Generated by GPT-5-mini| HPE (Hewlett Packard Enterprise) | |
|---|---|
| Name | Hewlett Packard Enterprise |
| Type | Public |
| Industry | Information technology |
| Founded | 2015 |
| Founder | Bill Hewlett, David Packard |
| Headquarters | Palo Alto, California |
| Area served | Global |
| Key people | Antonio Neri |
| Products | Servers, storage, networking, software |
HPE (Hewlett Packard Enterprise) is an American multinational information technology company formed in 2015 after the split of Hewlett-Packard. The company focuses on enterprise-class servers, storage hardware, networking hardware, cloud computing, and software solutions for business and government clients. HPE competes with firms such as Dell Technologies, IBM, Cisco Systems, Oracle Corporation, and Microsoft Corporation across data center, cloud, and edge computing markets.
HPE was created following a corporate split that involved executives from Meg Whitman era strategies and board decisions influenced by investors including Elliott Management Corporation and BlackRock, Inc., with roots tied to founders Bill Hewlett and David Packard and prior corporate entities such as Compaq and the original Hewlett-Packard. Early post‑split history involved strategic shifts under CEOs aligned with directions pursued by Marc Andreessen-era venture perspectives and board members from firms like Silver Lake Partners, while navigating regulatory contexts shaped by agencies such as the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. The company has engaged in restructurings and divestitures reminiscent of precedents set by corporations including AT&T and General Electric.
HPE's portfolio includes enterprise servers (e.g., ProLiant-class architectures), storage systems comparable to offerings from NetApp and EMC Corporation, networking equipment in the market with Arista Networks and Juniper Networks, and software stacks that integrate with Red Hat's Linux distributions and VMware virtualization platforms. The company delivers cloud services interoperable with Amazon Web Services, Google Cloud, and Microsoft Azure, as well as edge computing solutions paralleling initiatives by Nokia and Ericsson. HPE also sells management software, hybrid cloud platforms, and services for sectors such as finance firms like JPMorgan Chase and government agencies like Department of Defense (United States) clients.
HPE operates as a public company listed on exchanges similar to contemporaries New York Stock Exchange participants and has executive leadership including Antonio Neri along with a board containing figures from corporations such as Intel Corporation, SAP SE, and investment firms like Sequoia Capital. Its corporate structure includes business units for hybrid IT, intelligent edge, and services, and maintains subsidiary relationships with entities comparable to Aruba Networks post-acquisition, while aligning corporate governance with standards from organizations like ISO and regulatory frameworks observed by U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission filings.
HPE's financial performance has been tracked alongside peers such as Dell Technologies, IBM, Oracle Corporation, and Cisco Systems, with revenue streams from product sales, services, and software subscriptions. The company has reported fiscal results influenced by global macroeconomic factors involving markets in China, European Union, and United Kingdom, and by supply chain dynamics tied to component suppliers like Intel Corporation and NVIDIA. Investor relations activities engage major shareholders including institutional investors such as Vanguard Group and State Street Corporation.
HPE maintains research initiatives and collaborations with academic institutions such as Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Stanford University, and University of California, Berkeley, and pursues technology development in areas overlapping with artificial intelligence research labs and hardware acceleration trends set by NVIDIA Corporation and Google DeepMind. The company participates in consortia alongside OpenStack Foundation-type projects and funds innovation through partnerships with entities like Intel Corporation and Microsoft Research while filing patents in fields related to high-performance computing used by organizations like Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and CERN.
HPE has executed acquisitions and strategic deals reminiscent of consolidation in the technology sector, notably acquiring firms similar in profile to Aruba Networks and engaging in transactions involving private equity entities such as KKR and Silver Lake Partners. Partnerships and joint ventures have linked HPE with cloud players like Amazon Web Services and Google Cloud Platform, and alliances with software vendors including Red Hat and VMware to expand hybrid cloud offerings. Its M&A strategy has been compared to deals by IBM and Oracle Corporation that reshape enterprise portfolios.
HPE reports sustainability and corporate responsibility initiatives aligned with standards from organizations such as the United Nations Sustainable Development framework and participates in environmental reporting consistent with Global Reporting Initiative principles; programs address energy efficiency in data centers similar to efforts by Facebook (Meta Platforms) and Google LLC, supply chain responsibility reflecting expectations from Fair Labor Association, and philanthropy aligned with foundations like Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
Category:Information technology companies