Meg WhitemanHewlett-Packard CEO Meg Whitman told workers in India that their jobs are safe despite the company’s ongoing restructuring.
In May, HP announced plans to eliminate 27,000 positions over the next two years, about 9,000 of them in the U.S. Reports at the time said the company had a goal of 5,000 people accepting its retirement offer. Now, the AP says response to that offer has been better than expected.
In an interview with Economic Times, Whitman said:
We are not reducing our workforce in India. We have announced a global work force reduction, but India will stay largely intact, because we not only have all our business units here, but also our R&D and back office. We are focused on keeping our work force here, and I think over time, probably increase the work force.
About 30,000 of the company’s 349,600 workers are in India and it’s among the emerging markets on which the company is focused. Some 65 percent of its revenue is generated in emerging markets.
Meanwhile, HP’s Michigan training program, which was announced in May, still has the green light, despite the layoffs elsewhere. The program will to train more than 200 developers, testers and architects at HP Enterprise Services Pontiac.
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About Susan Hall

Susan Hall is an accomplished writer and editor living in Louisville, Ky., where they like horses – a lot. Susan boasts some affection for horses, but more for dogs. She has written on a broad range topics from Olympic marathoners to the use of Twitter in the corporate jungle. Born of the print era, she worked at metro dailies such as The Dallas Times Herald, Seattle Post-Intelligencer, Seattle Times and USA Today. The latter two even still exist. She fled the ink domain and became a member of the MSNBC.com launch team. From there it’s been a giddy ride of project management, research, interviewing, writing and editing in the IT realm. When not working, she and her Cocker Spaniel, Charlie, compete in AKC agility events.