T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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141.1 | Text from AP on Digital's Bonus Plan | PUNDIT::MCWILLIAMS | | Fri Jun 20 1986 15:24 | 35 |
| For what's it worth here is the text from the AP article on Digital's
new bonus program for sales. Another hopeful sign of Sales' resurgence
is that now the Phase Review process requires input from Sales.
Associated Press Wed 18-JUN-1986 06:39 MA--Digital Bonus
Key Sales People Get Bonuses To Keep Them From Jumping Ship
MAYNARD, Mass. (AP) - In an effort to keep its key sales people
from going after other jobs, Digital Equipment Corp. says it will
give out bonuses of up to $18,000 to each of its best performers
this summer.
The giant computer maker, which had difficulty with sales people
jumping ship in 1983 and 1984, announced Tuesday in a statement that
it would introduce its first major incentive program.
Only the top 20 percent of the sales force will get the
incentives, which range from $6,000 to $18,000, Digital said. But
the company will remain one of the few in the industry to limit
sales staff to straignt salary.
More common pay structure in the industry is a combination of
commission and salary.
``We had a 10 percent turnover in our sales force,'' recalled
John J. Shields, Digital's vice president and group manager for
sales and service. He would not reveal the size of the sales force,
for competitive reasons.
Shields estimated the median salary of Digital sales people is
about $60,000 a year and an $18,000 bonus would be a 30 percent
increase. Some account managers earning up to $100,000 also will be
eligible, he said.
|
141.2 | | MENTOR::LEITZ | | Fri Jun 20 1986 15:39 | 2 |
| See HUMAN::MARKETING note 244 where this is being discussed at some
depth.
|
141.3 | Please continue | VMSINT::SZETO | Simon Szeto | Fri Jun 20 1986 18:25 | 5 |
| This file is an appropriate place for this discussion. After you
read what's in MARKETING, feel free to continue the discussion here.
--Simon (moderator of both MARKETING and DIGITAL)
|
141.4 | Bring on my 18 grand. | NIPPER::HAGARTY | The Penultimate Rat... | Sun Jun 22 1986 23:10 | 6 |
| Ahh Gi'day...
Only 10% turnover, what a luxury, ours is probably closer to three
times that.
{dennis{{{ --
|
141.5 | Who's going to pay for it? | DUBSWS::D_OSULLIVAN | Ireland is not a NATO-member | Mon Jun 23 1986 12:43 | 1 |
|
|
141.6 | How much do salepeople 'really' make? | LSTARK::THOMPSON | Noter of the LoST ARK | Thu Jun 26 1986 11:31 | 9 |
| What do you mean (141.5) who's going to pay for it? The customer
is the one who pays us all.
BTW, does that $60,000 median salary look suspicious to anyone
else? I asked a manager, who replied that if that's true then
none of our salespeople are 'on plan'. In other words, the salary
range of most of our salespeople does not go as high as $60,000.
Alfred
|
141.7 | there's good money in Sales, there is | DELNI::GOLDSTEIN | Distributed Systems Ideology | Thu Jun 26 1986 19:12 | 6 |
| re:.-1
I dunno, Alfred. The S-series job list goes awfully high!
Account Executives, in particular, can get into the six figures
within the normal salary range. Not all of them, just the highest
ranking, but still sales types and not VPs or manglers.
|
141.9 | Sales Trainers make half as much as their students | CSTVAX::MCLURE | Vaxnote your way to ubiquity | Thu Jun 26 1986 23:29 | 9 |
| Gee,
Do you think a DEC Sales Training Programmer/Analyst with medium-size
ticket retail experience, as well as purley commisioned sales experience
might make a good DEC salesman? I wonder what sorts of extra perks these
guys get along with the "below-industry-standard" wages; do they get a
company car?
-DAV0
|
141.10 | MOVE INTO SALES? | JAWS::AUSTIN | Tom Austin @UPO - Channels Marketing | Fri Jun 27 1986 01:00 | 50 |
| RE: .9
1. "Do you think a DEC Sales Training Programmer/Analyst with medium-size
ticket retail experience, as well as purley commisioned sales experience
might make a good DEC salesman?"
As a career objective? Yes. That is, if you work on moving step
by step into sales, almost any experience background won't hold
you back. It takes a certain personality, a personal drive and a
willingness to develop the sales skills. Programmer Analysts in
an applications environment with no direct experience in the sale
of big ticket items might want to move into a pre-sales software
support position, working in the field day to day with sales people
to determine for themselves whether they really want to meet the
demands of the job, or if they would prefer a different role.
