T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1111.1 | | OVAL::KERRELLD | sponplatter lager | Mon May 21 1990 08:44 | 6 |
| re.0:
Isn't this the same as topic 7.* or do you intend a different line of
discussion?
Dave.
|
1111.2 | | BUNYIP::QUODLING | Conformist with all the clues... | Mon May 21 1990 12:14 | 15 |
| re .1
7.* talks about how to beat IBM. I think Simon's point is ... "Is being
number two behind IBM our main goal"
I feel too much stress has been put on confronting IBM here in Digital.
We have Sun, HP and Apple nipping at our heels. There are a number of
Vendors (Wang, UNisys etc) who are currently in an unhealthy state.
I feel we should concentrate more on picking up business from those who are
suffering, covering our tail from those that are coming up behind us, and
then prepare for the onslaught on the Big One.
q
|
1111.3 | best is better then biggest | CVG::THOMPSON | Aut vincere aut mori | Mon May 21 1990 12:59 | 10 |
| I'm not at all sure that being number 1 is all that healthy a
(primary) goal. I think this tends to reduce all planning to
"how will this make us bigger". Anther better, IMHO, goal is
to make the best computers on the market. This implies things
like meeting the customers needs and building the highest quality
product on the market. If we things like that then other good
things, like market share, better margins, profits, etc will
all fall out naturally.
Alfred
|
1111.4 | | ESCROW::KILGORE | Wild Bill | Mon May 21 1990 13:11 | 11 |
|
Well, Alfred beat me to it, but my thought was the same...
We shouldn't be concentrating on kicking the companies that are down,
or protecting our butts from the companies that are up, or comparing
our size against anyone else.
We should concentrate on providing the best products and services in
the industry. All goodness (profits, growth, salary continuation) will
follow naturally. Ken has said that countless times.
|
1111.5 | satisfy customers' wants first and foremost | ODIXIE::CARNELL | DTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALF | Mon May 21 1990 15:05 | 5 |
|
I believe if we concentrated on satisfying our customers' wants, as
they define them and their satisfaction, better than anyone else, then
the revenues, profits and being number one will follow automatically.
|
1111.6 | Wants vs. Needs | SUBWAY::BOWERS | Dave Bowers @WHO | Mon May 21 1990 15:43 | 8 |
| Satisfying out customers' _wants_ is important, no doubt about that.
Coming up with products that anticipate, and satisfy, their _needs_ is
the key to success.
The real "killer" products are those that simultaneously identify and
solve a previously unnoticed problem. Think about VisiCalc.
-dave
|
1111.8 | #1 in a level playing field would mean something | PIRU::GOETZE | std. of living stolen by privilege seekers | Mon May 21 1990 19:39 | 34 |
| I tend to agree with the .2,.3,.4 responses. We seem to be going to
some kind of circle too, between here and some recent notes in the
Marketing notes file.
I think in the computer business, being #1 has been synonymous with
being IBM, having that kind of clout. What kind of clout you say?
Many times it is the ability to dictate to the customer what they
should buy. Well I for one do not want to be part of any organization
that dictates anything to customers. I want to be part of an
organization whose products are so differentiated, so superior, so
elegant that discerning customers see the alternatives clearly and pick
ours after all. Often times I think a product which is not superior
is chosen for emotional or political reasons by customers, propelling
that product's maker into the top rank. Well those customers deserve
what they get, for they have not made a truly rational decision.
Therefore I see a lot of honor in being a number two, or a number
three in the marketplace. Also there is the bite, the hunger that comes
from being an underdog. It makes it that much more satisfying when you
do win, for it means you have triumphed over an incumbant's golfing
relationship with a CEO.
It brings us to the burning issue of 'When is a decision made to garner
market-share not a good decision for meeting the customer's needs and
wants?'
We have this duality within our society, that says monopolies are bad
and yet a dominant market share is all that many corporations seem to
strive for.
I have long thought that Digital stood more for great products than
killer marketing. It would be nice if great products brought us the #1
position but somehow I don't think that's how it works these days.
erik
|
1111.9 | any of you guys out on the field? | ZPOV03::HWCHOY | FE110000 | Tue May 22 1990 12:43 | 17 |
| Yes, I agree with ALL the notes that says "better is more important
than bigger", Ken has said it countless times, and I sincerely believe
it myself.
However, when you are in front of a customer (very high level
management) the ability to say that "We are #2", "We are Fortune 27",
"We have $x Billion in the bank", "We have the largest private
electronic network, 50000+ systems, 100000+ users"...
ie "Mr customer, the solution we're going to sell you now, is the same
that we use to run a 125000 persons, $13B Fortune 27 corporation that
is the #2 computer vendor WORLDWIDE. You will be successful with our
support"
believe me, the "comfort feeling" is tremendous.
HW
|
1111.10 | getting in the door is not the same as winning | CVG::THOMPSON | Aut vincere aut mori | Tue May 22 1990 12:59 | 9 |
| > believe me, the "comfort feeling" is tremendous.
