Amstrad plc

views updated May 14 2018

Amstrad plc

Brentwood House
169 Kings Road
Brentwood, Essex CM 14 4EF
United Kingdom
(0277) 228-888
Fax: (0277)211-350

Public Company
Incorporated: 1968 as AMS Trading Company
Employees: 1,200
Sales: £577.32 million (US$931.91 million)
Stock Exchange: London

Amstrad plc, the consumer-electronics and computers manufacturer, has, since 1980, achieved a name for turning electronic productstelevision, video cassette recorders, word processors, personal computers, camcorders, and satellite dishesinto affordable goods found in homes and businesses throughout Europe, North America, and Australasia.

For many people, Amstrad is synonymous with Alan Sugar, the founder and marketing genius behind the company. In 1965, aged 17 years, Sugar began selling reconditioned television sets from his home in Hackney, north London. After working as a salesman for several local electrical shops, Sugar, the son of a London East End garment maker, started his own company in 1968. AMS Trading Company, later abbreviated to Amstrad, began business as a buyer and seller of electrical goods. Originally, these goods were not manufactured by Sugars company. Its first products included cigarette lighters and home intercoms. In the next few years, Amstrad broadened its product range to include hi-fi amplifiers, tuners, car radios, aerials, and transistor radios.

In 1969, Sugar opened Global Audio, his first retail venture. By 1970 he already had tired of mere retailing, and sought a new avenue of expansion. He decided to manufacture plastic turntable covers at £2.95 each. He found a way to reduce radically the cost of production, as a result achieving high sales volumes and margins, along with low retail prices.

A year later, in 1971, Sugar expanded his manufacturing capacity by appointing four Far Eastern contractors for his electrical components. By 1974, most of Amstrads products were being manufactured in the Far East.

As a measure of its early growth, Amstrads sales reached a total of £207,534 in 1971 with profits of £24,242. In 1972, sales and profits tripled. By 1973, profits rose to £194,063 on sales of £1.32 million.

In 1978, Sugar declined Audiotronic Holdingss offer to purchase a 78% stake in Amstrad for £2 million. He chose instead to list his company on the stock market. By then, sales of his products were soaring. Volume sales of car radio-cassette players, for example, were 276,000 in 1976, rising to 418,000 a year later, and reaching 588,000 units in 1978.

Sales touched one million units in 1979. Finally in 1980, when a host of U.K. consumer-electronics manufacturers were going to the wall in the face of persistent competition from U.S. and Far Eastern manufacturers, Sugar brought Amstrad to the London Stock Exchange. At the time the companys 1980 turnover was £8.8 million, and profits stood at £1.4 million.

Amstrads fortunes grew steadily during the early 1980s. Between 1980 and 1983, compound profit growth for the company averaged 56%. Hong Kong eventually became Amstrads manufacturing base when a subsidiary, Amstrad International (Hong Kong), was established there in 1982. Sugar chose as a top executive in the Far East a Hong Kong woman, Callen So. She became marketing and sales director in 1982, having joined the group in 1971 as a secretary at the age of 19 years. Sos appointment was evidence that Alan Sugar never insisted on formal qualifications when hiring his senior managerial staff.

Sugar was responsible for Amstrads renowned agility in product development and marketing, allowing the company to jump in and out of markets at will. At the height of the 1982 recession, for example, Sugar took Amstrad out of the depressed car-radio cassette-player market. This move was not difficult to achieve because the manufacture of these products had always been placed with subcontractors in South Korea. Sugar had no directly employed workers to lay off as he left one market and leaped into another.

More importantly, Sugar displayed no emotional or technical commitment to retaining products whose markets have fallen away. In 1984, Amstrad dropped out of selling video cassette recorders not long after entering the market, again owing to a depression in that particular area. However, the company just as quickly returned to the same market a year later, having changed its supplier in Japan to help improve margins.

Amstrad doubled in size each year during the early 1980s. By 1983, Sugar had identified the potential for large profits to be made from the expanding personal computer (PC) market. In 1984, Amstrad launched a new home computer, the CPC464, known as Arnold. The 64k-memory personal computer was introduced as a direct competitor of the 64k computer put on the market by Commodore Computers. Having had the CPC464 assembled in South Korea, Amstrad used popular retail outlets such as Comet, Dixons, and Rumbelows to sell its units. The machines, operating on cassette programs, were aimed at the beginner computer market.

