T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1414.2 | Downhill since 1987 | SMAUG::GARROD | An Englishman's mind works best when it is almost too late | Tue Mar 26 1991 17:39 | 24 |
| I believe the downturn started the day of DECworld 1987. Remember
when the stock was at $199 and we had the QEII and Oceanic moored
in Boston. If ever that was a contrarian indicator that that had to
take the cake. What absolute arrogance.
Ever since then we've had the death by a thousand cuts. 1987 was the
last year that "The VAX Strategy" was riding high. Unfortunately
in 1985/86 nobody had replaced it with something. I've just
read "The Ultimate Entrepreneur Again" (had to write a paper on it).
Gordon Bell said that we should have got a VAX II out a lot earlier.
Also if we'd been as prescient about the future as Gordon Bell was in
1978 when he formed the VAX Strategy, or in 1964 when KO invented
product lines, or when Gordon Bell invented the PDP-11. Or when we
opened up the OEM business with the PDP-8 or when the company in the
early 80s saw what the Charlotte Package (All-IN-1) could we wouldn't
be in this mess now.
The company has not had an all encompassing strategy since about 1987.
I see the beginnings of one now but it is still a long way off.
So remember folks next time you see DEC partying it up on the QEII
phone your broker and shout SELL DEC.
Dave
|
1414.3 | When employees become resources | BASVAX::GREENLAW | Your ASSETS at work | Tue Mar 26 1991 17:57 | 26 |
| I believe that when a company starts to view its employees as a resource
to be used up, there is a major problem. The Digital downturn is more
obvious because the company depended on the employees to produce more than
is in the job description. But people catch on very quickly. If you take
advantage of them, the result will be lower returns later.
I don't have enough time in the company to judge when the problem started.
But I can see the results every day. Three years ago, the parking lot of
this building was busy after 5 o'clock and on weekends. Now, it is empty
and there are just as many people working here on a daily basis. What it
tells me is that either the ones who were working the extra hours stopped
or they were replaced by those who don't work the extra time.
My quess is that when bell curve rules came into effect on performance
review and the large growth in the market stopped, people were no longer
being compensated for working extra hard. Doesn't take long to see where
the company heads at that point.
One more point, when was the last time a "midnight hack" was turned into a
corporate product? I suppect that was when the downturn started.
Lee G.
P.S. I think that top management is trying to turn this around but Digital is
a very BIG ship. This problem didn't happen in a day and won't be solved in
one day either.
|
1414.4 | Doomsday. | SMAUG::GUNN | MAILbus Conductor | Tue Mar 26 1991 19:16 | 13 |
| The downturn began on the day IBM gave its stamp of approval to the
personal computer, that being the critical event necessary to make the
PC market take off. This event changed the nature of computing for
ever. Control of computing passed from the provider (Vendors and their
henchmen in I.S Departments) to consumers, the actual users of these
computers. Just as Henry Ford, by perfecting the mass production of the
private car, put an end to the oligoploy of the railroads and street
car companies for passenger transport, IBM put in motion a set of
forces that may even put IBM itself out of business and make Digital
join the Concord, Maynard and Hudson Street Railway in oblivion.
What happened subsequently, as mentioned in previous replies, merely
contributed to our DECline.
|
1414.5 | | YIELD::HARRIS | | Tue Mar 26 1991 21:36 | 29 |
| I agree with .4 about the PC, but I also think that the success of the
32-bit VAX(running VMS) also put us in the position we are in.
As for the PC, Digital has had one disappointment after another. When
IBM came out with the first IBM PC, DEC came out with the Rainbow.
IBM's became the standard, DEC's became a failure. I still think to
this day that the rainbow was a better computer than the original PC.
I also wonder what would have happened had the Rainbow been able read
the IBM 360Kb disk and run the same off-the-shelf software as the IBM
PC. IBM spent a fortune on marketing the PC while Digital did very
little marketing with the rainbow. DEC's next PC was the VAXmate, by
this time IBM owned the the PC standards. The VAXmate wasn't 100%
compatible had few options and had no color option. Now we have the
DECstations manufactured by Tandy and it wouldn't surprise me if 75% of
them were purchased internally. I wish that Digital would aggressively
pursue producing a inexpensive but fast personal workstation(intel and
risc) that runs both msdos and unix. This is what is going to sell in
the next bunch of years.
As for 32-bit VAX, the success of the VAX running VMS in my opinion
caused DEC to make two major mistakes. The first was treating Ultrix
as an inferior operating system. If we had been committed to Ultrix
from the beginning "I think" we would be in a much better position both
in the workstation and minicomputer market today. The other was not
producing our own RISC processor back in 1987. We went with MIPSCO
then and that put us two or three years behind.
-Bruce
-Bruce
|
1414.6 | We simply had our heads in the sand | RTL::HOBDAY | Distribution & Concurrency: Hand in Hand | Tue Mar 26 1991 21:40 | 26 |
| While gloating over the wonderful success of the almighty VAX and
her majesty VMS and her consort DECnet, we missed the major technology
developments of the 80's:
1. Pervasivness of PC's
2. Open systems
3. Heterogeneous networks -- notably Novell LAN's and TCP/IP
4. Desktop publishing
We're now in danger of missing the next wave:
1. Disconnected computing (aka notebooks and pockets)
2. UNIX TP (whoever thinks UNIX is for techies has their head in the
sand).
3. OOP
4. OOP married to distributed computing
5. Multi-media engines
6. Real exploitation by applications of LAN's and disconnected computing
There are many good folks in Engineering, Marketing, and Sales who are
now forward-looking. It's just gonna take time to refocus the
corporation on a new business model that doesn't depend on VMS to keep
us alive.
Ever hopeful,
Ken
|
1414.7 | When are we gonna smell the coffee? | DSM::CRAIG | Nice computers don't go down :-) | Tue Mar 26 1991 22:14 | 52 |
| I believe its a combination of factors:
- 386/486 CPUs taking over the desktop and displacing the VTxxx
terminal, and now moving into the same space occupied by the PDP and
low-end VAX processors.
- RISC processors coming out with performance which leapfrogs VAX
performance. Even with the recent substantial improvements in the
MicroVAX line (3xxx and 4000), VAXs are still perceived as not being
competitive on a price/performance basis.
- The advent of inexpensive, easy-to-use systems software, like Unix or
DOS. We talk a lot about the added value of VMS (which *does* exist),
but reality is:
o VMS is WAY too expensive, compared to the competition
o For many customers, Unix (or DOS) is good enough, and they don't
need, or want, all the bells and whistles they get with VMS.
The product my group produces was very popular on PDP-11s until the
mid-80's. Today our competition can put 20 happy users on a 386 with
an Arnet multiport board for about $12K. The nearest thing we have is
the MicroVAX 3100, which is double that ($8K just for VMS!). I had a
major European corporate customer (their logo looks like a sea
shell...you know, like a scallop?) tell me that they were starting to
use more and more of these systems. He said "I want a machine with the
power of a 3100 for half the cost", and I had nothing to say to him,
cause we ain't got it, and it doesn't look like we're going to have it
in our lifetime.
These small 10-30 user systems used to be our bread and butter, and
they used to migrate up to bigger DEC boxes as they grew up. Now, they
just lash some PC's together on a LAN, or buy a RISC box.
The people who used to be our customers in the low-end and mid-range
are buying systems which are smaller, faster, cheaper, and easier to
install and maintain. The customers who are in the high end, or who
require high availability/functionality/expandability will continue to
use VAX, but will still use PCs and other systems to supplement the
(relatively expensive) VAX. And I'm not convinced that Alpha (or
whatever we're calling it this week) is going to solve that problem.
It's especially discouraging to hear major portions of DEC focused on
architectures, building massive data structures in the sky, and
spending gobs of money with no prospect of profitability for years to
come, while my manager has to grovel and beg to get $500K so we can
produce a PC version of our product and try to regain the market share
we've let slip away the last 5-6 years. (No, he hasn't gotten it
yet... but he's not giving up).
