PICTURETEL CORP
10-K405, 1997-03-31
TELEPHONE & TELEGRAPH APPARATUS
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                                 UNITED STATES
                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                             WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549
                            ------------------------
 
                                   FORM 10-K
(MARK ONE)
[X]              ANNUAL REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d)
                     OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
                  FOR THE FISCAL YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1996
 
                                       OR
 
[   ]          TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d)
                     OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
 
                         COMMISSION FILE NUMBER 1-9434
 
                             PICTURETEL CORPORATION
 
             (Exact Name of Registrant as Specified in Its Charter)
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                            <C>
                  DELAWARE                                      04-2835972
       (State or Other Jurisdiction of                       (I.R.S. Employer
       Incorporation or Organization)                       Identification No.)
       100 MINUTEMAN ROAD, ANDOVER, MA                             01810
  (Address of Principal Executive Offices)                      (Zip Code)
</TABLE>
 
      REGISTRANT'S TELEPHONE NUMBER, INCLUDING AREA CODE:  (508) 292-5000
 
       SECURITIES REGISTERED PURSUANT TO SECTION 12(b) OF THE ACT:  NONE
 
          SECURITIES REGISTERED PURSUANT TO SECTION 12(g) OF THE ACT:
 
                                  Common Stock
                             (Title of Each Class)
 
     Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (1) has filed all reports
required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of
1934 during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the
registrant was required to file such reports), and (2) has been subject to such
filing requirements for the past 90 days.   Yes [X]        No [ ]
 
     Indicate by check mark if disclosure of delinquent filers pursuant to Item
405 of Regulation S-K is not contained herein and will not be contained, to the
best of registrant's knowledge, in definitive proxy or information statements
incorporated by reference in Part III of this Form 10-K, or any amendment to
this Form 10-K.   [X]
 
     The aggregate market value of the Registrant's Common Stock held by
non-affiliates of the Registrant as of March 14, 1997 was $485,343,335. On such
date, the average of the high and low price of the Common Stock was $14.32 per
share. The Registrant has 34,150,462 shares of Common Stock outstanding as of
March 14, 1997.
                            ------------------------
 
                      DOCUMENTS INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE
 
     Portions of the definitive 1997 Proxy Statement in connection with the
Annual Meeting of Stockholders to be held June 12, 1997 are incorporated by
reference into Part III.
 
     A list of all Exhibits to this Annual Report on Form 10-K is located at
pages 43 through 45.
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ITEM 1.  BUSINESS
 
     PictureTel develops, manufactures, markets and services visual
communications systems and collaboration software utilizing advanced video and
audio compression technology which permit users to hold face-to-face meetings at
a distance with the cost and convenience similar to the telephone.
Videoconferences may be held between two locations, or, using a multipoint
bridge, among multiple locations. PictureTel's compression technology permits
the transmission of "full-motion" color video with integrated fullduplex audio
at data rates as low as 56 kbps. By operating over such low speed switched
digital lines, PictureTel's systems have substantially reduced the cost and
increased the flexibility of videoconferencing. With high-speed (e.g. at 2 to 6
Mbps) videoconferencing solutions, which operate over dedicated (nondialed)
lines, the per-minute usage cost can be from 10 to 100 times higher. Flexibility
is achieved because the low speed digital switched lines have become available
from the long distance carriers in more and more geographic areas, thus leading
to greater potential use of videoconferencing in general and the PictureTel
systems in particular. The Company offers a range of products for group and
personal videoconferencing applications. PictureTel sells its products through a
number of telecommunication and personal computer distributors in the United
States and internationally as well as through a direct sales force. In 1996, 45%
of its revenues were generated from sales to customers outside the United
States.
 
     PictureTel is a Delaware corporation organized in 1984, with executive
offices at 100 Minuteman Road, Andover, Massachusetts 01810 (telephone:
508-292-5000).
 
INDUSTRY BACKGROUND
 
     The driving force behind the growth of the visual communications systems
market is the desire to achieve the effectiveness of face-to-face meetings with
the cost and convenience of the telephone. On a daily basis, workers routinely
exchange information in one-on-one or group meetings. Almost as frequently,
information is communicated between workers in geographically separate sites by
telephone or by sending or faxing written materials. Less frequently,
individuals travel to a common site to meet and exchange information that cannot
be transferred effectively by telephone or in writing. Face-to-face meetings
maximize the exchange of information, including written, verbal and non-verbal
communication.
 
     Visual communications systems, such as videoconferencing systems, can
improve worker productivity and reduce costs by eliminating or reducing travel,
speeding the decision making process by reducing the time needed to exchange
information between geographically dispersed work groups and leveraging the use
of scarce personnel resources located at a distance from coworkers needing their
expertise.
 
     Initial generations of videoconferencing products were relatively expensive
and typically required dedicated, high speed transmission facilities, trained
operators and special rooms, with customized lighting and acoustics. The price
and performance characteristics of these systems limited market demand to users
having large visual communications requirements between geographically separate
locations. Despite broad interest in videoconferencing, cost benefit analyses
led most potential users to conclude that an investment in the technology could
not be justified. In recent years, however, numerous factors have led to greater
use of videoconferencing. These factors include the rapid growth of world-wide
switched digital telephone services, the development of high speed switched
local area computer networks, development of corporate intranets, the
unprecedented growth of the worldwide Internet, the decreasing cost of these
services, technological improvements in both audio and video quality and the
availability of lower cost, easy to use turnkey visual communications systems,
and the steady increase in personal computer processing power.
 
     Global connectivity -- the ability to call any location without special
equipment or arrangements -- is the basis of the telephone's popularity. The
proliferation of switched digital networks, which transmit digital signals (as
compared to traditional telephone networks, which transmit analog signals) in
the United States and internationally has provided this key element of
connectivity to the visual communications market. Before switched digital
service was available, videoconferencing calls could only be completed over
dedicated transmission lines established between two fixed locations. At the end
of 1995, switched 56 kbps and ISDN (64 or 2 x 64 kbps) digital service was
available in most cities in the United States and from the United States to many
foreign countries. The majority of videoconferencing systems used on switched
digital networks in
 
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the United States operate at 112 or 128 kbps (two multiplexed 56 or 64 kbps
lines). Internationally, 64 kbps is the switched digital standard. The majority
of videoconferencing systems used on foreign switched digital networked operate
at 128 kbps (two multiplexed 64 kbps lines). PictureTel's videoconferencing
systems are fully compatible with one another whether used within the United
States or internationally. The Company's products interoperate with H.320
compliant systems from other vendors.
 
     Coincident with the expansion of switched digital networks has been the
dramatic decrease in the cost to use these transmission services. A
coast-to-coast call at 128 kbps placed over the U.S. ISDN dial-up network
typically costs less than a local cellular phone call; calls at 384 kbps cost
less than twice as much.
 
     In order to transmit a video image over telephone circuits, video data
signals must be reduced or "compressed" to fit the capacity of digital telephone
lines, which are available in various capacities from 56 kbps to 2 Mbps. To
compress an audiovisual signal, information is dropped, causing the quality of
the video image to decrease. The quality of the transmitted video image depends
upon the data rate at which the signal is transmitted and the sophistication of
the compression algorithm (which removes redundant or perceptually less
important data from the audio and video signals).
 
     Video and audio quality have improved dramatically over the years with the
introduction of more sophisticated compression algorithms by PictureTel and
others. These algorithms compress 90 Mbps of information contained in a
television video signal down to as little as 20 kbps (over 4,000 to 1
compression) for transmission over various telephony and computer networks, and
decompress that signal for display at the receiving end while achieving
acceptable picture quality and full duplex audio transmission. In addition,
proprietary advances in compression technologies have improved audio fidelity
from less than telephone quality in the mid-1980's to today's systems which
deliver sound which is difficult to distinguish from the voices of people
sitting in the same room as the listener.
 
     VLSI (Very Large Scale Integration) technology permits the placement of
large numbers of transistors and other components onto small chips of silicon,
thereby reducing significantly the size requirements for those components. With
the increasing use of VLSI chip technology, the cost of videoconferencing
systems has steadily decreased as components have become smaller and systems
more integrated, while offering greater functionality to the user.
 
     Since the introduction of turnkey systems, videoconferencing equipment has
become more convenient to purchase and use. Previously, telecommunications
specialists acquired equipment from numerous vendors and integrated the various
components into a custom system. Since 1988, videoconferencing vendors such as
PictureTel have begun offering turnkey systems, which eliminate the need for
procurement and systems integration specialists. In addition, these systems
incorporate "user friendly" features that eliminate, in most cases, the need for
trained specialists in order to use the equipment.
 
     New networks are expanding the possibilities for videoconferencing. With
the new H.324 standard, videoconferencing can be conducted over POTS. That
reduces the cost of a video call to the cost of a traditional phone call. It
also brings the possibility of very low cost ($500 or less) personal computer
(PC)-based videoconferencing solutions. The level of quality of POTS
videoconferencing is below that required for normal business usage, but it is
adequate for home use and for business people on the road (to place a video call
from a hotel room, for example).
 
     Local area networks (LANs), used for data communication among computers in
a business office, have experienced a steady increase in speed over the past few
years. With faster routers, low-cost 100 Mbps interface cards, and other
technologies, most LANs can easily accommodate the slight additional traffic of
video calls. With the H.323 standard, interoperable products for
videoconferencing over LANs are being introduced this year. The main advantage
of LAN videoconferencing is that it removes the need to bring ISDN connections
to every desktop -- it leverages the network cable that is already connected to
each PC. With H.323-to-H.320 gateways, videoconferencing systems in a LAN can
communicate with any ISDN system.
 
     The Internet has also been emerging lately as a network for
videoconferencing, in two forms. First as a way to interconnect
geographically-dispersed LANs within the same company (the so-called Intranets)
- -- in
 
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such cases usually high-speed portions of the Internet are used, to maintain an
adequate bandwidth and quality of service. Second, as a direct connection among
any computers or videoconferencing terminals connected to the Internet -- in
such cases the quality is low, with frequent dropouts in video and audio. Still,
Internet videoconferencing allows for the lowest possible connection cost: for
the price of a local phone call, long-distance (even international) video calls
can be placed. Products for Internet conferencing (audio, video, and data) have
been introduced in the past couple of years, including Microsoft's
Netmeeting(TM), which incorporates PictureTel application sharing technology.
 
TECHNOLOGY
 
  Proprietary
 
     The Company's primary technological contributions have been in the areas of
video compression, audio compression, echo cancellation, automatic volume
control, noise suppression, speaker localization for automatic camera
positioning, information sharing protocols/applications, and system
architecture. For definitions of technical terms see the brief glossary at the
end of the "Technology" section.
 
     A standard broadcast video signal is comprised of 90 million bits of
information per second. Transmission of this amount of data is costly and, in
most cases, it is unnecessary to send 100% of the information in order to
recreate the original picture, or an acceptable representation of it. The
purpose of a video compression algorithm is to reduce the amount of information
required to describe an image, including movement for objects within the image,
without significant loss of accuracy. The effectiveness of an algorithm is
measured by the amount of bandwidth needed to provide "acceptable" picture
quality. Subjective measures consider the smoothness of the moving images and
the lack of artifacts due to the compression.
 
     Since its inception, the Company has developed increasingly sophisticated
algorithms capable of compressing a video signal 800-1600 times to enable the
transmission of video images over low bandwidth dial-up networks. In 1986,
PictureTel introduced its first codec utilizing its proprietary algorithm, MCT,
which was the first commercially available product using motion compensated
discrete cosine transform video compression technology. In 1988, PictureTel
introduced HVQ, hierarchical vector quantization, a more advanced compression
technique which, among other improvements, replaced the discrete cosine
transform in MCT with a multiresolution pyramid and a vector quantizer.
 
     PictureTel's third generation algorithm, SG3, which the Company first
shipped in the first quarter of 1991, further advanced low bandwidth video
compression technology. SG3 replaced the vector quantizer in HVQ with a more
efficient vector quantizer. SG3 was also the first commercial product to
incorporate background estimation, which dramatically improves picture quality
in scenes where objects frequently include complex backgrounds. SG3's background
estimator permits it to dedicate more bandwidth to coding moving objects by
storing views of non-moving objects at the receiving end so they need not be
retransmitted. The Company believes that SG3 made it possible to deliver
acceptable business quality video and audio at approximately 80 kbps,
representing a 90% reduction in the required bandwidth from 1985. SG3 uses the
additional bandwidth beyond 80 kbps available on a 112 kbps or higher data rate
network to provide still better video and audio quality.
 
     PictureTel's latest video compression algorithm, SG4, introduced in 1995 in
the Concorde 4500 platform, has several improvements over SG3. The most
important are improved encoding of the motion vectors, resulting in smoother
motion rendition, and the PicturePlus video enhancement system, which
compensates for variations in the video quality caused by poor light conditions
and camera noise. Furthermore, the SG4 compressed data is transmitted using the
standard H.221 protocol, which allows multipoint conferencing with SG4 video
quality through standard H.320 MCUs.
 
     The Company has invested significantly to develop state of the art audio
compression and echo cancellation technologies in order to produce a more
"natural" sound in its videoconferencing systems. The Company believes that to
produce audio quality which approximates that of a face-to-face meeting, systems
must feature wideband audio and full-duplex operation, which, unlike half-duplex
speakerphones, allow people at all ends of a video call to be heard at the same
time.
 
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     When conducting a videoconference at 112 kbps, typically no more than 28
kbps are available for audio transmission. In 1986, audio compression technology
could only deliver 2.5 KHz of audio fidelity. With advancements incorporated
into HVQ, audio fidelity improved to 3.5 KHz, comparable to regular telephone
audio quality. Proprietary advancements in SG3 improved audio quality available
with the same 28 kbps to 7.0 KHz.. The perceptual difference between 3.5 KHz and
7 KHz audio is similar to the difference between sound on AM and FM radios.
 
     An effective face-to-face meeting requires full-duplex audio. However, in a
videoconference, transmitting sound into microphones and out through speakers
introduces the possibility of echo feedback. Commercial echo cancelers in
conventional speakerphones reduce echo feedback, but are not effective for
videoconferencing because of the relatively long processing delay caused by
compressing and decompressing the video. This delay can approach up to one
second round trip over low speed channels (128 kbps and less). Commercially
available echo cancelers at the time typically only operated at telephone
bandwidths (3.5 KHz). Therefore, the Company developed IDEC, its patented echo
cancellation technology, which substantially eliminates all echo feedback and is
standard in all group and personal videoconferencing system products. IDEC has
been steadily refined and improved since its introduction.
 
     Another audio technology, introduced by the Company in 1996, brings a new
level of comfort to videoconferencing: the LimeLight(TM) microphone array, which
is mounted together with the PowerCam camera on top of the video monitor. With
only four microphones, LimeLight uses sophisticated proprietary signal
processing algorithms to locate, in three dimensions, the head and shoulders of
the person who is currently speaking. The localization information is used to
automatically control the pan, tilt, and zoom of PowerCam to optimally frame the
person speaking. LimeLight also employs intelligent decision-making algorithms
in order to frame multiple persons who engage in a conversation. LimeLight
brings a competitive edge to the Company, since no other videoconferencing or
video camera manufacturer has an equivalent technology.
 
     In 1994 the Company introduced its LiveLAN product for LAN
videoconferencing. Besides audio and video compression technologies, LiveLAN
introduced additional components necessary to cope with the variable bandwidth
of LANs and the variable computing power of the host PC. Such technologies
include appropriate video and audio packetization protocols and techniques to
minimize artifacts due to packet losses. Appropriate management protocols were
also introduced, to allow network managers to control and limit video traffic
within any segment of their networks. Starting in 1997, the LiveLAN and
LiveGateway products will fully support to H.323 LAN videoconferencing
standards.
 
     As the number of videoconferencing systems has expanded in the marketplace,
there has been an increasing demand to link multiple locations into a single
call, in much the same way that audio conference calls occur today. This demand
has led to the development of video bridges, or multipoint control units
("MCU"). In a multipoint videoconference, each location transmits its compressed
audio and video signal to the bridge. The MCU contains audio bridging technology
which permits it to parse, or "strip out" the audio signal, decode it, determine
which signals represent speech, combine them, and then re-encode the combined
audio signal and transmit it to all locations on the call. In this sense, the
MCU acts similarly to a typical audio conferencing bridge. Beyond this
capability, however, is the need to synchronize the transmission of the audio
with the video image which accompanies it and the ability to switch between
various video images.
 
     Research and development in MCU technology is centered around improving the
audio detection algorithms to better distinguish speech from other noise in the
audio signal, improving the audio quality by increasing the audio bandwidth,
developing the technology to permit multiple sites to be viewed simultaneously
in separate windows in the same screen and transcoding technology which permits
callers operating at different bandwidths and using different compression
algorithms to participate in the same call.
 
  Standards
 
     The rate of expansion of the visual communications systems market is
influenced by the establishment of standard communication protocols for visual
communications.
 
