T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1373.1 | | COOKIE::LENNARD | | Wed Feb 13 1991 13:32 | 21 |
| This business of not returning phone calls is getting really serious!
As a former IBM and DEC customer, I can tell you that IBM puts HEAVY
emphasis on returning phone calls, and then checking to see if you
reached the person you were looking for...and then checking again the
next week just to make sure.
I honestly believe that until we start summarily firing people who do
not return calls, it's gonna be a big problem. But first, we have to
put the support structure back in place....i.e., responsive secretaries
who really understand the importance if what they are doing. And then
get rid of all the damned answering machines and all the other techno-
weinie alternatives to real people.
We should also make it an absolute requirement that every sales and
sales support person have a car phone....period, end of discussion.
K.O. visited Tucson a year or so ago and promised that car phones would
happen. Wanna guess what percentage still don't have them?
Do I think this is gonna happen? NO. Will the situation ever change?
NO. Am I disgusted? YES
|
1373.2 | | SQM::MACDONALD | | Wed Feb 13 1991 14:21 | 13 |
|
Re: .1
>I honestly believe that until we start summarily firing people who do
>not return calls, it's gonna be a big problem.
It's ALREADY a problem and not just among sales reps. I didn't
have any reason to do much internal calling until I was in product
management but it amazed me to see the number of persons who
ignore phone calls AND VAXmail as well.
Steve
|
1373.3 | another example | BSS::WILABY | | Wed Feb 13 1991 14:23 | 23 |
| It appears that if DEC salespeople are that weak in managing
accounts with IS buyers, that they are even weaker when dealing
with those customers which have a less straighforward relationship.
I don't know how to say this more clearly, but here is the
example: A close friend of mine is a regional sales manager for
Alan-Bradley in the factory automation product line. These
Alan-Bradley products usually incorporate many Digital products
(microvaxes, network equipment). Now, one would hope that the
Digital salespeople in his region would be cooperative in terms
of working with him to put together mini-trade shows, demonstration
exhibits for large potential customers, and the like.
But, just the contrary has occurred:
salespeople have been rude, unresponsive, and totally unsupportive
when asked to lend assistance for network configuration and the like.
When Alan-Bradley sells a network factory package it results in the
purchase of much Digital equipment - but this fact seems to escape
them.
Stock owners ought to be angry about this issue. I'm sure that
there are *many* great salespeople out there, how do they feel
about their organization?
|
1373.4 | Voyeur Consultant II | AIMHI::TINIUS | My hobby is stuffing things. | Wed Feb 13 1991 17:12 | 8 |
| re .0
> I spend several weeks each year listening to DEC and IBM
> customers behind one-way glass,
Uh, is this literal, or a phrase I've not heard before?
Stephen
|
1373.5 | Three longs and a short.... | COOKIE::LENNARD | | Wed Feb 13 1991 17:26 | 13 |
| No, it's literal. That's how a lot of these things work. It
facilitates videotaping, i.e., people are not sensitive to the
presence of a camera.
Agree that internally not answering the phone is also a big problem.
As an old codger, I find it incredible that a generation (dare I say
the "Y" word??) that can't be out of touch of a phone in their
personal life, treats them so cavalierly in their business relation-
ships.
Somebody help me....aren't there really small, portable, "Pocket"
phones available now. Maybe everyone should have one.
|
1373.6 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Wed Feb 13 1991 17:34 | 13 |
| >Aren't there really small pocket portable phones available now
Yes, but they do not yet work well inside buildings due to the
fact that the cellular phone companies are targeting cars and
have chosen cell sites to only provide good outdoor coverage.
At the current rate of installation of new cell sites, it will
be at least five years, and in many areas longer, before they
can be considered to be truly reliable.
Furthermore, the cost of using them is EXTREMELY high.
/john
|
1373.7 | Dealing with DEC 101 | SALSA::MOELLER | Karl has... left the building. | Wed Feb 13 1991 18:19 | 23 |
| re .3
> Alan-Bradley products usually incorporate many Digital products
> (microvaxes, network equipment). Now, one would hope that the
> Digital salespeople in his region would be cooperative in terms
> of working with him to put together mini-trade shows, demonstration
> exhibits for large potential customers, and the like.
He should find out which DIGITAL internal organization realizes the
revenue from his sales, probably a Channels TOEM sales group, and
pressure / request assistance of THEM. They are the ones that benefit.
> But, just the contrary has occurred:
> salespeople have been rude, unresponsive, and totally unsupportive
> when asked to lend assistance for network configuration and the like.
When rated on 'certs per minute' it's often difficult to put on the
corporate hat and spend the time. So get help from the group that
carries the budget.
karl
|
1373.8 | Just do it | AUSSIE::BAKER | I fell into the void * | Wed Feb 13 1991 18:49 | 23 |
| >He should find out which DIGITAL internal organization realizes the
revenue from his sales, probably a Channels TOEM sales group, and
>pressure / request assistance of THEM. They are the ones that benefit.
>
We all benefit.
>When rated on 'certs per minute' it's often difficult to put on the
>corporate hat and spend the time. So get help from the group that
>carries the budget.
Perhaps local delivery of service should be charged back to the group
who gets the benefits. BUT we should never balk at business, we should
do the work gladly and with pride and then sort out the structures that
are internally wrong that allow this sort of rediculous behaviour to
happen.
One of the problems with the get someone else to do it argument is that
the customer and Allen Bradley are twiddling there thumbs while it goes
through "the right channels" to "the right people" with "the right
focus". It takes more work than if someone had just gone an DONE it
in the first place.
John
|
1373.9 | avoid rathole | CHEFS::OSBORNEC | | Thu Feb 14 1991 03:50 | 24 |
|
Re somewhere further back --
Don't knock answerphones. I voluntarily gave up my secretary, as I
thought the cost to DEC out-weighed the economic advantage. Replaced her
with an answerphone, which I monitor frequently.
It's the sort that you can strip messages from anywhere, & put on a new
outgoing message from anywhere. I make sure that the outgoing message
is updated daily, or more if my circumstances change -- delayed at
meeting etc. I check it before I leave home, & before I go to bed.
That way I know whether anyone, internal or external, has reason to
change my day. They can & do leave messages at times when the office is
closed. All my contacts regard it as a considerable improvement, because
they always get through to me direct, with certainty, & with minimal
delay/cost -- 7 days of the week, any time zone.
I have to honour the implicit bargain by getting back to them as soon
as possible. Makes my life more manageable, keeps callers happy, saves
(much) money -- a good deal.
Let's not mix up the tools & the objective.
|
1373.10 | One of my pet peeves! | UKCSSE::LMCDONALD | | Thu Feb 14 1991 05:14 | 19 |
|
Yes, Colin, but you are incredibly conscientious. You always answer
your messages and you always reply to mail. The vast majority of
other people's machines where I've left messages did me as much good as
if I'd been talking into a black hole!
I agree with you though. It isn't the fault of the tools. It is the
attitude of the user that is causing the problems. Non-personal means
of communication (answerphone, E-mail) make it very easy to simply
ignore people you don't want to talk to or be bothered with.
Personally, I think it is incredibly *rude* not to return phone calls or
answer mail (that was not sent just for info) and I have very little
respect for people who behave this way.
Sorry for continuing the rathole.
LaDonna
|
1373.11 | | VMSNET::WOODBURY | | Thu Feb 14 1991 10:20 | 15 |
| Ah, the telephone.
So you think that someone should stop what they are doing and talk
to you just because you want to talk to them? My you have got a lot of
gall. No more than most people in this self centered society, but still
a lot of gall.
I will agree however that answering machines are all most as bad as
telephones. If it's part of your job to deal with a telephone, like it
is part of a recruiter's job, and you use an answering machine, you are
not doing your job if you do not return phone calls. If you ask someone
to call you back and have an answering machine, TURN the **** THING OFF!
E-mail is a much more polite medium. It waits for your convienience
and should be given the return curtesy of an answer.
|
1373.12 | Gall = customer needs | CHEFS::OSBORNEC | | Thu Feb 14 1991 10:33 | 24 |
|
Email might be polite, but of limited use with outside contacts ....
at least here in Europe. I'd like to see it used much more with our
customers & suppliers (in both directions).
Are IBM significantly better than us with email? Not a trick question
-- I don't know myself.
One major point re -1.
"So you think that someone should stop ...just because you want to talk
to them"..etc
That's exactly what a customer expects, & that's one of the areas where
I understood we were being unfavourably compared with big blue.
|
1373.13 | | COOKIE::LENNARD | | Thu Feb 14 1991 12:25 | 9 |
| I also think that lots of folks are simply incredibly poorly
organized. I have heard people talk of 2-300 message
pile-ups in their E-Mail. I don't know how anyone can let the
situation get that bad.
I also strongly agree that when a customer calls...you stop everything
and give him your highest level of attention and service.
Former vacuum cleaner, life insurance and computer salesperson.
|
1373.14 | | VMSNET::WOODBURY | | Thu Feb 14 1991 13:47 | 31 |
| Re last few:
I think you missed the point about the telephone. IF it is your job
to answer the telephone, by all means answer it. If there is a message
on your answering machine, listen to it. If your secretary has a note for
you, read it. If you need to return a phone call, return it. But what do
you do if you are talking to someone (as part of your job of course) and
the phone rings? Bluntly, the phone call is a rude intrusion. If someone
were to walk up to you and insist on breaking in to your conversation, you
would expect it to be important if they were that rude. You get no such
assurance with a phone call. The telephone is THE leading example of how
a technical system disreguards and degrades our social system.
So, you expect the person on answering the phone to be nice. That
expectation is unreasonable. It is truely supprising that as many people
as do, are nice when they answer the telephone. If you do get through to
a person on the telephone, you should be nice even if they are not. How
many of these people complaining about not getting calls returned are
polite when they leave messages? I'd bet that it's not that many.