Don't know about you, but I'm kinda worried.
|
1414.9 | Missed waves | ASD::DIGRAZIA | | Wed Mar 27 1991 11:37 | 7 |
|
Re .6: "We're now in danger of missing the next wave:"
Pen-based systems are getting popular, another wave we missed.
Regards, Robert.
|
1414.10 | reality check! | DECWET::PENNEY | DEL ENT <file> sets you free! | Wed Mar 27 1991 11:57 | 10 |
| re .6 - On the mark!
Things are happening in the company to do well in the 90's but
segments of our community still are focussed on past glories and missing
out on both short-term and long-term opportunities.
The "Isn't it awful!" paradigm is really getting old!
|
1414.11 | ..b-b-but Captain, it even smells like an iceberg | COOKIE::LENNARD | | Wed Mar 27 1991 12:20 | 20 |
| Like an aging dowager, we are totally inward focused and busy clipping
the few remaining coupons on our VAX/VMS stock. Someone else used the
ship analogy, and it is very appropriate. Like the Titanic, we thought
the "even God (IBM) can't sink DEC (Titanic)..." We ignored all the
warnings....PC's, Open Systems, Work Stations...but we not only ignored
them, we (KO) ridiculed them.
Someone previous said that the Rainbow was a "better computer". That's
the damned virus that is killing us. Our customers don't really care
whose computer is "better". They just want their problems solved.
So now we have a new strategy for the 90's (I forget what it is). But
I fear once again we've missed the boat. I fear that nothing less than
a reduction in headcount of 35-50,000, and an almost total
house-cleaning at the highest levels of the Corporation will work.
Let's break the traditional VAX/VMS business away from the mainstream
of the company (divisionalize it), essentially get ought'a the
hardware business (except as a commodity platform), and go after
the new world with the best software expertise we've got. We might
make it.
|
1414.12 | But what about the customer???? | CAPNET::CROWTHER | Maxine 276-8226 | Wed Mar 27 1991 14:17 | 9 |
| I find it interesting to read all these hardware based replies and not
one thing about our software, solutions, applications. I find that a
little scary. Perhaps the stovepipe mentality in this corporation is
part of the problem as well! As someone who doesn't know a computer
from a coke machine - I don't care what the application runs on, I
only care that it does what my business needs to survive!
(I have the feling that the rocks are about to come flying 8-)! )
|
1414.13 | The party is over (or it better be...) | VMSNET::WOODBURY | | Wed Mar 27 1991 14:22 | 19 |
| Not only do customers want their problems solved (which we can do),
but they want the solution to be as inexpensive and as quick as possible.
Once we are competitive on those grounds, they will look at the quality of
the solution. If we got our administrative structure under control, at
least to the point where we could get a system into customers hands quickly
and at a reasonable cost, the strangle hold PCs have on the market would
probably be easily broken.
When did DEC start losing its edge? Personally, I suspect it was
when the uVAX II was announced. At that time we had the best
price/performance in the industry and were making gains in market share
all over the place. It was the time when our stock price hit its peak.
Instead of agressively following up on our success, we went to pot. We
started hiring tons of people. We let our costs get out of control.
We did not push new systems out the door as fast as we could. We let our
best people be put into the corner because they were so demanding and hard
to get along with. Simply, we ignored the source of our success and had
a party. Well we've got the grand-daddy of all hangovers now.
We'll get over it, if we can stop partying and get back to work.
|
1414.14 | Is .8 a symptom or a cause? | CUSPID::MCCABE | If Murphy's Law can go wrong .. | Wed Mar 27 1991 14:40 | 106 |
| I agree with Dave Garrod about the $199 stock price, but we had
started seriously smoking our own exhaust a couple of years before
that.
In 1985 we were getting great press about digging ourselves out
of 1982. We also began to seriously believe that whatever we did
would turn to gold.
The success of Ethernet made the networks business high growth,
but we too seriously our own story about architecture and standards
and put all the eggs in the OSI basket.
We ignored (in fact dismissed TCP/IP)
We built the VAXmate, with the initial goal of being IBM compatible,
but could not resist adding Digital Value to an obsolete model of
PC (the AT with CGA)
We ignored the fact that the market was still moving, and that
the after market was a strong force.
We were legimitized by IBM's competition in the Office Space and the
success of ALL-IN-1 in meeting user needs. We assumed that everyone
with a PC also wanted VAX's and ALL-IN-1. We built PC ALL-IN-1, and
stalled PCSA, and PC-DECnet with political infighting.
We missed the PC LAN market (Novell)
We loved VMS to death. UNIX was snake oil, no commercial customer
would want a "hot box" or a non-VMS operating system.
We missed becomeing a legitimate player in the UNIX world.
RISC was not VAX. Architecture was supreme. The early workstation
systems (based on 68000's) was lost. We tried to push VAX/VMS price
performance too low on the curve.
Sun was born. Cutler was lost.
We had an 8600 that was obsoleted by Digital months later
We had money to burn. Projects live on from momemtum, not demand.
We released the uVAX I for what seems more like process reasons than
market pull. It was too little. Customers became perterbed when the
uVAX II appeared soon after (is a uVAX III a week away?)
We blinded ourselves to believing that our short term mistakes
would be fixed in the next release.
We continued to push time shared word processing WPS+ while the rest of
the world went to Wordstar and Word Perfect.
We ignored the desktop. In fact we scorned it.
We had political bloodbaths over our need to adhere to standards,
long after defacto standards existed. It seemed more driven by
pride than business sense.
We neglected multi-vendor, and multi-protocol as the expense
of our installed base.
We hired every warm body we could, and threw them at each new idea
we could come up with, without listening to the customers, or looking
at the competition.
We went from a point where our internal computing environment and
communications network was leading edge, futuristic technology,
to a point where it is non-mainstream, tangential, and lagging.
So what's happened?
We added a lot of people with a very poor ROI.
We've finally seen the end of the profits from the major (in some
cases bet the company) investments we made from 1976-1980.
- VAX
- VMS
- Ethernet
- DECnet
- ALL-IN-1
We've lost many of the people who remembered what it was like to
compete, and were willing to make those decisions. We've surrounded
those who remain.
So now we're playing catch-up. We're hanging on.
We have ALPHA coming, the middle of the VAX line remains strong,
we're trying to seriously compete in the transaction processing
area. We have a real main frame. TCP/IP is gaining acceptance.
We are at least selling a PC. PCSA (LANworks) is competing, we
offer somewhat competitive RISC workstations.
We're not leading any more. We no longer have money to burn. We
can no longer afford to carry people and projects as expenses.
Unfortunatly, we're doing just well enough for the pain to be bearable.
The passion is gone, replaced by a positive attitude and a human
relations course.
-Kevin
|
1414.15 | | VMSNET::WOODBURY | | Wed Mar 27 1991 15:09 | 10 |
| Re .14:
Most of what you said is right on, except for the last two lines.
> The passion is gone, replaced by a positive attitude and a human
> relations course.
The passion is gone, replaced by a negative attitude and a disreguard
for the human values, the human values that made DEC the great company it
was...
|
1414.16 | Do passion and talent go hand in hand? | BASVAX::GREENLAW | Your ASSETS at work | Wed Mar 27 1991 17:55 | 32 |
| .15 beat me to the point but let me add some more thoughts to the discussion.
As I pointed out in an earlier reply, I think that the company started to lose
when the employees became resources to be used and abused. Now let me ask some
questions. Are the better people ususally more passionate and as such, do they
cause more problems for managers? I think that the answer is a resounding
"YES". BTW, I am not management-bashing but what I am saying is that there are
"professional status-climbing" managers that can be found in every company.
And what does this manager do with a problem employee? Either the manager
downgrades the employee's performance rating because they cause problems or
just gets rid of them.
Since there are no people, only resources, there is no downside. The employee
can be replaced by someone who is more calm and quiet even if the new person
can't do the job as well. If this process goes on long enough, what you end
up with is a very mediocre company. Calm and quiet but mediocre.