Also in 1984, Amstrad augmented its U.K. manufacturing capacity by building a new 160,000-square-foot factory at Shoeburyness, at a cost of £2.5 million. The new factory began manufacturing consumer products, such as medium-sized color television sets and VHS video recorders. It also produced audio equipment, including remote-control hi-fi units. Indeed, after Amstrad achieved in two years a 40% share of the U.K. audio market on the strength of its Tower music systems, Sugar, at the age of 37, won the Guardian Young Businessman of the Year Award in 1984.

Part of Sugars success has come from Amstrads no-frills policy in developing new product lines. Sugar believes strongly in giving customers what they want, and nothing more. As he told his 1985 annual general meeting: We produce what the mass market customer wants and not a boffins ego trip.

Later that year, Amstrad eclipsed its early success in the personal computer market when it introduced the PCW8256 word processor, pitched at those looking for a sophisticated typewriter and incorporating the latest in word-processing software. The PCW8256 was typical of Amstrad products in that its market included people who had never yet bought a word processing unit because of the high price. By paying close attention to component costs, quality control, and packaging, Amstrad succeeded with the PCW8256, as with its other products, in delivering a particular product to a particular market at just the price the mass-market customer could afford.

The one problem with the PCW8256 was its incompatibility with IBM software. Amstrad remedied this difficulty in 1986 by introducing its new PC1512 computer line. The IBM-compatible personal computer took on IBM on the U.S. computer giants home ground. Here was a personal computer with word-processing software, complete with a monitor, disc drive, and printer, that was both relatively inexpensive and simple to use.

Amstrads expansionist phase included paying $7.7 million, in 1986, for the name and right to market the products of Sinclair Research Ltd., the troubled computer company founded by U.K. inventor Sir Clive Sinclair. Backed by Malcolm Miller, Amstrads marketing and sales director, the Sinclair acquisition gave the company access to a significant slice of the leisure end of the U.K. computer market.

Continuing from strength to strength, in 1987 Amstrad was listed on the FTSE-100 in London, the market index of the United Kingdoms top 100 companies, a mere seven years after the company first came onto the market. Building on the success of the PC 1512 computer line, Amstrad brought to the market its upgraded PC1640 model. The PC1512, with its powerful color system, appeared a perfect fit for the home-computer market. The PC1640, on the other hand, with its enhanced graphics facility, was ideal for the expanding business-computer market.

By now, Sugar and his marketing team had perfected their product-development formula: catch sight of a rising product, study it, copy it, amend it to include a few user-friendly gadgets, and then farm out its production to a Far Eastern or Scottish manufacturer. Then, after fixing a retail price with two nines in it and lower than anyone elses, Amstrad would introduce the consumer product to those who previously had been unable to afford such an item. Finally, Amstrad would bombard its market with blanket advertising.

In late 1987, Amstrad launched the successor to its successful PCW8256 word processor, the PCW9512. The enhanced word processor, fitted with a letter-quality, daisy-wheel printer, put yet another nail in the coffin of the office and home typewriter, much as Alan Sugar had intended.

As a measure of Sugars success, his own share stake in Amstrad grew in value at one point in 1988 to £590 million. However, problems began for the company in 1988. In that year, Funai-Amstrad, of which Amstrad was a 49% stake holder and a top customer, began production of video cassette recorders (VCRs) in the United Kingdom. Shifting the VCR manufacturing base from the Far East to the United Kingdom was intended to help Amstrad escape the effect of a rising yen and anticipated sanctions from the European Commission on electronic goods manufactured overseas.

As Amstrad grew, flexibility suffered as Sugar struggled to maintain direct control of his company. In 1988, he spent much of the year establishing further subsidiaries in Italy, West Germany, the Netherlands, and Belgium. The company work force doubled to 1,600 people. Sugar reacted to this expansion by delegating more and more responsibility to his lieutenants in the field, while previously he had been able to bark orders across his headquarters open-plan offices, so near was his senior management team.

After 20 years of solid growth, Amstrad revealed a profit slump from £160 million a year earlier to £76 million in 1989, on static turnover. City analysts were both stunned and satisfied that the skepticism many had long exhibited towards the company had proved warranted. With his customary candor, Sugar acknowledged that 1989 had been a disastrous year for Amstrad.

The consensus is that during the late 1980s Sugars management team had extended itself too far as the company grew too rapidly. Sugar had not been able to keep his eye on his company when it mattered most. As one rival told a national newspaper in 1989, Amstrad has always been a company that Alan could put his arms round. And now its growing too big for that. Technical and managerial difficulties at Amstrad appeared to be the causes of Sugars troubles in 1989. When he ought to have supported his management team, Sugar did not. Instead, he displayed his long-standing distaste for bureaucracy. Amstrad has never had more than four layers of management, and Sugar could always reach any one layer with speed.