The answering machine is a partial solution. Even with an answering
machine, you get this horrible noise doing its best to disrupt your
conversation or train of thought.
Now I have to deal with customers on the phone regularly. I know I
get anoyed when someone breaks into a conversation with them but I do
my best to be nice when it happens. I don't always succeed. When I
return a customers call, I work quite hard to get around the road-blocks
put in the way of telephone contact because I believe that the customer
wants to talk to me about a problem, but I try to be polite about it, and
I understand why the road-blocks are there.
|
1373.15 | | FLOWER::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Thu Feb 14 1991 13:59 | 9 |
| Re: .14
Not to sure that I understand the note...but...If the time of the call
is ~bad~,I say "I'll call you back". If I call,I first ask " are you
busy?".
What is the Bad Deal?
Marc H.
|
1373.16 | | VMSNET::WOODBURY | | Thu Feb 14 1991 14:03 | 11 |
| Re .15:
> Not to sure that I understand the note...but...If the time of the call
> is ~bad~,I say "I'll call you back". If I call,I first ask " are you
> busy?".
You're nice about it. A lot of people arn't.
> What is the Bad Deal?
The *@#$ noise it makes and the over all system design it is a part of!
|
1373.17 | could someone offer suggestions? | BSS::WILABY | | Thu Feb 14 1991 14:07 | 15 |
| Can I return to a moment to the frustrated Allen-Bradley
sales manager? Reply .7 suggested this person find the
responsible marketing group, and .8 thought the local sales
ought to be more responsive.
Since I doubt that he is unable to follow .7 advice (how would
find this entity?) then how would some of you suggest he could
get the local office to be more responsive? He's hesitant
to escallate to a district manager in fear of even further
damaging the fragile relationship he's got with the salesperson.
This is really timely: I just read where DEC lost out on a
mega-deal against SUN in a Allen-Bradley automation
product.
|
1373.18 | | SQM::MACDONALD | | Thu Feb 14 1991 16:15 | 21 |
|
Re: .17
> .... He's hesitant to escallate to a district manager in
> fear of even further damaging the fragile relationship he's
> got with the salesperson.
When people are being let go after years perhaps decades with
Digital, and the company unilaterally decides that they should
go to bi-weekly pay to make more money, and we have budget cuts
galore, and people walk on eggshells waiting for some axe to
fall, and all because we aren't doing so well, IT REALLY P*****
ME OFF THAT A CUSTOMER HAS TO BEG US TO HELP HIM SELL OUR STUFF.
I would do more than escalate it to a district manager. I would
tell the district manager that the I wanted another reliable
person assigned to my account TODAY, NOW, RIGHT AWAY!
Steve
|
1373.19 | Nix the groups - local sales are local | CSC32::S_HALL | DEC: We ALSO sell VMS.... | Thu Feb 14 1991 17:11 | 25 |
|
Just as I left the field, the local sales group
was trying to sell a great deal of "DEC stuff" to a
military base in the area.
The local sales folks earnestly drove back and forth ( 3 hour
round trip ) to the base several times a week to work the
sale.
They repeatedly found themselves having to wage war: not
with Sun....not with IBM....but with the DEC sales group
somewhere in the northeast "chartered" to sell to the
military.
It was horrible, and embarrassing to watch as the folks
in the other group threw wrenches into the efforts of
the local sales team...all from a comfortable distance...
All they had to do was let the local group do all the work, and
watch the "certs" roll in.
Personally, if I'd been "Ken For A Day", I'd have cleaned
house up there....
Steve H
|
1373.20 | I think I first said this in 1986 | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | God is their co-pilot | Thu Feb 14 1991 17:17 | 1 |
| Digital values the absence of conflict more that it values results.
|
1373.21 | | CHEFS::OSBORNEC | | Fri Feb 15 1991 03:35 | 20 |
|
re .14 --
Don't know how DEC switchboards work elsewhere, but in my office you
get good clues on whether to interrupt a conversation because of the
telephone -- 1 ring or 2 rings on the call.
Like you, I wouldn't interrupt a conversation with a customer or, say,
a personal interview with a member of staff. The answerphone can handle
the call, same as if I wasn't here.
However, if I'm working at the desk & the call is internal, I may
choose to take it immediately -- & I prefer to, because my experience
is that if I put it off, it costs me more time in the long run (call
back & person not there, etc).
If I'm at my desk, & the call is external, I will always take it -- the
people paying my salary come first, & all that good stuff.
|
1373.22 | How about the brickwalls | FLYWAY::ZAHNDR | | Fri Feb 15 1991 07:11 | 12 |
| -.20 You are right on, don't make wave, for one thing, don't point out
lousy management in some groups, or the shortcomings of some processes.
How can anyone get their work done, they are hindered, even if they
try. How many more level of management (brickwalls) can they build
between the workers and the ones making decisions? How many times more
can the decision maybe rumor be turned around? Why can K.O. not clean
house, because politics is still around. With all this lay-off, I hope
the right people get picked. Good luck to all the ones left. Hopefully,
the brickwalls will not be so high anymore and people can finally do
their job.
|
1373.23 | Being organized is a key | SUPER::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Sun Feb 17 1991 19:46 | 35 |
| I agree with the person who mentioned being organized as a key factor
in providing others with a feeling of responsiveness.
Organization is not automatic for me - I have to work very hard at it,
but it's extremely important to me. When too much happens too fast,
and my desk gets piled high in a day or two, I am most likely to
neglect returning a phone call or mail message. When I use my planner
and write down all calls to be returned and use the 'mark' feature in
mail to mark messages I must respond to, but cannot do so immediately,
my life goes better, and people get responded to.
I try to go through everything on my desk at the end of each day, too,
and prioritize that stuff.
When I get a call from the field for customer support, that goes to the
top of all other priorities.
Even so, I still mess up once in a while. I feel badly when I don't
manage to respond to the personal mail messages people send, but I
feel that the business ones come first.
I continue to be amazed by people who can function in a total state of
chaos - you know, all the counters in the office a foot deep, totally
ad hoc filing system, no planner, car resembles a dumpster. If I were
interviewing job candidates, I would probably ask them how they feel
about being organized, and what systems they use. Someone who
responded enthusiastically to this point AND had the technical
knowledge would score high in my book.
I have a higher trust level in organized people, even though I'm aware
that some people who appear to live in a total state of chaos actually
know where everything is and do manage never to drop the ball.
Holly
|
1373.24 | | KYOA::MIANO | John - NY Retail Banking Resource Cntr | Sun Feb 17 1991 23:19 | 14 |
| One thing that I am surprised did not show up in the survey is a
complaint I have often heard from customers: Digital sends too many
people to meetings. YOu know the ones. The meetings where you have two
customers facing 10 Digital people.
The reason for this is obvious. Rarely in Digital do you have a
situation where you can find a person in authority so make agreements
with customers. Instead each group involved in a project sends a
representative to represent their own interest.
We publicly display our internal confusion. I know IBM does not do
this.
John
|
1373.25 | | AYOV28::DHUNTER | | Mon Feb 18 1991 08:08 | 14 |
|
re: .0 and others.
This is not good. These types of customer complaints have been
consistent since I joined digital 13 years ago. I cannot understand
why it is so difficult to get people to return calls *especially*
in the Field. Communication is important and listening paramount
to understanding any client's (internal or external) requirements.
Any policies out there on how to deal with Customers via a telephone.
Don H.
|
1373.26 | how about some internal support? | HOCUS::HO | down in the trenches... | Tue Feb 19 1991 12:56 | 14 |
| re: .0 and others
I think the report should be circulated to all sales managers for
discussion at their next unit meetings.
The complaint that "DEC salespeople don't get the resources they need"
point to a problem that other salespeople and I have vocalized time &
time again. We need Digital to back us all the way when we're making a
sale. An IBM salesrep receives the full support of IBM to make something
happen if the salesrep believe it's important for the customer. Ever
tried to do the same thing at Digital? It's doable, but extremely
difficult.
|
1373.27 | | BRULE::MICKOL | Cleared by IRAQI Censors | Tue Feb 19 1991 22:51 | 18 |
| Well, here in our District the report on customer sensing did make the rounds.
I read it and have done everything I can to fix what is broken. I'm not sure
everyone read it, understood it, internalized it and adjusted their behavior
accordingly... in other words, for the most part, its business as usual.
I don't necessarily blame this on the individuals, though. The environment
that sales has to work in is not good. I don't think its set up for success.
Resources of every sort are hard to come by, the administrative systems are
cumbersome and hardly user-friendly, and trying to figure out our licensing and
other policies are increasing my purchases of extra-strength Tylenol.
When we are measured on Customer Satisfaction instead of certs, you just might
see a change in philosophy and behavior.
Regards,
Jim
Sales Support
|
1373.28 | significance of metrics to behavior | AKOCOA::POPE | Fifth disciplinarian | Fri Feb 22 1991 17:12 | 19 |
| Several of the replies have implicated the notion of "metrics" as
possibly one of the root causes of our un-acceptable behavior.
There is a copy of a recent KO memo making the rounds. It's been
sub-titled by forwarders with the likes of "The new Math" or "New
Management, No metrics".
I think there is a clear message here which I happen to agree with: "If
you push formulas onto peoples' performance you get only irrational
results." I know this may bring out all the cliches...you can't fix
what you can't measure...et al. These may be true, but they speak to a
different topic. I interpret the KO memo as saying "quit trying to
simplify the complex topic of individuals performance by applying
measurements that legitimately apply to processes, (not people).
Or, said another way, "measure processes; judge people".
I wondered how others might be interpreting the memo?
/pope
|
1373.29 | Now I'm thinking out loud | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | God is their co-pilot | Fri Feb 22 1991 21:40 | 11 |
| I really doubt that KO talking out loud, yet again, in another memo is
going to have the sweeping impact of changing the processes the he's
had in place for 34 years.
