Meltzer out, Rolant is in as CreoScitex Israel chief

Creo 017Michael Rolant will assume the Israeli corner office (Just think how far they have come: this is the office where Efi Arazi used sit…)

Monday March 12, 8:31 am Eastern Time

 

Press Release

 

SOURCE: Creo Products Inc.

Creo Names New President of CreoScitex Israel

 

VANCOUVER, March 12 /PRNewswire/ – Creo Products Inc. (NASDAQ: CREO – news; TSE: CRE – news) announced today that Erez Meltzer decided to step down from his roles as Chief Operating Officer and Executive Vice President, Creo Products Inc. and President of CreoScitex Corporation Ltd (Israel), one of the company’s manufacturing and development operations. Creo does not intend to fill the Chief Operating Officer and Executive Vice President role at this time.

 

Michael Rolant, currently Vice President of Business Operations for CreoScitex, will be assuming the role of President, CreoScitex Corporation Ltd (Israel). Mr. Rolant has been with Creo for six years and has been responsible for a variety of areas including leading the global CreoScitex Customer Support group. Mr. Meltzer will assist Mr. Rolant with the transition over the next two months.

Erez Meltzer to resign?

 

Erez Meltzer to resign?

meltzer_erez_eCreo-Scitex CEO Erez Meltzer about to resign over disagreements with Creo management

Meltzer’s will follow three senior executives out of the company. A senior company source: Creo’s management is not suitable for Israel. Where is this big ship heading?
Creo-Scitex CEO Erez Meltzer about to resign over disagreements with Creo managementMeltzer’s will follow three senior executives out of the company. A senior company source: Creo’s management is not suitable for Israel.

The ExScite has learned that Creo-Scitex CEO Erez Meltzer is about to resign his position, due to sharp disagreements with the management of the Creo group over the group’s strategic direction. Meltzer was unavailable for response today. Meltzer’s resignation from Creo-Scitex, responsible for two thirds of Creo’s activity, comes after a number of senior executives left in recent months.

A senior Creo-Scitex source today said, “Creo’s management takes no interest in the really important things, such as increasing sales and entering new fields in full force. That is also the reason for the wave of resignations. There are many disagreements about strategy and the company management methods.

”I predict that the short-term financial results will not be affected. I don’t believe we will see a profit warning tomorrow morning, but management should also look further ahead than one or two years from now. The long-term decisions taken were mistakes. Add to this Creo’s corporate culture, which is not suited to Israel, and you’ll understand why a number of managers have left Creo-Scitex.”

Source: Published by Israel’s Business Arena on March 11, 2001, Avishai Ovadya 11.03.2001 17:57

Nagler’s Aprion raises $5m. from Japan’s Toyo Ink

Analysts estimate the deal is based on valuation of $100m, significantly higher than Aprion’s value of $50m. in 7/2000.

Aprion raises $5m. from Japan’s Toyo Ink

By Digital Israel Staff (March 4, 12:55)

Aprion Digital, an art inkjet printing technology developer, said today that it has raised $5 million from Toyo Ink, a Japanese developer and manufacturer of chemicals, materials and printing inks for industrial applications. Analysts estimate that the deal is based on a company valuation of $100m., significantly higher than Aprion’s value of $50m. in its previous round of financing in July 2000.

 

Under the terms of the agreement Toyo will also exclusively develop, manufacture and distribute printing inks to be used with Aprion’s Graphic Arts products in the Japanese markets.

 

Aprion is currently preparing to launch its first line of industrial digital printing products, and intends to accelerate development of additional advanced products based on its leading inkjet printing technology. Aprion’s technology is about to begin its Beta testing.

 

Major shareholders in Aprion include Scitex Corporation, Clal Electronics Industries, Discount Investment Corporation, the Israel Infinity and the TDA venture capital funds, Bank HaPoalim, CDI, and now, Toyo Inc.

 

Aprion Digital was spun-off from Scitex Corporation, one of the leading pioneers of digital pre-press and digital printing. Aprion develops, manufactures and markets digital printing presses and specialized water based inks for industrial applications. Based on Aprion’s patented MAGIC (Multiple Array Graphic Inkjet Color) drop-on-demand piezo inkjet technology, these include; home and commercial furnishings, packaging, large format indoor and outdoor signage, book and document printing.

 

The company raised $15.5m. in September 1999, based on a company valuation of

George Carlisle moves on

Seybold reports that ECRM’s Bill Givens (ex-president) has moved back taking charge of operations, replacing George Carlisle, who has resigned.