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     In December 1990 the ITU-T (the International Telecommunication Union --
Telecommunication standardization sector, formerly CCITT) formally adopted a
standard for video telecommunications (H.320) to ensure that equipment from
different manufacturers will be capable of interoperating. Compatibility of
codecs is particularly important for communication via switched digital networks
(ISDN) because the advantage of these services is dial-up communications without
regard to the type of equipment being used at the receiving end of the
transmission.
 
     Beginning in the late 1980s the ITU-T (International Telecommunication
Union) defined the initial proposals for a new standard, T.120, which was
subsequently approved in 1995. The Company actively participated in the ITU-T
discussions developing T.120. This standard defines the exchange of data and
graphical images among personal computers, videoconferencing systems and other
graphical communication devices such as electronic white boards and overhead
projectors. This standard is presently being included in the Company's group
products and will be included in the personal system products. The technology
for computer application sharing, jointly owned by PictureTel and Microsoft
Corporation, will become part of the T.120 suite.
 
     As technological evolution enables other networks besides ISDN to carry
effective videoconferencing calls, new standards are emerging to define the
protocols for them. The Company maintains a strong level of participation in the
ITU-T, and has been driving such new standardization efforts. In particular,
PictureTel served as the editor of the H.324 standard for POTS multimedia
conferencing, initially approved by the ITU-T in November of 1995, and is a
major technical contributor of the H.323 standard for LAN videoconferencing, to
be determined by the ITU-T in mid 1997. PictureTel has also many chairman and
vice-chairman positions within the most important standard bodies, such as the
ITU-T, ANSI (American National Standards Institute), and IMTC (International
Multimedia Telecommunication Consortium).
 
     The H.320, H.323 and H.324 standards incorporate technologies that have
been developed and patented by certain codec manufacturers, including the
Company and certain of its competitors. These codec manufacturers have agreed
with the ITU-T to grant licenses, on nonexclusive nondiscriminatory bases and on
fair and reasonable terms to all manufacturers who wish to comply with the
standards. The Company has obtained some licenses, and it believes that it will
obtain all necessary licenses at reasonably low costs.
 
GLOSSARY
 
     ACCUNET -- the first commercially available switched digital communication
network, which allowed dialed digital connection at rates of 56 and 112 kbps,
using a combination of existing telephone lines and new network equipment.
 
     CODEC -- combination of a coder and decoder. A coder uses a compression
algorithm to reduce the number of bytes needed to represent an audio or video
segment. A decoder recovers the original raw bytes from the compressed bytes
generated by the coder. In video and audio compression, the recovery does not
need to be exact; a good approximation of the original information is
appropriate for practical purposes.
 
     COMPRESSION ALGORITHM -- a set of procedures (usually specified by
mathematical equations and implemented in software within a particular computing
architecture) that reduce the number of bytes necessary to represent some piece
of information, such as a video or audio segment.
 
     COMPRESSION RATIO -- the average number of bytes at the input of codec that
will produce one byte at the output of the coder. The higher the ratio the lower
the necessary channel speed to transmit the information, and therefore the lower
the transmission cost.
 
     DISCRETE COSINE TRANSFORM, DCT -- a mathematical transformation used in
standards and some proprietary video compression algorithms. The DCT maps a set
of original image sample values into frequency components that can more
efficiently be compressed. DCTs are used in all H.3xx standards.
 
     ECHO CANCELLATION -- the process of removing the acoustic echo that would
result from a full-duplex audio communication system. When the person at point A
talks and his voice is reproduced by the loudspeaker at
 
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point B, the microphone at B would pick it up and send it back (with a delay due
to the communication system) to the loudspeaker at point A. An acoustic echo
canceler eliminates such a return signal.
 
     FULL-DUPLEX -- characteristic of a communication system in which signals
can be simultaneously transmitted in both directions. For example, in audio or
audio/video calls, it means that people at both ends of a call can speak and be
heard simultaneously.
 
     H.320 -- Standard for videoconferencing on narrowband switched digital
networks, such as Accunet and ISDN. Can be used from 56 kbps to 2 Mbps.
 
     H.323 -- Standard for multimedia (audio, video, data) conferencing over
traditional packet-switched networks. It can be used for conferencing over LANs
and the Internet.
 
     H.324 -- Standard for multimedia conferencing over unmodified analog phone
lines (POTS).
 
     HALF DUPLEX -- characteristic of a communication system in which signals
can be transmitted in both directions, but not simultaneously. For example, in
an audio call, it means that only one person can speak at any given time (a
typical mode of operation for inexpensive speakerphones).
 
     INTERNET -- the worldwide network that interconnects many local area
networks. Initially funded entirely by the U.S. government, there are now many
commercial companies investing on expanding the Internet, adding more access
points, switching equipment, and communication links.
 
     IP -- Internet protocol. The most popular packet data communication
protocol, used in many LANs and the Internet.
 
     ISDN -- integrated services digital network, an international switched
digital communication network (also leveraging existing telephone wires, similar
to ACCUNET) that provides multiples of kbps per channel, up to a maximum of 2
Mbps. ISDN is available in many countries.
 
     KBPS -- kilobits per second, 1 kbps = 1,000 bits per second.
 
     LAN -- local area network, in which computer data communication involving
several sources and destinations flow concurrently through the same wires, by
means of a packet-based time-division multiplexing.
 
     MBPS -- megabits per second, 1 Mbps = 1,000,000 bits per second.
 
     MCU -- multipoint control unit, also referred to as a bridge. A piece of
equipment that is connected to multiple communication channels, making possible
multipoint audio or audio/video calls (i.e. calls in which several sites can
communicate).
 
     MOTION COMPENSATION, MC -- a component of most video compression
algorithms. MC leads to higher compression ratios because it allows a video
frame to be partially reconstructed from modifications on the previously
received frame using motion estimates.
 
     POTS -- "plain old telephone system," see PSTN.
 
     PSTN -- public switched telephone network; the traditional twisted-pair
network used for analog telephony.
 
     QUANTIZATION -- the process for approximating a continuous variable by its
nearest value from a table.
 
     VECTOR QUANTIZATION, VQ -- the process of approximating a collection of
continuous values ( a vector), by its nearest vector from a table.
 
PRODUCTS
 
     The Company develops and manufactures the products listed below for the
videoconferencing industry. They range from high end group systems for many
people, to personal systems for one-on-one videoconferencing. The Company also
offers products that complement these systems, such as multipoint bridges and
various software options and peripherals.
 
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  Group Systems
 
     The Company develops, manufactures, markets and supports three families of
group videoconferencing systems: the Performance Family, the Value Family, and
the Compact Family. All group videoconferencing products are comprised of five
basic modules or components: an electronics module, a video module, an audio
module, a user interface and a WAN interface. The electronics module or CODEC
(compression/decompression) includes all the necessary functionality required
for video compression, audio compression and video switching. The video module
is comprised of a pan, tilt, and zoom camera (or cameras), an NTSC or PAL color
display and associated video electronics. The audio module consists of a
microphone, speaker(s), and associated audio electronics which facilitate echo
cancellation, noise suppression, and gain control. The user interface is
comprised of a keypad and menus that assist in placing a call and managing the
videoconference with features such as camera control keys, camera preset keys,
video source selection keys, mute and Picture-in-Picture. The WAN interface
includes standard interfaces such as V.35, RS-449 or X.21, permitting
communication over switched or dedicated digital networks that operate from 56
Kbps up to T1 (1.544 Mbps) and E1 (2.048 Mbps) speeds.
 
     All the Company's group systems are interoperable and collectively, the
Performance, Value, and Compact products, span a price/performance range from
$8,995 to $50,000+ providing a viable solution for both the price sensitive and
performance oriented users.
 
     Performance Group Systems.  The Performance Family is PictureTel's premier
line of products. The Performance Family supports both PictureTel's most recent
proprietary compression algorithm, SG4, optimized for low bandwidth
applications, and an enhanced version of the industry standard ITU-T H.320
algorithm. The Performance Family currently includes the Concorde 4500ZX and
4200ZX products. List prices range from $35,000 to $50,000+ fully configured.
The Concorde 4500ZX, introduced in April 1995, is the Company's flagship
product. The standard system includes an infrared based keypad, camera and Look-
At-Me-Button (LAMB), a unique device to facilitate distributed control within a
videoconference call. The Concorde 4500ZX also comes standard with a WorldCart
supporting color NTSC or PAL displays up to 32" in size and an integrated
speaker system, optimized for voice, developed exclusively for PictureTel by
BOSE Corporation. Both the 4200ZX and the Concorde 4500ZX offer 30 FPS (frames
per second) performance. This feature provides "30 frames per second quality"
video at bandwidths starting as low as 256 Kbps (kilobits per second) and as
high as 768 Kbps. In July 1996, PictureTel introduced a new feature,
"Limelight," on the System 4000 Family. Limelight is an automatic audio sensing
intelligent camera positioning system.
 
     Value Group Systems.  The Value Family is PictureTel's answer for price
sensitive users. The Value Group Systems provide interoperability via the
industry standard ITU-T H.320 algorithm and support a wide range of data rates.
The Value line is represented by the Venue 2000 system, including the
low-cost-of-entry Venue Model 30, and the higher-functionality Venue Model 50.
All models offer options for higher data rates (T1/E1 speeds) and higher frame
rates. The Venue list prices range from $15,000 to over $30,000 for a fully
loaded Venue model.
 
     Compact Systems.  In October 1996, the Company introduced SwiftSite, the
industry's first Compact conferencing system, a self-contained,
optimized-for-simplicity system with a list price ranging from $8,995 to
$10,345. SwiftSite features ITU-T H.320 algorithms, as well as PictureTel
enhancements. In addition, SwiftSite integrates a pan tilt zoom camera and a
superdirective microphone into the self-contained unit, and the capability to
download software over the ISDN link from PictureTel's Software Upgrade Server.
SwiftSite heralds a new category of group conferencing systems -- Compact
systems -- that offer simple, portable and affordable solutions to PictureTel
customers.
 
  Personal Systems
 
     In July 1993, the Company introduced the PictureTel Live PCS 100, a
personal videoconferencing system designed for use with a personal computer
(desktop product). The PCS 100 consists of a video board, audio board, camera,
speakerphone and software. Utilizing the H.320 standard (described under
"Technology-Standards"), the PCS 100 is interoperable with all the Company's
conferencing and bridging products. It also provides information sharing
capabilities which allow users to simultaneously share files and applications
 
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while conducting a videoconference. The system is designed to operate in an
ISA-bus, 386 or above personal computer running Microsoft Windows 3.1(R). It
lists for $4,995 and $5,995.
 
     In July 1994, the Company shipped its LiveShare collaboration software with
application sharing that allows users to share files and interact on an
application during a videoconference. In September 1994, the Company entered
into the Local Area Network market with its LiveLAN family of products which
enable videoconferencing across a corporate LAN. List prices for these products
start at $249.
 
     In January 1995, the Company announced the PictureTel Live PCS 50 which
complements the PCS 100. The product consists of a single audio/video board, a
fixed focus camera, a speakerphone or headset and associated software. As with
the PCS 100, the ITU-T H.320 compression standard is used, which provides
interoperability with all of PictureTel's other conferencing and bridging
products and any H.320 compatible system from other vendors. It also provides
the same information sharing capability as the PCS 100 which allows users to
simultaneously share files while conducting a videoconference. The system is
designed to operate on an ISA-bus, 386 or above personal computer running
Microsoft Windows 3.1(R). The product's list price ranges from $2,495 to $4,195.
While the PCS 100 remains the high end member of the PictureTel Live product
family, offering greater flexibility in terms of network support and expansion
options, the PCS 50 product line offers a more affordable solution for ISDN
networks.
 
     In October 1995, the Company introduced the Live 200i videoconferencing
product. This product consists of an audio/video board, camera, headset, and
software. It features the same interoperability and information sharing tools as
the PCS 50 and PCS 100. The system is designed to operate in a ISA-bus, 486 or
above personal computer and requires a VMC display controller. Unlike the PCS 50
and PCS 100, the Live 200i runs using Microsoft Windows 95(R) operating system.
The product lists for $1,995.
 
     In May 1996, the Company shipped the Live200p. Unlike previous PictureTel
Desktop Video products, the Live200p is a single board solution that utilizes
the host computer's onboard or integrated graphics. The Live200p operates in a
PCI bus, 486 or Pentium personal computer running Microsoft Windows 95. The
Live200p consists of an audio/video board, camera, headset, speakers,
microphone, and software. The product's list prices range from $1,495 to $2,445.
 
     In September 1996, the LiveGateway began shipping. This product is part of
the LAN family of products, which run on a company's local area network. The
LiveGateway is a PC server add-on kit that provides LiveLAN clients access to
H.320 compliant systems. LiveGateway includes a board and a server software
application. It is an ISA bus board designed to run on a 486/66 or faster
personal computer. The LiveGateway list price is $2,995. With the introduction
of the LiveGateway came enhancements to LiveLAN, the desktop video conferencing
system for the LAN, and LiveManager, a software application that allows network
managers to tailor the use of video and audio within the local area network's
configurations and capacities. These three products together offer an end-to-end
solution for a company with both H.320 and H.323 systems.
 
     Also in September 1996, the Company announced follow-on releases in 1997 of
the LAN family of products that will provide functionality and performance
enhancements, such as full H.323 standards compliance, full CIF and full-screen
video, wideband audio with echo cancellation, and support of the T.120 standard
for multipoint data conferencing.
 
  Network Systems
 
     PictureTel's Network Systems could be described as the "glue" that joins
its videoconferencing systems products into a company-wide solution, commonly
known as an "enterprise solution". Multipoint bridges and reservation and
management systems software are the major revenue sources for the division.
These products deliver functionality that is "shared" among distributed
videoconferencing systems throughout a network. Multipoint bridges enable
videoconferences with more than two sites. Reservation and management systems
allow conference rooms, bridging resources and network facilities to be
scheduled and managed in advance of upcoming meetings by anyone, right from
their PC.
 
                                        8
<PAGE>   10
 
     The "Montage" Conferencing Server product line takes advantage of
"off-the-shelf" bridging hardware and differentiating software features that
make the products unique to the Company. Software features include the Company's
proprietary compression algorithms SG4 and PT724. Several major enhancements
including Continuous Presence and Audio only Conferencing were added to the
Montage Conference Server product line in 1996. The base Montage supports four
sites in a multipoint conference for about $90,000 list price. The largest
Montage systems support up to 48 sites in a single conference or any combination
of conferences up to a total of 48 sites. Over 2,000 sites can be in a single
conference using a capability called cascading, which joins multiple Montages
together. A fully loaded Montage Model 570 lists for over $300,000. Each Montage
system is fully upgradable so customers can take advantage of new
standards-based as well as proprietary features as they are released. In the
fall of 1996, over 10,000 people participated in a single multipoint call in
which approximately 1,000 sites were connected to 25 Montages networked
together.
 
     The "Prism" Conferencing Server product line, introduced in the summer of
1996, brings new levels of reliability and ease of use to multipoint
conferencing, while setting a new standard in price/performance. With Prism,
users of desktop and group videoconferencing systems can make spontaneous
multipoint calls using their own dedicated multipoint conferencing server (MCS).
Prism's premise switching capability also offers organizations an affordable way
to distribute expensive network resources to many videoconferencing users. Prism
is housed in a compact unit that can be located anywhere in the office
environment. It's delivered preconfigured to enable users to set up their own
multipoint calls without technical assistance. This minimizes the opportunity
for error in call setup, making Prism a highly reliable solution. List price
ranges from $20,000 to $70,000.
 
     LiveScheduler is PictureTel's enterprise scheduling and network control
solution and is among the industry's most advanced scheduling products.
Utilizing a client/server architecture, LiveScheduler provides simple,
effective, and yet powerful scheduling and management of conference rooms,
people and equipment, as well as videoconferencing network resources.
Availability of sites, rooms, equipment, and even people, are depicted
graphically to users through the Windows-based GUI application, while the
LiveScheduler server analyses the availability of any required supporting
resources, such as network equipment, multipoint bridge ports, and even network
bandwidth. The server can communicate with many globally dispersed clients
simultaneously, whether connected over a LAN or by dial-up modem, and process
all requests for meetings and schedules. Used in conjunction with PictureTel's
leadership Montage and Prism multipoint bridges, LiveScheduler can even
automatically set up and end a video conference by provisioning the required
network and instructing the bridge to dial directly to the sites to be
connected. List price ranges from $18,000 to $40,000.
 
  Software
 
     The Company's group and personal videoconferencing systems are software
based and can be upgraded by the user using standard floppy diskettes, a
removable memory cartridge, or remotely via server and modem. The Company also
sells a Developer's Toolkit, a set of software components, designed to give
programmers access to major functions for set up and control of video, audio,
windowing, data transfer, configuration and network communication.
 