There's a contradiction in there anyway: the result or lack thereof in
a "process" is not some abstraction to be measured. It's customer
satisfaction, market share, and profits. You know, the things that
really count in this world. Hold people accountable to their
commitments.
Digital values the absence of conflict more than it values results.
|
1373.30 | It's slipping away, but can't we get it back? | SUFRNG::REESE_K | just an old sweet song.... | Sat Feb 23 1991 12:32 | 56 |
| I tend to agree with Pat......I saw the memo and my immediate
impression was that all those folks who were on the disribution
lists that were deleted......therein could be the real problem.
I can only imagine, but I feel that these are a lot of the layers of
managers who are so ar removed from the IC's......the intent of
the memo will never be implemented. These are the same folks who
will beat people into the ground over metrics, metrics, metrics.
Yes, I read the memo.....I try to live up to the intent of that memo;
but until KO walks into a meeting (perhaps unannounced....well I can
dream , can't I?) and hear someone in the middle of the chain telling
us about the importance of metrics as it equates to continued funding
for our group.....the metrics bashing won't stop.
Those of us who are willing to buck the trend (and perhaps, or so it
seems these days...are getting away with it....only because the
response from our customers has been so positive).......a lot of people
will continue to do the right thing.....although there is the risk
that we will "right thing" ourselves right out the door. And the
newer people who bought into the metrics concept and are delivering
metrics, but not good service or quality answers.....will be among
those who are rewarded....what else can I say?
Pat makes a good point......we can't confuse doing the right thing
with "giving away the store". Like it or not, DEC has to make a
profit.....but if we work smart we can keep our customers happy,
really sell what is appropriate for them and hopefully gain on our
share of the market, and we'll weather the storm. Sometimes "doing what
is right".....also means doing what is right for DEC. Since I work
so closely with SW licensing.......I shudder when I think of how
much we truly have lost in what we have given away. The money is
lost and we have set an expectation with our installed based customers
that is going to be difficult to undo.
Right now we do have a lot of our installed base customers who are
unhappy with us.....we only have ourselves to blame. They love the
hardware, but we're killing them in other areas; bottom-line.....our
indifference (as it is viewed by the customer) justified or not....
is going to bring us to our knees.
As was illustrated in another note, my "customer" is a sales rep;
he views DEC-SALE as marginally helpful.....he's entitled to his
opinion, and he's entitled to be annoyed or angry if his expectations
of what we can do for him has been set falsely......and my gut is
telling me that this is exactly the case......I can only hope is
that he won't write us off.....will try us a few more times....and if
he doesn't get the answer he needs.....that he is willling to push
back. Yes, I know this can take "time".....and time is a precious
commodity for so many people today....but we all own a share of that.
I truly hope we weather the storm......but it is getting more
difficult to keep reassuring myself that *I* am the only person I
have to answer to (not my creditors) :-)
Karen
|
1373.31 | Try two phone lines | DSM::CRAIG | Nice computers don't go down :-) | Sun Feb 24 1991 08:36 | 16 |
| RE: returning calls
I found that I was missing lots of phone calls since I was on the phone
so much and incoming calls were getting forwarded to my group
secretary, where they wound up in my message slot which I might not see
for hours.
So - I had my manager order me a multi-line phone.
Now, when I'm on the phone and another call comes in, I ask the person
I'm talking with if they can hold for a moment (noone has ever said
"no"), answer the call, explain that I'm on another line and I'll call
them right back, and resume my previous conversation. I have found that
this utilization of existing technology has substantially reduced, but
not entirely eliminated, a lot of the phone tag I used to play.
|
1373.32 | Hmm. I wonder what call-annoying costs for a business line? | SCAACT::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow | Sun Feb 24 1991 17:09 | 13 |
| re: .31
Most of the people in my group have a multi-line phone because we deal
a lot with sales, sales support, CMPs, and sometimes customers. We
were recently asked to justify our multi-line phones. It turns out
that a multi-line phone at our site costs $1200/year MORE than a single
line phone. All our phones also have a message light that can be
turned on to indicate that we have had a message taken for us.
Unfortunately, only the building switchboard operator has the
capability to turn the light on. Our calls never roll over to the
switchboard, they roll to 2 or 3 secretaries on our floor.
Bob
|
1373.33 | | RICKS::SHERMAN | ECADSR::SHERMAN 225-5487, 223-3326 | Sun Feb 24 1991 18:45 | 3 |
| So ... what about two single-line phones?
Steve
|
1373.34 | Now where can I put the 2nd phone...the floor! | SCAACT::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow | Sun Feb 24 1991 18:59 | 9 |
| Re: .33
That might work. One drawback I can see to that is that in order
to make it act like a multi-line phone when one line is busy, it would
require each phone to point to the other for rollover when it is busy
and this would limit the rollover choices when both phones are busy. I
could live with that.
Bob
|
1373.35 | | KYOA::MIANO | John - NY Retail Banking Resource Cntr | Sun Feb 24 1991 23:35 | 11 |
| I have just moved into an office without DTNs. I now have to call a lot of
main numbers for DEC facilities and it is scary. It would be in
interesting exercise for the management to try calling people in various
facilities through the main number. They would find that in several
locations it takes forever for anyone to answer the phone. Often you
get bounced from one number to another. It is crazy!
I remember a couple of years ago I called a certain large Digital
facility's main number and I let the phone ring for 20 minutes to see
how long it would ring.
|
1373.36 | Uhh, didn't this technology exist back in "1A2" days? | PROXY::SCHMIDT | Thinking globally, acting locally! | Mon Feb 25 1991 08:00 | 5 |
| Maybe John Covert will post an authoratative reply, but somehow I
suspect that the $1200/year figure represents some department get-
ting rich at the Corporation's general expense and detriment.
Atlant
|
1373.37 | | SQM::MACDONALD | | Mon Feb 25 1991 08:54 | 14 |
|
Re: metrics
Back a few someone mentioned that we should be measuring processes
and not people. Deming, Six Sigma, etc. would totally agree with
you, but we aren't even doing that.
Until we have a reliable way to measure how well we are satisfying
our customers, we are going to continue shooting in the dark when
it comes to trying to satisfy them.
Steve
|
1373.38 | We need more mature technically-aware individuals | COUNT0::WELSH | What are the FACTS??? | Mon Feb 25 1991 11:11 | 38 |
| re: <<< Note 1373.24 by KYOA::MIANO "John - NY Retail Banking Resource Cntr" >>>
> One thing that I am surprised did not show up in the survey is a
> complaint I have often heard from customers: Digital sends too many
> people to meetings. YOu know the ones. The meetings where you have two
> customers facing 10 Digital people.
> The reason for this is obvious. Rarely in Digital do you have a
> situation where you can find a person in authority so make agreements
> with customers. Instead each group involved in a project sends a
> representative to represent their own interest.
I agree with this interpretation. There is another factor which I tend
to notice even more, out here in the field. We are less and less able
to find single individuals who can provide "technical support" as a
whole. More and more, we have a database expert, a UNIX expert, a CASE
expert, an Office expert, and a Networks expert. It would take them all
day to sort out their story, even without a customer present!
EIS seems to believe that technology is so complicated that the best
solution is to have an "insect society" solution with lots of highly
specialized "workers" who are directed by a superior caste of "business
initiates". These might be EIS managers, consultants, or even salesmen.
The problem with this approach is that the clever business people don't
know a lot about anything technical, so they need a different
specialist for every topic that might turn up.
Experience (backed up by poor old common sense, who rarely gets a
look-in these days) says that what delights customers is a visit from 1
(one: "ONE") Digital person who has an appreciation of the business
that the customer is in, realizes that we all work for money, that time
is money, etc.... and who also knows enough about most things that
Digital sells to be able to relate them to the customer's needs. This
is by no means as impossible as you might think - we have a good
number of people who are quite close to that ideal. The trouble is, we
don't value them, grow them, or attempt to keep them.
/Tom
|
1373.39 | fixing the CUSTOMER | FSTVAX::BEAN | Attila the Hun was a LIBERAL! | Mon Feb 25 1991 12:25 | 9 |
| re: -1
absolutly right on!
but, in order for that ONE person to function...s/he must be in a
position to "assume ownership" of the problem. by that i mean, s/he must
be willing and able to tackle the whole problem (whether it's a sales,
software, or hardware issue, or a combination of any/all of those) (or
even a policy issue). the need to call in specialized resources can be
determined later...with minimum impact on the customer.
|
1373.40 | More on phones - This is for the birds | KYOA::MIANO | John - NY Retail Banking Resource Cntr | Mon Feb 25 1991 16:36 | 14 |
| To follow up on what I said before (.35) on people not answering
telephones. Today I called a person in Digital and I got the voice mail
message that said "... or if you need assistance please press 0 and someone
will help you." Since I am going to be out of town most of the week I
pressed zero so that I could find out from the secretary when the person
would be in so I could call while on the road.
Well the phone rang, and rang, and rang.....and rang. Finally I had
to go to a meeting so out of a perverse sense of curiousity I went to
the meeting with my phone off the hook. When I cam back to my desk an
hour later guess what?
The phone was still ringing! And people in this company wonder why we
don't make budgets.
|
1373.41 | MORE THAN A PHONE ISSUE | KRSTIN::SCALA | | Mon Feb 25 1991 17:28 | 28 |
| Most of the comments here tend to focus on the phone situation, but
there is another issue worth covering. Customers in the focus groups
felt DEC did not have the resources that IBM has. I am sure this is
true based on shear size, but since we have fewer accounts than IBM,
it should be somewhat relative in support per account.
How is it that we have too many DEC people show up at customer meetings
and the perception of shallow support?
How is it DEC has THE HIGHEST COST OF SALES IN THE INDUSTRY, that
we spend more on selling as a percent of Revenue than any other
company and have the perception of shallow support.
