
(Reuters) - Dell Inc launched a new line of servers for enterprise  customers, boosting its corporate business unit and shifting its focus  further away from consumers, who are increasingly choosing such devices  as Apple Inc's iPad. 
 Chief Executive Michael Dell  said his namesake company is no longer a personal computer company and  has transformed itself into a business that sells services and products  to corporations, a lucrative market that he said is worth $3 trillion. Corporations  have grappled with ever-smaller IT budgets as slow economic growth  curtails spending. But many experts say tech spending will swell over  the long term as companies upgrade systems, connect to the Internet  cloud, or begin to make better use of user data. Dell's  so-called enterprise business has doubled in the past five to six years  and now represents half of the company's profit, he added. "It's  not really a PC company; it's an end-to-end IT company," Michael Dell  said at an event in San Francisco where the company launched a new line  of PowerEdge servers aimed at businesses with remote computing needs. The  company's founder said the growth of Dell's enterprise business  validates its strategy of diversifying away from personal computers as a  new crop of devices such as the iPad captivates buyers. Michael  Dell said he wants to focus on the enterprise and public markets,  rather than a drastically smaller $250 billion consumer market. "The  consumer market is not particularly healthy and the enterprise business  is much more so," Dave Johnson, Dell's strategy chief, told Reuters. Dell's storage and networking revenue grew 10 percent last year, while sales of its desktop PCs fell 4 percent. The  world's No. 3 personal computer maker fell short of Wall Street's  estimate for fourth-quarter earnings, hurt by weakness in U.S. public  spending and the lingering impact of the Thailand flood on its product mix. It has also forecast weak sales for the current quarter. Sales at Hewlett Packard's, the No. 1 PC seller, declined 15 percent in its fiscal first quarter. Round  Rock, Texas-based Dell has been waging an uphill battle to diversify  its revenue base from PCs to become a larger player in the data center  equipment market and IT services. It faces stiff competition in those  markets from the likes of International Business Machines Corp and HP. To  help that effort, it has been acquiring companies, including Force 10  Networks and Compellent Technologies, to boost its enterprise-related  products and services.
Source: Reuters