Confidential: Nortel’s Key Messages and Q&A for Customers

Here’s a confidential document that Nortel created to address its key messages as well as Q&A for customers in the wake of the proposed sale of its CDMA business and LTE R&D unit to Nokia Siemens.

One of the more interesting tidbits is the name “Nortel” could be sold as part of a transaction.

Key Messages:

“After careful review – decision taken to find buyers for each of our businesses – best way to carry Nortel’s rich innovation platforms into the future.”

Best path for Nortel to maximize value while preserving innovation and jobs to the greatest extent possible; Provides clarity for our customers and employees and maximizes value for our creditors

“Taken decisive action to move forward with a plan to sell substantially all of our CDMA business and LTE Access assets.”

Entered into a Stalking Horse Sale Agreement for the sale of substantially all CDMA Business and LTE Access Assets with Nokia Siemens Networks for US$650 million; Demonstrates the strength and value of Nortel’s wirelss assets throughout the industry; Seeking a strong and stable buyer is the best path forward for our CDMA business and LTE Access assets.

If successfully completed, this transaction would:

- Give our customers a clear roadmap for the future evolution of their networks

- Preserve employement to the greatest extent possible

- At least 2,500 employees would have the opportunity to continue with Nokia Siemens Networks.

This represents the majority of the employees associated with the assets being sold.
“Process well under way – Company is advancing in its discussions with external parties to sell its other businesses.”

Focused on finding the right buyers for our businesses; Will assess other restructuring alternatives for these businesses in the event it is unable to maximize value through sales; Will apply to delist its common shares and the NNL preferred shares from trading on the Toronto Stock Exchange

No change in our near term focus: Customer contracts remain in place during this process and we will continue to communicate with you throughout this process

- Nothing changes until the stalking horse process is complete

- We will be speaking with customers 1:1 to help them understand the process, and the scope of the proposed sale

Important to understand that this transaction is not final and is subject to a bidding process. This agreement has no immediate impact on Nortel’s current customer contracts. We will remain focused on our customers throughout this process and continue to be responsive and maintain open communication.

Q&A

Is Nortel headed for a break-up?

After completing a careful analysis, it has become clear that the optimal path for each of our businesses is to find buyers who can carry Nortel’s rich innovation platforms into the future.
The company is advancing in its discussions with external parties to sell its other businesses – this will provide an opportunity to maximize value while preserving innovation and jobs to the greatest extent possible

Is Nortel emerging from bankruptcy?
Nortel is focused on finding the right buyers for its businesses. If we are successful in selling our businesses Nortel will not continue as a going concern and will not emerge.

Does this mean Nortel is being liquidated?
No. We are focused for finding the right buyers for all of our businesses. After completing a careful analysis of each of our businesses, it has become clear that the best outcome for each of our businesses is to find buyers who can carry Nortel’s rich innovation platforms into the future. The company will assess other restructuring alternatives for these businesses in the event it is unable to maximize value through a sale.

What will happen to the Nortel name?
If we are successful in selling all our businesses, the Nortel name may continue with one of those businesses, depending on the terms of the deal.

What happened – what got you to this point?

After completing a careful analysis, it has become clear that the optimal path for each of our businesses is to find buyers who can carry Nortel’s rich innovation platforms into the future. We believe this is the best path for our businesses and our customers

What is a “stalking horse”?
In the U.S., this sale requires a court-approved bidding process, known as a “stalking horse” or 363 Sale under Chapter 11 of the US Bankruptcy Code. In addition, consummation of the stalking horse transaction is subject to higher or otherwise better offers, approval of the United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware and the Ontario Superior Court of Justice, and the satisfaction of other customary and other conditions.

We expect the U.S. stalking horse process to continue for a period of 39 days once bidding procedures are approved. Thereafter additional time may be required to satisfy all other conditions and obtain other necessary court or government approvals. We will update you on the status of the process as further information is available.

WIRELESS:

Will Richard Lowe (or any other executive) have a position at NSN? What will that be?
We are at the start of a bidding process and we are unable to comment on these details until the 363 sale process is complete.

What is the benefit for NSN in purchasing Nortel’s LTE/CDMA assets?

If the sale is successfully concluded, it would provide NSN with technology, know-how, and embedded resources to support a significant new customer base in NA and abroad. NSN would also gain a team of the most capable employees in our industry. If the sale is successfully concluded, Nortel’s LTE innovation could enable NSN to enter 4G market trials in 2009. We have already made significant advancement in 4G, and have seen significant market success. Nortel is involved in LTE trials with operators around the world.

Earlier this year, Nortel showcased the power of LTE at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Spain in February. We worked with industry partners like LG Electronics to demonstrate LTE’s ability to offer high speed mobile broadband on live air networks and across various spectrums. We also supported T-Mobile’s LTE showcase in Bonn, Germany and displayed those mobile capabilities in Barcelona.