March 7, 2001

Givens Back at ECRM Helm After Carlisle Resigns

 

George_Carlisle(Source: Seyboldreports.com) Bill Givens has moved back in charge of operations at ECRM, replacing George Carlisle, who has resigned. George was the president of STA in Bedford MA in the ’80s. The change reflects slower-than-expected sales resulting in part from the slowdown in the economy and in part from the slow rate of adoption of computer-to-plate systems as ECRM of Tewksbury MA shifts its market focus from imagesetters to CTP. The slow sales volume made it inexpedient for ECRM to have two high-level executives, as we understand it. Givens, who remains chairman of the board, is resuming the roles of president and CEO that he relinquished to Carlisle more than two years ago. Carlisle guided the company’s move to CTP, where it has installed nearly 100 systems, we were told. However, that isn’t enough to compensate for declines in imagesetter sales, not only at ECRM, but also around the industry, where, according to one source, imagesetter sales have dropped to about half of what they were five years ago.

Scitex is out of its JV’s

Scitex is withdrawing from two high tech joint ventures, Karat and Vio.

Scitex is getting rid of 2 of its Joint Ventures

Karat Digital Press – selling shares to KBA

 

Scitex has reached an agreement in principle to conclude its joint venture with Koenig & Bauer AG (KBA).

 

The company said that since the Creo transaction and DRUPA, it had become clear that the best future for Karat lay in closer integration with KBA’s production and distribution activities. Under the terms of the agreement, Scitex will sell its share of Karat to KBA in return for future performance related payments.

 

KBA will be responsible for manufacturing, sales and customer support operations of Karat Digital Press machines worldwide.

 

Consummation of the transaction is subject to final agreements and necessary approvals by both parties.

 

Vio Worldwide Limited – management buyout

 

London based Vio is a partnership between Scitex and British Telecom. Its area of activity is the transfer of graphics files via Internet.

 

An agreement in principle has been signed for a management buyout of the business. Consummation of the transaction is subject to final agreements and necessary approvals by both parties.

 

Scitex will retain a right to obtain a future interest in the company.

 

All expected costs related to the conclusion of the Karat and Vio joint ventures are included in the 2000 financial statements as part of the share in losses of equity investments.

New chief for Creo/Scitex America

The musical chairs continue after the merger, now it is the Creo/Scitex America turn. An Ex-Kodak is now at the helm of Ex-STA.

Creo Products appoints an Ex-Kodak as new president of CreoScitex America

Creo Products Inc., Vancouver, B.C., Canada, named Larry Letteney president of CreoScitex America, the U.S. arm of the graphic arts operating division. Effective March 1, Letteney will replace Kevin Joyce, who will assume a new role in Business Development. Since joining Creo in 1995, Letteney has held a variety of leadership positions including vice president of Sales and vice president of Operations. In his new position, he will report to Mark Dance, executive vice president of Creo and president and COO of CreoScitex. Prior to joining CreoScitex, Letteney had more than seven years of experience working in the Graphics Arts Division of Eastman Kodak Co.

XMPiE gets fresh financing. Now it’s for real

Yakov Aizikowitz’s XMPiE GETS $3.5M BOOST FROM JVP. XMPie spunn off from Scitex last year.

XMPiE GETS $3.5M BOOST FROM JVP The Netanya, Israel based XMPiE, http://www.xmpie.com a developer of cross-media personalized marketing solutions, announced that it has received an investment of $3.5 million from Jerusalem Venture Partners. Spun off from Scitex in July 2000, XMPiE is on the verge of beginning pilot tests of its first product. The company has earmarked the financing for completion of product development, to implement field trials and for the establishment of marketing, distribution and support operations, initially in the United States. The company founded by the ExScite’s Yakov Aizikovitz , Israel Roth and Reuven Sherwin.

 

One-to-one marketing solutions developer XMPiE closes $3.5 million financing round by JVP

 

Netanya, ISRAEL – January 29, 2001 – XMPiE ( www.xmpie.com ), an innovative developer of cross-media personalized marketing solutions, today announced that it has received an investment of $3.5 million from Jerusalem Venture Partners. Spun off from Scitex in July 2000, XMPiE is on the verge of beginning pilot tests of its first product. It has earmarked the financing for completion of product development, to implement field trials, and for the establishment of marketing, distribution and support operations, initially in the US.