  Options and Peripherals
 
     The group and personal systems videoconferencing products are available
with a number of software and hardware options. Options available on some or all
products include NTSC or PAL video input standards, various network interfaces
such as RS449, V.35, RS232 or X.21, high resolution graphics capability and data
encryption for secure communications. Peripheral equipment used to supplement
the systems may include document cameras for transmission of still images,
additional video cameras to be placed in the conference rooms and video cassette
recorders. In 1996, the Company introduced two new videoconferencing
peripherals, Groupview and Groupboard. Groupview is an overhead projector
designed to handle documents in a videoconferencing environment. Groupboard is a
42" high resolution display and whiteboards solution.
 
                                        9
<PAGE>   11
 
RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT
 
     The Company believes that decreased size, cost and increased functionality
will characterize future product generations. The Company also believes that as
videoconferencing expands beyond group meetings into the personal communications
segment of the market, success will be dependent on the further development of
powerful video signal processing chips and further miniaturization of systems
components such as cameras and monitors. At such time, the Company expects
videoconferencing usage to expand to the desktop as part of a "multimedia"
workstation, or as a personal videophone. This technology will initially augment
and may eventually replace the telephone, leading to the development of the
residential market with a consumer videophone.
 
     The Company is working to develop products similar to the PictureTel Live
PCS 100, 50, and Live 200p. The Company believes that, in order to meet the
power, size and cost constraints of desktop products, more powerful signal
processing chips are required. The Company believes that video signal processing
chips already available or under development by the Company and others will
provide the basis for future generations of group and desktop videoconferencing
systems.
 
     With the increased availability of other networks (besides ISDN and
Switched-56) for reliable videoconferencing (such as LANs and corporate
Intranets), the Company believes that the interfacing capabilities of its
products should be expanded to accommodate such networks, as is discussed in the
Technology section. Therefore the Company will continue to invest toward that
goal, as well as continue to invest in further developments to its LiveLAN
family of videoconferencing products. The LiveLAN family of products will have
an increasing presence in videoconferencing solutions delivered by the Company.
The transition from an ISDN-centric videoconferencing market to one with a
mixture of ISDN, LANs, Intranets, and the Internet will be somewhat slow for
business applications, where a minimal level of audio, video, and data
throughput quality is necessary for continued use of the technology.
 
     The Company spent $66,013,000, $50,431,000 and $41,243,000 on research and
development, including capitalized software costs, in 1996, 1995 and 1994,
respectively. The Company had 424 full-time employees in research and
development at December 31, 1996.
 
     The Company has entered into joint development agreements with Microsoft,
NTT and others for product and software development that will further expand the
desktop market. These companies retain non-exclusive rights under license from
PictureTel to distribute the products that result from the development work.
 
SALES, MARKETING AND CUSTOMER SERVICE
 
     The Company and its subsidiaries currently distribute PictureTel products
worldwide by direct sales and indirect channels of distribution.
 
     As the market for videoconferencing systems expands, the Company expects to
increase its reliance on joint selling and distribution through a combination of
transmission carriers, telecommunication equipment distributors, personal
computer distributors and resellers and value-added resellers, and has currently
developed relationships with companies in each of these indirect channels. In
1996, the Company derived approximately 24% of its worldwide product revenues
from direct selling activities, and 76% from indirect channels. At December 31,
1996 and 1995, the Company had a product backlog approximately $7,700,000 and
$14,100,000, respectively. Backlog consists of purchase orders for which a
delivery schedule within six months has been specified by the customer. Since
orders generally may be canceled or rescheduled by the customer without
significant penalty, backlog as of any particular date may not be indicative of
PictureTel's actual sales in any succeeding period.
 
UNITED STATES
 
     Indirect Channels.  To address the market below the Fortune/Service 500
(the largest businesses in the United States as published annually by Fortune
magazine) and expand the Company's presence in the Fortune/Service 500 market,
the Company has increased the number of telecommunication equipment
 
                                       10
<PAGE>   12
 
distributors, regional Bell Operating Companies ("RBOCs"), value-added resellers
("VARs") and dedicated dealers who distribute the Company's products. Telecom
distributors, or interconnects, act as dealers for the Company and typically
distribute other communications equipment such as PBX systems, voice processing
equipment and multiplexors, as well as network services to large, medium and
small size companies. The RBOCs typically sell third party manufactured systems
which leverage the use of their switched and dedicated network services. To
expand its coverage of the Fortune/Service 500 companies, the Company has
entered into distribution agreements with Lucent Technologies, Inc., CompuCom,
MCI, GTE, Southwestern Bell, Ameritech, Pacific Bell, and Ingram Micro.
 
     The Company believes that, as system prices decrease, additional
applications for sales to vertical markets, such as distance learning,
telemedicine and remote interviewing, will develop. VARs typically have
expertise in a particular market and the Company plans to utilize this expertise
to stimulate the Applications Developers Program. Under this program, PictureTel
sells developers, VARs, original equipment manufacturers and systems integrators
its Video Modem products and the PictureTel Developer's Tool Kit. Together these
products provide the building blocks to allow developers to write applications
and incorporate PictureTel's visual communications technology into unique
vertical market products. With the introduction of the PictureTel Live PCS 100,
Live PCS 50 and Live200p products, the Company continues to develop
relationships with established personal computer distributors and resellers.
 
     Direct Sales Organization.  The Company directly markets its
videoconferencing systems principally to the Fortune/Service 500. These large
companies typically have multiple locations in the United States as well as
internationally and typically specify a single vendor to supply equipment on a
world-wide basis. The Company believes that it is important to maintain a close
working relationship with these customers in order to meet their demands for
sales and support on a multinational basis.
 
     The Company maintains five regional sales and support offices and twenty
additional branch sales and support offices. Regional offices typically include
demonstration equipment as well as a number of customer and technical sales
representatives and field support personnel.
 
INTERNATIONAL DISTRIBUTION
 
     Outside of the United States the Company relies on a network of foreign
market distributors and its own international subsidiaries. Agreements with the
Company's foreign market distributors generally provide for pricing, volume
discounts, order lead times, a specific geographic territory and other terms and
conditions and are typically for terms of one to three years with options to
extend such terms by mutual agreement.
 
     In the third quarter of 1991 the Company established its first
international subsidiary, and currently the Company has operating subsidiaries
in the Australia, Brazil, Germany, Italy, Japan, Mexico, Sweden, Switzerland and
the United Kingdom, and branch offices in Canada, France, Spain, Hong Kong,
Korea, Malaysia, Netherlands, People's Republic of China and Singapore.
International distributors include companies such as British Telecom (BT),
Deutsche Telekom, Nippon Telephone & Telegraph (NTT), Alcatel, EGT (France
Telecom), Telecom Italia, Siemens, and Mercury Communication (Cable & Wireless).
These international units provide sales and support services locally. Sales to
international distributors are usually made in U.S. dollars in order to minimize
the risks associated with fluctuating foreign currency rates. Sales by the
Company's operating subsidiaries to customers are generally made in the
subsidiary's local currency.
 
     The Company's revenues from sales to foreign markets represent
approximately 45%, 43%, and 42%, respectively, of the Company's total revenues
in 1996, 1995, and 1994. Additional information with respect to the Company's
international business is included in Note 11 to the Consolidated Financial
Statements.
 
ENTERPRISE SERVICES DIVISION
 
     The Company believes that the quality and reliability of its systems and
services is important to customer satisfaction. As proof points, the Company's
Enterprise Services Division is ISO9002 registered, and continues to maintain
its certification. The Company also regularly measures customer satisfaction,
and implements corrective actions to improve the quality of its service. The
delivery of service is backed by the launch of the Company's Certification
Program (Certified Videoconferencing Engineer), the first in the
videoconferencing
 
                                       11
<PAGE>   13
 
industry, which will test and certify the technical abilities of all support
personnel dealing with the Company's videoconferencing products.
 
     The Company provides warranty support for parts and software media on all
its products. The warranty period is generally one year for hardware, 90 days
for software media, and 90 days for repaired parts. Estimated costs related to
warranty are accrued at the time of revenue recognition.
 
     The Company helps customers implement and manage its technology on a global
basis through a comprehensive portfolio of maintenance, professional and
conference services, which address each phase of the product life cycle.
Consulting services provide planning and needs analysis to customers. Design
services, like room design and custom solutions, provide customized
videoconferencing solutions to meet each customer's unique needs. Project
management, installation and training provide customers with effective
implementation of the Company's products. For the on-going operation of
customers' videoconferencing environment, the Company provides conference
services and maintenance services.
 
     Conference Services facilitate the customer's use of the videoconferencing
technology by providing conference room scheduling, call launching, and
end-to-end problem resolution during conferences. In addition, the Company
supports customers' multipoint needs including managing the customer's bridges,
either on the Company's premises or remotely, and offering bridging services to
customers who do not own a bridge.
 
     All these services are sold both directly to customers and through the
Company's distributors. Service programs for local and international
distributors range from reselling the Company's service offerings to providing
back-end support for servicing end-users.
 
     All maintenance services are delivered on a worldwide basis from several
integrated global support centers located in the United States, United Kingdom,
Singapore, and Japan. Spare parts are stocked around the world to meet response
time commitments to customers and distributors. The Company utilizes direct
field service staff as well as distributors and third party service providers to
perform installation and on-site repairs. Conference services are delivered from
geographically distributed Network Operations Centers located in the United
States, United Kingdom, and Singapore. The company delivers professional
services and training through consultants, project managers and instructors. In
addition, the Company offers electronic support via the World Wide Web.
 
     The Company's revenues from services represent less than 10% of the total
revenues in 1996.
 
COMPETITION
 
     The Company is engaged in an industry that, as a result of extensive
research and development efforts, has new, more technologically advanced
products introduced on a regular basis. If the Company is not in a position to
exploit and obtain technological advancements, its products may become obsolete
or priced above competitive levels. Moreover, unforeseen technical or other
difficulties may interfere with the development or production of its products,
or prevent or create delays in marketing such products.
 
     A number of companies, including British Telecom ("BT"), Compression
Laboratories, Inc. ("CLI"), VTEL Corporation ("VTEL") and NEC continue to
dominate the high bandwidth transmission (from 384 Kbps to 2.048 Mbps)
videoconferencing market. Currently, switched ISDN service is the most widely
available switched digital service in the United States.
 
     The Company also faces competition from a number of companies with
currently available or announced visual communications products designed for low
bandwidth videoconferencing. Currently, three United States companies, CLI,
VTEL, and Intel Corporation are among the companies marketing low bandwidth
full-motion video modems and complete videoconferencing systems. In addition,
outside the United States, low bandwidth videoconferencing systems and video
modems are available from a number of suppliers in Europe and the Far East
including Canvis Visual Technologies, Philips Kommunikations Industries AG,
Tandberg Telecom AS, Mitsubishi Ltd., NEC, Hitachi, Ltd., Sony Corporation,
Fujitsu Ltd. of Japan and Panasonic.
 
                                       12
<PAGE>   14
 
     Some of the companies which now offer products that compete with the
Company's products, such as Intel Corporation and Sony Corporation, have
significantly greater financial and other resources than the Company. However,
the Company competes primarily on the basis of video and audio quality, and data
collaboration, as well as on favorable features and the price of its systems.
The Company believes that its products are competitive in each of these areas.
 
     In the personal (one-on-one) visual communications segment, the Company
expects that competition will continue to intensify and competitive price
reductions may adversely affect the Company's revenues and profitability. The
competitive landscape has shifted substantially in 1996. As in 1995, Intel was
the primary competitor on the low end of the desktop market while several new
entrants have focused on high end solutions. Companies such as VCON, Zydacron
and RSI have competitive high end solutions but lack the breadth of products and
distribution network that the Company enjoys.
 
     Previously, purchasers of videoconferencing systems must have purchased the
videoconferencing systems from the same vendor to ensure the interoperability.
However, as a result of the adoption of standards, products from the Company and
other manufacturers are interoperable. Consequently, customers have the freedom
to purchase products from several vendors and are not locked into a single
vendor for videoconferencing equipment.
 
MANUFACTURING
 
     The Company has developed a supply chain that encompasses the Company's
subassemblies and products supplied by vendors to the delivery of finished goods
to the customer. This effort has resulted in a cost effective and timely
delivery of products to our customers. This strategy allows the Company to
reduce costly investment in manufacturing capital, and to leverage the expertise
of our vendors.
 
     The Company's manufacturing operation consists of final assembly and
testing of complete videoconferencing systems. Subassemblies of large systems
that support networks and room conferencing, including tested printed circuit
boards, are assembled into complete systems. These final systems are tested to
ensure they meet all functional requirements.
 
     Desktop hardware products are purchased in final form from various vendors.
The products have been subjected to PictureTel's quality testing at the vendor
site. These products are placed into inventory, and are shipped according to
demand.
 
     Certain components and parts used in the Company's products are procured
from a single source. The Company obtains parts only from one vendor, even where
multiple sources are available, to maintain quality control and enhance the
working relationship with suppliers. These purchases are made under existing
contracts or purchase orders. The failure of a supplier, including a
subcontractor, to deliver on schedule could delay or interrupt the Company's
delivery of products and thereby adversely affect the Company's revenues and
profits.
 
     In 1996, the Company opened a European Distribution Center in Holland to
centralize shipments to its customer base in Europe. PictureTel will look to
source components from local vendors in Europe to support proper stocking levels
in Holland and maintain timely customer shipments. This will be developed by
incorporating the same working relationships and policies with vendors in Europe
as it currently does in America.
 
PATENTS AND COPYRIGHTS
 
     The Company's principal technology consists primarily of certain advances
in video and audio compression algorithms, echo cancellation and audio signal
processing, camera positioning, and automatic speaker location technology,
implemented in software and hardware configurations for use in PictureTel
products. The Company has been issued a number of United States patents relating
to the above described technology, which expire at various dates from 2007 to
2013. The Company has a number of additional patent applications issued and
pending in various countries including the United States, Canada, Europe and
Japan, and will continue to file additional applications. However, there can be
no assurance that its current patents (or any additional patents that may be
issued in the future) provide broad protection from the development of similar
product technology by competitors of the Company. In the absence of broad patent
protection, and despite the
 
                                       13
<PAGE>   15
 
Company's reliance upon its proprietary confidential information, competitors of
the Company may be able to use algorithms similar to those used by the Company
to design and manufacture products that are directly competitive with the
Company's products.
 
     The Company also protects its copyrightable software and related technology
under U.S. and other countries' copyright laws by placing appropriate copyright
notices that comply with provisions of the U.S. copyright treaties and entering
into written agreements with its licensees.
 
EMPLOYEES
 
     At December 31, 1996, the Company had 1,496 full-time employees, of whom
700 were employed in sales, marketing and customer support, 424 in product
development and engineering, 143 in manufacturing and 229 in administration and
finance. The Company had 237 employees in foreign countries at December 31,
1996.
 
     The Company's continued success will depend in part on its ability to
attract and retain highly skilled and motivated personnel who are in great
demand throughout the industry.
 
     None of the Company's employees are represented by a labor union. The
Company believes its relations with its employees to be good.
 
ITEM 2.  PROPERTIES
 
     The Company's corporate offices and research, development and manufacturing
facilities are located in two facilities in Andover, Massachusetts, aggregating
approximately 448,900 square feet and one facility in Peabody, Massachusetts, at
46,800 square feet. The lease at 100 Brickstone in Andover expires June of 1999.
The lease at 100 Minuteman in Andover expires in July 2014. The Peabody lease
expires September 30, 1997. The Company has also entered into an agreement to
lease approximately 150,000 square feet of space at 50 Minuteman in Andover,
Massachusetts beginning in August 1997. The lease at 50 Minuteman expires in
October 2015.
 
     The Company also leases office space for its twenty-five regional and
branch sales and support offices in the United States and for similar offices of
its subsidiary and branch operations worldwide.
 
ITEM 3.  LEGAL PROCEEDINGS
 
     In December 1993, PictureTel was sued by Datapoint Corporation in the
United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas. Datapoint
alleges that certain of the Company's products infringe patent rights allegedly
owned by Datapoint. The complaint seeks approximately $51 million in damages for
alleged past infringement and an injunction against alleged future infringement.
The Company believes that it has meritorious defenses to the allegations of the
complaint, and is vigorously defending against the lawsuit.
 
     In the fall of 1995, the Court appointed a Special Master to consider the
Company's motion for summary judgment of noninfringement. The Special Master
recommended that the motion for summary judgment be denied. On September 16,
1996, the Court adopted the Special Master's claim construction of the Datapoint
patents and denied PictureTel's summary judgment motion. A trial date has been
set for October 6, 1997. The parties are completing discovery.
 
     In the event the Company is found to be infringing a valid patent or
patents, the Company could be required to pay damages for past infringement and
cease the sale of products incorporating the infringing feature (or be required
to take a license and pay royalties with respect to such patents). While there
can be no assurance that the Company will prevail, the Company believes that it
is unlikely that the outcome of the lawsuit would have a material adverse effect
on the business or the financial position, results of operations and cash flows
of the Company.
 
ITEM 4.  SUBMISSION OF MATTERS TO A VOTE OF SECURITY HOLDERS
 
     None.
 