Why didn’t you consolidate three years ago when the rest of the industry was consolidating (Alcatel-Lucent, Nokia-Siemens, etc.)?
We reviewed numerous M&A scenarios over the past several years, but none of these made sense/were in the best interests of Nortel at the time.

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  • borissss

    Could anyone please tell me what the difference is between this and liquidation?

  • NortelEmp

    It looks like PR has a new key message that will get over-used until the next one is made up:

    “After completing a careful analysis, it has become clear that the optimal path for each of our businesses is to find buyers who can carry Nortel’s rich innovation platforms into the future.”

    This should read: “Since we didn't know which way up, had egos that were way too large, and were incapable of making any sane decision, it has become clear that our only option is to sell off the businesses and collect our bonuses.”

  • sick_sigma

    We're not liquidating. We're just selling everything. See the difference?

  • NortelEmp

    Seems to me that the big difference is that Nortel gets to decide themselves what they do with the proceeds from the sale rather than pay back the unsecured creditors in an equitable fashion.

    If they went into CH7 they probably couldn't pay themselves the bonuses that they are expecting.

  • Asset_Number_XXX

    I am very curious if anyone picks up Nortel's name. It will be an interesting study in brand name value.

  • borissss

    OK then let's suppose that we sold everything.We have the cash money but nothing more.What is next?

  • ntpurgatory

    The brand has been irrevocably damaged. No value IMHO. Think Enron, Worldcom not Pan-AM, etc…

  • ntpurgatory

    Word games. Try to sell the businesses in tact = 'not liquidating'. When a division won't sell (GSM perhaps?), then the 'alternative restructuring' = letting everyone in that division go and selling 100% of it's assets at auction. That = liquidation. Just a word play. We all see what's actually happening…

  • sick_sigma

    There was some talk this week that Siemens/Gores Group only has the right to use the Siemens name until 2010. Then they will have to find something different. It seems reasonable that they would want to purchase the Nortel name because it is much stronger in the enterprise telephony space.

    So perhaps, possibly, the Nortel name could actually live on under a different set of owners.

  • nortelex

    Why didn’t you consolidate three years ago when the rest of the industry was consolidating (Alcatel-Lucent, Nokia-Siemens, etc.)?

    ————————————————————————————————–
    And the answer to this question should be our executives are clueless, we messed up. I laughed at the answer they gave, typical Nortel.

  • nortelex

    I think whatever cash they have go to the creditors.

    I doubt there is enough for that even.

  • anExNortelFun

    “Stalking horse”, it looks to me more and more than M.Z and his camarilla was a Trojan horse for Nortel. They were brought up to break up Nortel and then get lucrative deals with Nortel competitors. I can only hope that all those secret deals will be exposed very soon.

  • borissss

    yes that was what I thought :)

  • 1moreXemp

    Right on nortelex and NortelEmp, I laughed too, I got really bored reading the same robotic PR blurb”.

  • Nortel_pack_of_cards

    We are hearing strong rumors that Ericsson is in the race for CDMA. Anyone with more information on this ?

  • NortelEmp

    Having the rights doesn't imply that anyone will use the name.

    My guess is that Nortel will include the rights in one of the BU deals as candy. But not all candy is tasty.

  • less

    Remove Z and the BoD from power – finally – and there is a chance the brand “Nortel” could survive when paired with another. Easily more valuable than ALU. Nortel actually built some decent, tangible products that actually emit electricity (or so I've heard.)
    The swaggering big talk is what would stick with the Nortel name for a while yet.

  • gone2moro

    what would they have to gain? Verizon and Sprint are the only CDMA networks in the US that matter. Verizon awarded LTE to Alcatel. Ericcson has a presence in Vz with old TDM that they have essentially abandond and left to Nortel to collapse in to CS2ks. There is still CDMA buisiness with Sprint and Vz, but it is diminishing.

  • Still_At_Nortel

    Question: “What happened – what got you to this point?”

    answer: “After completing a careful analysis, it has become clear that the optimal path for each of our businesses is to find buyers who can carry Nortel’s rich innovation platforms into the future. We believe this is the best path for our businesses and our customers”
    ————————–
    WTF? why put a question on the FAQ if you're not going to answer it.
    who are these geniuses?

    anybody here want to answer it for them?

  • gone2moro

    I loved in the QandA…. Will Richard Lowe and other executives have jobs….. does anybody really care? But since fruit don't fall far from the tree I suspect Sue would love to have her mafia posse back…. and what greater gotcha than to have Richard working for her?… I hope all of the VP's go there… and then NSN can sink with the management overhead burden that NT had.