Then, a downturn in the economy or a some other major event happens. The
company is left without the talent or ability to recover. Need an example?
Read what Lee Iaccoca said when he first took over Chrysler and looked at their
Engineering department. It was said to be the best Engineering group in the
Auto industry. What Lee found was a shell. The best and brightest had left
Chrysler for better jobs elsewhere. That company is still trying to recover.
I would hope that Digital doesn't suffer the same fate. I truly think that
KO has stated both the problem and the solution. The problem is that the
numbers were more important than the customers or the employees. The solution
is to get back to the customer as the focus and not to judge any employee's
performance by a number.
Hopeful still for a turnaround,
Lee G.
|
1414.17 | prehaps we lost our balance | ATPS::BLOTCKY | | Wed Mar 27 1991 18:08 | 33 |
| While there are certianly mistakes made, I belive that a large factor
in our problems has been a lack of faith in and understanding our
strengths. If our PC clones are cost more because they are better
engineered and more reliable than others we should be telling people.
VMS was for years the most secure commerical operating system, and
currently is still one of the most secure. It certianly offers the
easist to use security features. But did we let anyone know?
I just read an interview with David Stone, indicating VMS will be, with
the addition of the POSIX interface, as open as any UNIX system. And
that in terms of networking it is ALREADY an open system. But are we
going to let anyone know?
We are not perfect, but even in areas we are good we don't get the
message out often because we don't realize how good we are.
It is wrong to ignore the demands of the marketplace, but it is also
wrong not to try to shape it. Somewhere along the line I think a lot
of folks decided we could only be followers, not leaders.
Eariler someone knocked long range, complex, architectures and
projects. They were correct in observing that we can't be totally
dedicated to such things to the exclusion of short range goals. But we
also can't concentrate only on the short term and ignore the long term.
In fact, I wonder if the basic problem isn't that we have lost the
right balance between short and long term goals. To few people are
interested in both. The same is probably true of the balance between
VMS and ULTRIX, between propritary and open systems, leading and
following the marketplace and so on.
Steve
|
1414.18 | Some things are irrelevent in some markets... | SCAACT::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow | Wed Mar 27 1991 21:55 | 41 |
| re: .17
>strengths. If our PC clones are cost more because they are better
>engineered and more reliable than others we should be telling people.
What good is that going to do? 99% of the PC purchase decision in most
companies are based upon cost. If you aren't one of the 3 least
expensive PC manufacturers, they won't even look at your product. As
has been said in other replies and topics, most companies don't expect
to use any given PC for more than a few years. They don't care if they
die after 3 years of use.
>VMS was for years the most secure commerical operating system, and
>currently is still one of the most secure. It certianly offers the
>easist to use security features. But did we let anyone know?
Once again, most customers buying Un*x boxes don't care. Most
customers do NOT have world-wide networks and feel that a
terminal-server-like box with password protection is sufficient. Now,
that may change when people put their bet-your-business applications on
those boxes and someone takes a big-time hit.
If your first statement is true, then we are probably shooting
ourselves in the foot and should re-think what we are doing.
Your second statement is probably true and we should be doing our best
to make sure that VMS and ULTRIX stay in the forefront on security.
This is a long-term investment that we need to make so that when the
poop hits the prop and someone takes that big hit, we can step in and
take advantage of the sudden market demand for 'secure' systems.
An aquaintence of mine lived in an apartment and didn't have renters
insurance. Some people working on the roof caught the building on fire
and the fire stopped one apartment from his. His belongings suffered
some water damage. Did he buy insurance? No. 2 months later, a hot
water heater in his building exploded causing more water damage to his
belongings. He finally bought renters insurance. Some companies are
this way about security.
Bob
|
1414.19 | We need to make the market to lead the market | ATPS::BLOTCKY | | Thu Mar 28 1991 03:55 | 76 |
| > What good is that going to do? 99% of the PC purchase decision in most
> companies are based upon cost. If you aren't one of the 3 least
> expensive PC manufacturers, they won't even look at your product. As
> has been said in other replies and topics, most companies don't expect
> to use any given PC for more than a few years. They don't care if they
> die after 3 years of use.
1. If the 99% figure was true, IBM would not sell any PCs because
theirs are not the cheapest. People still look at IBM because of
their quality, service and leadership in the field.
2. How long a PC's is to be used is not the quality issue. If the damn
thing breaks down and people lose data during those three years, that
adds to the cost of that "cheap" box. One of AT&T current ads claims
the SECONDS it takes to make long distance phone calls matter. What is
the cost in time of a head crash?
On security:
> Once again, most customers buying Un*x boxes don't care. Most
> customers do NOT have world-wide networks and feel that a
> terminal-server-like box with password protection is sufficient. Now,
> that may change when people put their bet-your-business applications on
> those boxes and someone takes a big-time hit.
Just my point. We should have been making them care now! This is not
a "NETWORK" problem. It is a "I'll boot your PC and copy all your
files" issues. Or a "anyone who can plug a PC into your LAN can screw
up all your local systems" issue.
My area of expertise is security, but it is just an example. This
company made "distributed" computing possible. 13 years ago I worked
for a DEC OEM which was selling PDP-8(!) systems for inventory control
and distribution management system. My first job was to convert the
systems to PDP-11. We were selling to Fortune 500 companies, replacing
batch and remote job entry systems. The concept of doing such things
was so new that corporate DP departments wanted nothing to do with it.
It was driven by the distribution departments, once we showed what was
possible. The latest version of that system is still being sold by CA.
Digital was leading the field.
Digital also led the field in networking.
We can certainly do better following the market than we are, but to
really be successful we have to start leading again. And one way to do
that is to sell what strengths we have now while developing future
strong and leading products; not whine that we don't have everything we
want to sell NOW.
We did shoot ourselves in the foot on security. A lot of re-thinking
and work as been and is being done in that area. VMS and ULTRIX are on
the forefront of security, but it does not seem so because of the way
they are sold. 5 years ago VMS was the ONLY commercial system with an
official US government security rating, and remained so for at least a
couple years. We failed to make that important in the commercial
market place. I suspect we have made similar errors in other
technologies.
You mention insurance. Insurance companies spend a great deal of time
and effort selling the importance of insurance. They invent new
innovative products. AND THE SELL THEIR STRENGTHS. They don't sit back
and wait for customers to discover some policies are worth while.
I don't claim that any single salesperson could get their customer to
buy a bunch of DEC PCs that can't compete with other clones on a
commodity basis. That clearly cannot happen. But if the company gets
it act together it should be able make the market want something more
than a bunch of clone PCs.
And just saying "we have the best" whatever will NOT sell it. We need
to explain what makes the best and why it is worth it. No one thought
overnight delivery was important until Federal Express made it so.
Steve
|
1414.20 | | SCAACT::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow | Thu Mar 28 1991 08:29 | 17 |
| re: .19
Steve,
I think we are in more agreement that we first thought on the security area.
Unfortunately, I'm not sure how we can sell security into the general market,
especially the UN*X hot-box market without resorting to FUD. And even then,
I'm not sure that will work. It may take a major systems problem caused by
a security breach before most companies have a high level of security awareness.
I think we will have to agree to disagree on the PC area. It's been a few
years since I was in PSS, but even then, the PC market was essentially a
commodity market. My customers had one or two IBM PCs and the rest were clones.
In this kind of market, I don't think any 'Digital Difference' will sell many
PCs.
Bob
|
1414.21 | Empire building | ASDS::CROUCH | Trying to remember to forget! | Thu Mar 28 1991 08:37 | 10 |
| The first I felt that we were going for a future fall was in
the mid eighties. An article in DECWORLD had an interview
with either KO or some VP. He indicated that we were going
to enter the 90's as a 20 billion dollar company and we were
going to start 'gearing' up for it. That was when the 'empire'
building started unabated. Of course there was no clear cut plan
on how we were going to get to this number.