As an immediate move? Depends on the nature of the selling experience
and other factors.
Sales is a well paying profession. It is not, however, a piece of
cake --long term-- no matter how easy it looks from the outside.
Perks? They get a car (or an 'alternate care plan' check every month).
They get some travel once in a while (if you think of that as a perk.)
They get to coordinate a lot of resources. They get, as they move
along, to plan their own work. Sometimes, they appear to work less than
a 40 hour week, but that usually is part of the BS they spread around.
A lot of the job is the image they project, and, for both males and
females in the job, the confidence it takes to succeed gets translated
into "macho" on the job -- about how little they have to work (since
they're so good). Granted, there ARE some goofoffs. In all
organizations and professions. Those who make it long term work very
hard, suffer from a LOT of stress and struggle for every nickle that
winds up in my paycheck and yours.
They also, at the end of the quarter/year, can point very specifically
to a directly measurable contribution they make to the company.
If sales were so easy, everyone would want to do it and, with the
law of supply and demand, wages, perks and commissions would shrink.
They aren't shrinking. The job continues to get tougher in our industry...
I wonder what sorts of extra perks these
guys get along with the "below-industry-standard" wages; do they get a
company car?
-DAV0
r
|
141.11 | I'd sell, but then I'd miss programming too much | CSTVAX::MCLURE | Vaxnote your way to ubiquity | Fri Jun 27 1986 13:40 | 36 |
| re. -1,
Thanks for the advice, I think the pre-sales would probably allow
me to feel-out a sales career first. My experience has been to program
IVIS courses for the sales force. However, my perceptions of who these
people are and what makes them tick has been limited to a few personal
aquaintances who have since joined the sales force, along with what few
needs-analysis surveys we have managed to send out to the field (there
is currently a ban on any more surveys).
You made an interesting point about a "macho" image projected by
successful salespeople, maybe this explains why they are generally
too busy "playing golf" with our customers to bother with any of the
IVIS courses that we have slaved away on for the past couple of years.
According to our QA reports, we have had a very small response (from
anybody, much less actual DEC salespeople) of QA reports returned in
the history (the rise and fall) of the Sales Training IVIS group here
at Stow. I can almost count the total amount of QA reports using my
fingers and toes, with most of the respondants coming from (idle?)
manufacturing employees such as might be found in Phoenix, etc. My
hat goes off to these few curious types who gave IVIS a chance.
Maybe the next round of QA reports will be more fruitfull, who
knows? And frankly, who cares? IVIS is a four letter word these days,
so I'll stop now before I really get going on that one. Otherwise,
I'll probably say something real witty and have to delete it later.
As far as Sales, well...I personally think we could sell alot
of equipment by setting-up a DECUS-styled Vaxnotes network (see the
related discussion An Independant Notes Network in this conference),
in which we could allow potential customers to interact with all of
us noters, as well as each other. We could cut right through some of
the overpaid and stylishly-underworked middlemen and get some REAL
$ALES going!!!
-DAV0
|
141.12 | The field has a different reality | ODIXIE::VICKERS | Don Vickers, Notes DIG member | Fri Jun 27 1986 20:19 | 21 |
| I always find it interesting to see the great difference in perceptions
throughout the company.
I've been in the field for nine years after being a customer for
seven years. My view of Sales is FAR different from DAV0's. Much
as I hate to admit it, Sales is a tough job that LOOKS very easy
from the outside.
A great part of the problem is that technical people have a real
attachment for the ABSOLUTE truth which tends to go against the
view by salespeople. The old joke about being able to tell when
a salesperson is lying is when his/her/its mouth is moving is NOT
true but is close enough in SOME cases. (The University of Florida
was promised delivery of Ethernet in 1983!!)
By the way, the stereotyping goes BOTH ways. Moving from a
technical position into Sales is very often difficult because Sales
views techies as nerds who cannot understand any reality beyond
what's in a crash dump.
Don
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141.13 | Jokes.not | BRAT::DAVISG | | Mon Jun 30 1986 14:01 | 5 |
| And then theres....
What's the difference between a car salesman and a computer salesman?