A management stretched to the limit of its capabilities was going to make mistakes, and Amstrads did. In 1988, a sophisticated component used in the new PC2000 computer was found to be faulty, delaying the launch of the line. The fault was not detected at an early stage, but was found after the computers had been manufactured and distributed, requiring them to be recalled. The screening and repair of other products in Amstrads PC2000 line, including the PC2286 and PC2386, forced a slow-down in supply to the companys distributors. A £325 million build-up in inventory followed, which Sugar swore at the time would not be cleared by resort to fire sales. Instead, he promised an orderly reduction in inventory through an aggressive marketing campaign.

Worse was to follow. A decision by Amstrad to take personal responsibility for the PC2000s distribution in West Germany led its former distributor, the Schneider Company, to depress demand for the new products by dumping its existing stock at bargain prices. Elsewhere, a labor shortage in Taiwan led one audio subcontractor to delay delivery of its order. In the United Kingdom Funai-Amstrad failed to meet VCR production targets. This delay led to lower than anticipated VCR sales in the United Kingdom during the Christmas season in late 1988.

Then a global shortage of computer microchips led to soaring prices for the components and higher production costs for the PC2000 line. To secure a steady supply of microchips, Amstrad bought into, but lost out on, a stake in a U.S. microchip supplier, Micron Technology. The value of the holding fell from £45 million to £30 million before the supply of memory chips improved, and was reflected in Amstrads poor 1989 profits.

The launch of the television satellite Sky heralded a major new market for Amstrad, the supply of Astra satellite dishes and receiving equipment. In the financial year ended June 30, Amstrad sold £107 million worth of Sky equipment in the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, and Germany, and now sees satellite as being an important part of the groups product range. The subsequent merger between Sky and BSB (British Satellite Broadcasting), resulting in Astras becoming the preferred system, further enhances Amstrads already dominant position in this market.

In 1989, Sugar brought Callen So from Hong Kong to his Brentwood headquarters to play a role in components sourcing. From her new base she supported efforts to relocate Amstrads manufacturing base in Europe, in part because the cost advantage of using Far East suppliers had been reduced, but also to avoid anti-dumping measures against Amstrad threatened by the European Commission in Brussels after 1992. Sugar also recruited a team of managerial experts. Prominent among the new recruits was Peter Thoms from Gillette, who became the new finance director, freeing Ken Ashcroft to deal with inventory control and City relationships, and John Benjamin from Mars Inc., who became the new manufacturing director.

During a troubled 1989, Sugar saw his personal stake in Amstrad fall sharply by £1 million a day to settle, at one point, at £118 million. This still left Alan Sugar the 70th-wealthiest man in the United Kingdom, according to the Sunday Times. During this period, Amstrad fell to third place in the league table of U.K. business microcomputer suppliers, behind Compaq with a 13.3% market share, and IBM, leading with a 26.1% share. Amstrads own 11.3% share kept it ahead of Apple, the U.S. computer maker, which trailed with a 5.8% share.

In late 1989, Sugar announced that his company was abandoning the audio and music-systems market. Long adept at pinpointing the needs of the audio market, Amstrad had decided that the margins available from the market no longer warranted the effort. As Sugar told Financial Weekly on November 10, 1989, Our success is at the bottom and calls for a disproportionate amount of management effort when compared with sales and net margins generated.

The abandonment of the audio market was significant because it signaled a marked change in the companys strategy. Until 1989, Sugar had maintained that he was interested in products that sold a minimum 100,000 units a year, but now the criterion for participation was colored by talk of profit contribution rather than volume.

Sugar was suggesting unwittingly that Amstrad was reaching maturity. He continued: Until recently, most of our products have been relatively low-ticket items, requiring mass sales to provide budgeted profits. As products increased in price, particularly for the business market, the profit margin had allowed Amstrad to sell fewer units while maintaining the companys overall targets. In other words, volume was no longer to be considered the sole source of the companys profits.

In 1990, Alan Sugar insisted that Amstrads problems of recent years were behind it. The companys share price began to climb from a five-year low reached in 1989, after Sugar threatened to privatize Amstrad once again if City investors did not look upon it more favorably.