                                       14
<PAGE>   16
 
                                    PART II
 
ITEM 5:  MARKET FOR REGISTRANT'S COMMON EQUITY AND RELATED STOCKHOLDER MATTERS
 
                          PRICE RANGE OF COMMON STOCK
 
     The following table sets forth the high and low sale prices for the
Company's Common Stock for the periods indicated as reported by NASDAQ under the
symbol PCTL. (1995 share prices were adjusted for 2:1 stock split during
November 1995.)
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                  HIGH         LOW
                                                                 -------     -------
          <S>                                                    <C>         <C>
          1995
          First Quarter........................................  $19.125     $11.125
          Second Quarter.......................................  $25.063     $17.000
          Third Quarter........................................  $31.000     $21.188
          Fourth Quarter.......................................  $43.875     $20.750
          1996
          First Quarter........................................  $44.734     $30.250
          Second Quarter.......................................  $40.063     $26.750
          Third Quarter........................................  $41.250     $31.250
          Fourth Quarter.......................................  $37.875     $23.375
          1997
          First Quarter (through March 14, 1997)...............  $26.875     $13.625
</TABLE>
 
     As of March 14, 1997 there were approximately 2,019 holders of record of
the Company's Common Stock.
 
                                DIVIDEND POLICY
 
     The Company has not paid any dividends on its Common Stock since its
inception and presently intends to reinvest earnings for use in its business and
to finance future growth. Accordingly, the Board of Directors does not
anticipate declaring any cash dividends in the foreseeable future.
 
                                       15
<PAGE>   17
 
ITEM 6:  SELECTED FINANCIAL DATA
 
                            SELECTED FINANCIAL DATA
                     (IN THOUSANDS, EXCEPT PER SHARE DATA)
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                        1996         1995         1994         1993         1992
                                      --------     --------     --------     --------     --------
<S>                                   <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>
STATEMENT OF INCOME DATA:
Revenues............................  $482,532     $346,758     $255,193     $176,252     $141,409
Income before extraordinary credit
  and cumulative effect of change in
  accounting principle..............    34,773       19,626        4,579        7,384        8,387
Extraordinary credit, tax benefit of
  net operating loss and tax credit
  carryforwards.....................        --           --           --           --        2,272
Cumulative effect of change in
  accounting principle..............        --           --           --        1,042           --
                                      --------     --------     --------     --------     --------
Net income..........................  $ 34,773     $ 19,626     $  4,579     $  8,426     $ 10,659
                                      ========     ========     ========     ========     ========
Net income per common and common
  equivalent share (1)(2):
Income before extraordinary credit
  and cumulative effect of change in
  accounting principle..............  $   0.96     $   0.56     $   0.15     $   0.24     $   0.26
Extraordinary credit................        --           --           --           --         0.07
Cumulative effect of change in
  accounting principle..............        --           --           --         0.03           --
                                      --------     --------     --------     --------     --------
Net income..........................  $   0.96     $   0.56     $   0.15     $   0.27     $   0.33
                                      ========     ========     ========     ========     ========
Weighted average shares outstanding
  (1)(2)............................    36,054       35,014       31,354       31,486       31,868
BALANCE SHEET DATA:
Working capital.....................  $200,946     $139,396     $118,922     $ 48,399     $ 55,334
Total assets........................   376,047      288,141      216,699      187,425      165,713
Total short-term debt...............     3,813        2,840       10,452        6,651        7,643
Total long-term debt................    13,934       12,804        3,015        4,367        4,685
Stockholders' equity................   259,058      200,822      153,236      146,939      132,128
</TABLE>
 
- ---------------
 
(1) Net income per common and common equivalent share is based on the weighted
    average number of shares of Common Stock and dilutive Common Stock
    equivalents outstanding during the period. All common and common equivalent
    share and per share amounts in 1995 and years prior have been retroactively
    restated to reflect the two-for-one common stock split effected by a 100%
    common stock dividend paid during the fourth quarter of 1995.
 
(2) The Company has not paid dividends on its Common Stock since its inception.
    The Company intends to reinvest earnings for use in its business and to
    finance future growth. Accordingly, the Board of Directors does not
    anticipate declaring any cash dividends in the foreseeable future.
 
                                       16
<PAGE>   18
 
ITEM 7:  MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION AND RESULTS
OF OPERATIONS
 
                    MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF
                 RESULTS OF OPERATIONS FINANCIAL CONDITION AND
 
     The following table sets forth, for the periods indicated, the percentage
of Revenues for certain items in the Company's Statement of Income for each
period:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                                                                -------------------------
                                                                1996      1995      1994
                                                                -----     -----     -----
        <S>                                                     <C>       <C>       <C>
        Revenues..............................................  100.0%    100.0%    100.0%
        Cost of sales.........................................   52.8      50.5      50.6
        Gross margin..........................................   47.2      49.5      49.4
        Selling, general and administrative...................   25.6      29.2      32.4
        Research and development..............................   12.5      13.3      15.0
        Total operating expenses..............................   38.1      42.5      47.4
        Operating income......................................    9.1       7.0       2.0
        Interest income, net..................................    0.9       0.9       0.7
        Other income, net.....................................    0.7        --        --
        Income before provision for income taxes..............   10.7       7.9       2.7
        Provision for income taxes............................    3.5       2.2       0.9
        Net income............................................    7.2       5.7       1.8
</TABLE>
 
FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS
 
     This section, as well as other portions of this document, includes certain
forward-looking statements about the Company's business and new products, sales
and expenses, effective tax rate and operating and capital requirements. In
addition, forward-looking statements may be included in various other Company
documents to be issued in the future and in various oral statements by Company
representatives to security analysts and investors from time to time. Any such
statements are subject to risks that could cause the actual results to vary
materially. These risks are discussed below in "Factors Affecting Future
Results".
 
  YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1996 COMPARED TO THE YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1995
 
     Revenues.  The Company's revenues increased $135,774,000, or 39%, in 1996
from 1995. The increase in revenue was primarily a result of increased
videoconferencing system unit shipments. This growth was partially offset by a
reduction in the average selling price of videoconferencing systems resulting
from a shift towards lower priced models, especially in the personal desktop
products, as well as a shift in distribution channel mix with approximately 76%
of product revenue now coming from the indirect channels compared with 67% in
1995. Videoconferencing system sales accounted for approximately 83% and 85% of
the Company's revenues in 1996 and 1995, respectively. Sales of group and
desktop videoconferencing products accounted for 67% and 16%, respectively, of
revenues for 1996, compared with 70% and 15%, respectively, for 1995. In
addition, sales of bridge products accounted for approximately 8% of the
Company's revenues for 1996 compared to approximately 7% for 1995. The balance
of the revenues in 1996 and 1995 were primarily from maintenance services,
licensing/development agreements and the sales of stand-alone codecs and video
modems.
 
     The Company's revenues from sales to foreign markets were approximately
$216,825,000 in 1996 compared to approximately $147,981,000 in 1995 representing
45% and 43%, respectively of total revenues. The Company expects that
international revenues will continue to account for a significant portion of
total revenues.
 
     Gross Margin.  The Company's gross margin increased $56,045,000 or 33%, in
1996 compared to 1995. Gross margin as a percentage of revenues was 47% in 1996
compared to 50% in 1995. Gross margin as a percentage of revenues decreased as a
result of the reduction in the average selling price of videoconferencing
 
                                       17
<PAGE>   19
 
systems and the increased percentage of volume through the indirect channels.
The two trends are expected to continue and may impact future gross margins.
 
     Selling, General and Administrative.  Selling, general and administrative
expenses increased $22,291,000 or 22% from 1995 and decreased as a percentage of
revenues to 26% from 29%. The dollar increase in spending resulted primarily
from the worldwide marketing focus associated with expanding indirect channels
and from new product launches, as well as increased commission expense. In
addition, the Company has provided additional sales, general and administrative
personnel in order to support the Company's overall growth.
 
     Research and Development.  Research and development expenses increased
$13,905,000, or 30% in 1996 from 1995 and were 13% of revenues for 1996 and
1995. Research and development expenditures, prior to the capitalization of
software costs, were $66,013,000 in 1996 and $50,431,000 in 1995 or 14% and 15%
of revenues, respectively. The dollar increase in expenditures primarily
reflects the Company's continuing investment in new product and software
development for existing and future videoconferencing products. The Company
capitalized software costs of $5,924,000 in 1996 and $4,247,000 in 1995
representing 9% and 8% of aggregate research and development expenditures,
respectively.
 
     Operating Income.  Although gross margin as a percentage of revenues has
not increased over 1995, operating income as a percentage of revenues increased
29% from 7% to 9% due to a decline in operating expenses as a percentage of
revenues.
 
     Net Interest Income (Expense).  Net interest income increased to $4,413,000
in 1996 from $3,152,000 in 1995. The increase was primarily the result of higher
marketable securities portfolio balances and lower interest expense.
 
     Other Income (Expense).  Other income (expense) of $3,147,000 in 1996
consists primarily of net gains on sales of securities. Other income (expense)
of $87,000 in 1995 consists primarily of net gains on foreign currency
transactions.
 
     Income Taxes.  The Company's effective tax rate for 1996 and 1995 was 33%
and 29% respectively, and 1996 was lower than the federal statutory rate
primarily due to the benefits of the research and development credits, the
foreign sales corporation, and a decrease in the valuation allowance. The
valuation allowance primarily offsets the deferred benefit of certain federal
and state tax credit carryforwards whose benefit is uncertain.
 
  YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1995 COMPARED TO THE YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1994
 
     Revenues.  The Company's revenues increased $91,565,000, or 36%, in 1995
from 1994. The increase in revenue was primarily a result of increased
videoconferencing system unit shipments. This growth was partially offset by a
reduction in the average selling price of videoconferencing systems resulting
from a shift towards lower priced models, especially in the personal desktop
products, as well as a shift in distribution channel mix with approximately 67%
of revenue now coming from the indirect channels. Videoconferencing system sales
accounted for approximately 85% of the Company's revenues in 1995 and 1994.
Sales of group and desktop videoconferencing products accounted for 70% and 15%,
respectively, of revenues for 1995, compared with 76% and 9%, respectively, for
1994. In addition, sales of bridge products accounted for approximately 7% of
the Company's revenues for 1995 compared to approximately 6% for 1994. The
balance of the revenues in 1995 and 1994 were primarily from maintenance
services, licensing/development agreements and the sales of stand-alone codecs
and video modems.
 
     The Company's revenues from sales to foreign markets were approximately
$147,981,000 in 1995 compared to approximately $108,118,000 in 1994 representing
43% and 42%, respectively of total revenues. The Company expects that
international revenues will continue to account for a significant portion of
total revenues.
 
     Gross Margin.  The Company's gross margin increased $45,561,000 or 36%, in
1995 compared to 1994. Gross margin as a percentage of revenues was 50% and 49%
in 1995 and 1994, respectively. Gross margin as a
 
                                       18
<PAGE>   20
 
percentage of revenues remained consistent primarily as a result of continued
product material cost reductions and decreasing overhead costs offset by an
increased percentage of volume through the indirect channels and a higher
percentage of revenues coming from the Company's lower-margin videoconferencing
system products. The latter two trends are expected to continue and may impact
future gross margins.
 
     Selling, General and Administrative.  Selling, general and administrative
expenses increased $18,611,000 or 23% from 1994 and decreased as a percentage of
revenues to 29% from 32%. The dollar increase in spending resulted primarily
from the worldwide marketing focus associated with expanding indirect channels
and new product launches, as well as increased commission expense. In addition,
the Company has provided additional sales, general and administrative personnel
in order to support the Company's overall growth.
 
     Research and Development.  Research and development expenses increased
$7,857,000, or 21% in 1995 from 1994 and were 13% and 15%, respectively, of
revenues for 1995 and 1994. Research and development expenditures, prior to the
capitalization of software costs, were $50,431,000 in 1995 and $41,243,000 in
1994 or 15% and 16% of revenues, respectively. The dollar increase in
expenditures primarily reflects the Company's continuing investment in new
product and software development for existing and future videoconferencing
products. The Company capitalized software costs of $4,247,000 in 1995 and
$2,916,000 in 1994 representing 8% and 7% of research and development
expenditures, respectively.
 
     Operating Income.  Although gross margin as a percentage of sales has not
increased over 1994, operating income as a percentage of sales increased, due to
a decline in operating expenses as a percentage of sales.
 
     Net Interest Income (Expense).  Net interest income increased to $3,152,000
in 1995 from $1,841,000 in 1994. The increase was primarily the result of higher
marketable securities portfolio balances.
 
     Other Income (Expense).  Other income of $87,000 in 1995 consists primarily
of net gains on foreign currency transactions. Other expense of $101,000 in 1994
consists primarily of net losses on foreign currency transactions.
 
     Income Taxes.  The Company's effective tax rate for 1995 and 1994 was 29%
and 34% respectively, and 1995 was lower than the federal statutory rate
primarily due to the change in deferred asset valuation allowance.
 
                        LIQUIDITY AND CAPITAL RESOURCES
 
     At December 31, 1996 the Company had $62,957,000 in cash and cash
equivalents, $38,918,000 in short-term marketable securities and $9,118,000 in
long-term marketable securities. During the year ended December 31, 1996 the
Company generated $45,639,000 in cash from operating activities. The primary use
of cash during 1996 was to fund the net growth in working capital items such as
accounts receivable of $49,615,000 net of increases in accounts payable of
$27,690,000, as well as additions to property and equipment. Accounts receivable
increased more than revenues as a percentage in 1996 compared with 1995 due to
increased foreign sales and sales through indirect channels to distributors and
dealers which typically have longer collection cycles.
 
     The Company has available for borrowing up to $40,000,000 under its
revolving credit agreement and approximately $4,400,000 available under local
foreign guaranteed lines of credit to certain of its foreign subsidiaries. At
December 31, 1996 there was $9,242,000 in debt and $18,319,000 in a standby
letter of credit outstanding under the revolving credit agreement and $519,000
outstanding under the foreign lines of credit. At December 31, 1996, the Company
had $7,986,000 outstanding under various leasing lines.
 
     The Company believes that funds from operations, equipment lease financing,
available borrowings under its various credit agreements and existing cash, cash
equivalents and marketable securities will be sufficient to meet the Company's
foreseeable operating and capital requirements.
 
                                       19
<PAGE>   21
 
FACTORS AFFECTING FUTURE RESULTS
 
     New Products, Cost Reductions and Technological Change. The Company is
engaged in an industry that, as a result of extensive research and development
efforts, has new, more technologically advanced products introduced on a regular
basis, and the Company continues to seek improvement in operating results
through new products and cost reductions. In addition, new technologies and
networks for delivering videoconferencing and data collaboration services, such
as the Internet and corporate intranets or LANS, have opened new opportunities
for videoconferencing. Industry standards for such new technologies are still
being developed. There can be no assurance that the Company will be successful
in obtaining cost reductions or in developing and marketing suitable new
products for these new technologies and networks that are competitive and
accepted by the marketplace.
 
     Competition.  In its established businesses of group systems and desktop
systems, the Company competes with a number of larger corporations, such as Sony
and Intel, which have greater financial and marketing resources than the
Company. In the developing businesses of videoconferencing over networks such as
the Internet and LANS, a number of new companies have begun to offer competitive
products. In addition, alliances between companies which compete with the
Company and companies which develop and market network products as well as
mergers among competitors are intensifying competition in the marketplace. This
increased competition may lead to decreases in average selling prices and
margins in both group and desktop videoconferencing systems or a lower segment
market share for newer products and services in the emerging areas of
network-based videoconferencing products and services. These factors may impact
the Company's growth.
 
     Potential Fluctuations of Quarterly Operating Results.  The majority of the
Company's revenues in each quarter result from orders booked in that quarter and
a substantial portion of the Company's orders and shipments typically occur
during the last weeks of each quarter so that forecasting of revenue is complex
and difficult to predict. Unanticipated variations in the timing of receipt of
customer orders in any quarter may produce significant fluctuations in quarterly
revenues. As a result, a shortfall in revenue compared to expectations may not
evidence itself until late in the quarter and any resulting impact on earnings
may not be determinable until some weeks after the end of the quarter.
 
     Manufacturing.  Some key subassemblies and products are currently available
only from one vendor and some vendors are smaller companies with less financial
resources than the Company. In some cases these are sourced from only one
vendor, even where multiple sources are available, to maintain quality control
and enhance the working relationship with the vendor. The Company's business
could be adversely affected by delays or interruptions of supplies,
subassemblies or products from such key vendors.
 
     Newly Issued Accounting Standards.  In February 1997, the Financial
Accounting Standards Board issued Statement No. 128 ("SFAS 128"), "Earnings per
Share," which is effective for fiscal years ending after December 15, 1997,
including interim periods. SFAS 128 requires the presentation of basic and
diluted earning per share (EPS). Basic EPS, which replaces primary EPS, excludes
dilution and is computed by dividing income available to common stockholders by
the weighted-average number of common shares outstanding for the period. Diluted
EPS reflects the potential dilution that could occur if securities or other
contracts to issue common stock were exercised or converted into common stock or
resulted in the issuance of common stock that then shared in the earnings of the
entity. Diluted EPS is computed similarly to fully diluted EPS under the
existing rules. SFAS 128 requires restatement of all prior-period earnings per
share data presented after the effective date. The Company will adopt SFAS 128
in 1997 and has not yet determined the impact of adoption.
 