 

Personalized marketing is already becoming an essential element of every modern business strategy. However, the implementation of one-to-one marketing campaigns across multiple media, such as print, email, and Web, poses significant logistical and technical challenges that have not yet been overcome. XMPiE’s solution is expected to revolutionize the field by transforming cross-media personalized campaign creation and correction cycles, raising the productivity and creativity of design professionals, and shortening time to market. It offers one-to-one marketers the valuable competitive edge of rapid turnaround time from initial idea, through proofing, to live campaign launch, and enables them to adjust to changing market conditions quickly and cost-effectively.

 

“The XMPiE solution expands corporations’ ability to leverage their extensive customer databases in order to interact personally with their customers via every possible channel,” said Yuval Cohen, JVP General Partner. “Our investment in XMPiE is in line with JVP’s policy of investing in Internet infrastructure companies. We are confident that its unique technology and the team’s track record of developing relevant revolutionary technology will make XMPiE a global leader in its field.”

 

Yoav Chelouche, President and CEO of Scitex Corporation, said: “XMPiE’s technology bridges the gap between Web-personalization and print-personalization. We believe that by appealing to both domains, XMPiE’s technology will be instrumental in helping full-color digital printing realize its full potential.”

 

Added Dr. Jacob Aizikowitz, President and CEO of XMPiE: “Our goal is to make personalization an extension of the proven desktop publishing discipline and to relieve personalized publishing from its current dependency on heavy programming and scripting. The JVP investment and Scitex’ standing in the publishing industry greatly enhance XMPiE’s potential for market success.”

 

About XMPiE

 

Founded in July 2000, privately held XMPiE Inc. provides innovative software solutions for cross-media personalized marketing. The company was spun off from Scitex and is led by a team of professionals with extensive experience in digital printing, personalization, and prepress. XMPiE Inc. is registered in the USA. It operates a wholly owned R&D subsidiary, XMPiE Ltd., located in Israel.

Israeli firms stage exodus to USA to avoid taxes

Mass exodus of Israeli technology start-ups to Delaware, the USA’s most popular corporate domicile. Hundreds of high-tech firms from Israel have migrated to Delaware — on paper, at least — incorporating there for as little as $74 in about the time it takes to get a marriage license.
 

Source: USA Today
01/23/2001 – Updated 07:00 PM ET
Israeli firms stage exodus to USA to avoid taxesBy James Cox, USA TODAY

Israel’s prime minister has sounded warnings. His Cabinet has huddled in urgent sessions.

The situation is so dire, warns one of the country’s leading newspapers, some think it could threaten Israel’s economic survival.

The subject of all this angst? Not the four months of bloody hostilities that have brought Israelis and Palestinians to the brink of war.

No, it’s the mass exodus of Israeli technology start-ups to the state of Delaware, the USA’s most popular corporate domicile. Hundreds of high-tech firms from Israel have migrated to Delaware — on paper, at least — incorporating there for as little as $74 in about the time it takes to get a marriage license.

Delaware boasts friendly, flexible laws and courts, and makes comparatively few demands of companies registered there. Israeli executives say incorporating in Delaware helps them limit their tax liability and recruit U.S. management talent. Even more important, it gives them legitimacy in the eyes of a key audience — venture capitalists, underwriters and stock market investors.

“Nearly every Israeli (tech) company I know incorporates in the United States, most in Delaware,” says Lenny Roth, vice president of strategic planning for Airslide Systems, which was founded in Herzelia, Israel.

That’s precisely what Israeli officials find so alarming. Tiny Israel is the world’s leading technology incubator after the USA. More than 4,000 tech firms have sprung up there, most founded by veterans of elite technology units in the Israeli armed forces or brainy Jewish יmigrיs who left jobs as scientists in the former Soviet Union.

Overnight, technology has become one of the main drivers of Israel’s economy. Homegrown companies that shift their paper homes to Delaware are, in effect, exporting tax revenue, job opportunities and expertise to the USA, as well.

Israeli companies making the jump typically turn their Israeli research and development units into subsidiaries of the Delaware parent and open head offices in the USA. One example: Airslide, a pioneer in technology that lets cellular providers upgrade networks using their existing architecture, filed its papers in Delaware in 1999. It has moved its corporate headquarters from Israel to New York, leaving R&D and software engineering in Herzelia.

Little noticed in the USA, the stampede from the Holy Land to Delaware began in 1998 after Israel liberalized its currency-control laws and made it easier for Israeli citizens to set up offshore companies. Since then, more than 1,000 Israeli tech firms — anywhere from 60% to 90% of those believed to have formally restructured — have designated Delaware as their corporate home.

“That’s when the floodgates opened,” says David Chertok, a U.S.-born lawyer working in Tel Aviv.

What’s Delaware got?

