T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1149.1 | A measure of vertical integration | STKMKT::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney in New York | Mon Jul 30 1990 13:37 | 19 |
| Revenue per employee is an indicator of how vertically integrated the
company is.
A company that simply assembles components made by other companies and
adds value through mass marketing will have a very high revenue per
employee.
Digital is structurally going to have low revenue per employee
design: we do a lot of our own chip design
manufacturing: we have a lot of captive manufacturing capacity
selling: we have few high volume channels and no mass marketing
channels
Outsourcing design, manufacturing, and selling is going to cause a lot
of conflict. And as you know, Digital values the absence of conflict
more than it values results.
|
1149.2 | | MAMIE::DCOX | | Mon Jul 30 1990 13:46 | 15 |
| > <<< Note 1149.0 by COOKIE::LENNARD >>>
> This is a very important metric and who's kidding who???
Revenue per employee, by itself, really is not all that important. It's just
another statistic, another way of looking at a company's performance.
As we all should be painfully aware by now, increased revenues are met with
resounding yawns from Wall Street when the expenses have continued high or
increased by a higher factor. Since we are on a drive to reduce those expenses
while increasing revenue, a more meaningful statistical indicator would be
EARNINGS per employee (revenue less expenses). Even using that metric alone is
unreliable, however it should indicate how successful we are in reaching our
goals.
Dave
|
1149.3 | It's All in the Numbers | AKOV12::ISRAELITE | | Mon Jul 30 1990 20:56 | 10 |
| re .0
What Ken said was that we give away of a lot of services that the other
companies against which we are compared charge for. His point was that
we would look much better is the revenue we don't collect now were to
be included in our 'rev per emp' calculation. He added that we are now
trying to figure out how to charge for some of our currently free
service.
I have no opinion here. I just wanted to clarify what he was saying.
|
1149.4 | some things keep coming up over and over | CVG::THOMPSON | Aut vincere aut mori | Mon Jul 30 1990 22:07 | 5 |
| First discussed in this conference back in topic 49. I think it's
been talked about at length in an other topic but I can't find it
right now.
Alfred
|
1149.5 | | MISFIT::MICKOL | Are you talkin' to me? | Wed Aug 08 1990 00:16 | 19 |
| Re .3: Well, the customer I'm dealing with wonders why we charge for things
that other vendors DON'T charge for. In comparison to our competition
in the production mainframe business, we're perceived as
nickel-and-diming the customer.
Conversation overheard at major customer site a few months ago:
VAX I.S. Manager: "This is Digital's quote for the VAX consolidation"
IBM I.S. Manager: "Wow! Our vendors' are only a couple pages...
Does DEC charge for the knobs and switches?"
This may all be a matter of perception because we unbundle so much. Its likely
that they're paying for the same services from other vendors, but those
vendors don't break it out to the detail we do. Certainly this has its pros
and cons. At the customer I support our level of detail on quotes and order
forms is not viewed positively.
Jim
|
1149.6 | The Process, not the Parts | AKOV12::ISRAELITE | | Thu Aug 09 1990 13:15 | 13 |
| regarding -.1
I think they were talking less about product and more about things like
free consulting services. I have heard stories about the types of
thinks that getted rolled under 'Technical Support to Sales' that wind
up providing to customers expertise that we could probably sell them.
I must admit, however, that when I see a price for a software product
and then I still have to buy the license, I get little annoyed. I know
that this might be necessary for VAXes, but for WPS-DOS? Seems a
little bizarre to me.
LI
|