France Telecom, Nortel Solidify Strategic Partnership
28 Novembro 2006 - 7:00AM
PR Newswire (US)
Orange Business Services Launches 'Business Together' based on
Nortel Technology PARIS, France, Nov. 28 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ --
Orange Business Services, which provides enterprise business
solutions and services by the France Telecom Group as of June 1,
2006, has launched a new suite of SIP multimedia services based on
Nortel(x) (NYSE/TSX: NT) technology. The new service 'Business
Together' will first be available for corporate French customers in
November 2006. As a result of a strategic partnership, France
Telecom and Nortel have jointly developed these new services to
help businesses communicate and collaborate with greater
flexibility and efficiency. 'Business Together' from Orange
Business Services unifies onto a single interface all the necessary
tools for a company to optimize their team working environment. It
does this through telephony, collaboration, instant messaging and
multimedia communications; all safely accessibly from a computer,
an IP Phone or a mobile smartphone. 'Business Together' enables
workers to communicate wherever they are, at the office or on the
road. "'Business Together' is a significant breakthrough for how
workers can work together instantly whether they are in the office
or on the road," said Barbara Dalibard, executive vice president,
Orange Business Services. "Our offering is unique to the
marketplace and we plan to expand to other countries in 2007. We
will continue to work closely with Nortel to help realize its full
potential." The strategic partnership signed in 2004 between France
Telecom and Nortel has a common objective to jointly develop and
deploy IP multimedia services as the basis for a new generation of
seamless services in the business market, and particularly in
person-to-person communication and collaborative work. A strong
focus has been made on co-development, co-marketing and co-selling
of these services. "Our partnership with France Telecom is powerful
proof of Nortel's drive to equip service providers with technology
designed to cost-effectively evolve their networks to deliver new
and innovative user experiences," said Michel Clement, president of
Southern Europe, Nortel. "France Telecom and Nortel have a long
history of delivering next-generation solutions and services.
Today's announcement further builds upon the strength of that
relationship." Orange's "Business Together" services include
Nortel's SIP Multimedia Communication Server 5200 (MCS 5200) which
seamlessly integrates voice with video, collaboration, presence and
reachability services. This solution leverages SIP to enable
service providers to deliver secured network based technologies and
enriched communications experiences. Nortel has been a key supplier
to France Telecom Group network for nearly two decades providing
solutions in wireless, wireline data and optical DWDM as well as
Enterprise Networks. About Orange Business Services Orange Business
Services represents the business communications solutions and
services provided by the France Telecom Group as of June 1, 2006.
They were previously sold under the France Telecom, Orange, Equant,
Etrali, Almerys, EGT, Expertel Consulting, France Telecom
Intelmatique, SETIB and Solicia brands. The offers include
converged voice, data and mobile services as well as IT expertise
and managed services, all designed to transform business processes
and improve productivity. Orange Business Services is present in
166 countries and territories and serves customers in 220. About
Nortel Nortel is a recognized leader in delivering communications
capabilities that enhance the human experience, ignite and power
global commerce, and secure and protect the world's most critical
information. Our next-generation technologies, for both service
providers and enterprises, span access and core networks, support
multimedia and business-critical applications, and help eliminate
today's barriers to efficiency, speed and performance by
simplifying networks and connecting people with information. Nortel
does business in more than 150 countries. For more information,
visit Nortel on the Web at http://www.nortel.com/. For the latest
Nortel news, visit http://www.nortel.com/news. Certain statements
in this press release may contain words such as "could", "expects",
"may", "anticipates", "believes", "intends", "estimates",
"targets", "envisions", "seeks" and other similar language and are
considered forward-looking statements or information under
applicable securities legislation. These statements are based on
Nortel's current expectations, estimates, forecasts and projections
about the operating environment, economies and markets in which
Nortel operates. These statements are subject to important
assumptions, risks and uncertainties, which are difficult to
predict and the actual outcome may be materially different. Nortel
has made various assumptions in the preparation of its financial
outlook in this press release, including the following company
specific assumptions: no further negative impact to Nortel's
results of operations, financial condition and liquidity arising
from Nortel's restatements of its financial results; Nortel's
prices increasing at or above the rate of price increases for
similar products in geographic regions in which Nortel sells its
products; increase in sales to Nortel's enterprise customers and
wireless service provider customers in the Asia Pacific region as a
result of Nortel's joint venture with LG Electronics Inc.;
anticipated growth in sales to enterprise customers, including the
full year impact to Nortel's revenues from its acquisition of PEC
Solutions, Inc., (now Nortel Government Solutions Incorporated);
improvement in Nortel's product costs due to favorable supplier
pricing substantially offset by higher costs associated with
initial customer deployments in emerging markets; cost reductions
resulting from the completion of Nortel's significant financial
restatements and 2004 restructuring plan; a moderate increase in
costs over 2005 related to investments in the finance organization
and remedial measures related to Nortel's material weaknesses in
internal controls; increased employee costs relative to expected
cost of living adjustments and employee bonuses offset by a
significant reduction in executive recruitment and severance costs
incurred in 2005; and the effective execution of Nortel's strategy.