                                       20
<PAGE>   22
 
ITEM 8:  FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND SUPPLEMENTARY DATA:
 
                             PICTURETEL CORPORATION
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                        PAGE
                                                                                        ----
<S>                                                                                     <C>
Index to Financial Statements and Supplementary Data
Financial Statements:
     Report of Independent Accountants................................................   22
     Consolidated Statements of Income................................................   23
     Consolidated Balance Sheets......................................................   24
     Consolidated Statements of Stockholders' Equity..................................   25
     Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows............................................   26
     Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.......................................   27
Supplementary Data:
     Report of Independent Accountants................................................   40
     Schedule II Valuation and Qualifying Accounts....................................   41
</TABLE>
 
                                       21
<PAGE>   23
 
                       REPORT OF INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS
 
To the Board of Directors and Stockholders of
  PICTURETEL CORPORATION:
 
     We have audited the accompanying consolidated balance sheets of PictureTel
Corporation as of December 31, 1996 and 1995, and the related consolidated
statements of income, stockholders' equity and cash flows for each of the three
years in the period ended December 31, 1996. These financial statements are the
responsibility of the Company's management. Our responsibility is to express an
opinion on these financial statements based on our audits.
 
     We conducted our audits in accordance with generally accepted auditing
standards. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain
reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material
misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting
the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. An audit also includes
assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by
management, as well as evaluating the overall financial statement presentation.
We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.
 
     In our opinion, the financial statements referred to above present fairly,
in all material respects, the consolidated financial position of PictureTel
Corporation as of December 31, 1996 and 1995, and the consolidated results of
its operations and its cash flows for each of the three years in the period
ended December 31, 1996 in conformity with generally accepted accounting
principles.
 
COOPERS & LYBRAND L.L.P.
Boston, Massachusetts
February 12, 1997
 
                                       22
<PAGE>   24
 
                             PICTURETEL CORPORATION
 
                       CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF INCOME
                 (DOLLARS IN THOUSANDS, EXCEPT PER SHARE DATA)
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                  YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                                                             ----------------------------------
                                                               1996         1995         1994
                                                             --------     --------     --------
<S>                                                          <C>          <C>          <C>
Revenues...................................................  $482,532     $346,758     $255,193
Cost of sales..............................................   254,772      175,043      129,039
                                                             --------     --------     --------
Gross margin...............................................   227,760      171,715      126,154
Operating expenses:
Selling, general and administrative........................   123,520      101,229       82,618
Research and development...................................    60,089       46,184       38,327
                                                             --------     --------     --------
Total operating expenses...................................   183,609      147,413      120,945
                                                             --------     --------     --------
Income from operations.....................................    44,151       24,302        5,209
Other income (expense):
Interest income............................................     5,337        4,123        2,826
Interest expense...........................................       924          971          985
Other income (expense), net................................     3,147           87         (101)
                                                             --------     --------     --------
Income before provision for income taxes...................    51,711       27,541        6,949
Provision for income taxes.................................    16,938        7,915        2,370
                                                             --------     --------     --------
Net income.................................................  $ 34,773     $ 19,626     $  4,579
                                                             ========     ========     ========
Net income per common and common equivalent share..........  $   0.96     $   0.56     $   0.15
                                                             ========     ========     ========
Weighted average common and common equivalent shares
  outstanding..............................................    36,054       35,014       31,354
                                                             ========     ========     ========
</TABLE>
 
   The accompanying notes are an integral part of the consolidated financial
                                  statements.
 
                                       23
<PAGE>   25
 
                             PICTURETEL CORPORATION
 
                          CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS
                             (DOLLARS IN THOUSANDS)
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                             DECEMBER 31,
                                                                         ---------------------
                                                                           1996         1995
                                                                         --------     --------
<S>                                                                      <C>          <C>
                                            ASSETS
Current assets:
Cash and cash equivalents..............................................  $ 62,957     $ 39,476
Marketable securities..................................................    38,918       20,463
Accounts receivable less allowance for doubtful accounts of $3,284 and
  $1,791 at December 31, 1996 and 1995, respectively...................   147,350       97,735
Inventories............................................................    43,320       43,791
Deferred taxes, net....................................................     5,950        6,665
Other current assets...................................................     5,506        5,781
                                                                         --------     --------
          Total current assets.........................................   304,001      213,911
Marketable securities..................................................     9,118       34,084
Deferred taxes, net....................................................     5,088        6,000
Property and equipment, net............................................    44,217       22,515
Capitalized software costs, net........................................     6,832        5,073
Other assets...........................................................     6,791        6,558
                                                                         --------     --------
          Total assets.................................................  $376,047     $288,141
                                                                         ========     ========
 
                             LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY
Current liabilities:
Short-term borrowings..................................................  $    519     $    557
Accounts payable.......................................................    53,329       25,639
Accrued compensation and benefits......................................     8,906        9,881
Accrued expenses.......................................................    17,897       16,646
Current portion of capital lease obligations...........................     3,294        2,283
Deferred revenue.......................................................    19,110       19,509
                                                                         --------     --------
          Total current liabilities....................................   103,055       74,515
Long- term borrowings..................................................     9,242       12,226
Capital lease obligations..............................................     4,692          578
Commitments and contingencies (Notes 6, 7 and 13)
Stockholders' equity:
Preference stock, $.01 par value; 15,000,000 shares authorized; none
  issued...............................................................        --           --
Common stock, $.01 par value; 80,000,000 shares authorized; 34,036,186
  and 32,723,444 shares issued and outstanding at December 31, 1996 and
  1995.................................................................       341          328
Additional paid-in capital.............................................   196,249      173,379
Retained earnings......................................................    62,195       27,422
Cumulative translation adjustment......................................      (615)        (531)
Unrealized gain on marketable securities, net..........................       888          224
                                                                         --------     --------
          Total stockholders' equity...................................   259,058      200,822
                                                                         --------     --------
          Total liabilities and stockholders' equity...................  $376,047     $288,141
                                                                         ========     ========
</TABLE>
 
   The accompanying notes are an integral part of the consolidated financial
                                  statements.
 
                                       24
<PAGE>   26
 
                             PICTURETEL CORPORATION
 
                       STATEMENTS OF STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY
               FOR THE YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1996, 1995, 1994
                             (DOLLARS IN THOUSANDS)
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                     UNREALIZED
                                                                                                     (LOSS) GAIN
                           COMMON STOCK        ADDITIONAL                             CUMULATIVE    ON MARKETABLE       TOTAL
                      ----------------------    PAID-IN     RETAINED     UNEARNED     TRANSLATION    SECURITIES,    STOCKHOLDERS'
                        SHARES     PAR VALUE    CAPITAL     EARNINGS   COMPENSATION   ADJUSTMENT         NET           EQUITY
                      ----------   ---------   ----------   --------   ------------   -----------   -------------   -------------
<S>                   <C>          <C>         <C>          <C>        <C>            <C>           <C>             <C>
Balance, December 31,
  1993............... 30,297,690     $ 303      $143,978    $ 3,217       $  (40)       $  (519)           --         $ 146,939
Exercise of employee
  stock options and
  related tax
  benefit............    420,110         4         2,021         --           --             --            --             2,025
Amortization of
  unearned
  compensation.......         --        --            --         --           40             --            --                40
Foreign currency
  translation
  adjustment.........         --        --            --         --           --             67            --                67
Unrealized loss on
  marketable
  securities, net....         --        --            --         --           --             --         $(414)             (414)
Net income...........         --        --            --      4,579           --             --            --             4,579
                      ----------      ----      --------    -------         ----          -----         -----          --------
Balance, December 31,
  1994............... 30,717,800       307       145,999      7,796           --           (452)         (414)          153,236
Exercise of employee
  stock options and
  related tax
  benefit............  1,873,650        19        26,229         --           --             --            --            26,248
Employee stock
  purchase plan
  shares.............    131,994         2         1,151         --           --             --            --             1,153
Foreign currency
  translation
  adjustment.........         --        --            --         --           --            (79)           --               (79)
Unrealized gain on
  marketable
  securities, net....         --        --            --         --           --             --           638               638
Net income...........         --        --            --     19,626           --             --            --            19,626
                      ----------      ----      --------    -------         ----          -----         -----          --------
Balance, December 31,
  1995............... 32,723,444       328       173,379     27,422           --           (531)          224           200,822
Exercise of employee
  stock options and
  related tax
  benefit............  1,238,915        12        20,992         --           --             --            --            21,004
Employee stock
  purchase plan
  shares.............     73,827         1         1,878         --           --             --            --             1,879
Foreign currency
  translation
  adjustment.........         --        --            --         --           --            (84)           --               (84)
Unrealized gain on
  marketable
  securities, net....         --        --            --         --           --             --           664               664
Net income...........         --        --            --     34,773           --             --            --            34,773
                      ----------      ----      --------    -------         ----          -----         -----          --------
Balance, December 31,
  1996............... 34,036,186     $ 341      $196,249    $62,195       $   --        $  (615)        $ 888         $ 259,058
                      ==========      ====      ========    =======         ====          =====         =====          ========
</TABLE>
 
   The accompanying notes are an integral part of the consolidated financial
                                  statements.
 
                                       25
<PAGE>   27
 
                             PICTURETEL CORPORATION
 
                     CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
                             (DOLLARS IN THOUSANDS)
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                  YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                                                              ---------------------------------
                                                                1995         1994        1996
                                                              --------     --------     -------
<S>                                                           <C>          <C>          <C>
Cash flows from operating activities:
     Net income.............................................  $ 34,773     $ 19,626     $ 4,579
Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash provided by
  (used in) operating activities:
     Depreciation and amortization..........................    21,521       17,906      18,345
     Deferred taxes, net....................................     1,627       (2,127)     (1,162)
     Other non-cash items...................................      (348)         (79)         53
Changes in operating assets and liabilities:
     Accounts receivable....................................   (49,615)     (32,707)    (16,682)
     Inventories............................................       471      (12,130)     (7,384)
     Other assets...........................................      (682)      (2,401)     (3,364)
     Accounts payable.......................................    27,690        7,423       7,481
     Accrued compensation and benefits and accrued
       expenses.............................................       276        9,472       5,693
     Income taxes, net......................................    10,325        8,056         660
     Deferred revenue.......................................      (399)       5,786       5,384
                                                              --------     --------     --------
Net cash provided by operating activities...................    45,639       18,825      13,603
Cash flows from investing activities:
     Purchase of marketable securities......................   (20,115)     (71,772)    (19,014)
     Proceeds from marketable securities....................    25,987       70,902      38,182
     Additions to property and equipment....................   (38,547)     (16,251)    (14,335)
     Proceeds from disposals of property and equipment......       387           --          --
     Capitalized software costs.............................    (5,924)      (4,247)     (2,916)
     Purchase of intangible asset...........................      (565)          --          --
     Proceeds from sale of intangible asset.................     2,050           --          --
                                                              --------     --------     --------
Net cash provided by (used in) investing activities.........   (36,727)     (21,368)      1,917
Cash flows from financing activities:
     Payments on short-term borrowings......................        38       (6,412)      4,944
     Proceeds from long-term borrowings.....................     2,803       12,226          --
     Principal payments on long-term borrowings.............    (5,787)          --       2,483
     Principal payments under capital lease obligations.....    (3,367)      (3,482)     (5,533)
     Proceeds from capital leases...........................     8,492           --          --
     Proceeds from exercise of stock options................    10,676       13,786       2,025
     Proceeds from employee stock purchase plan.............     1,878        1,153          --
                                                              --------     --------     --------
Net cash provided by financing activities...................    14,733       17,271       3,919
Effect of exchange rate changes on cash.....................      (164)         401      (2,013)
                                                              --------     --------     --------
Net increase in cash and cash equivalents...................    23,481       15,129      17,426
                                                              --------     --------     --------
Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of year..............    39,476       24,347       6,921
                                                              --------     --------     --------
Cash and cash equivalents at end of year....................  $ 62,957     $ 39,476     $24,347
                                                              ========     ========     ========
Supplemental cash flow information:
     Interest paid..........................................  $    895     $    958
     Income taxes paid......................................  $  1,632     $  2,893     $ 2,782
</TABLE>
 
   The accompanying notes are an integral part of the consolidated financial
                                  statements.
 
                                       26
<PAGE>   28
 
                             PICTURETEL CORPORATION
 
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
1.  NATURE OF THE BUSINESS:
 
     PictureTel Corporation (the "Company"), operates in one business segment,
the development, manufacture, marketing and servicing of videoconferencing
equipment.
 
2.  SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES:
 
  USE OF ESTIMATES IN THE PREPARATION OF FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
     The preparation of financial statements in conformity with generally
accepted accounting principles requires management to make estimates and
assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities and
disclosure of contingent assets and liabilities at the date of the financial
statements and the reported amounts of revenues and expenses during the
reporting period. Actual results could differ from those estimates.
 
  PRINCIPLES OF CONSOLIDATION
 
     The consolidated financial statements include the accounts of the Company
and all of its subsidiaries. All material inter-company accounts and
transactions have been eliminated in consolidation.
 
  FOREIGN CURRENCY TRANSLATION
 
     The financial statements of the Company's non-U.S. subsidiaries, where the
local currency is the functional currency, are translated using exchange rates
in effect at the end of the year for assets and liabilities and average exchange
rates during the year for results of operations. Related translation adjustments
are reported as a separate component of stockholders' equity.
 
  FOREIGN EXCHANGE CONTRACTS
 
     The Company and its subsidiaries have entered into foreign currency forward
contracts as a hedge against specific inter-company and foreign currency
receivable transactions. Forward contracts involve agreements to purchase or
sell foreign currencies at specific rates at future dates. The Company's hedging
activities do not subject the Company to exchange rate risk because the gains
and losses on these contracts offset the losses and gains on the assets,
liabilities, and transactions being hedged. The contract premiums or discounts
are amortized over the life of the foreign exchange contracts and are recognized
in other income. At December 31, 1996 and 1995 the Company had contracts
maturing through May 7, 1997 to purchase $18,534,000 and $21,779,000,
respectively, in foreign currency (British pounds, French francs, German marks,
Japanese yen, Swiss francs, Swedish krona and Australian dollars). Cash flows
resulting from hedging contracts are classified in the same category as the cash
flows from the items being hedged. The carrying amount of the foreign currency
forward contracts is the fair value which is determined by obtaining market
prices.
 
  CASH EQUIVALENTS AND MARKETABLE SECURITIES
 
     The Company classifies all debt and equity securities as available for
sale. They are carried at their fair value, based on quoted market prices, with
the unrealized gains and losses, net of tax, reported in a separate component of
stockholders' equity. The Company considers all highly liquid investments with a
maturity of three months or less at the date of purchase to be cash equivalents.
Those instruments with maturities between three months and twelve months, along
with equity securities, are considered to be short-term marketable securities
and investments with maturities of greater than one year are classified as
long-term marketable securities. At December 31, 1996 and 1995 cash equivalents
and marketable debt securities primarily consist of U.S. government securities,
corporate and municipal issues and commercial paper.
 
     The amortized cost of marketable securities is adjusted for the
amortization of premiums and accretion of discounts over the life of the
security. Such amortization and interest are included in interest income. For
the
 
                                       27
<PAGE>   29
 
                             PICTURETEL CORPORATION
           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
 
purpose of determining gain or loss, the specific identification of securities
method is used. Realized gains and losses are included in other income.
 
  INVENTORIES
 
     Inventories are stated at the lower of cost or market. Cost is determined
on the first-in, first-out basis.
 
  PROPERTY AND EQUIPMENT
 
     Property and equipment are stated at cost. Depreciation and amortization
are provided using the straight-line method over the following estimated useful
lives:
 
<TABLE>
          <S>                                             <C>
          Equipment.....................................  2-5 years
          Equipment and furniture under capital           3-5 years
            leases......................................
          Furniture and fixtures........................  3-5 years
          Leasehold improvements........................  Estimated useful life or term
                                                          of the lease, if shorter
</TABLE>
 
     Maintenance and repairs are charged to expense as incurred. Significant
improvements are capitalized and depreciated. Upon retirement or sale, the cost
of the assets disposed of, and the related accumulated depreciation, are removed
from the accounts and any resulting gain or loss is included in the
determination of net income.
 
  RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT AND CAPITALIZED SOFTWARE COSTS
 
     Costs incurred prior to the establishment of technological feasibility are
charged to research and development expense. Software production costs incurred
subsequent to the establishment of technological feasibility are capitalized
until the product is available for general release to customers. Amortization is
based on the greater of (i) the ratio that current gross revenues for a product
bear to the total of current and anticipated future gross revenues for that
product or (ii) the straight-line method over the remaining estimated life of
the product.
 
