HP's senior vice president of worldwide enterprise sales has been forbidden from discussing the company's North American policy following litigation from a competitor.
Bruce Dahlgren left Lexmark to join HP's Imaging and Printing Group (IPG) in January 2006.
However, his role is currently restricted to Europe, the Middle East and Africa until one year after leaving Lexmark.
Dahlgren told a customer and analyst at a conference in San Francisco that litigation from Lexmark is "restricting my activity at this time to outside the North Americas".
Lexmark sued HP in April over its hiring of Dahlgren, citing a non-compete clause in his contract. HP countersued, questioning the legality of the contractual clause.
Slides used by Dahlgren showing changes to HP's IPG enterprise business carried the tagline 'Being implemented outside of North America only at this time.'
"We hired Bruce Dahlgren from Lexmark and he was running North America so we are respecting that particular part of the arrangement," said Vyomesh Joshi, executive vice president of HP IPG.
"He has a non-compete so he cannot really play out the strategy that he talked about in North America."
Lexmark gags senior HP exec
By
Matt Chapman
on Oct 5, 2006 8:47AM
Got a news tip for our journalists? Share it with us anonymously here.
Partner Content
Guiding customers on the uneven path to AI adoption
How Expert Support Can Help Partners and SMBs Realize the Full Value of AI
Shared Intelligence is the Real Competitive Edge Partners Enjoy with Crayon
New Microsoft CSP rules? Here’s how MSPs can stay ahead with Ingram Micro
Beyond the box: How Crayon Is Redefining Distribution for the Next Era
Sponsored Whitepapers
Cut through the SASE confusion
Stay protected as cyber threats evolve
Defend Your Network from the Next Generation of AI Threats
The race to AI advantage is on. Don’t let slow consulting projects hold you back.
The changing face of Australian distribution




