New Page 1
DAYTON, Ohio — Officials at
NCR Corp. announced Jan. 11 that they plan
to cut 1,200 jobs as part of a realignment strategy that aims to improve the
company’s global ATM manufacturing efficiency.
“This restructuring will strengthen NCR’s global
order fulfillment capabilities to better meet customer expectations and needs
within this ever-changing market,” said Bill Nuti, NCR’s president and chief
executive, in a company statement. “The realignment should enable meaningful
cost reduction as we optimize our manufacturing operations by improving
absorption across geographies and strategically outsourcing to contract
manufacturers where the company can reap economies of scale.”
NCR would not say with which companies it is negotiating
— only that financial self-service equipment is not their primary business. But
it did say the move is not expected to have an impact on any of its ATM product
lines.
NCR’s Dundee, Scotland, plant is taking the
biggest hit, with 650 expected job cuts. And the ATM manufacturing facility in
Waterloo, Canada, will likely drop 450 employees.
NCR’s Carrollton, Texas, and Sao Paulo, Brazil,
plants have been spared the brunt of the layoffs — 32 of Carrollton’s 72 jobs
are expected to be axed, while about 60 are expected to be cut in Sao Paulo.
“Managing three separate factories (in the
Americas) is hard to manage,” said Bob Tramontano, NCR’s vice president of
Self-Service. “We feel very sure of our capability to manage each of the
(contract) sites to make sure the customer knows he is getting the highest
quality from NCR.”
Each of the three Americas facilities will retain
research-and-development, project-management and marketing departments. Only the
operations side will be scaled back, Tramontano said.
Those same departments will continue operating out
of Dundee, but the operations side — logistics, supply-line management,
manufacturing, etc. — will be moved to NCR’s facilities in India, Budapest and
China.
“We can have better efficiency, and that
efficiency can be passed on to our customers in better lead time,” Tramontano
said. “So by combining our capacity it allows us to have greater volume, so we
should be able to have better flexibility to respond to our customers.”
Dundee will continue to manufacture a handful of
NCR’s more complex financial self-service products, he added, but most
operations are being realigned.
NCR is expected to release more details about the
financial impact the new ATM-manufacturing plan will have on company revenue
Jan. 25 during its fourth-quarter earnings call.