Corel

Not to be confused with coral.
Corel Corporation
Private
Industry Software
Programming
Founded 1985
Headquarters Ottawa, ON
Key people
Michael Cowpland (Founder)
James Baillie (Chairman)[1]
Patrick Nichols (CEO)[2]
Chris DeBiase (CFO)
Grace Pura (CLO)
Products WordPerfect
CorelDRAW
WinZip
PaintShop Pro
WinDVD
Painter
Revenue Increase 250.5 million USD (2007)
Number of employees
500+ (2015)
Website corel.com

Corel Corporation (from the abbreviation "Cowpland Research Laboratory") is a Canadian software company headquartered in Ottawa, Ontario, specializing in graphics processing. It is known for producing software titles such as CorelDRAW, and for acquiring PaintShop Pro, Video Studio and WordPerfect.

History

Corel was founded by Michael Cowpland in 1985, as a research laboratory. The company had great success early in the high-tech boom of the 1990s with the product CorelDRAW, and became, for a time, the biggest software company in Canada. In 1996 it acquired Novell WordPerfect and started competing with the thought of being "Pepsi to Microsoft's Coke"[3] as Microsoft Word was the top-used word processing software at the time. Corel's job was in a difficult position as Microsoft pushed pre-loaded copies of its software onto new computers. This mainly consisted of Microsoft Works office applications, but a variant called Works Suite also bundled the Microsoft Word software.

In 1997 Corel sold its Corel ChemLab studio and its "CD Home Collection" consisting of over 60 multimedia titles as well as the Corel ChemLab studio to Hoffmann + Associates, a Toronto based company. As part of the deal, Corel acquired a minority interest in Hoffmann + Associates and received royalties.[4]

In August 2000 Cowpland was accused of insider trading and left. A new board of directors was then appointed and Derek Burney Jr., announced that the product line would be split into several brands—DeepWhite, ProCreate, and Corel. However, these plans would be scrapped, and only the Corel brand would remain. Corel acquired the graphics software company Micrografx in late 2001.

In August 2003, Corel was bought out by the private equity firm Vector Capital for $1.05 a share (slightly more than the cash in the company). The company was voluntarily delisted from the NASDAQ and Toronto Stock Exchanges. Some U.S. shareholders alleged the management benefited from the buyout personally while the buyout price was too low. A lawsuit was filed in the U.S. to stop the buyout and was unsuccessful.

In March 2005 Corel announced that the United States Justice Department purchased 50,000 licenses of WordPerfect (adding to the worldwide user base of 20 million) and that WordPerfect was adding 4 million new users per year thanks to bundling deals with Dell. Corel contended that WordPerfect was the only viable alternative to Microsoft Office with sales 70 times more than Lotus' SmartSuite. On April 26, 2006, Corel completed its return to the public market with an initial public offering on NASDAQ,[5] the same day finalizing the acquisition of WinZip, a well-known archiving software title.

On December 12, 2006, Corel completed its acquisitions of InterVideo and Ulead. The InterVideo acquisition was valued at around $196 million.[6] In May 2008, CEO David Dobson announced that he was leaving the company to take a senior strategy role at Pitney Bowes.[7] Dobson was replaced on May 8 by former Symantec executive Kris Hagerman.[8] In November 2009, it was announced that Vector Capital would be purchasing the remaining shares of common stock in Corel Corporation.[9] Upon completion, this made Corel once again privately owned.[10] On January 29, 2010, the shareholders of Corel approved its previously announced stock consolidation completing the transfer to Corel Holdings, L.P., a limited partnership controlled by an affiliate of Vector Capital.[11]

In January 2012, Corel acquired Roxio from Rovi Corporation for an undisclosed amount.[12] Subsequently on July 2, 2012, Corel announced its acquisition of Pinnacle Systems, a developer of consumer-oriented video editing products (such as the Pinnacle Studio series) owned by Avid.[13]

Having suffered layoffs in 2003, and 2008,[14] Corel began a near yearly culture of restructuring beginning in 2010 when in the latter part of that year the company's finance department was restructured and moved to their Taipei office resulting in significant layoffs at its Ottawa HQ. Restructuring in 2012[15] resulted in more layoffs. In December 2013 the company's restructuring resulted in the layoffs of the Taipei locations engineering and quality assurance team. Corel's Taipei office was the core development centre of PaintShop Pro and VideoStudio, one of the company's most well-known photo- and video-editing bundles. The 2013 re-structuring led to a complete handover of the product development to outsourced companies, resulting in the inadequate support for pre- and post-purchase customers. The company continued with layoffs in 2014 and once again at the beginning of 2015 with the change of the company's CEO.