Sure it's great but it's not that big a deal. I was in the field
twice myself (a few years for DEC and a few years for someone
else) so I know a little about it. Being big helps get in the door
but companies a lot smaller then us beat us all the time. Being
big isn't enough to win.
Alfred
|
1111.11 | It all ties together | SX4GTO::BERNARD | Dave from Cleveland | Tue May 22 1990 15:20 | 18 |
|
Research sort of indicates that there is a correlation between market
share and profitability. The bigger you are, the more market share
you can get, and vv. The more profitable you are, the more you can be
expected to grow. The better the expectations for growth, the more
investors will invest in you. The more investment and profit you have,
the more capital you have to fund expansion. The better you can fund
expansion, the better you can do engineering and apply new techology.
The more you can afford these things, the better the degree of quality
you can put into them.
The owners of companies like quality products, but they like growth
better. High-technology products are expensive to produce and sell.
Bigness can help insure that you can be viable and sell a quality
product. I'd rather be big, viable, and selling a quality product
than just selling a quality product.
Dave
|
1111.12 | Looking at 3rd? | DPDMAI::VIGIL | Williams VIGIL -- y que mas? | Tue May 22 1990 20:00 | 8 |
| Some market analysts are predicting that HP will be No 2 in about two
years. (They are bigger than DEC now but about 30% of their revenue is
from other than computers.)
Instead of worrying about being No. 1, we'd better be working harder
and smarter just to stay No. 2.
Williams
|
1111.13 | priorities | ZPOV03::HWCHOY | FE110000 | Wed May 23 1990 10:40 | 6 |
| .11 reflects my thinking well, we want to be good first and foremost,
and as a result of that, we would naturally become big. However, once
we're big, we need to stay BIG, if not get BIGGER. All this while, we
have to keep up being GOOD.
hw
|
1111.14 | | PIRU::GOETZE | std. of living stolen by privilege seekers | Wed May 23 1990 16:50 | 7 |
| Isn't the challenge once you are BIG to be able to still be extremely
responsive to market changes/conditions? The emphasis on being big
tends to mask the innate tendency of large insitutions to bog down in
their own bureaucracy. At what point does an organization become
impossible to control by one person?
erik
|
1111.15 | | SX4GTO::BERNARD | Dave from Cleveland | Wed May 23 1990 18:28 | 17 |
|
True, being big does make an organization extremely complex. Once an
organization reaches a certain size, bureaucracy is inevitable. And
bureaucracy isn't necessarily bad, unless it begins to exist just for
its own sake.
At what point does an organization become bureaucratic, and out of
control of a single person? Perhaps a hundred people; maybe even
three hundred. Certainly by a thousand the complexities and
relationships are more than any one person can control.
Any major, other than niche, player in today's hardware market is
already big. The other big guys want to get bigger at your expense.
You don't want to get smaller, and they don't want to let you stay
the same. So you have to try to be bigger, too.
Dave
|
1111.16 | Bureaucracy is what you make it... | CGOO01::DTHOMPSON | Don, of Don's ACT | Sat Jun 02 1990 11:54 | 16 |
| Re: .15 <At what point does an organization...>
At the point when the 'one person' no longer WANTS to understand
it or care about it.
Proof: Mr. Gorbachev is in charge of a slightly larger organization
than our own. He is intent on remaking that organization
in his own vision, and he is having an awesome impact.
In our case: Judge for yourself!
IBM: Akers is so impressed with the *idea* of being President,
he has nothing left to put into the job.
Don
|
1111.17 | Number One with a pronounced limp? | WORDY::JONG | Steve Jong/T and N Pubs | Fri Jun 15 1990 18:58 | 20 |
| I used to work for the Number Two computer company. We even called
ourselves "The Other Computer Company." Then we slipped to #3, then
#4, then... In all that time, I don't think we ever thought we'd be
Number One. Maybe that has something to do with what happened.
Being Number One does have its advantages. It's possible for a
customer to evaluate Number One and Number X, discover that Number X
provides a better solution at a better price with better service, and
go with Number One anyway, because it's Number One.
On the other hand, one can have the largest market share in a declining
market. In 1939, Poland had the best horse cavalry in the world. On a
less somber note, Digital has been the dominant player in the
minicomputer market. At some point, being Number One ceases to be an
advantage.
I'd be happy striving to be the best in our market, and letting someone
who's paid far more than I decide what new market we're going to
compete in from time to time. If being the best gives up the dominant
share, that's great!
|
1111.18 | Be specific!! | SIOUXI::HADDAD | | Tue Jun 19 1990 10:45 | 6 |
| "Number 1" in what aspect? If you intend to compete, you must know the
criteria for 'the win'. That needs definition before spend we Digital
resources convincing others to start crying about 'our' failure at being
"Number 1".
Bruce
|
1111.19 | | PNTAGN::WARRENFELTZR | | Fri Aug 12 1994 16:53 | 1 |
| be nice if we were #2 about now.
|