Delaware is the domicile of choice for 323,000 companies. Half of the Fortune 500 are incorporated there. By registering in Delaware and becoming U.S. companies, Israeli firms benefit from:

• Capital. Like start-ups everywhere, most Israeli tech firms want financing from venture capital funds and ultimately plan to go public.

Israel’s technology prowess has spawned a vibrant venture capital industry, but Israeli funds are dwarfed in comparison with what’s available in the USA. The USA is home to the world’s largest pool of venture capital and most active group of private investors.

“There are venture capital funds that will simply not invest in non-U.S. companies,” says Ben Strauss, an Israeli-born lawyer specializing in corporation law at Pepper Hamilton in Wilmington, Del. “This enables them to seek funding from sources that wouldn’t have invested in non-Delaware entities. It gives them access to the U.S. capital markets, which is their strongest motivation.”

Roughly 130 Israeli companies have already held initial public offerings (IPOs) and listed on the tech-heavy Nasdaq stock market. These days, only U.S. and Canadian companies outnumber Israeli firms on the exchange.

There is debate about whether a Delaware-registered company commands a higher valuation in an IPO. But many Israeli tech executives clearly believe investors will pay a Delaware premium or, conversely, discount the shares of non-Delaware companies.

“Definitely,” says Eran Tirer, CEO and co-founder of Intercomp, an Israeli company specializing in software for banks, insurers and securities firms. Intercomp is 45%-owned by Formula group, a Nasdaq-listed company that is Israel’s largest software firm. Intercomp plans its own share offering, tentatively in early 2002. “U.S. investors look more favorably at U.S. companies,” Tirer says, explaining his motivation for filing in Delaware.

• Customers. “I tell clients to ask themselves who and where are their customers. Half the market is generally the United States,” says Yoram Tietz, an accountant with the Tel Aviv firm of Kost Forer & Gabbay.

For Intercomp, 80% of its business is in the USA. The company currently calls Southfield, Mich., its headquarters, but that’s only temporary, the result of a decision to hire several executives from nearby Compuware. In a few weeks, Tirer and other key executives will move to New York, which is to be the base for Intercomp’s management and support functions. The company’s research unit will stay in Israel.

“Israel is not the marketplace,” says Lance Boxer, newly named CEO of XOsoft, which got its start in Tel Aviv and recently settled on Somerset, N.J., as its corporate headquarters. “Israel is very isolated. It has excellent technology people with a very strong work ethic. But what you’ve got is an excellent incubation area.”

• Taxes and rules. Entrepreneurs who start businesses in Israel face capital gains taxes of 50% when their big payday arrives in the form of a buyout, venture capital investment or a share offering. That’s about twice what they pay if their businesses are incorporated in the USA.

Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak has campaigned unsuccessfully for rate cuts, arguing that the country’s high taxes are forcing businesses to flee.

The Israeli government “is simply asking for too much,” Tirer says. “Israel is losing something very vital. Brainpower is running out of the country and going to the U.S.”

Barak pushed through a new corporation law, which took effect last February. Even though it is modeled after Delaware’s law, it has serious shortcomings, experts say. The new law leaves shareholders and officers more vulnerable to creditors; and it makes corporate reorganizations involving mergers or stock swaps tougher to pull off. And because the law is untested, Israeli courts have not had a chance to set legal precedents, something that leaves companies jittery.

By contrast, not even the biggest Delaware-registered companies pay more than $150,000 a year in taxes. There, the law is interpreted by the Chancery Court, a panel of five appointed judges steeped in the state’s corporation-friendly code. There are no jury trials and generally few surprises for corporate litigants.

The Israel Democracy Institute (IDI), an independent think tank, has concluded that 90% of the Israeli tech firms that incorporated in 1999 did so in Delaware. Given the burdensome taxes and regulations they face at home, they’d be crazy not to leave, IDI said.

“There is no economic justification for establishing a company in Israel,” IDI’s report said. “A chief executive who establishes a company in Israel should be fired immediately for his irresponsibility.”

Delaware on the hunt

Delaware officials say they don’t know for sure how many Israeli companies have incorporated in the state. But the Israelis didn’t discover Delaware by accident. State officials have conducted two incorporation workshops there, drawing hundreds of lawyers, accountants and business people. In addition, the state maintains a representative in Israel to provide local companies with information and help make its sales pitch.

The state does everything it can to make the process painless: Applicants can file their forms online through agents who, among other services, act as mailing addresses for their clients; the state registration office is open from 7 a.m. to midnight most weekdays.