     During the years ended December 31, 1996, 1995, and 1994, the Company
capitalized approximately $5,924,000, $4,247,000, and $2,916,000, respectively,
of software costs. During the years ended December 31, 1996, 1995, and 1994, the
Company amortized approximately $4,165,000, $3,337,000, and $3,973,000,
respectively, of software costs.
 
  OTHER ASSETS
 
     Included in other assets are intangible assets which consist primarily of
intellectual property rights and non-compete agreements which are amortized over
their estimated useful life, which range from eighteen to thirty-six months.
Accumulated amortization on intangible assets was $3,771,000 and $3,203,000 at
December 31, 1996 and 1995, respectively. Also included in other assets are
prepaid royalties and investments accounted for under the cost method. The
Company reviews other long-term assets for any impairment in accordance with the
Statement of Financial Accounting Standard No. 121 "Accounting for Impairment of
Long-Lived Assets and for Long-Lived Assets to be Disposed Of" (SFAS 121).
 
REVENUE RECOGNITION
 
     Revenue from product sales is recognized upon shipment in accordance with
contractual acceptance terms or upon completion of all significant obligations,
whichever is later. Revenue from maintenance contracts is recognized ratably
over the term of the contract. Allowances for estimated future product returns
 
                                       28
<PAGE>   30
 
                             PICTURETEL CORPORATION
           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
 
and price protection under the Company's agreements with its distributors and
resellers are provided in the same period as the related revenues.
 
  WARRANTY
 
     The Company provides a warranty for parts and labor on its products.
Warranty periods are generally one year from installation date on sales to
end-users and one year from delivery date on sales to distributors. In addition,
warranty periods for certain software products, repairs, and upgraded parts are
90 days upon receipt. Estimated costs related to warranty are accrued at the
time of revenue recognition.
 
  INCOME TAXES
 
     The Company provides for the recognition of deferred tax liabilities and
assets for the expected future tax consequences of events that have been
included in the financial statements or tax returns. Under this method, deferred
tax liabilities and assets are determined based on the difference between the
financial statement and tax bases of assets and liabilities using enacted tax
rates in effect for the year in which the differences are expected to reverse.
The measurement of deferred tax assets is reduced by a valuation allowance if,
based upon the weighted available evidence, it is more likely than not that some
or all of the deferred tax assets will not be realized.
 
  NET INCOME PER COMMON AND COMMON EQUIVALENT SHARE
 
     Net income per common and common equivalent share is based on the weighted
average number of shares of common and common equivalent shares (stock options)
outstanding during the period. Fully diluted earnings per common and common
equivalent share did not differ materially from primary earnings per common and
common equivalent share.
 
CONCENTRATIONS
 
  Credit Risk
 
     Financial instruments which potentially subject the Company to
concentration of credit risk include cash, cash equivalents, marketable
securities and trade receivables. The Company sells its products to a variety of
customers, including end users, dealers and distributors, in a variety of
different industries and geographic regions. The Company performs ongoing credit
evaluations of its customers and maintains reserves for potential credit losses.
With respect to its cash, cash equivalents and marketable securities, the
Company invests its excess cash primarily in deposits with a commercial bank,
U.S. government securities, corporate and municipal issues, and commercial paper
and has established guidelines relative to credit ratings, diversification and
maturities that maintain safety and liquidity. The Company has not experienced
any significant losses on these financial instruments.
 
  Suppliers
 
     Certain components and parts used in the Company's products are procured
from a single source. The Company obtains parts from one vendor only, even where
multiple sources are available, to maintain quality control and enhance the
working relationship with suppliers. These purchases are made under existing
contracts or purchase orders. The failure of a supplier, including a
subcontractor, to deliver on schedule could delay or interrupt the Company's
delivery of products and thereby adversely affect the Company's revenues and
profits.
 
  NEWLY ISSUED ACCOUNTING STANDARDS
 
     In February 1997, the Financial Accounting Standards Board issued Statement
No. 128 ("SFAS 128"), "Earnings per Share," which is effective for fiscal years
ending after December 15, 1997, including interim
 
                                       29
<PAGE>   31
 
                             PICTURETEL CORPORATION
           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
 
periods. SFAS 128 requires the presentation of basic and diluted earning per
share (EPS). Basic EPS, which replaces primary EPS, excludes dilution and is
computed by dividing income available to common stockholders by the
weighted-average number of common shares outstanding for the period. Diluted EPS
reflects the potential dilution that could occur if securities or other
contracts to issue common stock were exercised or converted into common stock or
resulted in the issuance of common stock that then shared in the earnings of the
entity. Diluted EPS is computed similarly to fully diluted EPS under the
existing rules. SFAS 128 requires restatement of all prior-period earnings per
share data presented after the effective date. The Company will adopt SFAS 128
in 1997 and has not yet determined the impact of adoption.
 
3.  INVENTORIES:
 
     Inventories consist of the following (in thousands):
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                    DECEMBER 31, 1996
                                                                  ---------------------
                                                                   1996          1995
                                                                  -------       -------
        <S>                                                       <C>           <C>
        Purchased parts.........................................  $ 6,409       $11,492
        Work in process.........................................    2,018         3,252
        Finished goods..........................................   34,893        29,047
                                                                  -------       -------
                                                                  $43,320       $43,791
                                                                  =======       =======
</TABLE>
 
4.  MARKETABLE SECURITIES:
 
     At December 31, 1996 and 1995, marketable securities can be summarized as
follows (in thousands):
Available for Sale Securities
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                 AVAILABLE FOR SALE SECURITIES
                                                         ---------------------------------------------
                                                                 1996                     1995
                                                         --------------------     --------------------
                                                         AMORTIZED   CARRYING     AMORTIZED   CARRYING
                                                           COST       VALUE         COST       VALUE
                                                         ---------   --------     ---------   --------
<S>                                                      <C>         <C>          <C>         <C>
U. S. Government and its agencies......................   $42,992    $ 42,956      $45,983    $ 46,252
Municipal Issues.......................................     3,352       3,353        8,217       8,295
                                                          -------     -------      -------     -------
     Total Debt Securities.............................    46,344      46,309       54,200      54,547
Equity Securities......................................       482       1,727           --          --
                                                          -------     -------      -------     -------
                                                          $46,826    $ 48,036      $54,200    $ 54,547
                                                          =======     =======      =======     =======
</TABLE>
 
     Unrealized holding gains of $1,210,000 for 1996 and $347,000 for 1995 are
included as a separate component of stockholders' equity, net of tax. Realized
gains of approximately $3,000,000, $107,000 and $84,000 from the sales of
available for sale securities are included in other income for the years ended
December 31, 1996, 1995 and 1994, respectively.
 
     At December 31, 1996, $37,192,000, or 58% of the Company's marketable
securities have stated maturity dates within one year of the balance sheet date,
the remaining securities have stated maturity dates within two years of the
balance sheet date.
 
                                       30
<PAGE>   32
 
                             PICTURETEL CORPORATION
           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
 
5.  PROPERTY AND EQUIPMENT:
 
     Property and equipment consist of the following (in thousands):
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                    DECEMBER 31, 1996
                                                                  ---------------------
                                                                   1996          1995
                                                                  -------       -------
        <S>                                                       <C>           <C>
        Equipment...............................................  $79,795       $49,526
        Equipment and furniture under capital leases............   11,410         7,867
        Furniture and fixtures..................................    6,865         6,166
        Leasehold improvements..................................    5,081         2,735
                                                                  -------       -------
                                                                  103,151        66,294
        Less:  Accumulated depreciation and amortization........   58,934        43,779
                                                                  -------       -------
                                                                  $44,217       $22,515
                                                                  =======       =======
</TABLE>
 
     At December 31, 1996 and 1995 accumulated amortization amounted to
$3,618,000 and $5,907,000 on equipment and furniture under capital leases.
Depreciation expense for the years ended December 31, 1996, 1995, and 1994 was
$16,807,000, $13,112,000 and $12,426,000, respectively.
 
6.  DEBT:
 
     On December 19, 1996, the Company amended its unsecured revolving credit
agreement to increase the borrowing capacity from $17,000,000 to $40,000,000
with an expiration date of October 4, 1999. This agreement requires interest
payable at either the bank's base rate, or the adjusted eurocurrency rate plus
applicable margin. The applicable margin ranges from seven-eighths percent to
one and three-eighths percent based on certain financial ratios. Commitment fees
are payable on any unused portion and range from 0.225% to 0.375% based upon
certain financial ratios. The amended agreement contains no demand feature and
provides that the principal portion of the borrowings be paid by the expiration
date. Accordingly, the borrowings under the amended agreement are classified as
long-term borrowings.
 
     In addition, the Company has $18,319,000 of outstanding standby letters of
credit under this agreement. Fees for letters of credit outstanding against this
revolving credit line were payable at one percent per annum of the face amount.
Each letter of credit issued subsequent to the amendment date will be calculated
at a fee equal to the applicable margin times the face amount of such letter of
credit.
 
     The unsecured revolving credit agreement contains certain financial
covenants, including the maintenance of certain ratios including total
liabilities to tangible net worth and operating cash flow to total debt
services. At December 31, 1996 and 1995, $9,242,000 and $12,226,000,
respectively, were outstanding under this credit agreement and the Company was
in compliance with all covenants.
 
     Local lines of credit are available for short-term advances of up to
$4,400,000 to certain of the Company's foreign subsidiaries. Most of these lines
are guaranteed by the Company. The agreements require interest payable ranging
from the bank's base rate plus one to one and one half of a percent per annum,
and facility fees of up to one eighth of one percent of the facility amount per
annum. A total of $519,000 and $557,000 was borrowed against these local lines
of credit at December 31, 1996 and 1995, respectively. At December 31, 1996 and
1995, the weighted average interest rate on outstanding short-term borrowings
was 4.6% and 6.8%, respectively. The carrying amount of the short-term and
long-term borrowings is a reasonable estimate of the fair value because of the
short maturity of those instruments and because the interest rate in effect at
December 31, 1996 approximates the current market rate, respectively.
 
7.  COMMITMENTS:
 
     The Company has commitments under operating leases for office and
manufacturing space. The facilities leases are for terms ranging from one to
eighteen years. The leases usually contain provisions which allow for
 
                                       31
<PAGE>   33
 
                             PICTURETEL CORPORATION
           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
 
expansion, extension and termination. Total rent expense for operating leases
was $9,114,000, $6,757,000 and $5,724,000 for the years ended December 31, 1996,
1995, and 1994, respectively. The Company entered into an eighteen year lease
agreement for an additional building in Andover, Massachusetts. Beginning in
August, 1997 the Company expects to occupy the new building which will be
accounted for as a capital lease. The future lease payments aggregate
$42,352,000.
 
     The Company is lessee under several capital lease and sale-leaseback
agreements with third parties for certain leasehold improvements, equipment and
furniture.
 
     Future minimum lease payments under capital and operating leases with
initial or remaining terms of one year of more are (in thousands):
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                    CAPITAL     OPERATING
                                                                    LEASES       LEASES
                                                                    -------     ---------
        <S>                                                         <C>         <C>
        1997......................................................  $ 3,785     $   8,905
        1998......................................................    3,180         8,601
        1999......................................................    1,822         7,005
        2000......................................................                  5,418
        2001......................................................                  5,247
        Thereafter................................................                 75,704
                                                                     ------      --------
        Total future minimum lease payments.......................  $ 8,787     $ 110,880
                                                                     ======      ========
        Less amount representing interest.........................      801
                                                                     ------
        Present value of net future minimum lease payments........    7,986
        Less current portion......................................    3,294
                                                                     ------
        Long-term obligation under capital leases.................  $ 4,692
                                                                     ======
</TABLE>
 
8.  CAPITAL STOCK:
 
  PREFERENCE STOCK
 
     The Company's Board of Directors is empowered to fix the terms and rights
of the Preference Stock. Issuance of the Preference Stock limits the rights of
the Common Stockholders.
 
  COMMON STOCK
 
     On September 28, 1995, the Board of Directors authorized a two-for-one
split of the Company's outstanding Common Stock (the "Stock Split") by means of
a 100% stock dividend. All Common Stock and Common Stock equivalents and per
share amounts have been retroactively restated to reflect the two-for-one split.
 
  STOCKHOLDERS' RIGHTS AGREEMENT
 
     On March 25, 1992, the Board of Directors of the Company declared a
dividend of one purchase right (a "Right") for every outstanding share of the
Company's Common Stock. After giving effect to the split, each Right entitles
the holder to purchase from the Company one two-hundredths of a share of Junior
Preference Stock at a price of $90 per one two-hundredths of a share, subject to
adjustment. The Rights will become exercisable on the fifteenth business day
following the date of a public announcement that an acquiring person (as defined
in the Rights Agreement, the definition of which provides for certain limited
exclusions) has acquired, or obtained the right to acquire, beneficial ownership
of 15% or more of the Company's outstanding Common Stock or on the fifteenth
business day following the commencement of a tender offer or exchange offer that
would result in an acquiring person owning 15% or more of the Company's
outstanding Common Stock.
 
                                       32
<PAGE>   34
 
                             PICTURETEL CORPORATION
           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
 
     If the Company were acquired in a merger or other business combination, or
more than 25% of its assets or earning power were sold, each holder of a Right
would be entitled to exercise such Right and thereby receive common stock of the
acquiring company with a market value of two times the exercise price of the
Right. If an acquiring person has acquired or obtained the right to acquire 15%
of the Company's Common Stock, each holder of a Right, other than the acquiring
person, will be entitled to receive shares of the Company's Common Stock having
a market value of two times the exercise price of the Right. At any time the
Company may redeem the Rights at a redemption price of $0.005 per Right. The
Rights expire March 25, 2002.
 
  STOCK-BASED COMPENSATION PLANS
 
     The Company has adopted the disclosure requirements of Statement of
Financial Accounting Standard (SFAS) No. 123, "Accounting for Stock-Based
Compensation." The Company continues to recognize compensation costs using the
intrinsic value based method described in Accounting Principles Board Opinion
No. 25, "Accounting for Stock Issued to Employees." No compensation costs were
recognized in 1996, 1995, and 1994.
 
     Net income and net income per share as reported in these consolidated
financial statements and on a pro forma basis, as if the fair value based method
described in SFAS No. 123 had been adopted, are as follows (in thousands, except
per share amounts):
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                 YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                                                                 ------------------------
                                                                  1996             1995
                                                                 -------          -------
        <S>                                      <C>             <C>              <C>
        Net income.............................  As reported     $34,773          $19,626
                                                 Pro forma        30,020           18,395
        Primary net income per share...........  As reported     $  0.96          $  0.56
                                                 Pro forma          0.85             0.53
        Fully diluted net income per share.....  As reported     $  0.96          $  0.56
                                                 Pro forma          0.85             0.52
</TABLE>
 
     The effects of applying SFAS No. 123 for the purpose of providing pro forma
disclosures may not be indicative of the effects on reported net income and net
income per share for future years, as the pro forma disclosures include the
effects of only those awards granted after January 1, 1995 and additional awards
in future years are anticipated.
 
  EMPLOYEE STOCK PURCHASE PLAN
 
     On April 15, 1994 the Company adopted an Employee Stock Purchase Plan (the
"Plan") under which eligible employees are able to purchase shares of the
Company's Common Stock at 85% of the market value at the date of the start of
each six month option period or the end of such period, whichever is lower.
Under the provisions of the Plan up to 1,000,000 shares are authorized after the
Stock Split. Shares purchased under the Plan in 1996 and 1995 totaled 73,827 and
131,994, respectively. The weighted average grant date fair value of the shares
purchased was $7.86 and $4.43 in 1996 and 1995. There are 794,179 shares
available under the Plan at December 31, 1996.
 
     For the purpose of providing pro forma disclosures, the fair values of
share purchased were estimated using the Black-Scholes option-pricing model with
the following weighted-average assumptions used for purchases in 1996 and 1995,
respectively: a risk-free interest rate of 5.23% and 5.89%, an expected life of
6 months, expected volatility of 50%, and no expected dividends.
 
                                       33
<PAGE>   35
 
                             PICTURETEL CORPORATION
           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
 
  STOCK OPTION PLANS
 
     Under the Company's 1984 Amended and Restated Stock Option Plan, employees
and other persons who are in a position to make significant contributions to the
success of the Company may be granted either non-statutory or incentive stock
options to purchase up to 2,094,174 shares of Common Stock after the Stock
Split. The options are exercisable as stipulated by the Board of Directors (or a
Committee thereof) and will expire no more than ten years from the date of the
grant. The incentive option price per share will not be less than the fair
market value at the date of the grant. No new options will be issued as the Plan
has been terminated.
 
     On February 18, 1997, the Compensation Committee of the Board of Directors
granted replacement options, at an exercise price of $16.875 per share, to all
employees other than the executive officers and directors (and other than those
few who did not consent) holding outstanding options exercisable at a price of
$20.00 or more. The replacement options become exercisable (unless accelerated
by the Compensation Committee) over a four-year period, and to the extent the
canceled option had already become exercisable, such portion of the new option
will become exercisable in six months from the date of re-grant and the
remaining options will become exercisable over a 4 year period commencing in
February 1998.
 