Defying its critics, who insisted that Amstrads problems would prove fatal, in April 1990 the company unveiled plans for a combined telephone, facsimile, and answering machine in a bid to return to financial health. Sugar announced at the time that his company would introduce one product every month. Reporting the years results in October 1990, Sugar was able to confirm that inventory had been reduced from a peak of £325 million to a manageable £180 million, and that the company was once again cash-positive.

Recognizing the potential for growth in laptop computers, Amstrad launched its new and highly regarded ALT range in early 1990, followed by a totally redesigned range of desk to PCs, the Generation-3 range.

Alan Sugar faces a test of his management skills in future years. The question is whether he can allow Amstrad to grow still further, and continue to prosper. He will have to relinquish direct control and give more power to his lieutenants to allow Amstrad to reach its full potential. Four appointments of 1990 key managers as main board directors-designate suggest that he can.

Principal Subsidiaries

Amstrad International (France); Amstrad Inc. (U.S.A.); Amstrad España (Spain); Amstrad GmbH (Germany); Amstrad BV (Netherlands); Amstrad NV (Belgium); Amstrad Pty Ltd. (Australia); Amstrad Italia (Italy); Amstrad Benelux BV (Netherlands).

Further Reading

Skapinker, Michael, The London street trader who would like to be as big as Sony, International Management, September 1986; Lloyd, Tom, A One Man Band? If It Is, Its a Big One, Financial Weekly, October 7, 1987; Vlessing, Etan, Amstrads Sugar Goes Back to School, Financial Weekly, November 10, 1989; Thomas, David, Alan Sugar: The Amstrad Story, Random, Century, 1990.

Etan Vlessing

Amstrad plc

views updated May 18 2018

Amstrad plc

Brentwood House
169 Kings Road
Brentwood, Essex CM14 4EF
United Kingdom
Telephone: (0277) 228-888
Fax: (0277) 211-350
Web site: http://www.amstrad.com

Public Company
Incorporated:
1968 as AMS Trading Company
Employees: 63
Sales: £60.9 million ($193.2 million) (2001)
Stock Exchanges: London
Ticker Symbol: AMT
NAIC: 334220 Radio and Television Broadcasting and Wireless Communications Equipment Manufacturing; 334290 Other Communications Equipment Manufacturing; 334210 Telephone Apparatus Manufacturing

Amstrad plc, previously known as a consumer-electronics and computers manufacturer, achieved a name for itself by turning electronic productstelevision, video cassette recorders, word processors, personal computers, camcorders, and satellite dishesinto affordable goods found in homes and businesses throughout Europe, North America, and Australasia during the 1980s. After experiencing a wave of difficulties during the 1990s, Amstrad and its subsidiaries now offer the e-m@iler, a digital telephone answering machine that allows customers to send and receive email, browse the Internet, and play Sinclair ZX Spectrum games. Amstrad also supplies digital satellite decoders to British Sky Broadcasting (BSkyB), and through its Hong Kong operations, sells audio equipment across the globe. Sir Alan Sugar, the companys creator, owns nearly 30 percent of Amstrad.

Origins and Growth Through the 1970s

For many people, Amstrad is synonymous with Alan Sugar, the founder and marketing genius behind the company. In 1965, at 17 years of age, Sugar began selling reconditioned television sets from his home in Hackney, north London. After working as a salesman for several local electrical shops, Sugar, the son of a London East End garment maker, started his own company in 1968. AMS Trading Company, later abbreviated to Amstrad, began business as a buyer and seller of electrical goods. Originally, these goods were not manufactured by Sugars company. Its first products included cigarette lighters and home intercoms. In the next few years, Amstrad broadened its product range to include hi-fi amplifiers, tuners, car radios, aerials, and transistor radios.

In 1969, Sugar opened Global Audio, his first retail venture. By 1970, he already had tired of mere retailing and sought a new avenue of expansion. He decided to manufacture plastic turntable covers at £2.95 each. He found a way to reduce radically the cost of production, as a result achieving high sales volumes and margins, along with low retail prices.

A year later, in 1971, Sugar expanded his manufacturing capacity by appointing four Far Eastern contractors for his electrical components. By 1974, most of Amstrads products were being manufactured in the Far East.

As a measure of its early growth, Amstrads sales reached a total of £207,534 in 1971 with profits of £24,242. In 1972, sales and profits tripled. By 1973, profits rose to £194,063 on sales of £1.32 million.

In 1978, Sugar declined Audiotronic Holdingss offer to purchase a 78% stake in Amstrad for £2 million. He chose instead to list his company on the stock market. By then, sales of his products were soaring. Volume sales of car radio-cassette players, for example, were 276,000 in 1976, rising to 418,000 a year later, and reaching 588,000 units in 1978.

