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Adobe to reduce enterprise software investment

Its enterprise division sells Adobe Connect and Adobe LiveCycle, among other products

Adobe will cut 750 jobs and reduce its investment in enterprise software as part of a broader plan to target the fast-growing markets for digital media and digital marketing products, the company said Tuesday.

Adobe will provide details of the plan at a meeting for financial analysts in New York Wednesday morning, it said. Adobe also lowered its earnings outlook for the current quarter, in part to pay for the layoffs.

The changes are part of a restructuring plan intended to increase Adobe's focus on what it called the "exploding growth categories" of digital media and digital marketing. Adobe targets those markets with tools for content creation and distribution, and for measuring results from digital marketing campaigns.

Adobe declined to comment ahead of the analyst meeting on which enterprise products would be affected, or how they would be affected.

"In order to drive increased Digital Marketing bookings, which are recognized as recurring revenue, the company will reduce its investment, and expected license revenue, in certain enterprise solution product lines," it said in a statement.

Its enterprise products include Adobe Connect and Adobe LiveCycle, as well as Web content management software it acquired last year when it bought Day Software. The category doesn't include its Acrobat products, which are part of Adobe's Knowledge Worker division.

The enterprise products generated less than 10 percent of Adobe's revenue last quarter, far less than its content creation and digital media divisions.

Wednesday's analyst meeting is likely to focus more on Adobe's plans for accelerating growth. It will continue to invest in its Creative Suite products and shift resources to support greater investment in HTML 5, through tools like Dreamweaver and Adobe Edge, it said.

In digital marketing, it wants to grow its analytics and reporting business, especially on mobile devices and social networks.

The job cuts will be made primarily in Europe and North America, Adobe said. It had 9,100 workers at the end of last year, making the cuts about 8 percent of its total staff.

It expects to record a restructuring charge of $87 million to $94 million in the current quarter, mostly for severance payments. That will reduce its earnings per share to between $0.30 and $0.38 based on generally accepted accounting principles, it said.

Adobe is still on track to meet its fourth-quarter revenue goal, it said, but the changes will reduce its revenue growth in the next fiscal year by 4 to 5 percentage points, to achieve revenue growth of about 6 percent.

"We believe that by focusing resources on two large initiatives and shifting our business model, we can drive faster and more predictable growth in [fiscal year 2013] and beyond," CFO Mark Garrett said in a statement.

James Niccolai covers data centers and general technology news for IDG News Service. Follow James on Twitter at @jniccolai. James's e-mail address is james_niccolai@idg.com

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More about: Adobe, Creative, IDG
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Tags: Adobe Systems, applications, business issues, business process management, document management, financial results, Graphics / multimedia, layoffs, Media player software, restructuring, software
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