The study in .0 includes one memorable quote from a customer,
"If IBM had DEC's equipment, DEC would be obsolete". Makes me
feel good as part of an engineering group that we have good products,
makes me think we have a tremendous opportunity for increased sales.
Would commissions, IBM style, change the behavior of the sales
force and then the perception of the customer? Would we get more
sales per rep with commissions? Are the people that our customers
see changeing too often because we don't pay comissions?
I think we need to get to a commission pay structure. Comments?
|
1373.42 | Why not fix the *real* problem? | SWAM2::MCCARTHY_LA | Value indifferences? | Mon Feb 25 1991 17:48 | 19 |
| re: .41, on the need for commissions to motivate Sales,
In eleven years of working closely with Sales in the field as Sales
Support, SWS/EIS/PSS/acronym-de-jour and even as a customer, it has not
been my experience that salespeople in Digital lack motivation. There
are some that lack skills, some lack training, some lack management
support and direction. Few lack motivation.
What they seem to lack most is the inclination of the rest of
corporation to support what they're doing, rather than constantly
obstructing it, inspecting it, second-guessing it and otherwise making
it harder to do.
The only "motivational problem" I've seen is the rep that, after years
of jumping artificial and unnecessary hurdles to do their job, gets fed
up with the whole thing and fills time until they find a new job.
Just MHO,
Larry.
|
1373.43 | salesperson authority => customer focus | SAUTER::SAUTER | John Sauter | Tue Feb 26 1991 07:11 | 48 |
| re: .41
I'm not sure commissions is the answer either because, like .42, I'm
not sure motivation is the problem. I interpret the description in
.42 to mean that the sales person lacks authority. I suspect that
in IBM a sales person can "get things done" on behalf of the customer
better than a DEC sales person, and that is what I mean by "authority".
In .41 it was noted "If IBM had DEC's equipment, DEC would be
obsolete". This is an indication that IBM's equipment is not up to
the standard set by DEC. I don't think this lack is an accident.
I think IBM deliberately doesn't develop products for which there
is not a justifiable business need. We've talked about doing that
at DEC, but as best I can tell we aren't (yet) doing it.
Someday Digital will get enough fiscal discipline to refrain from
building products for which it can see no profit. To do that we must
first find a way to determine how much of our profit comes from each
product we sell. When we reach that point Digital will be a sounder
company, but the Engineering part will be less fun to work in.
A friend of mine used to work for IBM. I'm not sure just what his job
was, but he was a hardware engineer of some sort, and specialized
in some aspect of chemistry. He told me that he had been given the
job of making a certain process more efficient. He spent a long time
working on the problem, and finally came up with a plan to improve
its efficiency by a small percentage. His superiors praised his work
but told him that they would not implement his recommendations until
they had to rebuild the facility anyway, because the increment of
improvement which he had demonstrated was too small to justify
an early rebuild.
Their decision was, I am sure, correct from a business perspective.
They must have measured the savings to the company of changing to his
new process, and determined that it was less than the cost of
rebuilding the facility. Nevertheless, he was disappointed that all
of his work did not provide any immediate benefit to his company.
He left shortly thereafter.
I think these two differences between IBM and DEC are related. If a
sales person has more authority, I think that leads quickly to a
greater focus on the customer and his needs, as opposed to building
whatever feels good. An increased focus on individual customers
leads to strategies which attempt to predict what customers will want
in the future, so we can have products ready for them. That leads,
in turn, to measuring the success of the strategy by measuring profits,
and this is the "fiscal discipline" I was talking about.
John Sauter
|
1373.44 | Phone fun | MINAR::BISHOP | | Tue Feb 26 1991 09:48 | 7 |
| It's not just DEC: I called AAA's 800 number, got a recording
that all lines were busy, wait, then a recording I could leave
a message, wait, then a recording that the "mailbox was full",
obviously the error message from the voice-mail service, and
then a hang-up--no apology, no alternate number, just "click".
-John Bishop
|
1373.45 | The answer is commissions. What was the question? | BOLT::MINOW | The best lack all conviction, while the worst | Tue Feb 26 1991 12:42 | 16 |
| re: .41:
Would commissions, IBM style, change the behavior of the sales
force and then the perception of the customer?
Probably... But if the problem is poor support, maybe we should
pay commissions to support people.
Ha Ha. Just kidding.
Martin.
|
1373.46 | Remember a similiar study? | ODIXIE::BONE | Osteopath | Tue Feb 26 1991 16:59 | 8 |
| Re:.0
I seem to remember a couple of years back, I think, the same
study/project or similiar. Were you involved with that one and how
does this current study compare response-wise? Are we (I'm a sales
rep) changing in the customers mind or is it still the same?
Bo
|
1373.47 | More on the phone problem... | GLDOA::TRUMBULL | | Tue Feb 26 1991 17:44 | 31 |
| Before we start bashing ourselves excessively on voice mail, answering
machines and our lack of professional phone manners (and we certainly
DO need to do _some_ bashing !), we should realize that we are not the
only ones with the problem.
I am in the Credit organization, which means I spend most of my time
"Dialing for Dollars". In most of the larger companies I call, voice
mail or something similar has been put into effect. In a week I would
lose track of the number of times my calls don't get returned, or get
routed around eternally when I elect to "push 0 to be connected to
another person"
We seem to have a relatively new piece of technology which, as it
becomes more commonplace, is changing the way we communicate. I think
we all can see how mis-use can cause problems, and it also makes it
easier for someone who does not have professional phone manners in the
first place to really become a pain in the *&#.
Should we be concerned if we are perceived to be worse in this category
than IBM ? YOU BET
Is it OK, since other companies have similar problems ? NO WAY
Is the answer getting rid of all our recorders/voice mail systems ?
NOPE
It seems that we've had this problem longer than voice mail has been
around, so we've got a people behavior problem. Train 'em, work with
'em; and if they don't clean up their act CAN 'EM
Phil
|
1373.48 | Consistent Behaviour. | SMAUG::GUNN | MAILbus Conductor | Tue Feb 26 1991 17:53 | 24 |
| In the early years of my longer than most peoples career at Digital I
TWICE heard Ken Olsen tell the New Digital Sales Representatives class
in Sales Training that he wanted to replace the Sales Force by a
Catalog. This was in the days when Digital was small enough that Ken
did talk to many of the NDSRT classes.
When I became a genuine budget carrying DECmobile driving Digital Sales
Representative, more than ten years ago now, I spent most of my time
fighting with Digital internal organizations getting them to deliver
all of what my customers had ordered and paid for and to live up to the
commitments they made to my customers.
Now, as a long tenured contributor to corporate overhead, I sit in
meetings and ask what it is that customers actually want to buy, I
either get a stoney silence or the last irate customer fire drill/phone
call/lost sale answer which engineering explains can't possibly be
satisfied because "it doesn't conform with standards".
When the value placed on Sales and Marketing skills relative to
Engineering skills rises in the company, the situation will change. Our
customers have been quite explicit in what they expect from their
vendors. May be we should invent a CCITT/ISO/OSF standard for attention
to customers so that Engineering can understand how badly we do in that
area.
|
1373.49 | This is not rocket science... | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | God is their co-pilot | Tue Feb 26 1991 19:46 | 8 |
| re:.-1
Tom Peters in his books makes the point that everyone wants excellent
service and can recognize it when they get it. For Federal Express
they have made a competitve advantage out of it. In other notes here
we've outlined other companies that do. Excellent service is
consistently good service and when there's a problem, resolving it to
the satisfaction of the customer.
|
1373.50 | Meetings, Bloody Meetings | BOSACT::EARLY | Cruising Through Momentum | Tue Feb 26 1991 20:49 | 31 |
| RE: .41
> How is it that we have too many DEC people show up at customer meetings
> and the perception of shallow support?
Because customers do not always value "meeting participation". If they
can meet with ONE Digital person and get a problem solved, then
we have done a great job. If 20 people show up and one solves the
problem, then they walk away thinking, "Gee that one person was
pretty smart ... who were all those other clowns?"
I think IBM just may use resources more wisely than we do, giving
the customer the ONE (two, three, or whatever) people they need
at the point in time when they need them. Jamming 20 "Big Shots"
into a room to impress the customer is stupid. Applying the person
you need at the time you need them is the trick.
> How is it DEC has THE HIGHEST COST OF SALES IN THE INDUSTRY, that
> we spend more on selling as a percent of Revenue than any other
> company and have the perception of shallow support.
I think it has something to do with the fact that we usually try to
outnumber our customers by at least a 2:1 margin at all meetings
and presentations.
;^)
/se
|
1373.51 | WISER USE OF EXISTING RESOURCES | KRSTIN::SCALA | | Wed Feb 27 1991 13:56 | 13 |
| RE .50
This is the comment I was fishing for; that IBM uses its resources more
wisely than DEC. The next logical question is, "How do we deploy our
resources in a wiser, more efficient way? I didn't get the support for
commissions that I thought I would (perhaps those reps that would
support the idea are too busy to read this). In any case, I believe
we can be more effective with the resources we have; but how?
Also, in .42 you mentioned all the hurdles in place to keep a sales rep
from getting his or her job done. Can you list a few? Perhaps posting
them will be the first step to removing them. Are they already listed
in this conference?
|
1373.52 | Time to go forward!. | CSTEAM::HENDERSON | Competition is Fun: Dtn 297-6180, MRO4 | Wed Feb 27 1991 14:44 | 19 |
| The Digital sales world is changing even as we read this file. The
letters P&L will mean something to us, in sales, in the very near future.
The vision is to have "Customers Enthusiastic about DEC", and the goal
is to have "More Profitability" in the process of doing so.
Our mission is to have a "Customer Focus", that gives our customers what
they want and need. We want to do this whilst we reduce costs and turn
into a company that operates as a "Customer Driven Organization". We
will do this while we retain all our traditional digital values of honesty
and integrity.