The Car salesman knows when he's lying....
|
141.14 | Set moderator | VMSINT::SZETO | Simon Szeto | Mon Jun 30 1986 22:28 | 2 |
| I'm glad you realized where that old joke belonged.
|
141.15 | On the example in .12 | EXIT26::STRATTON | Jim Stratton, Notes DIG member | Tue Jul 01 1986 09:26 | 3 |
| re .12 and "The University of Florida was promised delivery
of Ethernet in 1983!" - when did they finally get it (if
they have it at all)?
|
141.16 | A sidebar on the Gator tale | ODIXIE::VICKERS | Don Vickers, Notes DIG member | Wed Jul 02 1986 22:47 | 8 |
| Good old Gainesville is now pursuing rolling their own broadband
backbone with a few pockets of Ethernet here and there. They're
now giving us grief about the lack of security on Ethernet.
As it turns out, the Ethernet 'promise' didn't hurt Digital too
badly but was certainly VERY embarrassing at the time.
Don
|
141.17 | Digital going to start paying commissions? | ODIXIE::CARNELL | DTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALF | Wed Jun 06 1990 11:37 | 71 |
|
I read in the Digital VTX news that Digital is reportedly going to
begin paying some sales people commissions on sales.
What are the pros and cons? Do you think this will build a more
successful Digital?
My opinion:
PROS:
Paying commissions to some sales people will motivate their behavior to
sell more aggessively more Digital products with the result that
Digital generates more revenue.
CONS:
Paying commissions only to some will alienate those sales people who
are not paid any commissions.
Winning and keeping high-tech complex systems, solutions and integrated
enterprise business is a TEAM effort, requiring many team members, both
in the field (software support and customer services to name but two)
PLUS a wide variety of support both at field headquarters and corporate
facilities. Paying only one member, the sales rep, not only a higher
salary (already perceived to be a truth by many), but ALSO paying
commissions will alienate other team members even more. Increased
apathy and disenfranchisement in the success of Digital are potential
results since the attitude may well be that it is the SALES person's
responsibility to GET the business, not anyone elses.
Commissions provide windfall income to some with little effort, further
alienating other team members plus workers throughout Digital, ALL OF
WHOM have an impact, somewhere, on the ability of ANY field team or
person to win and keep a customer, generating revenue and profit.
Commissions paid on revenue will produce more revenue but perhaps at
the further erosion of margin, driving behavior to give allowances at
any cost in order to get any amount of revenue, which in turn will
provide commissions to the sales person. If paid on revenue and not
margin, profit losses are likely to escalate dramatically.
Paying commissions is a short-term fix to make the books look good but
at the expense of not addressing fundamental issues impeding change
that could lead to significant growth in products/services, markets,
customers, revenues, margins and net profit.
Sales personnel already spend time making sure they "get credit" for
certs; increased time will be spent fighting for getting credit when
commissions are at stake.
Paying commissions drives behavior to simply book more business rather
than driving behavior to thoroughly KNOW customer contacts, their needs
and wants, building long-term relationships based on customer
satisfaction, which in turn lead to greater account penetration,
revenue and most importantly, profitable business based on getting
premium margins with the most amount of revenue. A "sell more cars
mentality" could become pervasive at the expense of long-term
prosperity of Digital.
MY BELIEF:
I think paying commissions is a bad idea. Equal profit sharing is the
better approach for it builds harmony and cooperation, WITH ALL working
together to achieve higher levels of accomplishment as a TOTAL Digital
team; paying commissions only to some sales reps builds "meism
materialism" with no ownership by all other workers in Digital to think
creatively on what must be done AND CHANGED to increase efficiency and
effectiveness both in cutting costs as well as in building more
customers, revenue, margin and profit.
|
141.18 | Consider your sources ... | SWAM2::MCCARTHY_LA | Value indifferences? | Wed Jun 06 1990 12:05 | 20 |
| re: .17
I assume that you are referring to the VNS reprint of a rumor which
surfaced in one of the trade rags (Digital Review?). I sure hope that
you don't rely on these same sources for other information on Digital.
Remeber that their main objective is to sell magazines, not to
accurately inform Digital employees of internal goings-on.
Before passing judgement on changes to the way that Sales Reps are
compensated, it might be worthwhile to find out what is actually in the
compensation plan. That's assuming, of course, that Sales thinks it's
anybody else's business - I wouldn't expect my management to tell Sales
Reps what *I'm* making.
