Motorola

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This article is part of the Center for Media & Democracy's spotlight on global corporations.

Motorola
Type Publicly-traded corporation
Founded 1928
Headquarters Illinois, USA
Area served worldwide
Key people Edward Zander Chariman and CEO, Gregory Brown CEO, Thomas Meredith acting CFO, Mike S. Zafirovski - Former President
Industry technology
Products communications equipment
Revenue 34.64 bilion USD
Net income -81 million USD
Total assets 21.8 billion USD
Employees 66,000 (full-time)
Divisions Mobile Devices, Home and Networks Mobility, and Enterprise Mobility Solutions
Website http://www.motorola.com/

Motorola is the second largest maker of wireless handsets after global leader Nokia. After its spin-off of its semiconductor unit, Motorola reorganized to focus on enterprise mobility, mobile devices, and home and networks mobility. It also supplies wireless infrastructure equipment such as cellular transmission base stations, amplifiers, and servers. In 2006, it had sales of $43 billion and profits of $3.6 billion. [1]

Company History

Motorola was originally founded as the Galvin Manufacturing Corporation in 1928. The first product that it introduced was the battery eliminator. Motorola has worked in wireless, broadband, and automotive communications technologies and embedded electronic products. [1]

Historical Financial Information

Business Strategy

Political and Public Influence

Paragraph information

Political Contributions

Motorola gave $276,321 to federal candidates in the 2006 election through its political action committee - 31% to Democrats and 69% to Republicans. [2]

Lobbying

The company spent $3,240,000 for lobbying in 2006. Some of the lobbying firms used were OB-C Group, Dutko Worldwide, Federalist Group, Lundquist, Nethercutt & Griles LLC, and Ernst & Young. [3]

Corporate Accountability

Labor

In early 2006, Students and Scholars Against Corporate Misbehavior (SACOM), learned that nine women in the Shenzhen (China) Hospital for Occupational Disease Treatment & Prevention were poisoned by n-hexane as a result of working at a plant contracted to produce for the company (Hivac). "Hivac agreed to give every worker suffering n-hexane poisoning a tiny sum of seven to eight thousand yuan. However, they pressured workers to agree, among other things, not to raise future complaints in connection with their disease. Otherwise, the employer said they would get no recompense at all. These efforts to silence workers from discussing the long term effects of their poisoning no doubt influenced the quality of the "independent" audit commissioned by Motorola." Hivac makes lenses for Motorola phones out of Nanshan, Shenzhen Special Economic Zone in southern China. Exposure to toxic chemicals resulting in illness and birth defects has been a recurrent problem with suppliers of parts to cell phone manufacturers, including Motorola and Nokia[4]

In the late 1980s, bitter and often violent battles broke out at the company's South Korean subsidiary over the right to form a union, according to the New York Times: We still don't understand, said Park Joon Hee, country manager for Motorola Korea (employer of 3,800 workers), reflecting on how workers' demands for union recognition escalated into nightmarish days of demonstrations, hunger strikes, near self-immolations and a long siege at the computer center. In January/February 1989 Multinational Monitor reported that an IMF study concluded that the company set up a kusadae - "save the company corps" - which consists of 'thugs' who offer their services to Korean companies. The primary work of the kusadae has been to intimidate trade union activists. The IMF charged that the Motorola kusadae has disrupted union meetings, attacked union organizers with iron bars and cattle prods, and set four union leaders on fire. Motorola had 5,000 employees in Seoul and in 1987 Motorola in Korea made $8.8 billion in profits.[5]

Human Rights

Environment

Consumer Protection and Product Safety

"In Cellular Telephone Russian Roulette, author Robert Kane, a former top Motorola engineer, traces the history of cell phone development (in which he was involved) and analyzes the cell phone radiation bioeffects research base from 1950 to 1996. Despite industry’s claim to safety, Kane’s report shows that there was much more information available indicating safety concerns than the industry has ever acknowledged." [2]

Another interesting book written by corporate insider is Dr. George Carlo's book, Cell Phones: Invisible Hazards in the Wireless Age: An Insider's Alarming Discoveries About Cancer and Genetic Damage (Carroll and Graf, 2001).

Anti-Trust and Tax Practices

Social Responsibility Initiatives

Motorola claims in its policy for suppliers that it is committed to ensuring its suppliers do not violate workers’ rights.