Sales touched one million units in 1979. Finally, in 1980, when a host of U.K. consumer-electronics manufacturers were going to the wall in the face of persistent competition from U.S. and Far Eastern manufacturers, Sugar brought Amstrad to the London Stock Exchange. At the time the companys 1980 turnover was £8.8 million, and profits stood at £1.4 million.

Amstrads fortunes grew steadily during the early 1980s. Between 1980 and 1983, compound profit growth for the company averaged 56 percent. Hong Kong eventually became Amstrads manufacturing base when a subsidiary, Amstrad International (Hong Kong), was established there in 1982. Sugar chose as a top executive in the Far East a Hong Kong woman, Callen So. She became marketing and sales director in 1982, having joined the group in 1971 as a secretary at the age of 19 years. Sos appointment was evidence that Alan Sugar never insisted on formal qualifications when hiring his senior managerial staff.

Sugar was responsible for Amstrads renowned agility in product development and marketing, allowing the company to jump in and out of markets at will. At the height of the 1982 recession, for example, Sugar took Amstrad out of the depressed car-radio cassette-player market. This move was not difficult to achieve because the manufacture of these products had always been placed with subcontractors in South Korea. Sugar had no directly employed workers to lay off as he left one market and leaped into another.

More importantly, Sugar displayed no emotional or technical commitment to retaining products whose markets have fallen away. In 1984, Amstrad dropped out of selling video cassette recorders not long after entering the market, again owing to a depression in that particular area. However, the company just as quickly returned to the same market a year later, having changed its supplier in Japan to help improve margins.

Opportunity in the PC Market: Mid- to Late 1980s

Amstrad doubled in size each year during the early 1980s. By 1983, Sugar had identified the potential for large profits to be made from the expanding personal computer (PC) market. In 1984, Amstrad launched a new home computer, the CPC464, known as Arnold. The 64k-memory personal computer was introduced as a direct competitor of the 64k computer put on the market by Commodore Computers. Having had the CPC464 assembled in South Korea, Amstrad used popular retail outlets such as Comet, Dixons, and Rumbelows to sell its units. The machines, operating on cassette programs, were aimed at the beginner computer market.

Also in 1984, Amstrad augmented its U.K. manufacturing capacity by building a new 160,000-square-foot factory at Shoeburyness, at a cost of £2.5 million. The new factory began manufacturing consumer products, such as medium-sized color television sets and VHS video recorders. It also produced audio equipment, including remote-control hi-fi units. Indeed, after Amstrad achieved in two years a 40 percent share of the U.K. audio market on the strength of its Tower music systems, Sugar, at the age of 37, won the Guardian Young Businessman of the Year Award in 1984.

Part of Sugars success has come from Amstrads no-frills policy in developing new product lines. Sugar believes strongly in giving customers what they want, and nothing more. As he told his 1985 annual general meeting: We produce what the mass market customer wants and not a boffins ego trip.

Later that year, Amstrad eclipsed its early success in the personal computer market when it introduced the PCW8256 word processor, pitched at those looking for nothing more than a sophisticated typewriter and incorporating the latest in word-processing software. The PCW8256 was typical of Amstrad products in that its market included people who had never yet bought a word processing unit because of the high price. By paying close attention to component costs, quality control, and packaging, Amstrad succeeded with the PCW8256, as with its other products, in delivering a particular product to a particular market at just the price the mass-market customer could afford.

The one problem with the PCW8256 was its incompatibility with IBM software. Amstrad remedied this difficulty in 1986 by introducing its new PC1512 computer line. The IBM-compatible personal computer took on IBM on the U.S. computer giants home ground. Here was a personal computer with word-processing software, complete with a monitor, disc drive, and printer, that was both relatively inexpensive and simple to use.

Amstrads expansionist phase included paying $7.7 million, in 1986, for the name and right to market the products of Sinclair Research Ltd., the troubled computer company founded by U.K. inventor Sir Clive Sinclair. Backed by Malcolm Miller, Amstrads marketing and sales director, the Sinclair acquisition gave the company access to a significant slice of the leisure end of the U.K. computer market.

Continuing from strength to strength, in 1987 Amstrad was listed on the FTSE-100 in London, the market index of the United Kingdoms top 100 companies, a mere seven years after the company first came onto the market. Building on the success of the PC1512 computer line, Amstrad brought to the market its upgraded PC1640 model. The PC1512, with its powerful color system, appeared a perfect fit for the home-computer market. The PC1640, on the other hand, with its enhanced graphics facility, was ideal for the expanding business-computer market.