  • Milan_Bekich

    NT's new tag line: “Carry Nortel’s rich innovation platforms into the future”

    Innovation platforms… ah yes it seems like only yesterday whent all I had was “solutions” in my bag. Now the bags are full of “innovation platforms” It will indeed be interesting to see how much these “innovation platforms” are worth when they are sold by the pound.

    Milan

  • roseball

    Ericsson is in it to kill the competition..They dont want NSN or for that matter anyone else to be part of the VZ LTE deployments which would make their pie smaller….

  • NortelEmp

    These “briefs” are an insult to the Nortel sales teams. Does anyone in PR / Media relations really think the sales guys regurgitate this stuff?

    It's one thing to try to movitave your work force, but this is borderline insulting to anyone who is supposed to say this to their customers.

  • felixmk

    The good brands are: DMS, Meridian, Northern Telecom, Passport, BNR, Norstar, Vista. The bad brands are: Nortel, Zafirtovski, Hackney, Lowe, Dunn, Roth.

  • Anonymous

    Kinda’ sad that, on the one hand, folks like those on this blog ask for information and complain about being left in the dark, and then when someone tries to at least provide some minimal squeeze-it-through-the-legal-filter stuff some idiot feels it’s appropriate to send it to the world.

    No secrets here, but since everyone in the company has this stuff what’s the point in posting it? I can only assume the act was designed to embarrass those of us still working at NT by taking our private business out into the street. Note that this is exactly why we get so little information internally – because bozo thinks he’s a clever boy by sending it outside.

    Too bad we’ve come to this.

  • nortel_cn

    Anyone can tell if this timetable is correct?

    * Now – July.30, seek court to approve auction procedure.
    * July 30 – + 39 days(Sep.7), seek for a better bidder.
    * Sep.7+, seek court approval for the winner, and then start transaction.

    My doubt is why it takes so long(from June.16 to July.30 or maybe a little bit earlier) to prepare filings of the aucation procedure?

  • NortelTragedy

    It would be foolish for Sue to bring aboard to NSN Richard L., Bruce G., D. Conner, or anyone at VP+ level. She should distance herself as far as possible from these “leaders” …

  • Milan_Bekich

    NortelEmp

    Suck it up and “Carry Nortel’s rich innovation platforms into the future”.

    Seriously, do you think any NT customers are going to believe the spin from salespeople “speaking with customers 1:1 to help them understand the process, and the scope of the proposed sale” ?

    Customers will remain frozen like deer in the headlights until the dissolution is complete and the new owners are identified.

    Milan

  • borissss

    ah then they should pay us for %50 to make up a joint venture. :)

  • NortelEmp

    Don't think so.

    Courts will approve auction procedure on June 29th I believe.

    If NSN wins, employees will be working under the new company by August 1st or so. Nokia stated publicly that it would be middle of Q3.

    Check the court docs on EPIQ. The outline the dates as per the official process. Much quicker than you list above, as it relates to NSN.

  • less

    Team dynamics work in funny ways. One could suppose NT board members were all competent – just not as the combined personality resulting in their current formation. It wouldn't matter where they worked or what colors and logos they wore.

  • yes4aapl

    That message is for Mike Z
    Hey buddy
    We all know you were not the GEnius we all expected you to be.
    Don't feel bad.
    I have an evidence Nortel was dead before you took over.
    Maybe you remember my message 2 years ago.
    I said BoD tricked you to get the job.
    They promised you the accounting at Nortel was fixed and perfect. It was not the case. You had to go for restating accounting numbers once again.
    wait for new mewssage…

    ys4

  • TongueInCheek

    The 39 calendar days, not business days, started on June 19th.

  • gone2moro

    That makes senses.

  • gone2moro

    Thoser were Sr. VP types… what about the likes for A. Pritchard (Bus Dev) and A. Cioffi (now CDMA)?… They know a lot of people in the customer base and are/were fairly inocuous in the fall of NT. What do you do with those types of VP's… of which NT seem to have way to many of.

  • The psychiatrist

    From a former s/w developer

    “Funny, reading these articles on Nortel, having had the extreme displeasure of working there.

    Little have I seen the good press speculate much as to the reasons for the failure of this once-proud peacock of the Canadian high-tech scene. You'd swear the demise of such a behemoth is a fated sort of thing, a natural exit to expect, ultimately, like death — appropriately mourned, and then forgotten.

    Well, as one of countless frustrated bright software developers over the years that left the company in absolute disgust I'd like to say thank goodness it's over. It's a painful thing watching those in positions of power carefully and repeatedly rape what was once a strong and vital corporation. With policies designed to reward position, and starve talent, mediocrity in many divisions at Nortel was a highly developed art form.