Jim C.
|
1414.22 | IBM AS/400 | ODIXIE::SILVERMAN | | Thu Mar 28 1991 09:17 | 40 |
| I believe that Digital's downfall is both directly and indirectly attributable
to IBM's introduction of the AS/400 line of computers for the following two
reasons:
o Digital could no longer claim a premium based on being the dominant
minicomputer manufacturer. Now no market was secure. This eliminated
our cash cow and restricted our development efforts.
o The invasion of our minicomputer market led to our counterpunch in the
mainframe market: the VAX 9000 series. Although they were and are
a technological tour de force the 9000s were a blunder of magnificent
proportions. The series will never make money as our market is too
small to recoup development costs but this isn't the worst of it.
The resources which were spend on the 9000s were not spent on disk
drives, workstations, networks, or other opportunities. Think of where
we would be today if we had invested as much on porting all our VMS
based software over to UNIX as we did on the 9000s.
Where do we go from here? Alpha is probably the only way DEC can keep its
customer base and position for future growth. Unfortunately Alpha is a long
way away and is no guarantee. Once you get behind on a treadmill it is
very difficult to catch up. And there will be alot of red ink between now
and Alpha.
Unfortunately Digital has no choice but to CUT, CUT NOW, and CUT DEEP. Full
departments, buildings, and product lines must be eliminated and rationalized.
At least 20,000 people, one million square feet of building space, and 33% of
our products must be eliminated to lower our breakeven point. All cuts should
be based on where we can combine products to maximize profitability. Personnel
cuts should be arbitrary and based upon what department that individual
resides in.
I feel lousy about the individual impacts such a course of action will have and
will probably be one of the people who is layed off but it does nobody any good
to do several gradual cutbacks based on short term performance reviews. The
company would be so weakened as to be a motivational and economical cripple.
Mike
|
1414.23 | This is mine! Go hug your own tree!!! | COOKIE::LENNARD | | Thu Mar 28 1991 12:25 | 27 |
| People, People, People!!! You're missing it. Five years from now the
average user in a distributed computing environment will not know, much
less care what kind of computer/operating system is running. Their
only concern will be application up-time and superb service of same.
By then price will constitute 99.999% of the decision process in buying
new pc's/work stations. We cannot compete in this hardware marketplace
given our cost structure. In FY89 we sold 50,000 workstations and lost
50 megabucks. In FY90 we sold 25,OOO PC's and lost 11M bucks. Our
hardware business is killing us, and I'm sorry to tell ya, but SW isn't
a hell of a lot better. You want good state-of-the-art software these
days???....go to the software store in your local mall...but it might
cost you a hundred bucks.
To others...we are not negative...we are realistic. The VAX/VMS
business must be stabilized technically and cut loose from the
Corporate mainstream otherwise we are dead. If we can't deliver superb
software in 9-12 months at 20% of today's cost that market is dead too.
On "human values".....sorry, we are literally in a fight for survival.
It is that bad! We are not the corporate equivalent of Mount Holyoke.
If we are not seriously into the distributing computing business, and
successful at it 4-5 years from now I think we'll lose it.
To be successful, we should downsize to about 60-70K employees by that
time.
|
1414.24 | | ALOSWS::KOZAKIEWICZ | Shoes for industry | Thu Mar 28 1991 13:38 | 23 |
| re: .23
Who died and made you omniscient?
First of all, it is by no means clear that price will be the primary
buying criteria in this marketplace. There will continue to be a mix
of relationship and transaction buyers and companies who compete based
on adding value and service will continue to dominate over those who do
not. Digital's problem is not that it is a value-added supplier, per
se, but that we still seem to arrogantly think that what's valuable to
us is naturally of value to our customers. We don't listen.
Second, I don't believe for an instant your figures on how much we lost
on workstations and PC's because this is a company which doesn't have a
clue what it's costs are. The current mechanism for allocating
corporate overhead is brain-dead because it cannot effectively account
for the proportion of use among the various products we manufacture and
sell. In fact, this is not an unusual problem for large corporations
and is one of the reasons we are moving towards the "New Management
System".
Al
|
1414.25 | | VMSNET::WOODBURY | | Thu Mar 28 1991 15:08 | 15 |
| Re .23:
Just out of curiosity, where do your loss figures come from? If we
lost so much on workstations and PCs, where did we make up for it?
Also, you are missing a very very important point about the human
relations stuff. The problem is NOT to be nicy nicy to the people who
work for you. The problem is to listen to what they have to say when
they tell you that you are full of shit and are about to blow it big
time. The problem is to identify the people who really do the work and
encourage them, rather than encouraging the people who do nothing more
than make you feel good. The problem is to get the work done and reduce
the friction that stops or slows the work. The human relations stuff IS
what a manager HAS to manage. If he doesn't, he's acting as a technical
project leader, not as a manager.
|
1414.26 | Sometimes the truth hurts....sorry | COOKIE::LENNARD | | Thu Mar 28 1991 15:17 | 23 |
| No one made me an expert...but I do keep my eyes and ears open. Even
someone as dumb as me can make an educated guess that a VMS layered
product that took two-plus years to develop, and sold .7% of forecasted
licenses is probably losing money.
I feel that there is no such thing as added value on what are rapidly
becoming the purest form of commodity items (computers that is).
We have a reasonably good chance of adding value in the distributed
computing environment. We are generally rated rather highly in this
arena...but we gotta get moving FAST!
Please don't sniff at my numbers that quickly. The source of the WS
numbers was the VP who managed that PBU; the source of the PC numbers
was a Corporate Consulting Engineer. BTW, our attempts at selling
PC's is a good example of how much our customers appreciate our
added value there. In that same year 33,000,000 PC's were sold
without "added value".
I know everything is allocated....but I do have a reasonably good
handle on the numbers for some of our hardware businesses, and I think
WSs and PCs are pretty easily to isolate.
|
1414.27 | | VMSNET::WOODBURY | | Thu Mar 28 1991 15:24 | 11 |
| Re .26:
I've met some of the projections before. It depends on who is doing
the projecting how realistic they are. Still you're probably right about
the product that only did .7% of projected not making a profit.
However, you ignored the other half of the question. Where did we
MAKE the money that covered the losses you mentioned?
And the point about the human relation stuff is exactly the point in
your title.
|
1414.28 | What product are we talking about? | SMAUG::GARROD | An Englishman's mind works best when it is almost too late | Thu Mar 28 1991 15:53 | 6 |
| Re .-1
What product are we talking about that only made 0.7% of projected
revenue. I've lost the thread here.
Dave
|
1414.29 | | VMSNET::WOODBURY | | Thu Mar 28 1991 18:57 | 13 |
| Re .28:
From .26
> No one made me an expert...but I do keep my eyes and ears open. Even
> someone as dumb as me can make an educated guess that a VMS layered
> product that took two-plus years to develop, and sold .7% of forecasted
> licenses is probably losing money.
That one. I havn't the foggiest exactly what he's talking about but
I'm willing to believe the critter exists. I've seen stuff sell 500 units
when 20000 were projected by the enthusiastic (and that 500 units wildly
exceeded the sales the unenthusiastic predicted).
|
1414.30 | That was then, this is now | ATPS::BLOTCKY | | Fri Mar 29 1991 03:40 | 10 |
| Re: .20
I am not sure we disagree NOW, but the discussion was about what caused
the downturn, not what can turn it around today. There were many
causes, I'm sure, but I still think not exploiting our strengths to the
fullest was one. Not recognizing our weaknesses was another.
Steve
|
1414.31 | | COOKIE::LENNARD | | Fri Mar 29 1991 12:00 | 13 |
| You're right, we should get back to the core issue.
I believe the true cause was that we failed (refused??) to recognize
a major course change in the business from proprietary mini's and
O/S's, to commodity platforms, open systems, and multi-vendor
distributed environments.
We fell deeply in love with our engineering "excellence", and our
damned corporate mystique (whatever that is). We truly believed that
we could ignore the obvious. It's very much the same as what happened
when silent movies were replaced by "talkies".