     On November 14, 1989, the Company's shareholders approved the PictureTel
Equity Incentive Plan. As of December 31, 1996 shareholders have authorized the
issuance of up to 9,000,000 shares of post Stock Split Common Stock under the
Plan. The Equity Incentive Plan permits the granting of non-statutory and
incentive stock options, a variety of stock and stock-based awards and related
benefits, and cash performance awards, which are in addition to option grants
under the 1984 Amended and Restated Stock Option Plan, to employees and other
persons who are in a position to make significant contributions to the success
of the Company.
 
     Effective October 23, 1992, the Board of Directors adopted the 1992
Non-Employee Directors' Stock Option Plan. As of December 31, 1996 shareholders
have authorized the issuance of up to 430,000 shares of Common Stock under the
Plan to eligible non-employee directors. Under this Plan each non-employee
director at October 23, 1992 and each non-employee director subsequently elected
receives, at October 23, 1992 or the director's first election date, a
non-statutory option to purchase 40,000 shares of post Stock Split Common Stock
at an exercise price equal to the fair market value of the stock on the
effective date of grant. The Plan was amended at the Annual Meeting on June 17,
1996 so as to increase the aggregate number of shares available for issuance
under the Plan from 280,000 to 430,000, and to further provide, as of August 1,
1996, for the automatic grant of a non- statutory option to purchase 20,000
shares of Common Stock to directors who have been directors for more than two
years on August 1, 1996, and on the later date of first election of any other
director and thereafter, for the annual grant of stock options to purchase 5,000
shares of the Company's Common Stock on August first of each year, commencing on
August 1, 1997, so long as such individual is serving as a director on the
applicable August first date, provided that no such annual option for 5,000
shares shall be granted to a director who first became a director of the Company
within six months prior to August first of said year. All options expire ten
years after the effective date of grant, and such options become exercisable
over a four year period. At December 31, 1996 there were 1,239,297 shares
available for future grant under these plans.
 
                                       34
<PAGE>   36
 
                             PICTURETEL CORPORATION
           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
 
     The following table summarizes the Company's stock option plans at December
31, 1996, 1995, and 1994, and changes during the years then ended:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                           1996                     1995                    1994
                                  ----------------------   ----------------------   ---------------------
                                               WEIGHTED-                WEIGHTED-               WEIGHTED-
                                                AVERAGE                  AVERAGE                 AVERAGE
                                               EXERCISE                 EXERCISE                EXERCISE
                                    SHARES       PRICE       SHARES       PRICE      SHARES       PRICE
                                  ----------   ---------   ----------   ---------   ---------   ---------
<S>                               <C>          <C>         <C>          <C>         <C>         <C>
Outstanding at beginning of
  year..........................   4,908,811    $ 11.56     5,863,550    $  8.00    4,961,036     $7.77
Granted at fair market value....   1,439,350      34.65     1,089,524      23.37    2,102,300      8.32
Exercised.......................  (1,238,915)      8.64    (1,873,650)      6.74     (420,110)     4.15
Forfeited.......................    (343,973)     14.49      (170,613)     10.63     (779,676)     9.55
                                   ---------                ---------               ---------
Outstanding at end of year......   4,765,273    $ 19.08     4,908,811    $ 11.56    5,863,550     $8.00
                                   =========                =========               =========
Options exercisable at
  year-end......................   1,805,678    $ 10.54     1,811,854    $  7.67    2,529,068     $6.84
Weighted-average grant-date fair
  value of options granted
  during the year at fair market
  value.........................                $ 15.74                  $ 10.65
</TABLE>
 
     The following table summarizes information about stock options outstanding
at December 31, 1996:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                     OPTIONS OUTSTANDING
                     ---------------------------------------------------          OPTIONS EXERCISABLE
                                     WEIGHTED-AVERAGE                        ------------------------------
                       NUMBER           REMAINING           WEIGHTED-          NUMBER           WEIGHTED
    RANGE OF         OUTSTANDING     CONTRACTUAL LIFE        AVERAGE         EXERCISABLE        AVERAGE
EXERCISE PRICES      AT 12/31/95        (IN YEARS)        EXERCISE PRICE     AT 12/31/96     EXERCISE PRICE
- ----------------     -----------     ----------------     --------------     -----------     --------------
<S>                  <C>             <C>                  <C>                <C>             <C>
$ 1.125 -  8.625        584,075             4.4              $  5.639           348,245          $4.385
     8.875              805,353             5.2                 8.875           313,032           8.875
   8.94 -  9.625        734,949             6.4                 9.507           677,297           9.548
   9.75 -  18.44        439,318             6.1                11.304           244,638          11.036
 21.312 - 24.880        739,205             8.0                23.808           150,515          23.342
 25.815 -  34.50        768,100             7.9                31.537            64,226          27.646
  35.00 -  40.50        694,273             8.0                 38.48             7,725          35.13
                      ---------                                               ---------
  1.125 -  40.50      4,765,273             6.5                 19.08         1,805,678          10.54
                      =========                                               =========
</TABLE>
 
     For the purpose of providing pro forma disclosures, the fair values of
options granted were estimated using the Black-Scholes option-pricing model with
the following weighted-average assumptions used for grants in 1996 and 1995,
respectively: a risk-free interest rate of 6.08% and 5.83%, an expected life of
4 years, expected volatility of 50%, and no expected dividends.
 
9.  INCOME TAXES:
 
     Significant items making up total net deferred tax assets are as follows
(in thousands): December 31,
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                       DECEMBER 31,
                                                                    -------------------
                                                                     1996        1995
                                                                    -------     -------
        <S>                                                         <C>         <C>
        Net operating loss and tax credit carryforwards...........  $10,125     $ 9,434
        Inventory reserves........................................    2,185       2,889
        Deferred revenue..........................................        0       1,110
        Other temporary differences...............................    3,495       5,916
        Valuation allowance.......................................   (4,767)     (6,684)
                                                                    -------     -------
        Total net deferred tax assets.............................  $11,038     $12,665
                                                                    =======     =======
</TABLE>
 
     The valuation allowance primarily offsets the deferred benefit of certain
federal and state tax credit carryforwards whose benefit is uncertain. The
Company has recorded a deferred tax asset of approximately
 
                                       35
<PAGE>   37
 
                             PICTURETEL CORPORATION
           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
 
$6,856,000 reflecting the benefit of deductions from the exercise of stock
options. This deferred tax asset is partially offset by a valuation allowance of
$3,726,000 until it is more likely than not that the benefit from the exercise
of stock options will be realized. The benefit from this valuation allowance
will be recorded as a credit to additional paid in capital when realized.
 
     The provision for income taxes consisted of the following (in thousands):
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                              YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                                                          -------------------------------
                                                           1996        1995        1994
                                                          -------     -------     -------
        <S>                                               <C>         <C>         <C>
        Federal income taxes:
             Currently payable..........................  $ 9,275     $ 7,311     $ 1,613
             Deferred...................................    2,813      (1,840)       (595)
        State income taxes:
             Currently payable..........................      501       1,301         671
             Deferred...................................    1,292        (119)       (567)
        Foreign taxes:
             Currently payable..........................    3,593       1,430       1,248
             Deferred...................................     (536)       (168)         --
                                                          -------      ------      ------
        Total...........................................  $16,938     $ 7,915     $ 2,370
                                                          =======      ======      ======
</TABLE>
 
     The differences between the statutory federal income tax rate and the
Company's effective income tax rate were as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                                                              ---------------------------
                                                              1996       1995       1994
                                                              ----       ----       -----
        <S>                                                   <C>        <C>        <C>
        Statutory federal income tax rate...................  35.0%      35.0%       35.0%
        State income tax, net of federal tax benefit........   3.0        5.1         0.8
        Federal and state tax credits from research and
          development.......................................  (1.4)      (1.9)      (30.1)
        Difference between foreign and US tax rates and the
          benefit of the foreign sales corporation..........  (1.7)      (1.0)       (5.1)
        Change in deferred asset valuation allowance........  (2.6)      (8.8)      31.5
        Other...............................................   0.5        0.3         2.0
                                                              ----       ----        ----
        Effective tax rate..................................  32.8%      28.7%      34.1%
                                                              ====       ====        ====
</TABLE>
 
     At December 31, 1996, the Company had remaining net operating loss ("NOL")
carryforwards available of approximately $8,344,000 to offset future federal
taxable income. The Company also has unused federal research and development tax
credits of approximately $2,348,000. The NOL and tax credit carryforwards expire
at various dates through the year 2009 and 2010, respectively. As a result of
prior equity issuances, the Company's use of NOL carryforwards incurred prior to
July 1988 is subject to certain annual limitations. At December 31, 1996,
approximately $4,637,000 of the available NOL carryforwards have an annual
limitation amount of approximately $662,000 that may be used to reduce the
Company's taxable income in the future.
 
10.  EMPLOYEE BENEFIT PLANS:
 
     The Company has a defined contribution profit sharing plan, including
features under Section 401(k) of the Internal Revenue Code, which will provide
retirement benefits to its employees. The Plan covers substantially all
employees of the Company and eligible participants may contribute up to 15% of
their pay on a pretax basis subject to annual dollar limits established by the
Internal Revenue Code and plan limitations. In 1994, the Company contributed
$353,000 to the Plan. In 1995, the Company agreed to provide a 50% matching
contribution up to the first 3% of each participant's eligible compensation. The
Company's matching contribution to the Plan was $857,000 and $661,000 in 1996
and 1995, respectively.
 
                                       36
<PAGE>   38
 
                             PICTURETEL CORPORATION
           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
 
11.  GEOGRAPHIC DATA AND MAJOR CUSTOMERS:
 
     The Company's operations involve a single industry segment -- the
development, manufacture, marketing and servicing of videoconferencing
equipment. The Company has subsidiaries in various foreign countries which sell
and service the Company's products in their respective geographic areas.
Revenues are reflected in the geographic areas from which the sales are made.
Financial information, summarized by geographic area, is as follows (in
thousands):
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                            UNITED
                                            STATES       EUROPE    ASIA/PACIFIC   ELIMINATIONS   CONSOLIDATED
                                         ------------   --------   ------------   ------------   ------------
<S>                                      <C>            <C>        <C>            <C>            <C>
YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1996:
Total revenues
Unaffiliated customers.................    $310,022     $114,861     $ 57,649              --      $482,532
Inter-company transfers................     101,230          630           --      $ (101,860)           --
                                           --------     --------      -------         -------       -------
     Total.............................    $411,252     $115,491     $ 57,649      $ (101,860)     $482,532
                                           ========     ========      =======         =======       =======
Income (loss) from operations..........    $ 30,665     $  7,657     $  3,383      $    2,446      $ 44,151
                                           ========     ========      =======         =======       =======
Identifiable assets....................    $250,521     $ 55,592     $ 25,691      $  (23,984)     $307,820
                                           ========     ========      =======         =======
Corporate assets.......................                                                            $ 68,227
                                                                                                    -------
     Total assets......................                                                            $376,047
                                                                                                    =======
YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1995:
Total revenues
Unaffiliated customers.................    $231,740     $ 79,010     $ 36,008              --      $346,758
Inter-company transfers................      80,300          701           --      $  (81,001)           --
                                           --------      -------      -------         -------      --------
Total..................................    $312,040     $ 79,711     $ 36,008      $  (81,001)     $346,758
                                           ========      =======      =======         =======      ========
Income (loss) from operations..........    $ 23,131     $ (1,515)    $  1,037      $    1,649      $ 24,302
                                           --------      -------      -------         -------      --------
Identifiable assets....................    $193,496     $ 42,196     $ 17,434      $  (26,254)     $226,872
                                           ========      =======      =======         =======
Corporate assets.......................                                                              61,269
                                                                                                   --------
     Total assets......................                                                            $288,141
                                                                                                   ========
YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1994:
Total revenues
Unaffiliated customers..................    $164,176     $62,876     $ 28,141              --      $255,193
Inter-company transfers.................      59,268          --           --      $  (59,268)           --
                                            --------     -------      -------        --------      --------
Total...................................    $223,444     $62,876     $ 28,141      $  (59,268)     $255,193
Income from operations..................    $  4,026     $   604     $    926      $     (347)     $  5,209
                                            ========     =======      =======        ========      ========
Identifiable assets.....................    $134,515     $29,919     $ 14,642      $  (20,429)     $158,647
                                            ========     =======      =======        ========
Corporate assets........................                                                             58,052
                                                                                                   --------
     Total assets.......................                                                           $216,699
                                                                                                   ========
</TABLE>
 
     The United States inter-company transfers primarily represent shipments of
systems to international subsidiaries. The inter-company transfers of systems
are made at transfer prices which approximate cost to distributors plus an
appropriate mark up, and are eliminated from consolidated revenues. Corporate
assets consist primarily of marketable securities.
 
                                       37
<PAGE>   39
 
                             PICTURETEL CORPORATION
           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
 
     Export sales to unaffiliated customers from the Company's United States
operations were as follows (in thousands):
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                               YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                                                            -------------------------------
                                                             1996        1995        1994
                                                            -------     -------     -------
     <S>                                                    <C>         <C>         <C>
     Europe...............................................  $ 1,026     $ 2,693     $ 2,552
     Canada...............................................    8,319       8,341       5,989
     Asia/Pacific.........................................   19,332      13,220       4,703
     Other................................................   15,638       8,709       3,857
                                                            -------     -------     -------
                                                            $44,315     $32,963     $17,101
                                                            =======     =======     =======
</TABLE>
 
     In 1996, 1995 and 1994 no customer accounted for 10% or more of total
revenues.
 
12.  UNAUDITED INTERIM FINANCIAL INFORMATION:
 
     Quarterly financial information is as follows (in thousands, except per
share data):
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                              FIRST        SECOND       THIRD        FOURTH
                                             QUARTER      QUARTER      QUARTER      QUARTER
                                             --------     --------     --------     --------
     <S>                                     <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>
     1996
     Revenues..............................  $105,001     $116,082     $121,302     $140,147
     Gross margin..........................    50,892       55,739       58,346       62,783
     Net income............................     7,469        8,488        8,914        9,902
     Net income per common and common
       equivalent share....................  $   0.21     $   0.24     $   0.25     $   0.28
     1995
     Revenues..............................  $ 74,156     $ 80,489     $ 90,098     $102,015
     Gross margin..........................    37,798       41,039       44,335       48,543
     Net income............................     3,088        4,155        5,223        7,160
     Net income per common and common
       equivalent share....................  $   0.09     $   0.12     $   0.15     $   0.20
</TABLE>
 
13.  LITIGATION:
 
     In December 1993, PictureTel was sued by Datapoint Corporation in the
United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas. Datapoint
alleges that certain of the Company's products infringe patent rights allegedly
owned by Datapoint. The complaint seeks approximately $51 million in
 
     damages for alleged past infringement and an injunction against alleged
future infringement. The Company believes that it has meritorious defenses to
the allegations of the complaint, and is vigorously defending against the
lawsuit.
 
     In the fall of 1995, the Court appointed a Special Master to consider the
Company's motion for summary judgment of non-infringement. The Special Master
recommended that the motion for summary judgment be denied. On September 16,
1996, the Court adopted the Special Master's claim
 
     construction of the Datapoint patents and denied PictureTel's summary
judgment motion. A trial date has been set for October 6, 1997. The parties are
completing discovery.
 
     In the event the Company is found to be infringing a valid patent or
patents, the Company could be required to pay damages for past infringement and
cease the sale of products incorporating the infringing feature (or be required
to take a license and pay royalties with respect to such patents). While there
can be no assurance that the Company will prevail, the Company believes that it
is unlikely that the outcome of the lawsuit would have a material adverse effect
on the business or the financial position, results of operations and cash flows
of the Company.
 
                                       38
<PAGE>   40
 
                             PICTURETEL CORPORATION
           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
 
ITEM 9:  CHANGES IN AND DISAGREEMENTS WITH ACCOUNTANTS ON ACCOUNTING AND
FINANCIAL DISCLOSURE
 
     None.
 
                                       39
<PAGE>   41
 
                       REPORT OF INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS
 
     Our report on the consolidated financial statements of PictureTel
Corporation is included in Item 8 of this Form 10-K. In connection with our
audits of such financial statements, we have also audited the related financial
statement schedule listed in Item 14(a) of the Form 10-K.
 
     In our opinion, the financial statement schedule referred to above, when
considered in relation to the basic financial statements taken as a whole,
presents fairly, in all material respects, the information required to be
included therein.
 
COOPERS & LYBRAND L.L.P.
 
