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Conference thebay::joyoflex

Title:The Joy of Lex
Notice:A Notes File even your grammar could love
Moderator:THEBAY::SYSTEM
Created:Fri Feb 28 1986
Last Modified:Mon Jun 02 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1192
Total number of notes:42769

166.0. "I don't buy "solutions"" by VIKING::FLEISCHER (Bob Fleischer) Wed Apr 02 1986 18:24

I'm bugged by people who use "solution" as a substitute for "product".

One of our senior managers announced that we are investigating an "NI solution"
for the Rainbow.  He means an Ethernet card.

(He also tends to talk about "investment" in contexts where "cost" would
do;  but I don't want to be picky.)

Bob
T.RTitleUserPersonal
Name
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166.1BEING::POSTPISCHILAlways mount a scratch monkey.Thu Apr 03 1986 09:436
    Re .0:
    
    If a product solves a problem, it is a solution.
    
    
    				-- edp
166.2Trite but rightNACHO::CONLIFFEThu Apr 03 1986 10:362
There are no problems, there are only solutions.
It's just that some solutions are almost insurmountable!
166.3aphorisms to live byCANYON::MOELLERThu Apr 03 1986 12:583
    "Inside every problem is a gift.
     Inside every gift is a problem."
    
166.4VIKING::FLEISCHERBob FleischerThu Apr 03 1986 13:5424
re .1:

Rarely does one product, by itself, "solve" anything.
The solution is in how the product is applied, often in conjunction with
other products and procedures.

(How often, when you go shopping, do you think of your purchases as
"solutions"?)

The particular "solution" mentioned in the base topic couldn't possibly
be an immediate solution to a problem except for the customer who a) already
had a Rainbow, and b) already had an Ethernet to connect it to, and c) already
had software that would use the card to communicate over the Ethernet.

I gather that "solution" became a trendy marketing term in DEC when we
realized that in many sales situations IBM actually was selling "solutions".
IBM did and does this not by coming to a customer and saying "this product
solves your problem", but rather by performing a kind of consulting role
for the customer.  They would make a quick analysis of some of the customer's
business problems, and propose modifications to the customer's ways of doing
business.  These modifications just happened to require the installation
of an IBM system for their implementation.

Bob
166.5ERIS::CALLASJon CallasThu Apr 03 1986 15:428
    Sure, but if the person who wanted the "NI solution" *meant* merely
    an Ethernet card, then that would simply be a naive definition of
    "NI solution." If "NI solution" were to denote the hardware, software,
    and necessary field support then that would be a reasonable thing
    to say. Incidentally, how do you know that the person meant "Ethernet
    card" when it said "NI solution"?
    
    	Jon
166.6DANGER: Rathole ApproachingVAXUUM::DEVRIESFri Apr 04 1986 09:5411
    To be charitable to the marketeers of the world:  If you sell somebody
    a product and tell them how to use it to solve their problem, you
    have, in effect, sold a "solution", whether your *motivation* was to
    solve problems or to move products.
    
    But I'm really surprised that matter got more than a second glance
    in *this* conference.  It seems to me that most of the readers of
    *this* conference are aware of the nature of advertising slogans,
    etc. -- that is, 100% fact-free.
    
    Given that this is all market-speak, is there anything left to say?
166.7context, and historyVIKING::FLEISCHERBob FleischerFri Apr 04 1986 10:3012
re Note 166.5 by ERIS::CALLAS:

>   Incidentally, how do you know that the person meant "Ethernet
>   card" when it said "NI solution"?
    
Easy:

    a) context

    b) he uses "solution" in that sense very often.

Bob
166.8ERIS::CALLASJon CallasFri Apr 04 1986 15:2711
    Then it seems that the problem is one of accuracy, not of language.
    This is really no different that the marketing types who say
    "microcode" when they really mean "ROM." I think that the word
    "solution" can be used correctly, but this person simply didn't.
    
    I'm reminded of the cartoon that was out a few weeks ago in which
    there's a man sitting on the telephone. A voice from off the panel
    says, "What are you doing, honey?" He replies, "Saving on long
    distance."
    
    	Jon 
166.9Products are only part of the solution.BLUES::HATCHERFri Apr 04 1986 18:209
    A product by itself does not create a solution.  A product when
    combined with instructions on how to use it properly can then become
    a solution.
    
    I reminds me of the article in the paper that said that the building
    was "partially destroyed."  Is this the same as "partially pregnant?"
    
    Bob
    
166.10thanks for humoring meVIKING::FLEISCHERBob FleischerFri Apr 04 1986 18:3817
re Note 166.8 by ERIS::CALLAS:

>     Then it seems that the problem is one of accuracy, not of language.

Or, perhaps, "accuracy of language".

I have not known the person whom I referred to in .0 long enough to say
this about him, but I do know persons who used to talk about "product"
but now use the word "solution" in exactly the same contexts.  They want
to mean something else, something more than they meant when they said
"product".

Yes, in a trivial sense, every product is a solution to some problem, if
properly defined.  But that seems to trivialize the traditional meaning
of "solution", which used to mean much more than a "useful product".

Bob
166.11I buy "solutions".11550::BLINNDr. TomFri Apr 04 1986 23:056
        I _do_ buy "solutions".  For instance, I've been known to buy
        a cup of coffee, which is a solution of certain volatile oils,
        and I often add sucrose (provided as part of my purchase) to
        it, making it a more complex solution.
        
        Tom