We were also very ill-served by senior management.
|
1414.32 | DEworld'87 was the apex | MRKTNG::SILVERBERG | Mark Silverberg DTN 264-2269 TTB1-5/B3 | Fri Mar 29 1991 13:14 | 31 |
| I perceive the downturn started after DECworld'87, when I think we
really started to believe all the press and analysts stories about
how good we were. I think certain events, before & after DECworld '87,
were indicators of things to come:
1). We started stating when we estimated we would pass IBM in
revenues (we were growng 20-30% & IBM 10%)
2). PRISM was cancelled to insure the growth of traditional VAX
systems (RISC was not going to be popular)
3). Just when the UNIX market started taking off for good, we hit
the "snake oil" patch
4). The "NBS" (New Business System) was developed to save our
ability to control, monitor and account for the new organizational
responsibilities
5). 3-6 months before "Silverlake" was due to hit, Marketing
cancelled a program to directly attack the S/34-36-38 base,
saying the market was not large enough or strategic enough,
and the AS/400 was not a direct threat to Digital.
There were others, and most were overshadowed by the good things we
did, but hopefully we will prevent future problems by remembering the
past.
Mark
5).
|
1414.33 | | NAC::SCHUCHARD | Al Bundy for Gov' | Fri Mar 29 1991 14:27 | 17 |
|
I think Kevin(.14) spoke most eloquent. For the first time i can
remember, i have no rebute, especially the last 2 lines. I've certainly
had my passion bludgeoned by what i consider HR terror tactics.
Dick Lennard speaks numbers I've heard before. All the personel cost
estimates are probably being too generous since we all like our
jobs :-). A memo I saw concerning a David Stone talk attributes him
saying most of our layered products don't earn money 'till v3.0, if
they get that far! I'd certainly agree....
We are NO LONGER LEADERS in this industry. We HAVE to change
many of our business practices. We need to take MONTHS, not YEARS
to develop sofware products. We need to scrape away the built in
6 months minimum process overhead for each project.
bob
|
1414.34 | Marketing Warfare | ODIXIE::WESTCL | Gator Golfer | Fri Mar 29 1991 15:33 | 4 |
| Anyone interested in this overall subject matter would probably enjoy
reading "Marketing Warfare" by Al Ries and Jack Trout (Plume). It's a
great strategy book and any reader will not likely forget the basics of
attacking one's own products and services in order to survive.
|
1414.35 | DEC bought mucho real estate at the peak and lost big | TOOK::DMCLURE | | Fri Mar 29 1991 17:38 | 24 |
| I don't know if I would pin the blame on the admittedly somewhat
wild partying on the QEII at DECworld '87. Those were excessive times,
there is no doubt about that. I have been to some fairly extravagant
parties in my day (Hollywood film debuts, expensive weddings, etc.),
and nothing came close to DECworld '87. But DECworld '87 was, for
the most part, money well spent given the existing economic climate.
As with any promotional event, it was a big gamble: you have to spend
money to make money. If it wasn't for the overall economic downturn
which occurred later that year, DECworld '87 would have paid off big
time (especially since DEC barely advertises at all - another problem).
I think we can all basically agree that the downturn occurred
during the Stock market crash of October '87. That was when the
nightmare began, and despite a few promising glimmers of light here
and there, it continues. It wasn't until the spring of 1988 that
I learned of the biggest mistake DEC had made that year: two many
capital expenditures (i.e. purchases of previously leased buildings
and/or properties primarily in Massachusetts, but also elsewhere).
The reason I know this is because I was in Merrimack for the State
of the Company address manning the Transaction Processing demo and
I listened to the bad news along with the rest of the top company
executives.
-davo
|
1414.36 | More symptoms... | SWAM2::GOLDMAN_MA | Who ya gonna call? SCUDbusters! | Fri Mar 29 1991 19:00 | 74 |
| As a recent additional to the world of DEC, I can't say much about
*when* the downturn started, but I can make a few comments about some
other contributing factors. I work in Customer Services Account
Support (the folks who sell maintenance, etc.) as a Dept Coord III. I
have fairly good business sense, and I see things pretty clearly.
Here's some of the things I see that may have caused the downturn and
are continuing to exacerbate the problem:
1. A reluctance to grow, change, learn. I see this every single day;
even the wonderful group with which I work does this. As an example,
we are currently implementing TRS (don't ask me what it stands for!),
which is an ALLIN1-based leads management system. I have tried it, and
it is great. But every single ASG rep was peeved that the "old" way
(haphazard mental/hand tracking) was changing, and frightened that the
new way would interfere with their old habits. Geez, *somebody* spent
a lot of time and money to make their lives easier, and they wouldn't
even give the system the benefit of the doubt!
While this single instance means little or nothing in the long run, it
is typical of the reigning attitude DEC has run on for years now..."We
are the best already, so why change?"
2. Price/performance is a *major* issue with our customers. All of
you have noticed this and discussed it from the H/W and S/W viewpoint.
However, it just adds fuel to the downturn fire when you factor in
third party maintenance firms that can offer services for up to 50%
*less* than DEC, and that's without using discounts/allowances! Since
most of the TPM firms do not have to "support" a large manufacturing
and sales division, they can afford to offer service for less.
Customer Services has hedged its bets for a long time with the thought
that our customers *have* to come to us for software updates, which
will supposedly give us an edge over the competition. HAH! Some edge!
While most of the end users we serve are very pro-DEC and would rather
see a DEC engineer than any other, their purchasing organizations don't
look at "quality" in maintenance, just the bottom-line price! I cannot
count the number of customers we have lost this year over price issues.
We cannot allowance deep enough to be competitive, especially when we
cannot allowance software service at all!!
3. I also see a "pound wise, penny foolish" attitude that is *still*
out there, in spite of transition, cut-backs, freezes, falling stock
price, etc. I recently attempted to capitalize an order for a PC for
my desk so that I could produce really good proposal data, with color
graphics, etc. (I support 14 CS sales reps in a highly competitive
market here in Southern California...) My order for $1800 (for which
we did budget this year) was rejected my boss' manager, and yet
there are over a dozen idle lease car sitting in a garage at another
lcoal facility for over a year now, and my poor boss has had to make six
expensive trips (over $300 in airfare each time, plus hotel, etc.) for
staff meeting which netted absolutely no useful information that could
not have been transmitted via e-mail, con call, etc.
3. The "attitude" that keeps poor performers because it is too
difficult to fire someone, but gets rid of great people because their
job has "gone away". We have all seen this happen in the recent
transition, and many of those poor performers have been riding on the
waves of management apathy for a very long time, so it can't be a
recent phenomenon. Now, H/W-S/W sales reps all over are being berated
for budget deficiencies, regardless of whether any sense was put into
the budget calculation. I have an acquaintance in sales whose personal
budget for FY91 is as large as some entire units, even though he sells
in the aerospace industry!! He is suffering just as hard for his
budget deficiency as anyone else, and could be fired if he doesn't make
it, yet some people out there have 200%-300% of budget by virtue of the
fact that their industry is doing well and their budget was less than a
tenth of my acquaintance!! What is wrong with this picture??
Okay, time to get off my high horse!! *Deep Sigh*!!
Anyway, as far as I am concerned, there is very little wrong
with DEC that would not be cured by common sense management and some
*major* enthusiam boosting in the employee ranks!!
M.
|
1414.37 | "Is Digital Blind or What? | WLDWST::GUILLEN | | Sat Mar 30 1991 05:57 | 14 |
| I'm just a fab operator but I have read all these replies and
agree with just 95% of them. Its said that this company as
gone this way, bigger ones have had the same problem.
My question is didn't anyone forsee this situation before
all of this downturn happened? Didn't anyone speak up and
say "look out we're going under". When I came in here
8 mos. again I had the same energy that all the new people
had. I was so excited and brainwashed into believing this
was something bigger and better than ever. Now all I feel
is sadness because I really enjoyed working on what I thought
was a big item in the market. I'm not alone there are many
many of us fab people who feel this way. But why did'nt
someone see this before?????
|
1414.38 | Somebody in management knew... | MUDHWK::LAWLER | I'm not 38. | Mon Apr 01 1991 07:58 | 12 |
|
>Didn't anyone forsee this situation before it happened?