    But waves upon waves of senior management at Nortel isn't crying. Their policies have succeeded — their deep pockets are full to the top and they can retire. Like so many that we might call 'the CEO class' on this continent in the last thirty years, they've grown their private fortunes at the expense of the vitality of the corporations that they have preyed upon.

    And I fear that we all have yet to pay for their excesses and their inability to appreciate the joy of acting for the common good, and the joy of growing something great for our children.”

  • nortel_cn

    A little bit strange, how could the bidding start without an approved auction procedure?

  • nortel_cn

    Could you please provide the address the document? I couldn't find one telling this.

    Looks like you have a good impression on NSN.

  • lastCDMAchump

    I wish NSN the best, but I don't believe they will succeed with CDMA/LTE in North America.
    What is currently left with Nortel in CDMA and LTE departments is an overcompensated bunch of architects, project managers and VPs with no clue about the cost structure and customer support.
    The CDMA was a successful part of Nortel's business because of CDMA cost reduction activities done by the Calgary team. Over the last 9 years the cost of CDMA base station was decreased from app. $150k down to $20k. These cost reductions added over $1B to Nortel's bottom line keeping the company alive. As a reword, the senior executives (R. Lowe, G. Richards, and N. Kucuc) decided to shut the Calgary division down. There are no people left in Nortel that know anything about CDMA. The Chinese that supposed to support CDMA are as green as a lime tree, and the Ottawa LTE team has no concept of cost.
    Good luck NSN.

  • TongueInCheek

    The auction process follows the 363 Auction Rules as defined under US Law (Chapter-11). The court documents show that if there are additional bids beyond the NSN bid, then the auction will take place on July 24th. A hearing is set for June 29th for court approval to proceed with these items and time lines.

  • OffTheChains

    I would not expect anything less from a Corporacracy. The greed of a few elite (or so they like to think) is at the expense of the many. Our whole country and world is based on the same principal. Money!

  • nortel_cn

    Thanks!

    Great if you can provide the related court documents, I can't find updates for this sale on “Ernst & Young Reports”

  • TongueInCheek
  • NortelTragedy

    SVP, VP, and many Senior Directors (buddies to the VP) … they are all culpable of poor indecision, mismanagement, and lack of vision. Anyone at this level worth his or her salt left long ago on their own accord. NSN should have a long hard look at the credentials and value-add of anyone Director level, and not even consider VP and SVP ranks.

  • borissss

    why don't the creditors give their shares to nortel employees?They have nothing to lose :) I am sure we can manage the situation better.

  • protosphere

    Traditional Notell sugar-coating

    Is Nortel headed for a break-up?: Yes
    Is Nortel emerging from bankruptcy? No
    Does this mean Nortel is being liquidated? Yes
    What will happen to the Nortel name? It will disappear.
    What happened – what got you to this point? Fraud, revisions, lies in forecasts, cash burn, bonuses, etc., dumb question.
    What is a “stalking horse”? An large animal that follows you or 39 days to find a higher bidder.
    Why didn’t you consolidate three years ago when the rest of the industry? We didn't want to back then for more.

    =)

  • Lookahead

    Money and contracts are actually from Verizon, otherwise, NSN would not want the CDMA/LTE piece from Nortel.

    For the Nortel LTE, it is still front runner in the technology side, which Verizon CTO knows and other trials proved the Nortel LTE was ranked No. 1. that time. How much that changed so far? NSN and Verizon would have answers thses days already.

  • protosphere

    “I wish NSN the best, but I don't believe they will succeed with CDMA/LTE in North America. “

    Me neither.

    Worse yet, how many of the 2,500 transferred were motivated and at the crime scene or senior level people, for their level of mass orchestration in fraud for bonuses …. heh, add Siemens to the mix, and presto the perfect storm brews once again aside from just the business=)

    Horrible to say but this is what I fear.

    CDMA is also on the decline as they buy the diminishing profits.
    LTE is future stuff with plenty of increasing competition.
    Not the smartest acquisition to make aside from the declining customer list. Like Radware, cheap and sometimes one pays what for what they get, sometimes not… we'll see…

  • less

    North Korea says if anyone touches its ships under of ther guise of recent UN resolutions its gonna resume its war against the True Aggressor, the US.

    Iran says the US is the True Aggressor in the wake of numerous, regrettable post-election misunderstandings.

    I dunno..I read “363 Sale, Chapter 11″ and can't help but think of a certain Cisco router… numbered 3631…..

    </global thinker hat>

  • protosphere

    “the same principal. Money!”

    holding hostages in ultimatum settlement while they refused to negotiate pay practices before tanking them with revisions, rewarding printing billions in paper, adgates and airbus gates, bonuses and looting the corpse, 5no fines by OSC, continued EDC welfare, etc… yep… money for the big players not the small investors or peons.

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