By now, Sugar and his marketing team had perfected their product-development formula: catch sight of a rising product, study it, copy it, amend it to include a few user-friendly gadgets, and then farm out its production to a Far Eastern or Scottish manufacturer. Then, after fixing a retail price with two nines in it that was lower the competitions, Amstrad would introduce the consumer product to those who previously had been unable to afford such an item. Finally, Amstrad would bombard its market with blanket advertising.

In late 1987, Amstrad launched the successor to its successful PCW8256 word processor, the PCW9512. The enhanced word processor, fitted with a letter-quality, daisy-wheel printer, put yet another nail in the coffin of the office and home typewriter, much as Alan Sugar had intended.

Company Perspectives:

The future of Amstrad lies in understanding the latest technology and then creating and developing products using that technology. At Amstrad, we are Always Innovating.

As a measure of Sugars success, his own share stake in Amstrad grew in value at one point to £590 million. However, problems began for the company in 1988. In that year, Funai-Amstrad, of which Amstrad was a 49 percent stake holder and a top customer, began production of video cassette recorders (VCRs) in the United Kingdom. Shifting the VCR manufacturing base from the Far East to the United Kingdom was intended to help Amstrad escape the effect of a rising yen and anticipated sanctions from the European Commission on electronic goods manufactured overseas.

As Amstrad grew, flexibility suffered as Sugar struggled to maintain direct control of his company. In 1988, he spent much of the year establishing further subsidiaries in Italy, West Germany, the Netherlands, and Belgium. The company work force doubled to 1,600 people. Sugar reacted to this expansion by delegating more and more responsibility to his lieutenants in the field, while previously he had been able to bark orders across his headquarters open-plan offices, so near was his senior management team.

A Disastrous Year: 1989

After 20 years of solid growth, Amstrad revealed a profit slump from £160 million a year earlier to £76 million in 1989, on static turnover. City analysts were both stunned and satisfied that the skepticism many had long exhibited towards the company had proved warranted. With his customary candor, Sugar acknowledged that 1989 had been a disastrous year for Amstrad.

The consensus is that during the late 1980s Sugars management team had extended itself too far as the company grew too rapidly. Sugar had not been able to keep his eye on his company when it mattered most. As one rival told a national newspaper in 1989, Amstrad has always been a company that Alan could put his arms round. And now its growing too big for that. Technical and managerial difficulties at Amstrad appeared to be the causes of Sugars troubles in 1989. When he ought to have supported his management team, Sugar did not. Instead, he displayed his long-standing distaste for bureaucracy. Amstrad has never had more than four layers of management, and Sugar could always reach any one layer with speed.

A management stretched to the limit of its capabilities was going to make mistakes, and Amstrads did. In 1988, a sophisticated component used in the new PC2000 computer was found to be faulty, delaying the launch of the line. The fault was not detected at an early stage, but was found after the computers had been manufactured and distributed, requiring them to be recalled. The screening and repair of other products in Amstrads PC2000 line, including the PC2286 and PC2386, forced a slowdown in supply to the companys distributors. A £325 million build-up in inventory followed, which Sugar swore at the time would not be cleared by resorting to fire sales. Instead, he promised an orderly reduction in inventory through an aggressive marketing campaign.

Worse was to follow. A decision by Amstrad to take personal responsibility for the PC2000s distribution in West Germany led its former distributor, the Schneider Company, to depress demand for the new products by dumping its existing stock at bargain prices. Elsewhere, a labor shortage in Taiwan led one audio subcontractor to delay delivery of its order. In the United Kingdom, Funai-Amstrad failed to meet VCR production targets. This delay led to lower than anticipated VCR sales in the United Kingdom during the Christmas season in late 1988.

Then a global shortage of computer microchips led to soaring prices for the components and higher production costs for the PC2000 line. To secure a steady supply of microchips, Amstrad bought into, but lost money on, a U.S. microchip supplier, Micron Technology. The value of the holding fell from £45 million to £30 million before the supply of memory chips improved, and this decline was reflected in Amstrads poor 1989 profits.

The launch of the television satellite Sky heralded a major new market for Amstrad, the supply of Astra satellite dishes and receiving equipment. In the financial year ended June 30, Amstrad sold £107 million worth of Sky equipment in the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, and Germany, and saw satellite as being an important part of the groups product range. The subsequent merger between Sky and BSB (British Satellite Broadcasting), resulting in Astras becoming the preferred system, further enhanced Amstrads already dominant position in this market.