As far as I know, there has not been a formal, authoritative
announcement of changes in Sales' compensation plan. You may wish to
hold your fire until there is one. If there is one ...
FWIW,
Larry.
|
141.19 | What is the source? | ESCROW::KILGORE | Wild Bill | Wed Jun 06 1990 13:15 | 6 |
|
Re .17:
Can you give a pointer to the article? (I was just browsing, couldn't
find anything.)
|
141.20 | VOGON NEWS | FDCV07::HSCOTT | Lynn Hanley-Scott | Wed Jun 06 1990 14:48 | 5 |
| Check today's VOGON news -- it cites an article in the Middlesex News
(Mass) rehashing last week's KO meeting with the analysts. The article
states that commissions for sales is one of the changes being
contemplated or in the works.
|
141.21 | Perhaps this is the article? | SWAM2::MCCARTHY_LA | Value indifferences? | Wed Jun 06 1990 15:10 | 21 |
| re: .19
I believe this is the article referred to by .17
The VOGON News Service
Edition : 2080 Monday 4-Jun-1990 Circulation : 8239
VNS COMPUTER NEWS: Tracy Talcott, VNS Computer Desk
Nashua, NH, USA
Digital - Changing the way it does business
{Computerworld, 28-May-90, p. 1} {MISG}
Digital is in the mist of substantial changes. The company will decentralize
its sales force with commissions and more flexibility to cut deals with
clients. Digital also plans to pay shareholders dividends next year for the
first time. Tougher employee severance programs are in the works to reduce
head count among Digital's 125,800 employees. The programs extend beyond the
manufacturing groups into field operations and administrative staff. Kenneth
Olsen reaffirmed however, that no companywide layoffs are planned.
MISG = {Article summarized and distributed by Digital's Market
Information Services Group (MISG)}
|
141.22 | Alleged Middlesex News article on DEC | TLE::AMARTIN | Alan H. Martin | Wed Jun 06 1990 18:12 | 90 |
| DREAMS OF DIVIDEND NEAR REALITY AT DEC
Stock rise, company changes please analysts
Middlesex News, Wednesday, May 30,1990
By Michael E. Knell
News Business Writer
MAYNARD - With the price of its stock already on the rise, officials of
Digital Equipment Corp. are apparently close to declaring the company's first
dividend.
In an unusual day-and-a-half meeting with 175 securities analysts and
consultants last week plans for continued evolution of DEC were outlined by
Chairman Kenneth H. Olsen, joined by a phalanx of other top officials from
various DEC divisions.
"It's the first full-court press I've ever seen," said Terry Shannon, a
DEC-watcher for International Data Corp. of Framingham.
After a year of shrinking profits, officials told analysts they are making a
variety of changes aimed at making the $13 billion-a-year company more
competitive, as well as more attractive in investors.
Among moves either under way or contemplated: a switch to commissions for some
sales staff, establishment of business center focused on certain areas,
continued buy outs of employees aimed at cutting costs and yielding the
32-year-old firm's first dividend.
Many large institutional investors, who are often seen as driving market
increases, are prohibited from buying shares of stocks that do not produce
regular income through payment of dividends.
That deprives Digital of potentially massive investment: About $180 billion
is managed by Wall Street's top 1,200 funds, according to a recent survey.
The prospect of dividends makes DEC stock more attractive, and that might boost
the price of DEC stock, which has languished since the glorious summer of
1987, when Digital hit an all-time high of $199.50.
Talk about dividends is also seen as a sign that more profitable times are
ahead. In recent quarters, DEC profits have sagged although never dipped into
the red.
Digital stock, which sunk as low as $69.50 a share during the winter, has
often been seen as under-valued, sometimes so low that a purchase of the
company might look like a bargain.
Despite a spate of rumors, DEC officials say they have no reason to suspect a
takeover. But officials have taken a number of anti-take-over steps including
purchase of company stock.
That kind of buy-back is traditionally seen as one way to boost stock value.
And in fact, DEC has staged a comeback in recent months, rising to $94.75 a
share at the close of Tuesday's trading. But the climb is largely attributed
to a general wave of high-tech buying that has boosted prices for many
computer company stocks.
Some analysts, including the California Technology Stock Letter of San
Francisco, predict a burst of this spring's bubble, but most analysts are much
more optimistic.
For example, Jay Stevens of Dean Witter Reynolds, of New York City, expects
the stock of most large computer makers to keep rising. On Tuesday Stevens
predicted DEC will reach $111 this year.