We will aim to service our customers by selling them solutions that
support their business needs. We will do this and still work for one of
the best people orientated companies in the world.
regards
Eric H.
|
1373.53 | Sounds good, but..... | JAMBOS::NEIL | Gorgie Wave | Thu Feb 28 1991 02:55 | 4 |
|
Re .52
How???
|
1373.54 | Salary *or* Commission | BIGJOE::DMCLURE | Live from Littleton... | Thu Feb 28 1991 10:30 | 55 |
| re: .53,
How indeed! This is the same question which undoubtedly still
reverberates throughout the evolving centrally-planned economies of
Eastern Europe and Asia. It all basically boils down to motivation.
How do you motivate your employees?
There are basically two distinct schools of thought on this
subject:
1. One school of thought attempts to motivate its work force
through the manipulation of wages in which the higher the overall
corporate profit, the higher the wages that can be paid to the
overall work force (and vice versa). This school is based on
the notion of maintaining full employment at all costs in order
to maintain a higher level of worker morale. In bad times, on
the other hand, everyone tends to suffer [theoretically equally]
under such a plan.
2. The other school of thought attempts to motivate its work force
through the threat of lay-offs. In this environment, raises (as
well as the lack thereof) are based on the achievements of each
individual worker with commissions and bonuses quite commonly
awarded, and there is a constant pool of unemployed workers who
stand ready to take the jobs of those who underperform in their
jobs, as lay-offs are quite common.
Most corporations tend to implement a combination of the
two schools of thought, but the general trend at DEC would seem
to be that of moving away from a primarily school #1 base and
towards that of school #2.
Myself, I sort of prefer the method used at Radio Shack to
motivate its employees. This method is called "Salary *or* Commission"
(which ever is the greater of the two). In this environment, the
employee is guaranteed a base (almost subsistence) salary, but also
has the potential to improve their income by selling so much as
to surpass their salary and get paid based upon commissions instead.
The way this works is as follows: an employee earns a minimum
wage of some sort each week (guaranteed income level). Each time
an employee is credited with a sale, a 5% commission on that sale
is tallied towards that employee's weekly total. At the end of the
week, the total commissions are compared with the base salary, and
the employee gets the larger of the two as their weekly wage. In
all the retail jobs I ever had, I don't think I was ever so motivated
to sell as I was at that Radio Shack job.
Of course, not everyone is a sales person, so there are other
factors involved, but I see no reason why the same principles can't
be applied to other functions as well. I still maintain that the
ideal way to implement such an idea would be through the Info-Market
approach outlined in note #1024, but then I always was an idealist!
-davo
|
1373.55 | Or try Theory Y... | COUNT0::WELSH | What are the FACTS??? | Fri Mar 01 1991 06:15 | 36 |
| re .54:
There is a third school of thought which motivates employees by
* Treating them like free adults AT ALL TIMES
* Informing them fully
* Consulting them appropriately
* Giving them respect, including suitable praise when they do well
AND criticism when they do badly - without fail
* Enlisting their enthusiastic cooperation, which can be gained only
by making them feel empowered, responsible, and recognised.
As far as I know, this is McGregor's classic Theory Y.
I used to sneer when managers said "money doesn't motivate". But
they were right - it doesn't do a real good job. Lack of money
will demotivate - but usually there is also lack of the things
listed above. Both the strategies described in .54 use money
to manipulate the employee in a harsh, uncaring, Theory X way.
The trouble with Digital is that it expresses all the right
sentiments (such as "our people are our greatest asset") -
just like other companies. But as soon as the pressure is on,
it abandons those principles in practice, while endorsing them louder
than ever verbally - just like other companies.
Look at the Corporate Philosophy, with its simple, old fashioned values
of quality, honesty, simplicity, and trust. If the majority of our
managers and people understood and practised those values, we wouldn't
need anything else.
/Tom
|
1373.56 | Poor Ken!! | COOKIE::LENNARD | | Fri Mar 01 1991 13:10 | 25 |
| I would like to see a major move to an aggressive commission schedule.
I see no reason in the world why a hot-shot DEC salesman should not be
able to make 300-400K a year. With that kind of income, he'll make
sure he's got the resources he needs, even if it has to come out of his
own pocket. I know for a fact that CRAY salesman made 250K ten years
ago, and distinctly remember a report on Wang in 1976...when 100K was
common, and several sales folk were making over 200K. We ain't
serious.
On VoiceMail (gag), I can just see a scenario in about five years when
the whole g-d country experiences a complete telecommunication lock-up,
with all these stupid systems talking to each other. I'd throw them
all out!!
I really liked the "new management system" memo from Ken, until I read
the part about business managers getting good, complete data on a
weekly basis. What a joke! If Ken believes we have the processes,
people, and systems to do just that piece of it....he has a serious
disconnect with reality. Our admin systems are horrible...and getting
worse. I "manage" millions of dollars of service income, and I have
no idea at all what the real situation on my products is.....and I'm
not alone. Equally disturbing is the idea that Ken apparently thinks
we can transition to this new system using the same bad actors who got
us into this mess. It's really scary.
|
1373.57 | DEC Culture: The Opiate of the Masses? | BIGJOE::DMCLURE | Live from Littleton... | Fri Mar 01 1991 19:26 | 37 |
| re: .54,
Geez! And I thought I was idealistic?! ;^)
Seriously, I think what you have written looks good, and I can
imagine it would make good copy for any number of DEC's many such
loftily-worded personnel messages (i.e. DECpropaganda), but if you
really want to follow your rule #2 ("Informing them fully"), then
I think we'll all have to return to earth orbit for a momment and
take a long hard look at the facts of [corporate] life.
Let's face it, aside from those of us here who have either won
Megabucks, struck oil in their backyard, or inherited a titanium
mine, we all have rent or mortgages along with oodles of other such
bills to worry about paying each month. This means that unless we
take home some sort of satisfactory income from this wonderful job,
that we will end up on the streets. Furthermore, since money doesn't
grow on trees, this means that we are constantly motivated to earn
those wonderful greenbacks that put food on the table and which seat
us at tables in the relative comfort of a home.
Therefore, while it may be that many of us are suitably well off,
classy, or downright brainwashed enough to think that money is not an
effective motivator, then I need only remind these folks that unless
they live in Utopia-ville, that the food, housing, and life support
systems which they depend upon for their very existence depend upon
this capitalistic evil known as "money". Try removing these things
from your own family and see how long you remain unmotivated!
Call it "Theory X" if you wish, but unless you can generate an
almost religious fundamentalism in your work force (which, by the way,
is yet another management theory), then you're going to need to use
some sort of monetary behavior modification method or another if you
want to motivate your people. The point is, in these relatively tough
times, money talks and, well...you know the rest of the story.
-davo
|
1373.58 | Money Money Money Money! | KL10::WADDINGTON | Wadda ya mean, WE? | Fri Mar 01 1991 23:37 | 15 |
| When I'm "underpaid", I'm motivated to fix that. In general this means
that I'm motivated to change jobs/companies. It seems extremely
unlikely that I'll solve my financial difficulties by staying put and
working harder.
When I'm "adequately paid", the possibility of additional money can be
motivating, but a **GOOD** manager is a far better source of
motivation. Unfortunately, many people don't feel they have good
management so money's their best shot and in these times, there's
never enough money to go around.
And when I'm "overpaid", well, ur, ummm, I don't know... I've never
been "overpaid" ;-)
Rich
|
1373.59 | | SOLVIT::DCOX | | Sat Mar 02 1991 07:50 | 32 |
| > <<< Note 1373.56 by COOKIE::LENNARD >>>
> -< Poor Ken!! >-
>
> I would like to see a major move to an aggressive commission schedule.
> I see no reason in the world why a hot-shot DEC salesman should not be
> able to make 300-400K a year. With that kind of income, he'll make
> sure he's got the resources he needs, even if it has to come out of his
I would like a more aggressive commission schedule. I see no reason in
the world why a a hot-shot Product Team (5x5, 6x6, whatever) should not
be able to make 300-400K a year. With that kind of income, they'll
make sure...
...that the bloody products they bring to market WILL SELL!
I don't care HOW good a salesperson you are, you cannot (for long) sell
what you don't have.
We STILL do an incredibly effective job of bringing real pieces of junk
to market (this VT1000 I am hammering on is a prime example) along with
the quality products (ie, VAX 4000). Let's reward the winner product
teams with $$$$$ and the losers with an opportunity to develop products
in another company.
More in line with today's problems, find the consistent winners and
give them MORE development money (it's called a low-risk investment);
find the consistent losers and give them a pink slip (it's called
expense reduction).
FWIW
Dave
|
1373.60 | | BRULE::MICKOL | Cleared by IRAQI Censors | Sat Mar 02 1991 23:39 | 17 |
| I agree that additional monetary incentives will help, but the PRIMARY problem
is as stated a few notes ago:
The Sales Force does not feel empowered and spends most of its time
fighting with the rest of Digital and struggling with the administrative
processes and tools!
When we fix that, we'll be VERY successful and all those who deserve it will
get monetary incentives in the form of better and more frequent salary
increases.
Today we have the SP2 program (recently improved, I believe) and other
incentive programs for the Sales force... So a hard-working sales rep who gets
results can increase their income substantially. Their annual income may not
reach six figures, but its a start.
Jim
|
1373.61 | ...administrative processes... | SAUTER::SAUTER | John Sauter | Mon Mar 04 1991 08:45 | 20 |
| re: .60
The sales force is not the only part of Digital that spends time
struggling with administrative processes. I recently learned that
even our product manager does not have a complete list of customers
who have bought our product. While Europe is 45% of our sales,
he only gets breakdowns by country, not by customer, and even the
per country listings aren't always available.