Boston, Massachusetts
February 12, 1997
 
                                       40
<PAGE>   42
 
                SCHEDULE II -- VALUATION AND QUALIFYING ACCOUNTS
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                CHARGE TO                    BALANCE AT
                                               BALANCE AT       COSTS AND                      END OF
                                            BEGINNING OF YEAR    EXPENSES    DEDUCTIONS         YEAR
                                            -----------------   ----------   ----------      ----------
<S>                                         <C>                 <C>          <C>             <C>
YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1994:
Accounts receivable reserves..............     $ 1,377,000      $  560,000   $  152,000(a)   $1,785,000
Inventory reserves........................     $ 2,534,000      $2,376,000   $1,739,000(b)   $3,171,000
Warranty reserves.........................     $   815,000      $1,541,000   $  699,000(c)   $1,657,000
YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1995:
Accounts receivable reserves..............     $ 1,785,000      $  430,000   $  424,000(a)   $1,791,000
Inventory reserves........................     $ 3,171,000      $3,036,000   $3,339,000(b)   $2,868,000
Warranty reserves.........................     $ 1,657,000      $2,181,000   $1,343,000(c)   $2,495,000
YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1996:
Accounts receivable reserves..............     $ 1,791,000      $2,850,000   $1,357,000(a)   $3,284,000
Inventory reserves........................     $ 2,868,000      $3,309,000   $4,766,000(b)   $1,411,000
Warranty reserves.........................     $ 2,495,000      $4,104,000   $3,938,000(c)   $2,661,000
</TABLE>
 
- ---------------
 
(a) Specific write-offs
 
(b) Specific dispositions
 
(c) Specific usage
 
                                       41
<PAGE>   43
 
                                    PART III
 
ITEM 10:  DIRECTORS AND EXECUTIVE OFFICERS OF THE REGISTRANT
 
     Information with respect to this item is incorporated by reference herein
to information contained under the heading "Item 1 -- Election of Directors",
subheadings "Nominees for Election", Executive Officers" and "Section 16(a)
Beneficial Ownership Reporting Compliance" in the definitive 1997 Proxy
Statement.
 
ITEM 11:  EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION
 
     Information with respect to this item is incorporated by reference herein
to information contained under the heading "Item 1 -- Election of Directors",
subheadings "Directors Compensation", "management Compensation" and "Employment,
Severance and Other Agreements" in the definitive 1997 Proxy Statement.
(information in the 1997 Proxy Statement under " Report of the Compensation
Committee" and "Performance Graph" is not incorporated by reference.)
 
ITEM 12:  SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT
 
     Information with respect to this item is incorporated by reference herein
to information contained under the heading "Security Ownership" in the
definitive 1997 Proxy Statement.
 
ITEM 13:  CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED TRANSACTIONS
 
     Information with respect to this item is incorporated by reference herein
to information contained under the heading "Certain Relationships and Related
Transactions" [there was no such heading in 1996] in the definitive 1997 Proxy
Statement.
 
                                       42
<PAGE>   44
 
                                    PART IV
 
ITEM 14:  EXHIBITS, FINANCIAL STATEMENT SCHEDULES, AND REPORTS ON FORM 8-K
 
(A) 1.  FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
       -- Report of Independent Accountants
       -- Consolidated Statements of Income for the Years ended December 31,
          1996, 1995 and 1994
       -- Consolidated Balance Sheets as of December 31, 1996 and 1995
       -- Consolidated Statements of Stockholders' Equity for the years ended
          December 31, 1996, 1995 and 1994
       -- Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows for the years ended December 31,
          1996, 1995 and 1994
       -- Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements
 
     2.  FINANCIAL STATEMENT SCHEDULE
       -- Report of Independent Accountant
       -- Schedule II -- Valuation and Qualifying Accounts
       -- Schedules other than those listed above have been omitted since they
          are either not required, not applicable, or the information is
          otherwise included.
 
(B) REPORTS ON FORM 8-K
 
     1.  On December 17, 1996, the Company filed a report on Form 8-K to report
the resignation of Stephen Crummey as Vice President of Worldwide Sales.
 
     2.  On January 16, 1997, the Company filed a report on Form 8-K to report
that Domenic LaCava, the Vice President Enterprise Systems Group, had been
promoted to the position of President and Chief Operating Officer of the
Company.
 
(C) EXHIBITS
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
 EXHIBIT
 NUMBER                                        DESCRIPTION
- ---------   ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<C>         <S>
 3.1        Third Restated Certificate of Incorporation of Registrant, effective June 10, 1992
            (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.1.4 to Registrant's Quarterly Report on
            Form 10-Q for the quarter ended June 27, 1992)
 3.2        By-Laws as amended September 13, 1994 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 1 to
            the Registrant's Current Report on Form 8-K filed September 14, 1994)
 4.1        Form of Common Stock Certificate (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4(b) to
            Registrant's Registration Statement on Form S-8, Registration Number 33-36315
            effective August 10, 1990)
 4.2        Shareholders' Rights Agreement between the Company and The First National Bank of
            Boston as Rights Agent, dated March 25, 1992 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit
            1 to the Registrant's Registration of Certain Classes of Securities on Form 8-A
            dated March 26, 1992)
 4.2.1      Form of Certificate of Designation with respect to Junior Preference Stock
            (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 2 to the Registrant's Registration of
            Certain Classes of Securities on Form 8-A dated March 26, 1992)
 4.2.2      Form of Rights Certificate (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3 to the
            Registrant's Registration of Certain Classes of Securities on Form 8-A dated March
            26, 1992)
 4.2.3      Summary of Purchase Rights (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4 to the
            Registrant's Registration of Certain Classes of Securities on Form 8-A dated March
            26, 1992)
 4.2.4      Amendment dated January 13, 1995 to Shareholders' Rights Agreement (incorporated
            by reference to Exhibit 4.2.4 to Registrant's Annual Report on Form 10-K for the
            year ended December 31, 1994)
</TABLE>
 
                                       43
<PAGE>   45
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
 EXHIBIT
 NUMBER                                        DESCRIPTION
- ---------   ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<C>         <S>
10.1*       1984 Amended and Restated Stock Option Plan as amended through December 13, 1988
            (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.10 to Registrant's Annual Report on Form
            10-K for the year ended December 31, 1988)
10.1.1*     Amendment dated October 26, 1994 to 1984 Amended and Restated Stock Option Plan
            (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.10.1 to Registrant's Annual Report on
            Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 1994)
10.2*       PictureTel Corporation Equity Incentive Plan as amended through October 26, 1994
            (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.11 to Registrant's Annual Report on Form
            10-K for the year ended December 31, 1994)
10.2.1*     Amendment dated June 29, 1995 to PictureTel Corporation Equity Incentive Plan
            (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to Registrant's Quarterly Report on
            Form 10-Q for the quarter ended July 1, 1995)
10.3*       Amended 1992 Non-Employee Director Stock Option Plan as amended through April 10,
            1996 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4(a) to Registrant's Registration
            Statement on Form S-8, Registration Number 333-10163 effective September 2, 1996
10.4        PictureTel Corporation 1994 Employee Stock Purchase Plan (incorporated by
            reference to Exhibit 4 to Registrant's Registration Statement on Form S-8,
            Registration Number 33-81848, effective July 22, 1994)
10.5        401(k) Profit Sharing Retirement Plan as amended through July 1, 1994
            (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.45 to Registrant's Annual Report on Form
            10-K for the year ended December 31, 1994)
10.6*       Employment Agreement between PictureTel Corporation and Norman E. Gaut dated July
            29, 1988 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.12 to Registrant's Annual Report
            on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 1988)
10.6.1*     Amendment dated January 15, 1995 to the Employment Agreement between PictureTel
            Corporation and Norman E. Gaut (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to
            Registrant's Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended April 1, 1995)
10.7*       Agreement between PictureTel Corporation and Les Strauss as amended through
            January 15, 1995 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.2 to Registrant's
            Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended April 1, 1995)
10.8*       Agreement between PictureTel Corporation and Domenic J. LaCava as amended through
            January 17, 1995 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.4 to Registrant's
            Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended April 1, 1995)
10.9*       Agreement between PictureTel Corporation and Lawrence Bornstein as amended through
            January 16, 1995 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.5 to Registrant's
            Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended April 1, 1995)
10.11*      Agreement between PictureTel Corporation and William Avery dated June 15, 1995
            (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to Registrant's Quarterly Report on
            Form 10-Q for the quarter ended June 29, 1996)
10.12       Form of Indemnification Agreement for directors and officers (incorporated by
            reference to Exhibit 10.34 to Registrant's Registration Statement on Form S-1,
            Registration No. 33-6368, effective August 12, 1986)
10.13*      Agreement between PictureTel Corporation and Khoa Nguyen as amended through March
            6, 1995 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.3 to Registrant's Quarterly
            Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended April 1, 1995).
10.14       Lease Agreement between PictureTel Corporation and 100 Minuteman Limited
            Partnership dated October 7, 1995 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.47 to
            Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 1995)
10.15       Lease Agreement between PictureTel Corporation and Andover Mills Realty Limited
            Partnership dated February 10, 1994 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.51 to
            Registrant's Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 1994)
</TABLE>
 
                                       44
<PAGE>   46
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
 EXHIBIT
 NUMBER                                        DESCRIPTION
- ---------   ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<C>         <S>
10.16       Lease Agreement between PictureTel Corporation and 50 Minuteman Limited
            Partnership dated August 26, 1996 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to
            Registrant's Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended September 28,
            1996)
11          Calculation of Earnings Per Share
21          Subsidiaries of the Company (filed herewith)
23          Consent of Coopers & Lybrand L.L.P. (filed herewith)
27          Financial Data Schedule as required by Item 601(c) of Regulation S-K (filed
            herewith)
</TABLE>
 
- ---------------
 
* Indicates management contract or compensatory plan, contract or arrangement.
 
(d) FINANCIAL STATEMENT SCHEDULE
 
     The Company hereby files as part of this Annual Report on Form 10-K the
financial statement schedule listed on Item 14(a)2 as set forth above.
 
                                       45
<PAGE>   47
 
                                   SIGNATURES
 
     Pursuant to the requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on
its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.


                                            PICTURETEL CORPORATION
 
                                            By:      /s/ NORMAN E. GAUT
                                              ----------------------------------
                                                        Norman E. Gaut
                                                   Chief Executive Officer
 
Date:  March 28, 1997
 
     Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, this
report has been signed below by the following persons on behalf of the
registrant and in the capacities and on the dates indicated.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
               SIGNATURE                                TITLE                        DATE
- ----------------------------------------   -------------------------------      ---------------
<C>                                        <S>                                  <C>
 
           /s/ NORMAN E. GAUT              Chairman of the Board, Chief         March 28, 1997
- ----------------------------------------   Executive Officer and Director
             Norman E. Gaut                (Principal Executive Officer)
 
           /s/ DAVID B. LEVI               Director March 28, 1997
- ----------------------------------------
             David B. Levi
 
          /s/ JAMES R. SWARTZ              Director                             March 28, 1997
- ----------------------------------------
            James R. Swartz
 
            /s/ VINOD KHOSLA               Director                             March 28, 1997
- ----------------------------------------
              Vinod Khosla
 
          /s/ ROBERT T. KNIGHT             Director                             March 28, 1997
- ----------------------------------------
            Robert T. Knight
 
            /s/ ENZO TORRESI               Director                             March 28, 1997
- ----------------------------------------
              Enzo Torresi
 
           /s/ LES B. STRAUSS              Vice President, Chief Financial      March 28, 1997
- ----------------------------------------   Officer (Principal Financial
             Les B. Strauss                Officer and Principal
                                           Accounting Officer)
</TABLE>
 
                                       46

<PAGE>   1
 
                                                                      EXHIBIT 11
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                    YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31
                                                                -------------------------------
                                                                 1996        1995        1994
                                                                -------     -------     -------
                                                                (IN THOUSANDS, EXCEPT PERSHARE
                                                                           AMOUNTS)
<S>                                                             <C>         <C>         <C>
CALCULATION OF EARNINGS PER SHARE:
PRIMARY:
Weighted average common shares outstanding during the
  period......................................................   33,293      31,761      30,441
Dilutive effect of stock options using the treasury stock
  method......................................................    2,761       3,253         913
                                                                -------     -------     -------
          Total common equivalent shares......................   36,054      35,014      31,354
                                                                -------     -------     -------
Net income....................................................  $34,773     $19,626     $ 4,579
Net income per share..........................................  $  0.96     $  0.56     $  0.15
FULLY DILUTED:(1)
Weighted average common shares outstanding during the
  period......................................................   33,293      31,761      30,441
Diluted effect of stock options using the treasury stock
  method......................................................    2,761       4,124       1,194
                                                                -------     -------     -------
          Total common equivalent shares......................   36,054      35,885      31,635
                                                                -------     -------     -------
Net income....................................................  $34,773     $19,626     $ 4,579
Net income per share..........................................  $  0.96     $  0.55     $  0.15
</TABLE>
 
- ---------------
 
(1) This calculation is submitted in accordance with Regulation S-K item
    601(b)(11) although not required by Footnote 2 to Paragraph 14 of APB
    Opinion No. 15 because it results in dilution of less than 3%.

<PAGE>   1
 
                                                                    EXHIBIT 21.1
 
                          SUBSIDIARIES OF THE COMPANY
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                       STATE OR OTHER JURISDICTION OF
             NAME OF SUBSIDIARY                        INCORPORATION OR ORGANIZATION
- --------------------------------------------    --------------------------------------------
<S>                                             <C>
PictureTel Securities Corporation               Massachusetts
PictureTel International Corporation            Delaware
PictureTel Technology Corporation               Delaware
PictureTel Service Corporation                  Delaware
PicTel Videoconferencing Systems Corporation    Delaware
PictureTel Australia Pty. Ltd.                  Australia
PictureTel International Ltda.                  Brazil
PictureTel GmbH                                 Germany
PictureTel Italy S.r.1.                         Italy
PictureTel Japan, KK.                           Japan
PictureTel Mexico S.A. de C.V.                  Mexico
PictureTel Service Ltd. Pte.                    Singapore
PictureTel Scandinavia AB                       Sweden
PictureTel (Schweiz) AG                         Switzerland
PictureTel UK Limited                           United Kingdom
PictureTel FSC, Ltd.                            United States Virgin Islands
</TABLE>
 
     All the subsidiaries are wholly owned (except for directors' qualifying
shares in certain countries), either directly or indirectly, by the company and
may do business under their own name as well as the name PictureTel Corporation

<PAGE>   1
 
                                                                    EXHIBIT 23.1
 
                       CONSENT OF INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS
 
     We consent to the incorporation by reference in the registration statements
of PictureTel Corporation on Form S-8 (File Nos. 33-7477, 33-19024, 33-31161,
33-36315, 33-44719, 33-49814, 33-66502, 33-69292, 33-81848, 33-99272, 
333-10163) of our reports dated February 12, 1997, on our audits of the 
consolidated financial statements and financial statement schedule of 
PictureTel Corporation as of December 31, 1996 and 1995 and for each of the 
three years in the period ended December 31, 1996, which reports are included in
this Annual Report on Form 10-K.
 
COOPERS & LYBRAND L.L.P.
 
Boston, Massachusetts
March 27, 1997

<TABLE> <S> <C>

<ARTICLE> 5
<LEGEND>
THIS SCHEDULE CONTAINS SUMMARY FINANCIAL INFORMATION EXTRACTED FROM PICTURETEL'S
BALANCE SHEET & INCOME STATEMENT FOR THE PERIOD ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1996 AND IS
QUALIFIED IN ITS ENTIRETY BY REFERENCE TO SUCH 10-K FILING.
</LEGEND>
<MULTIPLIER> 1,000
<CURRENCY> U.S. $
       
<S>                             <C>
<PERIOD-TYPE>                   YEAR
<FISCAL-YEAR-END>                          DEC-31-1996
<PERIOD-START>                             JAN-01-1996
<PERIOD-END>                               DEC-31-1996
<EXCHANGE-RATE>                                      1
<CASH>                                          62,957
<SECURITIES>                                    38,918
<RECEIVABLES>                                  150,634
<ALLOWANCES>                                   (3,284)
<INVENTORY>                                     43,320
<CURRENT-ASSETS>                               304,001
<PP&E>                                         103,151
<DEPRECIATION>                                (58,934)
<TOTAL-ASSETS>                                 376,047
<CURRENT-LIABILITIES>                          103,055
<BONDS>                                              0
                                0
                                          0
<COMMON>                                           341
<OTHER-SE>                                     258,717
<TOTAL-LIABILITY-AND-EQUITY>                   376,047
<SALES>                                        482,532
<TOTAL-REVENUES>                               482,532
<CGS>                                          254,772
<TOTAL-COSTS>                                  254,772
<OTHER-EXPENSES>                                     0
<LOSS-PROVISION>                                     0
<INTEREST-EXPENSE>                                 924
<INCOME-PRETAX>                                 51,711
<INCOME-TAX>                                    16,938
<INCOME-CONTINUING>                             34,773
<DISCONTINUED>                                       0
<EXTRAORDINARY>                                      0
<CHANGES>                                            0
<NET-INCOME>                                    34,773
<EPS-PRIMARY>                                     0.96
<EPS-DILUTED>                                     0.96
        

</TABLE>


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