Stevens, one of the first analysts this year to put DEC on a "buy" list, cited
the expected sales of the VAX 9000 mainframe, to soon-to-be announced VAX 4000
minicomputers and the company's huge cash reserve.
That surplus, amassed while many firms were plunging deep into debt, also
fuels the call for dividends. At the end of the most recent fiscal quarter,
Digital had $2,162 billion in reserves, much of it invested in banks and
Treasury bills, according to DEC spokesman Mark Steinkrauss.
Olsen did not promise a dividend, but told analysts he believes a dividend is
two years overdue, although he has apparently been unable to convince the
board.
"I'm sure there are things that Mikhail Gorbachev wants that his Politburo
doesn't," Shannon said. "You've got to have a consensus opinion."
Digital's board of directors could vote to declare a dividend at any time, but
analysts expect such a move sometime after the start of the fiscal year
July 1.
Stevens said Tuesday he expects a "minimal" dividend, perhaps 50 cents a
share.
|
141.23 | It's also in MIS Week | JAWJA::GRESH | Subtle as a Brick | Thu Jun 07 1990 11:36 | 10 |
| There's also a lengthy article in MIS Week, June 4, 1990. The title of
the article is "DEC rethinks sales force structure and compensation".
The first paragraph of the article follows.
"MAYNARD, MASS. - At a meeting with financial analysts two weeks ago,
Digital equipment Corp. said that it is considering reorganizing its
sales force by lines of business and basing sales compensation on
commissions rather than on salary, according to analysts who attended
the parley."
|
141.24 | A sore point for a long time ... | AUSTIN::UNLAND | Sic Biscuitus Disintegratum | Thu Jun 07 1990 12:19 | 39 |
| re: <<< Note 141.18 by SWAM2::MCCARTHY_LA "Value indifferences?" >>>
> Before passing judgement on changes to the way that Sales Reps are
> compensated, it might be worthwhile to find out what is actually in the
> compensation plan. That's assuming, of course, that Sales thinks it's
> anybody else's business - I wouldn't expect my management to tell Sales
> Reps what *I'm* making.
I think that there are a couple of things you might have overlooked
here. First off, the Certs/Goalsheet metrics that currently exist
in Sales is well known by the people in Sales Support, because they
are also measured on many of the same things. As of the new fiscal
year, Sales Support is now *part* of Sales, so I have no doubt that
Sales Management will know to the penny what the Support people make.
That's where the real issue comes in: This move is perceived as not
being in the best interests of the Support people. They are now in
the Sales organization, subject to all of the same pressures and
woes that Sales people deal with. They will be measured more or less
the same as Sales reps are measured. BUT, they will not participate
in the same incentive programs as Sales (Bonuses, commissions, etc).
In other words, all the pain but no gain.
When Sales Account Teams consist of senior and junior reps, all reps
still have the potential to share in the gravy. That will not be
true for Sales Support personnel. Of our competitors that possess
joint Sales/Support teams, most pay commission to all the personnel
on the team, whether they are Sales or Support. At IBM, it was
considered critical to the success of selling complex mainframe
systems, because top-notch technical support is *required* to make
the sale. To attract and keep the best Systems Engineers, they had
to make it worth their while to be in Sales Support.
I have worked in Sales Support several times over the years, and have
usually enjoyed it and gained some small recognition out of it. But
I can't imagine that I would go back to Sales Support under the new
conditions. It just doesn't seem worth the aggravation.
Geoff
|
141.25 | | SCCAT::BOUCHARD | Ken Bouchard WRO3-2 | Mon Jul 16 1990 21:47 | 8 |
| .18> anybody else's business - I wouldn't expect my management to tell Sales
.18> Reps what *I'm* making.
Although you won't see it posted on buletin boards,pay ranges are
pretty easily obtained,therefore your friendly sales reps. probably
already know approximately what you make.
Ken
|
141.26 | | CSSE32::RHINE | A dirty mind is a terrible thing to waste | Mon Jul 16 1990 21:59 | 5 |
| RE:.-1
Pay ranges are fairly easily obtainable. However, since JEC, the ranges
are very wide. It is not easy to guess what someone makes even knowing
their job code.
|
141.27 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Tue Jul 17 1990 10:11 | 4 |
| re .25:
Salary ranges are quite wide. The range for my position is from
N to 1.8*N.
|