A few years ago, when I was acting as a product manager, I couldn't get
a complete list of DECsystem-10 customers who also had IBM 360s for
a survey: I was designing a gateway product and wanted to find out
what customers wanted in such a product. I think I ended up with only
nine customer names.
I think there's something rotton in our administrative systems if we
don't even know who our current customers are.
Sorry for the flame; this pushed one of my hot buttons.
John Sauter
|
1373.62 | It's Hopeless!! | COOKIE::LENNARD | | Mon Mar 04 1991 11:54 | 29 |
| re .1 -- John, we really don't even have admin systems. I'm looking at
a service report out of Europe, that lists Media and Documentation
Update Service (MDDS) contracts sold to customers on a SW
product THAT HAS NO MEDIA OR DOCUMENTATION!! I'll bet the product
manager for General Mills for Wheaties can pull up data that is current
as of the close of business the previous day on manufacturing costs,
quality, sales cut anyway you want it, expenses, forecasts, etc. etc.
We can get poop-poo-caa-caa. I get a smattering of general misleading
data about mid-quarter on the previous quarter, and that's only from
the U.S....forget Europe and GIA. I've sat in a dozen meetings in
the past few years where urgent presentations were made for dramatic
improvements in our admin systems. Senior management nodded sagely,
and deferred decision until "next fiscal year", when "the numbers
might be better". You do not get rewarded in this company for spending
money to improve things administratively....you get rewarded for making
your numbers, which I also happen to know are 50% crap and fudging, but
not one has good enough data to challenge what's happening.
Sp2 is a farce...what is the max, 18K? I'm talking real money.
Also agree that product teams should get dramatic bonuses...50-75-100K!
Product teams turning money-losers loose on our customers should be
ousted, quickly. Once again, the problem is we don't really know
which are good and which are bad. Everything works on an allocation
basis, and by the time it gets to the Executive Committee level, every-
thing looks great.
Whew!!!.........Dick
|
1373.63 | but consider... | SAUTER::SAUTER | John Sauter | Mon Mar 04 1991 13:04 | 10 |
| re: .62
Look on the bright side: maybe the report is accurate.
Maybe there's a salesperson out there somewhere who can sell Media and
Documentation Update Service on software products which have no media
or documentation, just in case they ever do, and still maintain a high
level of customer satisfaction.
If it's true we need more such salespersons.
John Sauter
|
1373.64 | | COOKIE::LENNARD | | Mon Mar 04 1991 13:11 | 8 |
| ...yeh, that's kinda in line with a new telephone support service I
was thinking of creating...it's very aggressively priced for customers
who have no phones.
Our sloppy (read non-existant) admin systems are mostly a result of
30 years of run-away product acceptance, high growth, and good profits.
We really didn't need to know what was going on. We desparately need
to know now, but no one is going to spend the bucks....sigh....
|
1373.65 | What to I get for QT-UPIaa-E5? | ORABX::REESE_K | just an old sweet song.... | Mon Mar 04 1991 18:39 | 17 |
| Regarding the Media and Documentation services for products that
required no initial H-kits; I'm assuming you might have been referring
to VMS...... DECNET, VAXCLUSTER SW etc. are part and parcel of the
VMS media....the license enables those products. I've been yelling
and screaming since I've been with RSS that quoting MDDS for those
products was a rip-off at best, but "felt" fraudulent to me.
About a month ago we received notification from country SPS that
MDDS on these products was being retired immediately.....but when
I think of the customers who have been paying for MDDS on those
products for a couple of years....arrrrrgggggggghhhhhhhh!!!!!!!
Our group as no evidence that all our yelling and screaming made a
difference on the decision, but I'd like to think we did.
Karen
|
1373.66 | | COOKIE::LENNARD | | Tue Mar 05 1991 11:49 | 4 |
| No...it wasn't one of those....but similar. I agree we often stretch
the limits of "legality" with a lot of our SPS contracts. Like update
service, etc., on layered products that we really have no intention of
ever updating again...Oh well.
|
1373.67 | Ringing phone = torture device 8^) | WORDY::JONG | Steve Jong/T and N Publications | Wed Mar 06 1991 17:28 | 5 |
| A footnote on human behavior: I refuse to believe that Twentieth
Century Man can withstand a ringing phone. When we read stories of
phones unanswered for twenty minutes or an hour or whatever, I am sure
the phone was not connected or not heard. It sure wasn't ringing in
someone's office.
|
1373.68 | @@It happens. | CSTEAM::HENDERSON | Competition is Fun: Dtn 297-6180, MRO4 | Fri Mar 08 1991 10:51 | 24 |
| I have had instances of "Phantom" phones that have rung when people
tried to call in. Fortunately they escallated the issue and I found the
problem.
It seems that if you unplug the phone it will still give a ringing
sound to the caller. The explanation that I was given/demanded,
was that the "Computer does not know that there is not a phone in the
wall jack?". Hmmmm!.
I now have all my phones bounce to a person, a tape or voicemail. The
capability is there. It is up to managment to make sure that it is set
up that way.
I also wish that every persons direct number had an alternative
secretary or managers number to call. Elf could make these fields
compulsory. It would not, of course address the external calls but a
"bouncing" system would.
Getting people to return calls is entirely another issue...
reagrds
Eric H.
|
1373.69 | Wake up and die right. | RIPPLE::BRUSO_SA | | Fri Mar 15 1991 13:54 | 52 |
| After being in the field for almost 8 years, most of it being married
to a Sales Unit Manager, I've gotten an interesting perspective on what
motivates our sales force.
I don't think money is a mitigating factor. Take it from me, your
average sales rep does not get rich off this company. If they wanted to
make the major $$$$$ they would be with somebody else. However, Dec is,
or rather used to be, a very comfortable and secure company to sell for
and that's not all badness. When you consider that the average selling
cycle for a Vax 9000 is upwards of 2 years, you need to reward the sales
rep who is willing to spend the time and take the risk that long-range
selling engenders...and make no mistake, this company did not become
successful from short term sales.
So how do we reward our sales force? If they make 100% of their budget,
he and the missus (pardon the stereotype) get to spend a weekend in
Area headquarters listening to VP's telling them what a great job they
did. By the time they get done paying for the rental car, hiring a
babysitter for the 1.5 kids and boarding the family mutt, it costs more
than it's worth. Then if they're really good, they get to do it all
over again for a whole week!! I can't tell you how many times I've
heard salespeople complain that DEC100 and Decathalon are punishments,
not rewards.
So why not make money a motivating factor? SP2 is a start, but as
another noter state, it's not nearly enough. Rather that scrap the
salary structure and institute a commission, why not create a better
bonus system? If I remember correctly, Dec pays $5000 to send a sales
rep to Dec100 and $15,000 to send them to Decathalon. That,coupled with
SP2 would provide a good sales rep with a good chunk of bonus money, yet
wouldn't encourage short term, quick sales which would eventually run
this company into the ground.
And while I'm playing Ken For A Day, let's get rid of this internecine
rivalry between organizations. I was at a meeting last year where a
program was discussed to replace our customers 780's and 785's with
newer, more cost effective technology. A sale manager requested a list
of all of the current 780 owners within the district from the Field
Service manager and the bozo refused to give it to him, telling him to
find the information for himself. Seems the F/S manager didn't want to
lose the service revenue from those costly old dinosaurs, even though it
meant a better solution to the customer.
Moral of the stories: until we stop giving lip service to customer
satisfaction and make our customers, both internal and external, our
main reason for coming to work every day, we're going to get the
results, year after year, that are reflected in the base note.
Sandy
|
1373.70 | | SQM::MACDONALD | | Fri Mar 15 1991 15:35 | 25 |
|
Re: .69
Some very good points here, particularly the one regarding the selling
cycle for a VAX 9000.
I'll relate briefly a story told to me by the person who experienced
it. He was at a DEC function with customers. Sitting to his right
was the Xerox account manager for the DEC account. He asked this fellow
from Xerox what happens to an AM at Xerox who doesn't make budget.
The Xerox fellow said that in Xerox such a question doesn't make
sense by answering this way: "In my last account at Xerox, I only
made 50% of my budget, but I received a bonus and a promotion to
manage the DEC account. Why? Because Xerox does a customer
satisfaction survey each year. The year he got the bonus and
promotion, he won running away among all Xerox AM in the customer
satisaction survey.
For DEC reps who need to spend 2 years trying to sell a product,
we need a way of measuring how well they are working with the
customer along the way and giving them credit for that.
fwiw,
Steve
|
1373.71 | Bullseye | BOSACT::EARLY | Hey Mister: Wanna buy a Framework? | Fri Mar 15 1991 20:41 | 6 |
| RE: Last 2 (.69 and .70)
Both excellent replies.
Right on the mark.
/se
|
1373.72 | | ALOSWS::KOZAKIEWICZ | Shoes for industry | Sun Mar 17 1991 22:07 | 14 |
| re: .69
A minor nit, but those that can't do, NOTE and those who can't NOTE
complain about everything in DIGITAL.NOTE (or something like that!!!)
and those who complain like to dump on recognition programs. Your
dollar figures on DEC100 and DECathalon (Circle of Excellence) are off
by almost an order of magnitude. I don't know where you got them, but
I certainly travel in the same circles as your spouse and can state
unequivocally that they are nowhere near the amounts you mention.
So there...
Al
|
1373.73 | Where are the bean counters when you need 'em? | DSM::CRAIG | Nice computers don't go down :-) | Sun Mar 24 1991 23:07 | 26 |
| re: .61
>>...struggling with administrative processes...product manager does not
>>have a complete list of customers...breakdowns by country, not by
>>customer... I think there's something rotton in our administrative
>>systems if we don't even know who our current customers are...
This is a very serious problem for my group. We do over half our
business overseas, and our single biggest overseas customer (according
to the reports we get from Digitals databases) is Digital UK, followed
closely by DEC Germany.