Key Dates:

1965:
Seventeen-year-old Alan Sugar begins selling reconditioned television sets from his home in London.
1968:
Sugar establishes AMS Trading Company, later abbreviated as Amstrad.
1971:
The firm expands its manufacturing capacity to the Far East.
1979:
Sales reach one million units.
1980:
Amstrad lists on the London Stock Exchange.
1982:
A subsidiary is established in Hong Kong.
1984:
The firm launches the CPC464, or Arnold, a home computer.
1986:
Amstrad purchases the rights to market the products of Sinclair Research Ltd.
1989:
After twenty years of growth, profits falter.
1992:
The firm acquires a 71.3 percent stake in Betacom plc.
1994:
Amstrad purchases Viglen computers.
1997:
The company sells its consumer electronics and satellite business to Betacom; Betacom changes its name to Amstrad plc.
2000:
The e-m@iler is launched and Amserve is established to oversee the retail and distribution of the product.
2002:
Amstrad develops the e-m@ilerplus, which offers Internet access and allows customers to play Spectrum games.

In 1989, Sugar brought Callen So from Hong Kong to his Brentwood headquarters to play a role in components sourcing. From her new base she supported efforts to relocate Amstrads manufacturing base in Europe, in part because the cost advantage of using Far East suppliers had been reduced, but also to avoid anti-dumping measures against Amstrad threatened by the European Commission in Brussels after 1992. Sugar also recruited a team of managerial experts. Prominent among the new recruits was Peter Thoms from Gillette, who became the new finance director, freeing Ken Ashcroft to deal with inventory control and City relationships, and John Benjamin from Mars Inc., who became the new manufacturing director.

During a troubled 1989, Sugar saw his personal stake in Amstrad fall sharply by £1 million a day to settle, at one point, at £118 million. This still left Alan Sugar the 70th-wealthiest man in the United Kingdom, according to the Sunday Times. During this period, Amstrad fell to third place in the league table of U.K. business microcomputer suppliers, behind Compaq with a 13.3 percent market share, and IBM, leading with a 26.1 percent share. Amstrads own 11.3 percent share kept it ahead of Apple, the U.S. computer maker, which trailed with a 5.8 percent share.

In late 1989, Sugar announced that his company was abandoning the audio and music-systems market. Long adept at pinpointing the needs of the audio market, Amstrad had decided that the margins available from the market no longer warranted the effort. As Sugar told Financial Weekly on November 10, 1989, Our success is at the bottom and calls for a disproportionate amount of management effort when compared with sales and net margins generated.

The abandonment of the audio market was significant because it signaled a marked change in the companys strategy. Until 1989, Sugar had maintained that he was interested in products that sold a minimum 100,000 units a year, but now the criterion for participation was colored by talk of profit contribution rather than volume.

Sugar was suggesting unwittingly that Amstrad was reaching maturity. He continued: Until recently, most of our products have been relatively low-ticket items, requiring mass sales to provide budgeted profits. As products increased in price, particularly for the business market, the profit margin had allowed Amstrad to sell fewer units while maintaining the companys overall targets. In other words, volume was no longer to be considered the sole source of the companys profits.

In 1990, Alan Sugar insisted that Amstrads problems of recent years were behind it. The companys share price began to climb from a five-year low reached in 1989, after Sugar threatened to privatize Amstrad once again if investors did not look upon it more favorably.

Defying its critics, who insisted that Amstrads problems would prove fatal, in April 1990 the company unveiled plans for a combined telephone, facsimile, and answering machine in a bid to return to financial health. Sugar announced at the time that his company would introduce one product every month. Recognizing the potential for growth in laptop computers, Amstrad launched its new and highly regarded ALT range in early 1990, followed by a totally redesigned range of desktop PCs, the Generation-3 range. Reporting the years results in October 1990, Sugar was able to confirm that inventory had been reduced from a peak of £325 million to a manageable £180 million, and that the company was once again cash-positive.

Tough Times: 1990s

Returning Amstrad to its former glory proved to be out of Sugars reach during the 1990s. In 1992, he tried to take the company private; however, shareholders voted against the move. Sugar then spent the majority of the decade looking for new opportunities that would match the good fortune of the mid-1980s. The companys efforts included venturing into the telecommunications market. In 1992, Amstrad purchased a 71.3 percent interest in Betacom plc, a United Kingdom-based telephone supplier. The following year, Dancall Telecom, a Danish mobile phone company, was purchased. This company was later sold in 1997.