Business Scope

Lines of Business and Major Products Paragraph

Motorola Subsidiaries[6]

  • Motorola Australia Proprietary Ltd (Austrailia)
  • Motorola Industrial Ltda (Brazil)
  • Motorola Servicios Ltda (Brazil)
  • Motorola Canada Ltd (Canada)
  • Hangzhou Motorola Cellular Equipment Co Ltd (China)
  • Motorola (China) Electronics Ltd (China)
  • Motorola (China) Investment Ltd (China)
  • Motorola SAS (France)
  • Motorola Gmbh (Germany)
  • Motorola Asia Ltd (Hong Kong)
  • Motorola South Israel Ltd (Israel)
  • Motorola Israel Ltd (Israel)
  • Motorola Japan Ltd (Japan)
  • Motorola Technology Sdn Bhd (Malaysia)
  • Motorola Electronics Sdn Bhd (Malaysia)
  • Motorola de Mexica SA (Mexico)
  • Motorola Finance BV (Netherlands)
  • Motorola Asia Treasury Pte Ltd (Singapore)
  • Motorola Electronics Ptd Ltd (Singapore)
  • General Instrument of Taiwan Ltd (Taiwan)
  • Motorola Electronics Taiwan Ltd (Taiwan)
  • Motorola Ltd (United Kingdom)
  • General Instrument Corp
  • River Delta Networks Inc.
  • Synchronous Inc
  • Network Ventures I Inc
  • Motorola Credit Corp
  • Tohoku Semiconductor Corp (Japan)
  • Synchronous Inc
  • Quantum Bridge COmmunications (R) Inc
  • Force Computers
  • MeshNetworks Inc
  • CRISNET Inc
  • Post Year End Acquisition
  • Ucentric Systems Inc
  • Post Year End Joing Venture
  • Triarc Content Labs


Customers Suppliers Creditors Competitors
AT&T Supplier 1 Creditor 1 Competitor 1
Cingular Supplier 2 Creditor 2 Competitor 2
Telcel Mexico Supplier 3 Creditor 3 Competitor 3
T-Mobile Supplier 4 Creditor 4 Competitor 4
Verizon Supplier 4 Creditor 4 Competitor 4
Vodafone Supplier 4 Creditor 4 Competitor 4


Financial Information (2008)

Ticker Symbol:MOT
Main Exchanges:NYSE
Investor Website:http://phx.corporate-ir.net/phoenix.zhtml?c=90829&p=irol-intermediate

Shareholder % Total Shares held
Dodge and Cox Stock Fund 6.20%
Ichan Capital Management LP 5.13%
NWQ INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT COMPANY, LLC 3.55%
Barclays Global Investors UK Holdings Ltd 3.42%
FMR LLC 3.29%
STATE STREET CORPORATION 3.11%
VANGUARD GROUP, INC. (THE) 3.03%

Largest Shareholders[7]

Geographic scope paragraph

Country Revenue Profits Assets Employees
Australia Revenue 1 Profit 1 Assets 1 Employees 1
Brazil Revenue 2 Profit 2 Assets 2 Employees 2
Canada Revenue 3 Profit 3 Assets 3 Employees 3
China Revenue 4 Profit 4 Assets 4 Employees 4
France Revenue 4 Profit 4 Assets 4 Employees 4
Germany Revenue 4 Profit 4 Assets 4 Employees 4
Hong Kong Revenue 4 Profit 4 Assets 4 Employees 4
Israel Revenue 4 Profit 4 Assets 4 Employees 4
Japan Revenue 4 Profit 4 Assets 4 Employees 4
Malaysia Revenue 4 Profit 4 Assets 4 Employees 4
Mexico Revenue 4 Profit 4 Assets 4 Employees 4
Netherlands Revenue 4 Profit 4 Assets 4 Employees 4
Singapore Revenue 4 Profit 4 Assets 4 Employees 4
Taiwan Revenue 4 Profit 4 Assets 4 Employees 4
United Kingdom Revenue 4 Profit 4 Assets 4 Employees 4
United States Revenue 4 Profit 4 Assets 4 Employees 4

Governance

Key executives and 2006 pay: [8]          Options
exercised
Edward J. Zander, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer    $2,770,000    $0
Gregory Q. Brown, Chief Operating Officer    $1,230,000    $3,990,000
Thomas Joseph Meredith, Acting Chief Financial Officer    $105,000    N/A
A. Peter Lawson, Executive Vice President    $820,000    $1,210,000
Adrian Nemcek, Executive Vice President    $400,000    $7,720,000

Selected Motorola board members: [9]

Contact Information

Motorola Inc. 1303 East Algonquin Road
Schaumburg, IL 60196
Phone: 847-576-5000
Fax: 847-576-5372
Web: http://www.motorola.com

Articles and Resources

Books on the Company

Related SourceWatch Articles

Sources

  1. Motorola Profile, Hoovers, accessed August 2007.
  2. 2006 PAC Summary Data, Open Secrets, accessed August 2007.
  3. Motorola lobbying expenses, Open Secrets.
  4. "Workers Poisoned in Mobile Phone Factories in China - Report", December 13th, 2006.
  5. Crocodyl "Motorola"
  6. Joseph Wilde & Esther de Haan. November 2006.The High Cost of Calling: Critical Issues in the Mobile Phone Industry SOMO: Centre for Research on Multinational Corporations, p.45.
  7. Yahoo! Finance accessed July 2008
  8. Motorola Key Executives, Yahoo Finance, accessed November 2007.
  9. Board of Directors, Motorola, accessed August 2007.

External Resources

External Articles