We have one person on our staff who is spending the majority of her
time calling country managers and badgering them to tell us who our
customers are. Sometimes they won't tell us, citing national laws
which restrict passing information across international borders. What
a great use of our (very limited) resources.
We do about 20% of our business in Japan, but our resident bean counter
won't acknowledge that business, since it's not in any database she
ever heard of. We have the facts, (how many licenses are sold, the
approximate revenue, etc.), but she doesn't want to be confused by the
facts, so our revenue stream is undercounted by approximately 20%.
It's pretty sad when the bean counters can't even count the beans...
|
1373.74 | You must kiss a lot of frogs... | SIERAS::MCCLUSKY | | Wed Apr 03 1991 21:43 | 43 |
| I just read the entire file and found some very interesting things,
both positive and negative. The base note seemed to be talking about
Customer Perceptions - yet we got into discussions all over the globe,
frequently forgetting the Customer's Perceptions. I have been with DEC
about 18 mos. in a Sales Support role. I started in data processing as
a user over twenty-five years ago. I first bought a S360 in 1969 and
since that time have purchased IBM, Tandem, Stratus, Sperry, Burroughs,
and Amdahl hardware, plus timesharing of CRAY, GE and Honeywell. Point
I am making is that I have a great deal of customer experience, in
banking, engineering, manufacturing and public employee sectors. In
that entire experience I have no opinion of DEC Salesman - I never had
one call on me or respond to an RFP. In addition to the companies I
listed there are many pitches I have heard from companies that no
longer exist - but never DEC.
Now, I think our products are better than most of the others (I like
Non-Stop SQL), and I have seen our sales force in action. I have not
seen them act like IBM, where one month after I moved to a new city,
two hundred miles from my last employer and in a different industry my
IBM salesman called and took me out to lunch. During lunch he told me
that his high school age son was on the High School baseball team and
he had heard that I had some experience in player development and could
I help him improve? I had not met the man and he hit me in my most
vulnerable spot - I had coached American Legion/Semi-pro/Big League and
sand-lot baseball for over 25 years, was new in town and had gone out
to Fresno State to see if I could do some coaching just because of my
love of the game. He never told me how he found out, but the next
saturday morning his son and I started working out, and you guessed
correctly if you said that the IBM salesman was welcome in our business
and in our home. I believe you call it relationship selling. My next
move the IBM salesman called and invited me to play golf before I had
met him - had been in town a week - and he had hit on love number two.
My question is about the customer's perception when he has never met
the Digital salesman???
I working as hard as I can to get our story out. It is a GREAT ONE, if
we'll tell it and relate to the customer and solve his business needs.
Hardware, incentives, sales support, telephones, etc. can contribute,
or detract, but only if you relate to the customer, solve his business
needs and tell your story.
Daryl
|
1373.75 | Do what it takes | PFSVAX::MATSCHERZ | | Fri Apr 05 1991 10:06 | 9 |
| RE .74
**************GREAT RESPONSE**************
That had to be one of the best and most positive notes I have ever
seen in this file!
Keep selling a solution,
Steve M..
|
1373.76 | | VMSNET::WOODBURY | | Tue Apr 09 1991 02:16 | 3 |
| We have the network that SHOULD make the kind of response IBM has
possible AND WE DON'T USE IT!!!!! Does anybody know how we can change
this?
|
1373.77 | It's key, and we've lost it | YUPPY::DAVIESA | Phoenix | Wed Apr 17 1991 10:16 | 32 |
|
Re .75
That was a great note!
I have always believed that sales are made through this kind of
activity, and it's great to hear it from the customer perspective.
Why don't we do this?
I believe that we JUST DON'T THINK THIS KIND OF THING IS IMPORTANT!
It's not important enough to be included when our salespeople
are taught how to work within Digital. In sales, if you aren't
metriced on it you don't do it. If you personally can't book it,
you don't spend time on it. There is no gain to an individual
salesperson if they spend time bothering to CARE. So it doesn't
happen. We are not metriced on teamwork, cross-regionally, so
it doesn't happen. While one regions' gain is anothers loss,
we have no incentive to work together.
"Being nice" and "bothering" with these "details" are seen as
not only not valued, but actually contrary to the way a
salesperson should be!
"What is he going to spend, and when? You don't know? He's not
planning to spend before quarter close? I'm a busy sales rep -
my time is valuable, and unless you tell me $ I am not interested.
Why are you telling me about this guy - get off my line and don't waste
my time..(slam)"
We have become too arrogant to believe in "the personal touch".
We have lost sight of one of the key basics of selling....
IMO.
'gail
|
1373.78 | what is the REAL philosophy of a company | SAHQ::CARNELLD | DTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALF | Wed Apr 17 1991 13:21 | 24 |
| REF: <<< Note 1373.77 by YUPPY::DAVIESA "Phoenix" >>>
>><<We have become too arrogant to believe in "the personal touch".>>
A correct assessment typical of many companies. And it is imbedded
deep within the culture and operating philosophies of organizations,
which is then manifested in literally all actions by most employees.
Succinctly stated, it is the difference of belief practiced by a
company, i.e.: I will make MONEY by making and offering quality
products and services, as I define them, doing so at the least cost,
VERSUS
I will satisfy specific customer wants and expectations with my
resources in specific product and service areas AND in all employee
activities, with focused constant change on improving all products,
services and activities as they relate to customers and satisfaction,
and as a CONSEQUENCE of doing "this" BETTER than other companies, the
winning of customers, customer loyalty and lots of revenue, margin and
profit will be a natural outcome.
MANY "preach" the latter philosophy but in fact practice the former.
|
1373.79 | | SQM::MACDONALD | | Wed Apr 17 1991 15:21 | 13 |
|
Re: .78
You're quite right.
Among those economists held in high regard, most are in agreement
that companies that don't start actually practicing the latter and
not paying just lip service to it will have great difficulty surviving
into the 21st century. The intensifying competition is quickly making
all markets into buyer's markets.
Steve
|
1373.80 | or ... "oh death where is thy sting"? | MORO::BEELER_JE | Iacta alea est | Sun May 12 1991 01:45 | 44 |
| I think that one thing which has NOT been mentioned in this string is
the simple fact that the vast majority of the DECsalesForce W A N T S
---------
to do what's right ... think strategically ...return phone calls ...
take responsibility .. understand the customers business needs ...
Yes, I honestly believe that DEC has some of the best sales people in
the industry .. they can't do what they really want to ... however,
when I'm in a position to do something, you can bet that I will do it.
When I'm in charge ... you'll have very little trouble getting a
terminal to set on your desk .. you'll have no problems ordering a
stapler .. you'll have no problems getting resources ...
...you will have one hell of a time if you hold "mandatory attendance"
sales meetings ... If I see 10 sales representatives in a room, all day
long, I'll add up their (loaded) salary, and, you'd best be able to
justify the use of that money .. both tactically and strategically,
both long term and short term.
...you will have one hell of a time when you want more paperwork from
the sales force ... when you send out a form to be filled out - you'd
damned well better be able to justify it.
...you will be in deep trouble with me if I check the sales expenses
vouchers and find that they are NOT spending time with customers (I
have seen some sales representatives go for a YEAR and never take a
customer to lunch).
There's a lot more ...
I've been at selling for MotherDEC for 14 years now ... as I look back
at some of the more non_sales_related_time_consuming elements that a
sales person had to contend with 14 years ago ... not a heck of a lot
different then from now.
Seems as though we've all had this discussion before ... I wonder if
y'all will be having this discussion 14 years from now ...
How long ... oh Lord ....
Jerry
PS - look at the next resonse for an "example" of what I'm talking about.
|
1373.81 | Try this on for size .... | MORO::BEELER_JE | Iacta alea est | Sun May 12 1991 02:30 | 59 |
| What is to come? Sit down Nancy (author of the base note) because you
may not like this.
In my area of responsibility (Bakersfield, California) I have a large
number of oil companies. Exxon, Arco, Shell, Texaco, Mobil, Chevron,
and Occidental International...to mention a few. These are major sites.
Now, under the new "sales plan" (for FY92) that I've heard about, the
corporate account managers are chartered to plan and "buy" resources to
support their accounts.
Suppose that a corporate account manager "buys" a fraction of me to
handle Texaco, Mobil, and, Occidental. Suppose that the Shell account
manager, who is located in Dallas, decides not to support any fraction
of me to call on Shell in Bakersfield.
Now, Shell (locally) calls me to come out and talk about *something*,
be it an upgrade to his 6000 or some workstations (the subject matter
is of no consequence for purposes of this discussion). I am not
chartered (i.e., budgeted) for Shell Oil ... guess what I'm going to do
Nancy ... take a wild guess:
"Thank you for your inquiry. Your account is being
handled from the Dallas, Texas office [2,000 miles
and two time zones distant] and I'll have them contact
you concerning your inquiry"
How do I know that I'll do this? Because I've already asked as to how
I should handle this type of situation. The sad part is that I'm
(literally) located within walking distance of their offices. Sure, I
could put on my corporate hat and walk over to sell them a million
dollars in hardware ... but ... I will get Z E R O certs for that
sale ... it's not on my goal sheet. From a measurement prespective I
will be a failure. That is what any potential salary increases are
based on...DEC-100...DECathlon...advancement ... DEC has a happy
customer, and, I'm a failure? There's something wrong with this
picture!
Suppose I hold some sort of DECdays function for my accounts .. do I
invite the other oil companies? Not hardly - I don't even know the
"contacts" in those companies .. they're handled from another location.
I could find out, invite them, devote my time toward some accounts
which may generate revenue for DEC ... the customer may end up happy ..
but I'm a failure since I'm chartered for SPECIFIC accounts, why,
because I'm funded to do so.