Yup - I still remember back in 87 when the stock was over $180/share
and we had just announced another good quarter, Some unknown
guy named Smith was complaining that our cost structure was too
high... I remember wondering if he knew something that the
other 119,999 of us didn't...
-al
|
1414.39 | rambling..... | POCUS::HO | down in the trenches... | Mon Apr 01 1991 20:24 | 51 |
| some random thoughts.......
"price" and "commodity": By calling our products commodity items, we
automatically concede to a price war. We have to differentiate our
products and services by finding and highlighting our added values or
capabilities. Price IS NOT the #1 consideration of our customers!
It's on the list of critiria, but it's not a show stopper. In 5 years
of sales, I can only think of a handful of sales I lost because of
price. The secret is that our "added value" has to be priced
reasonably. If Price was the sole critiria, IBM would've gone out of
business a long time ago.
Downturn: I absolutely agree that we missed some strategic markets that
we could've captured easily. PCs - we were THE distributed computing
vendor when PCs took off, and aren't PCs the ultimate distribution of
compute power? Workstations - we owned the engineering departments where
workstations made their initial mark. Just about every engineering
department I dealt with had VAXes and was loyal to Digital. They
wanted to buy DEC, if only we had a product. We were at least 2-3
years late with our serious products. UNIX - I remember that when UNIX
started becoming a buzzword, Digital had the LARGEST market share of
installed UNIX/ULTRIX systems. We saw that eroded because we couldn't
market our way out of a paperbag. It's easy to see these mistakes
NOW since hindsight is 20/20. However, it does us no good to talk
about what COULD have happened. We need to learn our lessons and
move on. We have to find and focus on our strengths, organize around
them, and sell/market them agressively.
blindspot: I've always felt that our engineering group and product
marketing group had a blindspot when it came to competition. The
message was that whatever we built just had to be better than what's
out there, and that there weren't any reasons why a customer would want
a competitor's products, because, hey, we're DEC! Consequently, some
products (I won't say all since we have some excellent products that
are unmatched in the industry) miss the target markets entirely.
Let's keep it simple! ASK the customers, or us salespeople, what the
customers want and map that into our product strategy.
human value: I agree 100% with the noters who pointed out that Digital
seems to be valuing its employees less. Cutting headcounts and
reducing expense may help improve our short term profitability, but
until we get the workforce motivated again and marching to a single
drumbeat, we are not going to see profitable growth in the near future.
PROFIT = REVENUE - EXPENSE. I've seen a LOT of activities on reducing the
expense side. But I haven't seen an equal level of enthusiasm on
raising the revenue side, which is where I think our salvation is.
anyway....enough rambling for one note......
|
1414.40 | | WHOS01::BOWERS | Dave Bowers @WHO | Tue Apr 02 1991 10:45 | 7 |
| Some markets are price-insensitive.
Others are more price-sensitive.
Yet others are commodity markets.
All of them can recognize an over-priced product when they see one.
-dave
|
1414.41 | | COOKIE::LENNARD | | Tue Apr 02 1991 13:50 | 13 |
| .39 .. really determined to go down with the ship, aren't you? Price
is the overwhelming issue, period. We never really did have much
added value...just thought we did, and then actually started believing
it. We've gotta wake up...even the 9000 is a damned commodity.
.36 has really hit it on the head. We have too many people unwilling
to change...too close to retirement, I guess. Also our attitude
towards the internal useage of PC's, WS's, etc., is absolutely
medieval. I too would love to have a PC. No chance, but I could
get a business trip of equivalent cost approved in 15 minutes.
And then I took a day's vacation yesterday, and the stock went down
four bucks. I'm gonna have to start being more careful.
|
1414.42 | you hit my button! | POCUS::HO | down in the trenches... | Tue Apr 02 1991 19:16 | 40 |
| .41...No, I'm just trying to help turn the ship in the right direction.
Price IS an issue, but it's NOT the overwhelming one. The game of
sales is in differentiating your products & services so that the
customer is aware of your added value. Prime and Data General were two
companies that competed on price primarily, yet we beat them
consistently on our added value. Look at where they are now.
Sun's primary competitive strategy at the beginning wasn't price,
it was performance! Our customers gladly paid more for the superior
performance. Once we had competitive hardware products, they shifted
the playing field to applications portfolio. They had the
applications, we didn't. Now that we have the applications, and
products, and maybe even price, they're competing with superior market
share and mindshare of the customers. This is exactly how we competed
against DG and Prime in the mid 80s!
If you think that we can be successful by mfg low-cost "commodity"
items, you're dead wrong. Besides, it'd be a dull company to work for.
By calling our products commodity items, you level the
playing field for our competitors and concede away whatever added value
we do have. It's a quick way to lose. Paperclips and pencils may be
commodity items, but I'll even doubt that paperclips and pencils
manufacturers will tout their items as commodity items.
Successful companies will always differentiate their products from the
competition. Purdue does it by claiming the highest quality. IBM does
it by claiming superior service. Sun does it by claiming standards,
openess, and market share. H-P does it by claiming superior
engineering. Compaq does it by claiming superior implementation of
technology. The list goes on. When we start to believe we market
commodity items, we're in REAL trouble. If I want to sell low cost
"commodity" PCs, I'd have left Digital a while ago. I happen to agree
with Ken that we do the complex stuff better than anyone else, and
that's what I want to sell.
I will agree with you that at some point, we started believing we had
MORE added value than what customers actually perceived. But don't
believe for one moment that we don't bring added value to a customer.
|
1414.43 | | COOKIE::LENNARD | | Wed Apr 03 1991 14:47 | 16 |
| re -1 .... well stated, but rearwards looking. I'm basically talking
about five years from now. Most large users won't even know, much
less care whose equipment is behind their application.
Personally, I believe we will pretty much be out of the hardware
business, except in those instances where we can make a commodity
priced hardware offering as part of our systems integration pitch.
I expect that if you are hardware oriented, you will be very bored
as by that time hardware will be very boring.
There's a guy named Olsen who I think agrees with me. Last week he
directed the PC, WS, Communications, and Storage businesses to adopt
the Dell Computer Co., business model. That's about as "commodity"
oriented as you can get.
The next 3-5 years ought to be very interesting.
|
1414.44 | a multitude of sins | BTOVT::CACCIA_S | the REAL steve | Wed Apr 03 1991 16:15 | 28 |
| RE- LAST BUNCH!!!
Commodities, applications, service, quality, cost,---- not a d**n bit
of it makes any difference if the whatever is not ====$OLD=====.
Oh yes, we sell stuff by the billions of dolars worht but lets just
face the facts, Digital, as a corporate entity, has never had a good
track record for SALESMANSHIP. Many have believed that if we built the
better mouse trap, or mouse, or mouse controller, the wourld would beat
a path to our door. They probably would if anyone except the engineers
knew about it because we never allowed ourselves to be advertised on
anything except educational TV or as " the official computer of the
NBA" once a year, Or if once a prospective customer learned of our Mouse,
there was a person to talk to at the time of the call, not a week
later, or if the person who answered the call a month later was really
talking about mouse traps and not mouse t**ds.
I am not saying that sales or advertising are the total culprits because
they certainly are not. Other factors are Ignorabnce and apathy -
people don't know whats wrong and don't care whats wrong. or the
problems are recognized and the soulution without malice aforethought
is, feed it money and people. Or the thought prevails that "hey it
worked 20 years ago it's got to work now."
I may be rambling but after 17 years with the company I feel I do have
a right to speak. Right wrong or indifferent. And maybe I, like a
goodly number of others, have waited too long to do so.
|
1414.45 | "Get some new ideas Digital" | WLDWST::GUILLEN | | Wed Apr 03 1991 22:47 | 12 |
| Over the weekend I hade time to think about Digital"s problem.