Products

Acquired products

Corel World Design Contest

The annual Corel World Design Contest first ran from 1990 through 1998. The competition intended to recognize and encourage an international community of graphic artists from over 50,000,000 registered Corel users. Two finalists for each of the eight categories were awarded a trip to Ottawa, Canada to participate in the Corel World Design Contest gala and awards ceremony. The finalists from each of the eight categories received an issue of the "Corel Crystal Award". The collection of artworks were later released in a catalogue with bundled CD, under the name of "Corel Artshow". The contest was reinitiated in 2009 on the 20th Anniversary of CoreDRAW’s launch and now runs every two years. The 2013 and 2015 contests each had a prize pool with a total value of USD100,000.

Corel's Historical Logo
Corel First Logo
Logo for Corel's short-lived ProCreate brand 
Corel Second Logo
Corel's current logo, the balloon 
Corel Third Logo
Corel's second logo 
Corel's third logo, launched February 2001 

See also

References

  1. Richardson, Tim (2003-06-19). "Corel shareholders rebel". The Register. Retrieved 2015-09-05.
  2. "Corel Names Patrick Nichols as CEO" (PDF). Retrieved 2015-08-15.
  3. Powers, Jeffrey (2014-01-31). "January 31, 1996: Corel Acquired WordPerfect". Day In Tech History. Retrieved 2015-09-05.
  4. "Moby Games summary of Hoffmann + Associates Inc". Retrieved 19 December 2015.
  5. Kawamoto, Dawn (2006-04-26). "Corel IPO stumbles out of the gate". CNET. Retrieved 2015-09-05.
  6. Dobson, David (2006). "Corel's letter to customers on the InterVideo Ulead acquisition". Corel. Archived from the original on 2008-10-09. Retrieved 2015-09-05.
  7. "David Dobson blurb". Money 2020. 2015. Retrieved 2015-09-05.
  8. "Corel welcomes Kris Hagerman as permanent CEO". Business Wire. 2009-07-29. Retrieved 2015-09-05.
  9. Wauters, Robin (2009-11-26). "Corel buys out Corel". Tech Crunch. Retrieved 2015-09-05.
  10. Corel Holdings Announces Successful Tender Offer and Commencement of Subsequent Offering Period, URL accessed on 26 November 2009
  11. "Shareholders Approve Consolidation of Corel Corporation Shares". Business Wire. 2010-01-26. Archived from the original on 2011-06-05. Retrieved 2015-09-05.
  12. Muchmore, Michael (7 February 2012). "Corel Buys Roxio from Rovi, Releases First Product". PCMag.com. Retrieved 13 February 2012.
  13. "Corel Acquires Pinnacle Products from Avid". Corel press release. Retrieved 7 September 2012.
  14. "WordPerfect publisher to lay off 90 employees". Silicon Beat. 2008-09-10. Retrieved 2015-09-05.
  15. Symons, Courtney (2012-03-07). "Corel confirms layoffs". Ottawa Business Journal. Retrieved 2015-09-05.
  16. "Corel Introduces New Netbook-Ready Office Suite". PR Web. 2009-06-17. Retrieved 2015-09-05.
  17. Dolcourt, Jessica (2009-06-16). "Corel Home Office review". CNET. Retrieved 2015-09-05.
  18. CAD Software for Mac and Windows – CorelCAD 2013. Corel.com. Retrieved on 2013-07-17.
  19. Chastain, Sue. "Corel Acquires Jasc Software". About.com.

External links

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