Viglen, the largest mail order supplier of personal computers in the United Kingdom, was acquired in 1994, followed by the purchase of modem specialist Dataflex Design Communications in 1995. During this time period, Amstrad launched new personal digital assistants (PDAs), various satellite receivers, and mobile phones, but was unable to bring a product to market that had significant sales results.

By 1997, rumors surrounded the company concerning the uncertainty of its future. In a restructuring effort, Amstrad broke up later that year. Its consumer electronics and satellite business was sold to Betacom and Amstrad delisted from the London exchange. Shareholders received shares in Viglen Technology plc, a newly-listed company, and Betacom plc, who had previously named Sugar as chairman. Then in November, Betacom changed its name back to Amstrad plc. In 1999, Amstrad sold the original Betacom business to Alba PLC along with the Answercall and Cable & Wireless branded telecommunications businesses.

Amstrad, a mere shadow of the company it was in the 1980s, entered the new millennium determined to stay afloat. Its employee count had dwindled to 71, down from 1,600 employees in 1988. A May 2000 Marketing article claimed that Sugar would dearly love to recover the former glory of two decades ago when Amstrad was a pioneer in the low-cost electronics market, and every home seemed to have one of its branded hi-fis or computers. Indeed, the companys main strategy continued to focus on developing cutting edge products that were affordable.

The e-m@iler Launch: 2000

The company appeared to have a breakthrough in 2000 when the firm launched its e-m@iler, a telephone device with an LCD screen and keyboard that allowed a consumer to read and write email and browse the Web. The product also allowed advertisers to promote their brands to e-m@iler customers, a facet that Sugar hoped to cash in on. While analysts gave the product a lukewarm reception reflected in a 17 percent drop in Amstrads share price, Sugar pursued the new product with a strong belief that it had the potential to secure huge revenues. As such, Amserve Ltd. was created as a subsidiary to oversee the advertising, retail and distribution of the e-m@iler. In June 2000, Dixons Group plc purchased a 20 percent stake in Amserve for £15 million.

By now, Amstrads focus was on its satellite set top boxes or receivers, its Hong Kong audio products manufacturing operations, and its e-m@iler technology. In 2000, sales related to its satellites peaked due to a BSkyB marketing promotion in which it offered its customers free satellite equipment. Total group sales for the firm reached £126.6 million but fell to £60.9 million in 2001, due to the decrease in demand from BSkyB after it ended the free receiver promotion.

During 2002, the company developed the e-m@ilerplus, a product that offered enhanced Internet access and allowed the customer to download and play Sinclair ZX Spectrum games. By June 2001, there were 92,000 registered e-m@ilers. In 2002, the companys advertising budget related to this product reached £8 million. While Amstrad was a long way from the success of the 1980s, Sugar and his management team were confident that demand for the e-m@iler would continue to grow. Whether or not Amstrad would remain an independent, healthy company, however, remained to be seen.

Principal Subsidiaries

Amserve Ltd. (80.1%); Amstrad Consumer Products Ltd.; Amstrad Satellite Products Ltd.; Amstrad International Ltd. (Hong Kong).

Principal Competitors

LM Ericcson; Pace Micro Technology plc; Sony United Kingdom.

Further Reading

Amstrad Flies the Flag with E-mailer Plus TV Campaign, Electronics Weekly, March 6, 2002, p. 14.

Amstrad Pays the Price of Sugar, Investors Chronicle, February 21, 1997, p. 52.

Dignam, Conor, Sugar and Spice, Marketing, May 25, 2000, p. 32.

Dixons Buys 20 Percent of Amstrad e-m@iler Arm, Electronics Weekly, May 25, 2000, p. 32.

Druce, Chris, Amstrads Subsidies on E-mailer Continue to Eat Profits, Electronics Weekly, October 3, 2001, p. 1.

Lloyd, Tom, A One Man Band? If It Is, Its a Big One, Financial Weekly, October 7, 1987.

Skapinker, Michael, The London Street Trader Who Would Like to Be as Big as Sony, International Management, September 1986.

Sugar Lumps It, Economist (U.S.), June 7, 1997, p. 70.

Vlessing, Etan, Amstrads Sugar Goes Back to School, Financial Weekly, November 10, 1989.

Thomas, David, Alan Sugar: The Amstrad Story, Random, Century, 1990.

Etan Vlessing
update: Christina M. Stansell