Lenovo has become China’s first non-monopoly private company to
be ranked among Fortune Magazine’s top 500 enterprises. Fortune
announced Lenovo’s total income to be $16. 788 billion, ranking 499
among the world’s top 500 enterprises. Lenovo declared that
entering the world’s top 500 marked a crucial moment for the
company’s rapid growth in the global market, and that Lenovo was
very proud of it. “As a market-based company since its foundation,
Lenovo has experienced important periods, establishing its own
brand and becoming globalized.
Joining the world’s top 500 demonstrates the effectiveness of
Lenovo’s strategy, and will be regarded as a milestone in the
company’s history,” announced a Lenovo spokesperson, adding that
right now the company is making preparations for the Beijing
Olympic Games which are coming right up. Many Chinese companies
dream of becoming big in the world’s markets, symbolized by a 500
listing. Haier was the first domestic non-monopoly consumer company
to get near, coming closest when its income was only $200 million
below the world’s 500th company.Another Chinese major, Huawei, has
just released its financial report for 2007, according to which the
company’s annual income was $12. 5 billion, still some distance
from the top 500 list. Companies such as Haier, having developed
through brutal competition since the 1990s, are most eager for
world status, but these companies do not control core technology
and the manufacture of upstream components, and are short of a
whole globalized strategy.Their development has slowed in recent
years.
Midea, another Chinese home appliance maker, aims to increase
its annual income to 120 billion yuan by 2010, and perhaps become
one of the world’s top 500. For Lenovo, earning a place on the
Fortune list has never been a company goal. Chairman Yang Yuanqing
said Lenovo values only its own development and its share in the
global market, and merely being among the world’s top 500 firms was
not of any particular concern.Among domestic home appliance and IT
companies, Lenovo has made itself the most likely to reach such
heights. Lenovo is China’s most globalized company. In 2004, after
having built a strong regional presence, the company in one jump
launched into the global market by acquiring IBM’s PC business.
During the past four years, Lenovo, which was seen by many at the
time as having bitten off too great a chunk, has integrated the
business according to its original plan, and broke through during
the fiscal year 2007 to 2008.
Yang Yuanqing says Lenovo’s acquisition has succeeded, and the
company has entered a new stage. Lenovo will accelerate its
development this year. In early 2008, it released its new consumer
brand, Idea, and promoted it at the global consumers market. The
company’s 2009 income is expected to show significant growth. There
is still, however, a wide gap between Lenovo and its massive rivals
HP and Dell. HP, with the largest share in the global PC market,
has as annual income totaling $104. 9 billion, ranking 41 among the
world’s top 500 firms.
But the PC business contributes only a part of HP’s income,
so comparison with Lenovo is not really relevant. Dell, however, is
a PC company, with an annual income of $61. 1 billion, and ranks
106 among the top 500, four places down from its 2007 ranking.
Taiwan-based Acer, which competes with Lenovo for the world’s third
largest PC company, did not make this year’s list.