Nortel has also made certain macroeconomic and general industry
assumptions in the preparation of its financial guidance including:
a modest growth rate in the gross domestic product of global
economies in the range of 3.9% which is higher than the growth rate
in 2005; global service provider capital expenditures in 2006
reflecting mid to high single digit growth as compared to low
double digit growth in 2005; a general increase in demand for
broadband access, data traffic and wireless infrastructure and
services in emerging markets with the rate of growth in developed
markets beginning to slow; and a moderate impact as a result of
expected industry consolidation among service providers in various
geographic regions, particularly in North America and EMEA. The
above assumptions, although considered reasonable by Nortel at the
date of this press release, may prove to be inaccurate and
consequently Nortel's actual results could differ materially from
its expectations set out in this press release. Further, actual
results or events could differ materially from those contemplated
in forward-looking statements as a result of the following (i)
risks and uncertainties relating to Nortel's restatements and
related matters including: Nortel's most recent restatement and two
previous restatements of its financial statements and related
events; the negative impact on Nortel and NNL of their most recent
restatement and delay in filing their financial statements and
related periodic reports; legal judgments, fines, penalties or
settlements, or any substantial regulatory fines or other penalties
or sanctions, related to the ongoing regulatory and criminal
investigations of Nortel in the U.S. and Canada; any significant
pending civil litigation actions not encompassed by Nortel's
proposed class action settlement; any substantial cash payment
and/or significant dilution of Nortel's existing equity positions
resulting from the approval of its proposed class action
settlement; any unsuccessful remediation of Nortel's material
weaknesses in internal control over financial reporting resulting
in an inability to report Nortel's results of operations and
financial condition accurately and in a timely manner; the time
required to implement Nortel's remedial measures; Nortel's
inability to access, in its current form, its shelf registration
filed with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission
(SEC), and Nortel's below investment grade credit rating and any
further adverse effect on its credit rating due to Nortel's
restatements of its financial statements; any adverse affect on
Nortel's business and market price of its publicly traded
securities arising from continuing negative publicity related to
Nortel's restatements; Nortel's potential inability to attract or
retain the personnel necessary to achieve its business objectives;
any breach by Nortel of the continued listing requirements of the
NYSE or TSX causing the NYSE and/or the TSX to commence suspension
or delisting procedures; (ii) risks and uncertainties relating to
Nortel's business including: yearly and quarterly fluctuations of
Nortel's operating results; reduced demand and pricing pressures
for its products due to global economic conditions, significant
competition, competitive pricing practice, cautious capital
spending by customers, increased industry consolidation, rapidly
changing technologies, evolving industry standards, frequent new
product introductions and short product life cycles, and other
trends and industry characteristics affecting the
telecommunications industry; the sufficiency of recently announced
restructuring actions, including the potential for higher actual
costs to be incurred in connection with these restructuring actions
compared to the estimated costs of such actions and the ability to
achieve the targeted cost savings and reductions of Nortel's
unfunded pension liability deficit; any material and adverse
affects on Nortel's performance if its expectations regarding
market demand for particular products prove to be wrong or because
of certain barriers in its efforts to expand internationally; any
reduction in Nortel's operating results and any related volatility
in the market price of its publicly traded securities arising from
any decline in its gross margin, or fluctuations in foreign
currency exchange rates; any negative developments associated with
Nortel's supply contract and contract manufacturing agreements
including as a result of using a sole supplier for key optical
networking solutions components, and any defects or errors in
Nortel's current or planned products; any negative impact to Nortel
of its failure to achieve its business transformation objectives,
including completion of the sale of its UMTS access business to
Alcatel; additional valuation allowances for all or a portion of
its deferred tax assets; Nortel's failure to protect its
intellectual property rights, or any adverse judgments or
settlements arising out of disputes regarding intellectual
property; changes in regulation of the Internet and/or other
aspects of the industry; Nortel's failure to successfully operate
or integrate its strategic acquisitions, or failure to consummate
or succeed with its strategic alliances; any negative effect of
Nortel's failure to evolve adequately its financial and managerial
control and reporting systems and processes, manage and grow its
business, or create an effective risk management strategy; and
(iii) risks and uncertainties relating to Nortel's liquidity,
financing arrangements and capital including: the impact of
Nortel's most recent restatement and two previous restatements of
its financial statements; any inability of Nortel to manage cash
flow fluctuations to fund working capital requirements or achieve
its business objectives in a timely manner or obtain additional
sources of funding; high levels of debt, limitations on Nortel
capitalizing on business opportunities because of support facility
covenants, or on obtaining additional secured debt pursuant to the
provisions of indentures governing certain of Nortel's public debt
issues and the provisions of its support facility; any increase of
restricted cash requirements for Nortel if it is unable to secure
alternative support for obligations arising from certain normal
course business activities, or any inability of Nortel's
subsidiaries to provide it with sufficient funding; any negative
effect to Nortel of the need to make larger defined benefit plans
contributions in the future or exposure to customer credit risks or
inability of customers to fulfill payment obligations under
customer financing arrangements; any negative impact on Nortel's
ability to make future acquisitions, raise capital, issue debt and
retain employees arising from stock price volatility and further
declines in the market price of Nortel's publicly traded
securities, or the planned share consolidation resulting in a lower
total market capitalization or adverse effect on the liquidity of
Nortel's common shares. For additional information with respect to
certain of these and other factors, see Nortel's Annual Report on
Form 10-K/A, Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q and other securities
filings with the SEC. Unless otherwise required by applicable
securities laws, Nortel disclaims any intention or obligation to
update or revise any forward-looking statements, whether as a
result of new information, future events or otherwise. (x) Nortel,
the Nortel logo and the Globemark are trademarks of Nortel
Networks. Use of the terms "partner" and "partnership" does not
imply a legal partnership between Nortel and any other party.
DATASOURCE: Nortel CONTACT: Isabelle Tadmoury, +33 1 6955 1291, ;
Jamie Moody, (972) 684-7167, ; Fabienne Moiteaux, +33 1 4444 9393,
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