Finnish vendor confirms Sandra Motley will remain on the payroll, but the roles of Gabriela Styf Sjöman and Bhaskar Gorti remain in doubt.

Iain Morris, International Editor

December 23, 2020

6 Min Read
Nokia names Motley crew member for fixed networks

New leaders often bring a management refresh but rarely as much upheaval as the latest regime change at Nokia. Including erstwhile CEO Rajeev Suri, seven top executives have now either fallen on their swords or been dismissed from their posts in recent months (the full list is shown below).

For Pekka Lundmark, Nokia's latest boss, the mission is to reduce the pool of decision makers with seats on the global leadership team to just 11, from the 17 Nokia had under Suri. This cull, it is hoped, will streamline and simplify the business. "Even in a fairly straightforward mobile access deal, there are five members responsible for that deal and that takes a lot of coordination," Lundmark told analysts last week.

He has now almost finalized the appointments for his executive team. After recently naming new recruit Nishant Batra as the chief strategy and technology officer, the company this week confirmed that Sandra Motley, the president of fixed networks, will lose her seat at the table. While Motley will continue to lead the fixed networks business, her unit will form a part of the new network infrastructure group led by Federico Guillén, already confirmed as one of Lundmark's 11.

The new gang

With nine other seats now taken, Nokia is still looking for an eleventh member of the team to fill what is likely to be a corporate affairs role. That means Gabriela Styf Sjöman and Bhaskar Gorti will probably be excluded.

Sjöman's job of chief strategy officer has effectively disappeared with the appointment of Nishant Batra. She has been in talks about her future at the company, a Nokia spokesperson told Light Reading last week. It is not totally inconceivable she steps into the corporate affairs role.

Name

Role

Status

On global leadership team?

Rajeev Suri

Ex-CEO

Departed

No

Kristian Pullola

Ex-chief financial officer

Departed

No

Pekka Lundmark

CEO

Confirmed

Yes

Marco Wiren

Chief financial officer

Confirmed

Yes

Nassib Abbou-Khalil

Chief legal officer

Confirmed

Yes

Barry French

Chief marketing officer

Departed

No

Gabriela Styf Sjoman

Ex-chief strategy officer

In talks

Uncertain

Marcus Weldon

Ex-chief technology officer

Departed

No

Nishant Batra

Chief strategy and technology officer

Confirmed

Yes

Stephanie Werner-Dietz

Chief human resources officer

Confirmed

Yes

Tommi Uitto

President of mobile networks

Confirmed

Yes

Sandra Motley

President of fixed networks

Named head of fixed networks

No

Rahgav Sahgal

President of Nokia Enterprise

Named head of cloud and network services

Yes

Jenni Lukander

President of Nokia Technologies

Confirmed

Yes

Basil Alwan

Co-president of IP/optical networks

Taking advisory role

No

Sri Reddy

Co-president of IP/optical networks

Taking advisory role

No

Bhaskar Gorti

President of Nokia Software and chief digital officer

Uncertain

Uncertain

Sanjay Goel

President of global services and operations

Departed

No

Ricky Corker

President of customer operations, Americas

Named head of customer experience

Yes

Federico Guillen

President of customer operations, EMEA and APAC

Named head of network infrastructure

Yes

Source: Nokia, Light Reading.

Gorti is in a similar position to Motley. His software business has been rolled into a new cloud and network services unit that will be led by Rahgav Sahgal, until now president of Nokia's enterprise business. Like Motley, Gorti could settle for a less senior role, but that is by no means certain.

Other members of the global leadership team have not settled, after all. Basil Alwan and Sri Reddy, co-presidents of the high-flying IP and optical networks business, are to step down after their unit is absorbed into Guillén's network infrastructure one. They will, however, continue to advise Nokia for much of 2021, the company announced this week. "Sri and I are committed to ensuring a smooth and seamless continuation of service for our customers," said Alwan in a prepared statement.

Want to know more about 5G? Check out our dedicated 5G content channel here on Light Reading.

Securing the services of two such highly respected industry executives should help to minimize disruption for Nokia as Lundmark kneads it into an entirely different shape. He is thinning out the doughy corporate functions by shifting 14,000 of their employees into his new business groups: mobile, network infrastructure, cloud services and the licensing unit (Nokia Technologies) that will continue as before.

Further job losses seem inevitable as Nokia tries to fatten profit margins that suffered under previous management. Average headcount at the business fell by nearly 4,800 positions last year, to 98,322. "Streamlining" and "simplifying," words Lundmark used pointedly during last week's discussion with analysts, are activities that seem likely to affect the entire organization, and not just Nokia's global leadership team.

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— Iain Morris, International Editor, Light Reading

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About the Author(s)

Iain Morris

International Editor, Light Reading

Iain Morris joined Light Reading as News Editor at the start of 2015 -- and we mean, right at the start. His friends and family were still singing Auld Lang Syne as Iain started sourcing New Year's Eve UK mobile network congestion statistics. Prior to boosting Light Reading's UK-based editorial team numbers (he is based in London, south of the river), Iain was a successful freelance writer and editor who had been covering the telecoms sector for the past 15 years. His work has appeared in publications including The Economist (classy!) and The Observer, besides a variety of trade and business journals. He was previously the lead telecoms analyst for the Economist Intelligence Unit, and before that worked as a features editor at Telecommunications magazine. Iain started out in telecoms as an editor at consulting and market-research company Analysys (now Analysys Mason).

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