I've always tried to be a very strategic sales person ... one of the
most significant elements of that is the very basis of customer
satisfaction ... any customer will buy a relationship long before he
buys your product. I have been rather unsuccessful at 2,000 mile
relationships in my personal life .. well .. maybe DEC knows something
that I don't know.
I'm worried, but, somewhat of a survivor .. maybe it will all work out
in the long run, but, at what price? I repeat my last entry in this
string ... how long oh Lord?
Jerry
|
1373.82 | Sales at DEC | ULTRA::SEKURSKI | | Mon May 13 1991 13:45 | 10 |
|
Your right it doesn't sound like the right way to conduct sales...
Having been in it for 14 years what do you think the right way
to do it is ?
Mike
----
|
1373.83 | Thoughts and HMMMMMMMM | CTOAVX::BRAVERMAN | The plot thickens! | Mon May 13 1991 16:01 | 11 |
|
SALES::RULES_OF_THE_ROAD:$USER[GENERAL]ONE_OF_MANY.RULES;1
People buy from people.
Customers will always say NO. They will say yes when they have the
RIGHT buying information. Selling is the process of getting the
customer the information to make the buying decision. Therefore SELLING
doesn't start till the customer says NO!
Salespersons become people when they help the customer
|
1373.84 | | BRULE::MICKOL | If you think of losing, you've lost | Wed May 29 1991 17:22 | 20 |
| I'm a member of the Xerox Corporate Account Team and our FY92 Account plan has
the majority of the Sales Support resources in Rochester, NY, with a few
tenths of a person at various locations, such as LA, where there is a
concentration of Xerox sites.
I just spent two weeks in LA and plan to spend more time there in the coming
year to support the account. I live at Xerox in Rochester and am getting to
know it as well as Digital (where I've worked for 13 years). I'm not thrilled
about being away from my family for long periods of time, but I know I am
better prepared to support Xerox than someone local who may not deal with them
very often. I'm sure each customer and compnay has their own idiocyncracies
and it is my opinion that only people who work with and partner with the
customer on a regular basis will be suitably prepared to support them in the
competitive environment of the 1990s.
Regards,
Jim
Sales Support
|
1373.85 | knowing the main office <> knowing a field office | CVG::THOMPSON | Semper Gumby | Wed May 29 1991 17:59 | 26 |
| RE: .84
Let me see if I understand this. Because you know the company
you can support an individual office that you only talk to a couple
of times a year better then someone who sees that office weekly
but only gets to know that office? And you can do it more cost
effectively? This is the claim of the people Jerry is talking to.
Heck of a theory.
You say that "only people who work with and partner the customer
on a regular basis will be suitably prepared to support them." You
can do that for a customer in LA from NY better then a sales rep
in LA? And as cost effectively? Heck of a theory. What about
building up a relationship with the customer, learning their needs and
problems? I can see being an order taker but sales in the 90s is
a lot more then that.
Somehow I'm skeptical. Perhaps its just because I've seen so many
good sales people get in and learn a bunch of companies inside and
out. Perhaps it's because I've seen salespeople who live at the main
office lose sales because a remote site would rather deal with someone
local. Or because that site had different needs and personalities
then the main office. Lots of companies have a culture that's very
different in the field then it is in the main office. Look at DEC!
Alfred
|
1373.86 | A Field Office? | LAIDBK::MUELLER | | Wed May 29 1991 18:17 | 6 |
| What Xerox has in Southern California can by no stretch of the
imagination be called a _field_office_. Trying to support it from New
York is the height of craziness! This is a major installation and on
its own is a large customer!
Sandy
|
1373.87 | We are not alone... | IMTDEV::BRUNO | Father Gregory | Wed May 29 1991 18:48 | 54 |
| From: [email protected] (ALAN GERSTEN, UPI Business Writer)
Subject: IBM chief blasts his employees
Date: 29 May 91 19:25:49 GMT
NEW YORK (UPI) -- Troubled by falling sales, declining income and
employee performance, John Akers, chairman of International Business
Machines Corp., blasted some of his managers earlier this month, IBM
confirmed Wednesday.
``Mr. Akers has been talking to management for a while, and the
message is that we need to improve,'' said Peter Thonis, an IBM
spokesman in Armonk, N.Y. ``We need to execute better than we have.''
``The message is to let management know what is expected of them,''
Thonis said.
Publicly, IBM, the world's biggest computer maker, blamed its
problems on the recession. Privately, Akers told IBM managers the
company had ``too many people standing around the water cooler waiting
to be told what to do,'' according to notes of his remarks.
Parts of Akers' message have filtered outside IBM, but the most
detailed version came in the notes an IBM manager, Brent Henderson, took
at a small group seminar Akers addressed earlier this month. Akers spoke
to the Advanced Management School, IBM's best and brightest, a group of
about 20 managers in Armonk.
Henderson, who was unavailable for comment, apparently thought he was
circulating the notes to IBM employees in his area.
However, the notes spread via the electronic mail system and were
obtained by the New York Times and Wall Street Journal.
Thonis said he couldn't confirm every word in the notes, but ``I can
confirm the tone of (Akers') message.''
In the first quarter, IBM had a net loss of $1.73 billion due to
sagging business, unfavorable exchange rates and a new accounting
charge. Analysts said IBM is losing market share to clone makers, which
charge less for their computers.
IBM entered the personal computer market in 1981 and quickly became
the market leader, a position it still holds, but competitors have
chipped away at IBM's lead. IBM also has many competitors for its
mainframe computers.
IBM's overall worldwide market share has fallen to 23 percent from 37
percent, which it had in 1983.
Against that background, IBM has introduced new products, cut prices
and promised to remain ahead of competitors.
Akers is 3 1/2 years away from IBM's mandatory retirement age of 60 and
is beginning to talk in terms of his legacy.
``The fact that we're losing market share makes me goddamn mad. I
used to think my job as a (sales) rep was at risk if I lost a sale. Tell
them theirs is at risk if they lose one,'' the Journal quoted Akers as
saying at the management meeting.
``I'm sick and tired of visiting plants to hear nothing but great
things about quality and cycle time and then to visit customers who tell
me of problems. If the people in labs and plants miss deadlines ... tell
them their job is on the line, too,'' the notes said, according to the
Journal.
The company has too many sales representatives ``popping out for
coffee with their customer and calling it a call,'' the Times quoted the
notes as saying.
|
1373.88 | Here is a couple of awful ideas | STAR::PARKE | I'm a surgeon, NOT Jack the Ripper | Thu May 30 1991 17:33 | 70 |
| ~~~~ FLAME WHITE HOT ~~~~~~~
from someone who is an engineer and used to be in the field, AT customer
sites listening to their complaints.
How about:
1) For XEROX (as an example) there be two account teams, (or
two half teams) which focus on their respective XEROXs
(New York and Southern California) AND COMMUNICATE WITH
EACH OTHER.
2) How about we have distributed account support, we have a
wonderful network. Then people like Jerry could service
their local customers WITH THE SUPPORT AND ADVICE OF THE
TEAM IN TEXAS.
These must be awful ideas, they would:
1) Have a local, familiar salesperson face for the customer
2) Focus on the cultural differences (a NY suit going
to southern California is akin to sending a Frenchman to
Japan when it comes to area cultures }8-)} ) (Ask Brian
Reid about his "business suits".)
3) Be cost effective (cutting down on travel expenses). What
is the possibility that the NY-Southern Cal travel expences
equal at least one full time SENIOR sales salary.
4) Make the local salesperson feel useful (no you cann't go
across the street, the account rep will fly in from
Timbucktu)
THIS IS A BLOODY CROCK
I lived on a customer site for 4.5 years. The local office did several
million in business. Their corporate headquarters was in Canada. We
were lucky that all support did not have to come from Canada since the
customers local site was fairly autonomus.
BUT
IN THE 4.5 YEARS THERE WERE 4 CHANGES OF SALESPEOPLE AND 3 CHANGES OF
SALES ORGANIZATION (those they could buy from). Because of this and
the fact that a sales call was "Is there anything you want today?" they
started to do business with other vendors (SUN, APPLE, etc) and were
busy evaluating others. We haverecovered some, the customers local
office is gone, and the people were moved to the American Corporate
headquarters where most of the products they were creating using out
equipment are in endlife. Is this a win ? Could we, with better,
distributed, coordinated service have made this branch MUCH more
successful.
From one who was included in the customers advanced development team
(and was moving them FROM U*X to VMS and would have succeeded with
better support) even though I worked for DEC, you have a resounding YES.
We could have had a major influence on the product line, if there had
been anyone, over time, listening.
~~~ FLAME OFF ~~~~
We have GOT to get away from domains, everyone owns the sale, even me.
We have GOT to get away from "my turf stay away" to "Yes I can help
you make you and me successful"
Many grand and glorous organizations have gone down in grand and
glorious flames (Rome comes to mind).
|
1373.89 | | RIPPLE::GRANT_JO | monkey violates heavens | Thu May 30 1991 20:54 | 10 |
| re: .88
Well said. There is clear benefit to having CAM-type
resources available while the local reps establish local
relationships and provide strong input into the Account
Plan. And there has *got* to be some stability somewhere
along the line...
Joel
|
1373.90 | | BRULE::MICKOL | If you think of losing, you've lost | Mon Jun 03 1991 14:28 | 16 |
| Let me clarify a few things (as I call AMEX to make arrangements for another
trip to LA).
The Xerox Team does have a local Sales Rep in the LA area. The majority of the
Sales Support will be coming from Rochester, NY. Local (LA) Sales Support
resources may be used in particular cases, but relatively few are budgeted
(5-7 tenths of a person).
I agree that its kinda weird supporting a customer this way, but there are
some advantages and I'm going to give it my best shot. As we move into FY92, I
expect this whole philosophy and the process it brings will be refined and
adjusted so that we're closer to "doing the right thing".
Regards,
Jim
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