If management and sales are to blame why doesn't the company
get some new ideas from new people. Give it a good dose of
common sense. Get with the 90"s and quit sitting on our
with their hands tied. Come down here to the fab talk to
us the little people who are building this product....
You'd be surprised at what answers and ideas you would get
from us... It seems all the big boys in those higher offices
only read reports and paperwork but do they ever really
see what goes on in here the heartbeat of DIGITAL...
Maybe some of the idea could help get this product moving
in the right direction....
|
1414.46 | Use our computer network to help sell DEC products! | TOOK::DMCLURE | CHARGE!!! | Thu Apr 04 1991 00:25 | 56 |
| re: .44,
> Other factors are Ignorabnce and apathy -
This is either a classic typo, or you are exactly right! %^)
I do have to agree with you however on the issue of selling.
We still have yet to fully lower ourselves to that petty bourgeois,
non-collegiate, and mundane capitalistic endeavor. We can't advertise
either, it's too tacky as well. Or, at least you'd think that was the
case sometimes after looking at how we end up soliciting business. Hell,
maybe we should hold a fundraiser like public television and radio do
and simply beg for money? of course we'd call it something else, like
"user-supported computerware" or something tasteful like that. At least
then the people outside of New England who've been told we exist (you
know, the people who watch PBS that one or two times a week when the
kiddy-block logo gets a few seconds of TV time) might comprehend that
we are actually in business selling computer products.
The shame of it all is that our most powerful potential advertising
medium of all - these notesfiles and the Digital people who know how
to utilize them - have always been off-limits to the marketplace!~~
If we could only set up an alternate noting envionment that would be
open to the public, then we would instantly add an on-line, 24-hour-a-day
sales and marketing force to help boost sales! Not only would it help
sell DEC equipment, but such a network setup would also sell itself as
an innovative marketing medium! We can cash in on this people-oriented
electronic environment!
What's even more amazing is that the groundwork for such a network
noting marketplace is already in place! For years we have had The
Electronic Store (an on-line, VAX Producer-based electronic showcase
of Digital products), and now there is something even newer called
ISVNet which promises to be even more successful. To access ISVNet,
simply use any terminal & modem (set to 8-bits per character, no parity,
on either a 1200, or 2400 baud line) and call 1-800-234-1998. Then
enter the following to log in and use it:
User Account : 1-19771
Sub Account Number : 0
Password : ISVUSER
...and you're in business with DEC! Check it out! All we need
now is the human element - all we need are DEC's employees noting in
ISVNet notesfiles to communicate with potential DEC customers!
-davo
p.s. My first job at DEC was that of programming Interactive Video
Information System (IVIS) training courseware to the Digital Sales
force (back before the IVIS Sales Training group, along with the
Pro-Series computer it depended on, went down the tubes). Strange
how ever since the decision was made to eliminate the computer-based
courses from Sales Training that DEC seems to be having more trouble
selling computers! I think it's high time we reconfigured the sales
force such that they use our computer products in helping them sell!
|
1414.47 | | RICKS::SHERMAN | ECADSR::SHERMAN 225-5487, 223-3326 | Thu Apr 04 1991 00:54 | 8 |
| re: -.1
I suggested that to my management years ago. It was blown off as a
security issue. Same reason for not allowing us to have our node path
on business cards. I don't know if that is still the policy. Funny
though that I was REQUIRED to put my organization and such on the card.
Steve
|
1414.48 | open systems/networks -> secure | UTROP2::BROUWER_J | Jacques Brouwer (NL/CS-PTS) | Thu Apr 04 1991 07:49 | 32 |
| re: .47
Years ago; security as an excuse?; yes possible! (due to lack of
understanding and/or discipline!).
These and coming years; DEC into and pushing for open systems,
open networks; we all (as company) for certainly (must) understand
and also force ourselves into certain disciplinairy mode to ensure
security clearance; only then we merit open systems/network company
awards (sell what we use; show what we use,....you know!).
Advanced Electronic Services, positioned as a very important and world
wide program, is/will also be introduced, whereby basically customers
(and there systems) will be "(in)directly" tied into the easynet
(security show up as a controlled topic now).
Imagine the possibilities. Not only Customer Services ("Services")
will be able to use these facilities for predictive,
preventive and remedial services but other functions providing their
services (via the same facility-link) such as; training catalogue,
-enrollment; direct mailing, direct merchandising catalogue, -survey;
symptom/solution questionaires, etc...... try yourself and fill in.
A facility as such (in)directly reduce costs for DEC and probably is
sellable to our customers to be used to reduce their purchasing costs
(business: we introduce internal cost saving to be competitive, use it
also and sell it later to the customer as form of consultancy, that's
fact of life!).
Keep on convincing!
...closing down my phylosophical part, and back to work!
|
1414.49 | Less is more? | CIMNET::JET | Jim Thompson | Fri Apr 05 1991 00:02 | 17 |
|
Remember when we used to bundle lots of "non-supported" programs
on OS distributions, sorta, kinda like some other operating systems
at that time? But then, we couldn't do that any more because "the"
(some? one?) customers couldn't distinguish supported from non-
supported software? And then, for some reason, we could only enhance
the programmer visible parts of VMS - end user tools like MAIL
stopped improving at V3 or so. Was this the slippery slope that
caused us to pull back on the functionality of the OOTB programs
for DECwindows? (Does anyone out there have an aftermarket
DECwindows program that is enduser focused. Ie, not a major app,
just a $25 - $50 program. Maybe a DECwindows solitaire?)
If this isn't clear, I think I'm talking about times when we
found strategic reasons to disappoint our customers.
Jim
|
1414.50 | Why not suggest it again?? | WONDER::BENTO | Rude Dog and the Dweebs | Tue Apr 09 1991 13:29 | 13 |
| re: .46-.48
There is also the question of liability to DEC.
Imagine that a customer uses some suggestions from the CLUSTER notes
file to address a problem he's having. The customer implements the
suggestions only to find that his cluster crashes and won't get back
up. He could, potentially, sue DEC for bad advice.
Not to throw water on the idea in its basic form. I think it is an
excellent thought and should be brought up to the appropriate Comm.
-TB
|
1414.51 | Less of this, please | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney in New York | Wed Apr 10 1991 09:15 | 2 |
| Suggesting what customers will or won't do in order to sue or not sue
is the sort of speculation that conferences like this one need less of.
|
1414.52 | Happens more often than not... | WONDER::BENTO | Rude Dog and the Dweebs | Wed Apr 10 1991 13:04 | 10 |
| Hardly speculation! All you have to do is read about customers who
sue their software suppliers (or try to) because a change in code
has now broken their model or application!
Suggest you read Wall Street Journal, Digital Review, DEC Professional
and other trade magazines.
It's still a good idea! Just limit the number of people to those who
can help the customer not flood him with suggestions.
|
1414.53 | Less Speculation | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney in New York | Wed Apr 10 1991 15:46 | 14 |
| It's sort of humorous to suggest that I, of all people, should read the
Wall Street Journal...
In any case, I'm aware that companies get sued and in DIGITAL and
MARKETING have commented on them: Real cases that don't involve
Digital but have a lesson for Digital.
The sort of speculation that we need less of is of the form:
"If Digital does (does not do) X, we ought to be sued"
"If the customer found out that we did (did not do) X, we should be (are
going to be) sued".
|
1414.54 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Wed Apr 10 1991 17:43 | 16 |
| The suggestion in .46 was not to give customers access to the internal
conferences, but to set up an alternate noting environment, like ISVnet.
Well, just that was done over three years ago. It has been running strong
since then. It currently costs customers $60/year plus whatever it costs
them to dial in (at most $15/hour undiscounted day rates on AT&T). DECUS
is proposing to drop the annual fee as of 1 July.
It's called DECUServe, and it is one of the fastest and cheapest ways that
customers can get problems solved. Some of the best technical people around
are participants (both DEC employees and DECUS wizards).