Israeli officials have reacted with alarm as companies have fled. In September, Israel’s deputy attorney general warned participants in a Delaware-organized conference in Tel Aviv to think twice before incorporating in the state. Delaware companies, she said, faced hidden liabilities and the potential of enormous legal costs and burdens if they became involved in litigation.

Her remarks have done little to slow the exodus, which is taking place among Palestinian companies, too.

“We would be in the final stages of incorporation there right now” if not for the current uprising, says Maan Bseiso, founder of Palnet, a Jerusalem-based Internet service provider.

The unrest forced Palnet to abort efforts to incorporate in Delaware. It will try again, once calm returns and venture capitalists and the stock markets are more comfortable with the idea of investing in the region. “You can’t convince anybody to invest here at the moment,” Bseiso says.

Some Israeli lawyers and accountants expect the tide of companies leaving for Delaware to slow as Israeli taxes come down and entrepreneurs there get more comfortable with the new corporation law.

Others, particularly those who hope to recruit U.S. management talent, aren’t so sure.

Boxer, a former top executive at Lucent and MCI, says there’s no way he’d have taken the job as CEO of XOsoft if the company had incorporated in Israel.

“I wanted to run an American company. It’s hard enough running an Israeli-founded company from America, especially with the unrest and with 75% of my software engineers being of Russian descent,” he says. “You not only deal with distance and concerns for safety, but with cultural and language and visa problems.”

Airslide’s Roth says the migration to Delaware and to the Nasdaq has made it almost impossible to tell anymore what’s an Israeli company and what’s not. The Israeli newspaper Ha’aretz also recently addressed the identity issue, throwing up its hands in frustration.

What does it mean to be an Israeli company these days, the newspaper wondered. “Are these companies operating here, or once operated here, or the founder’s surname is simply Cohen?”

Ex-Scitex Band

The last performance of the (now) Ex-Scite’s
These pictures of the last performance of the Scitex Band, were sent to us by Doron Hanochi-Zamir Email: doron.zamir@actelis.com, now working at Actelis www.actelis.com. Actelis Networks is a start-up company developing a communication technology for utilizing hybrid fiber optics and copper lines networks.

 

 

The players are:

Keyboards:  Israel Roth – Now in XMPiE

Electric Guitar:  Alon Weiss – Now in RadVision

Drums: Ronen Yosifun – Still in CreoScitex

Clarinet: Gil Belaish – Still in CreoScitex

Vocals:  Vital Nachman – Now in Zappa

Vocals:Inbal Smadar-Shachar – Still in CreoScitex

Vocals: Nardi Ya’acobi – Subcontractor in CreoScitex

Base Guitar: Doron Hanochi-Zamir: Now in Actelis

Israeli High-tech salaries decline

Salary levels are on the decline in almost all high-tech jobs in the Internet field, including senior management positions, according to a survey conducted by Manpower Israel.
Israeli High-tech salaries started to fade during last three months of 2000

By Haim Bior
Ha’aretz Labor Correspondent

Salary levels are on the decline in almost all high-tech jobs in the Internet field, including senior management positions, according to a survey conducted by MIT, a subsidiary of Manpower Israel.

The managing director of MIT, Yair Feldman, said that CEOs and vice presidents of high-tech firms earned monthly salaries of NIS 35,000-90,000 during the last quarter of the year, down from NIS 40,000-100,000 during the third quarter of 2000. (These figures represent gross pay, and do not include company car benefits, options and bonuses.)

According to Feldman, senior managers were paid NIS 25,000-35,000 during the fourth quarter of 2000, while top salaries for these positions reached NIS 40,000 during the previous quarter. Senior marketing and business development managers received salaries of NIS 30,000-40,000 during the last quarter of the year, compared to NIS 30,000-45,000 during the third quarter.

The top salary range for senior financial officers slipped from NIS 70,000 to NIS 60,000 during the last quarter of 2000, while the top range of salaries for IT managers dipped from NIS 40,000-NIS 35,000. The pay scale for senior R&D managers remained constant during the last two quarters of the year at NIS 30,000-50,000.

According to the MIT survey, project managers with experience of one to two years earned NIS 18,000 to 25,000 a month during the last quarter of 2000, compared to NIS 18,000-27,000 during the previous three months. Project managers with experience of three to five years received salaries of NIS 20,000-30,000 during the last three months of 2000, down from NIS 23,000-34,000 during the previous quarter.

Internet software engineers with experience of up to two years earned NIS 14,000-22,000 during the last quarter of the year, compared to NIS 17,000-25,000 during the third quarter. With three to five years experience, these positions paid NIS 18,000-25,000, down from NIS 21,000-32,000 during the third quarter.

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