For more information, see the internal conference CADSYS::DECUSERVE, which
describes the system and how DEC employees can get free accounts.
/john
|
1414.55 | Free SEX? (Support Expertise eXchange) | TOOK::DMCLURE | | Thu Apr 11 1991 11:25 | 19 |
| re: .54,
> Well, just that was done over three years ago. It has been running strong
> since then. It currently costs customers $60/year plus whatever it costs
> them to dial in (at most $15/hour undiscounted day rates on AT&T). DECUS
> is proposing to drop the annual fee as of 1 July.
Sounds like a great deal for DEC customers! But what about DEC
support centers? Why should the customer pay for support anymore
when they can get the [milk] for free?
I'm elated that such a network exists, and I also think it's good
that we are dropping the annual fee (as an annual fee is like forcing
someone to pay an entry fee to shop in an [information] store), but I
think the network might benefit from an Info-Store setup (along the
lines of the note #1024 discussion) to allow certain valuable information
to be sold for a price.
-davo
|
1414.56 | DEC vs. DECUServe | GLDOA::FULLER | World's most dangerous FS engineer | Fri Apr 12 1991 10:51 | 28 |
| >> DECUS
>> is proposing to drop the annual fee as of 1 July.
Note that the latest *rumor* at our Detroit area LUG meeting indicates
that this may not be so, due to lower attendance at recent symposia.
> Sounds like a great deal for DEC customers! But what about DEC
> support centers? Why should the customer pay for support anymore
> when they can get the [milk] for free?
DECUServe is not the only support outlet. There is a VAX Forum on
CompuServe and the VAX echo in FIDOnet. I'm sure that many DECUS LUGs
run bulletin boards in their geographic areas that do the same thing.
DECUServe is NOT an official DEC support outlet. I peruse DECUServe
daily, answer questions when I can and offer advice when asked. Also,
note that I pay my $60/year - not DEC. However, I am not the offical
voice of Digital. My comments are my own - if they're wrong, the
people who read my comments suffer accordingly. There is no escalation
procedure for those questions that no one on DECUServe can answer.
> I'm elated that such a network exists, and I also think it's good
> that we are dropping the annual fee (as an annual fee is like forcing
Remember that DECUServe is a service provided by DECUS, *not* by DEC.
We (DEC) didn't drop the annual fee, as we didn't charge it to begin
with.
Stu (a DECUServe subscriber, and Sysop of the CompuServe VAX Forum)
|
1414.57 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Fri Apr 12 1991 13:26 | 3 |
| Yep, Free DECUServe may be dead.
It remains free to DEC Employees, subject to approval by the DECUServe Chair.
|
1414.58 | down memory lane | ARCANA::CONNELLY | Aack!! Thppft! | Tue Oct 19 1993 00:58 | 98 |
|
re: .0
>Can anyone pinpoint when the Digital Downturn started?
Hard to say! (Especially since it's continued for so long since that entry.)
Everyone probably has their own chronology of the events that have brought
this company a few short steps away from the brink of Wang-dom. Here's one
version (note about half of these "milestones" happened since we first started
to admit that there was an actual "downturn"):
Apr/May 1986 The Death Spiral Begins: SEXCETERA notesfile closed down.;^)
Sep 1986 Strike Two: misnamed VAXmate introduced as an AT "unclone".
Sep 1987 DECb(l)oat: cash flows for DECworld on the QE2.
Oct 1987 Stock market crashes.
Dec 1987 JEC rears its ugly head, redefining the term "boondoggle".
Sep 1988 Snake Oil: Ken Olsen makes DEC persona non grata at UNIX EXPO.
Nov 1988 Hackers: a year of computer and network break-ins culminates
in the shutdown of numerous major data center systems.
Feb/Mar 1989 Just Say Yes: to drug testing for Digital employees on DoD
contracts (mostly in Services).
May 1989 Experiment in Terror: AHOD, which begat COD I, which begat COD
II, which begat COD III (over the next year), with most
of the relocated and retrained workers laid off later.
Sep 1989 CRACK!: "Voluntary" TFSOs start for idled manufacturing workers.
Oct 1989 THUD!: the VAX 9000 is introduced in a "bet-the-company" move to
gain entry to a market already in decline.
Mar 1990 TFSO is reaffirmed/continued as a voluntary program at less $$$.
Oct 1990 Does It Hurt When I Do This?: US medical benefit cuts pick up
steam as HealthNet concept is introduced.
Jan 1991 The Dam Breaks: "involuntary" TFSOs begin with lesser package.
May 1991 NMS rears ITS ugly head--the ensuing year will show how little
control Ken Olsen really has over his middle managers.
Jun 1991 Late For Its Own Funeral: DECnet/OSI finally officially
announced (for Ultrix only).
Jul 1991 Red ink starts gushing in earnest as Q4 loss is announced.
Nov/Dec 1991 Don't Try Suicide: medical benefits cut again; Alpha is
prematurely introduced in response to trade rag leaks--
killing whatever momentum VAX sales had.
Mar 1992 The Longest Rumor: SERP finally arrives.
Jun 1992 What's In a Name?: VMS becomes OpenVMS.
Jul 1992 BODybagged: Ken Olsen out--the Board bypasses the Senior VPs
(Jack Smith, John Sims, Win Hindle, Don Zereski--all
but Hindle are eventually ex-employees) to pluck Bob
Palmer from the ranks of the Young Turks (of the
others, Pier Carlo Falotti departs immediately and
David Stone soon after, leaving only Charlie Christ).
Oct 1992 TFSO package reduced sharply.
Nov 1992 Medical benefits cut again.
Mar 1993 Home Sweet Home: planned Maynard Mill closing is announced.
Jul 1993 TFSO package reduced again.
Aug 1993 Round Up the Usual Suspects: Corporate Telecomm threatens to
close down wicked employee interest notes files for
sapping the company's network resources.;^)
When the Q1 and Q2 results get announced we'll probably see the climax of
this chain of events. Given the latest news about the CBUs, it leads one
to wonder whether the power of top management to effect major changes is
vastly overrated (other than by the most drastic measures--selling off the
company or large chunks of it, etc.). There's an apparently insurmountable
disconnect between top management and the line supervisors and workers--
whatever you'd care to call the layers that stand between them seem to be
able to frustrate even revolutionary attempts to change things.
We may well become a classic textbook case study for future business majors.
Is there anything we can learn from this before it comes to that?
- paul
|
1414.59 | | ICS::CROUCH | Try CyberSurfing the Web on NCSA Mosaic | Tue Oct 19 1993 08:54 | 21 |
| My take is that it started during the massive hiring that started
right after an article in one of our news mags. We had a bunch
back then so I can't remember which one. This was around 85 - 86.
In the article a certain high level senior vp stated that we were
to become a 20 billion dollar company by 1990. I believe we were
betwen 8 - 10 at the time with a poplulation of around 85,000. The
vp mentioned that in order to get to this number we needed many many
more people. So we hired tons of people.
Of course there were also the loss of direction, loss of network
leadership, pc and unix disasters, etc. It's hard to really narrow
it down to one event. However, the article above opened my eyes.
Sure we were going gangbusters at the time, but the cycle of the
economy was sure to hit and create a downturn soon. I cringed at
what was happening in the pc, unix, network spaces and said to many
at the time. Watch out in a couple of years because it won't be pretty.
It sure hasn't been.
Jim C.
|
1414.60 | the ring of truth (and a touch of humor) | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (DTN 223-8576, MSO2-2/A2, IM&T) | Tue Oct 19 1993 10:21 | 9 |
| re Note 1414.58 by ARCANA::CONNELLY:
> Everyone probably has their own chronology of the events that have brought
> this company a few short steps away from the brink of Wang-dom. Here's one
> version
I'm impressed -- a very good summary!
Bob
|
1414.61 | | KISMIF::BROWN | | Tue Oct 19 1993 13:25 | 9 |
|
I agree, yes a very good summary.
To add another milestone:
Final Days pay increases - Upper Management shows it is short term
with "Fire sale pay increases"
|