T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1492.1 | If we'd only learn to get it right the first time | CVG::THOMPSON | Semper Gumby | Tue Jun 11 1991 12:25 | 10 |
| > Early buyers were rattled by a glitch that caused some systems to
> crash when used in certain applications. Digital quickly fixed
> the problem, but it was yet another setback: The complex circuit
> modules coming off already problem-plagued production lines had to
> be used to fix the affected computers, rather than build new ones.
Someone explain again to me why a product that is out early sells
better then one that works. Thanks.
Alfred
|
1492.2 | seems like it was LATE | SYSTMX::BEAN | Attila the Hun was a LIBERAL! | Tue Jun 11 1991 13:27 | 30 |
| re .1
? Seems to me the product was LATE!
... also from the article:
< The slow start has hurt Digital, which has been counting on the
...
< More than anything else, Digital's timing was bad - perhaps
< fatally so. Digital was hot in 1988, and its big customers were
< clamoring for a more powerful machine. But the company decided to
< cancel a water-cooled mainframe design - all of IBM's are
< water-cooled - and concentrate on advanced technology that
< required no plumbing, a key competitive advantage. That cost
< perhaps a year.
< When the new design was unveiled in the fall of 1989, setbacks in
< manufacturing pushed back volume shipments another year. By then,
< recession was looming and capital spending by big companies was
< slowing. At the same time, an industry-wide trend toward smaller,
< faster machines using standard software was sapping mainframe
< sales.
< "Digital probably missed the window that would have made this
< machine a big success," says Marc Schulman, a UBS Securities Inc.
< analyst.
|
1492.3 | So late and broken is better still?? | CVG::THOMPSON | Semper Gumby | Tue Jun 11 1991 14:17 | 7 |
| RE: .2 Yes it was late. So it was late AND didn't work. That was
apparently someones idea of a good thing. A few more units of time
and it might have shipped in working condition but that was not
concidered to be importent enough to delay any longer. It was still
shipper earlier then a stable product was.
Alfred
|
1492.4 | Engineering Wins Again | COOKIE::LENNARD | Rush Limbaugh, I Luv Ya Guy | Tue Jun 11 1991 14:44 | 10 |
| Re .1, that's easy, Alfred. For EVERY product there is a market
window. We blew it again. Dave Stone is making a big deal these
days about the devastating impact on profitability when you miss
the market window for software. Same is true for hardware.
The only hopeful sign is that after 30-some years, we are finally
beginning to recognize this......but I fear it may be too late again.
We've got to stop building machines that don't make money. I
honestly don't think we'll ever learn.
|
1492.5 | | SAHQ::LUBER | I'm schizophrenic and I am too | Tue Jun 11 1991 16:59 | 1 |
| How about: we've got to stop giving our products and services away.
|
1492.6 | gotta use the right words | SMOOT::ROTH | From little acorns mighty oaks grow. | Tue Jun 11 1991 17:45 | 8 |
| re: <<< Note 1492.5 by SAHQ::LUBER "I'm schizophrenic and I am too" >>>
>How about: we've got to stop giving our products and services away.
The current euphamisim is "business decision". It still hurts the pocket
book but reads better in memos and meetings.
Lee
|
1492.7 | Controversy brewing... | BRULE::MICKOL | If you think of losing, you've lost | Wed Jun 12 1991 00:02 | 11 |
| Sorry, I think we should give our services away (at least from our
customer's perspective). The perception that we are doing that and not
"nickel-and-diming" the customer is causing us to make great strides with a
major corporate account.
The perceived 'price gouging' by our service organizations is what's going
to kill us. I speak from experience.
Regards,
Jim
|
1492.8 | Brilliant, just brilliant, the profit margin on products is approaching ... | YUPPIE::COLE | Proposal:Getting an edge in word-wise! | Wed Jun 12 1991 09:09 | 10 |
| ... the low single digits, and now you say we should GIVE AWAY
the most profitable business we have? Services are the "added value"
everyone keeps alluding to when saying how we distinguish ourselves in
the "commodity" market of hardware these days. What we need are more
people in the field wgho have the guts to sell the added value and not
the "allowance kings" we have now!
Rethink what you said, and think about this: Let's sell TOTAL
packages of products and services for ONE price. Let the bookkeepers sort
out who gets credit for what!
|
1492.9 | One price per solution. | ODIXIE::SILVERS | Sales Support Ninja... | Wed Jun 12 1991 10:11 | 6 |
| Exactly, Jack - we need to get away from detailed, line-item (this
connector costs 3.95, this cable 14.40, this service 150.00/hr) to a
single undiscounted price line followed by the discounted one (for
those accounts with DBA's) - we've got to get better at 'bundling'
service in with hw/sw/service solutions. Then let the 'bean counters'
sort and count the beans....
|
1492.10 | | WHOS01::BOWERS | Dave Bowers @WHO | Wed Jun 12 1991 11:31 | 22 |
| re .6;
There's a world of difference between making sure that your
relationship with a customer is profitable, and the dogged
determination to wring every last cent out of every last transaction.
Yes, in the past, we've tried to "buy" business with allowances and
free service (usually provideed by sales support folks). We've also
(as noted) created a reputation for "nickel & diming" the customer to
death on services and gouging the customer unmercifully on software
license fees.
To be even-handed, one must also recognize that service managers
operate under almost impossible metrics (my unit currently has revenue
goals that couldn't be met if everyone was 100% billable at $150/hr.).
They really can't afford to let a penny get away. I'm sure other
groups are under similar pressure. It is my hope that NMS will solve
some of these problems by putting P&L resposibility where it belongs,
and letting the service groups concentrate on delivering quality
service.
-dave
|
1492.11 | we need predictability | RICKS::SHERMAN | ECADSR::SHERMAN 225-5487, 223-3326 | Wed Jun 12 1991 11:33 | 16 |
| I suspect our customers don't mind what it costs so long as it is
predictable. They have budgets to make, too. If we tell them this is
a $5K computer and then later tell them they need to buy an unexpected
$1K service contract for each machine (I'm making up these numbers)
the customer has every reason to be upset. We are "nickel and diming"
him to death because every time he turns around we ask for money he
wasn't planning to give us. His budget gets shot and he wonders if we
have been less than honest. After all, by saying that it would cost
only $5K we may have underbid someone. Then, by tacking on other costs
that were unexpected we may have gone over competitive bids. Better to
be up front about it and say that this is what you pay, this is what
you get, this is why what we offer is better than what you'll get from
our competitors. Predictability is one of the values we should be
adding and charging for.
Steve
|
1492.12 | | KYOA::MIANO | John - NY Retail Banking Resource Cntr | Wed Jun 12 1991 13:15 | 3 |
| You'll know when Digital really gets into the integration business
when we start giving away hardware to leverage service sales
(Rather than the other way around).
|
1492.13 | RIP DEC | COOKIE::LENNARD | Rush Limbaugh, I Luv Ya Guy | Wed Jun 12 1991 13:47 | 30 |
| We "give away" incredible amounts of free services at CSC's because
our admin systems are so bad that we don't even know who has a support
contract and who doesn't. In FY89, at CSC Colorado, we had 72,000
referrals to local offices of people who called without a contract.
They are trying to fix that now through a service "entitlement" program
which is also floundering from a lack of resources.....not to mention
it has been going on for about a year.
At the risk of repeating myself, our admin systems are so bad that it
is only our size that keeps us afloat...and STILL management is not
willing to make the massive investment necessary to clean it up. For
NMS to be truly effective we need incredibly better business
information, and we ain't gonna get it. Allocations will take over again,
management will find out how to work the "system", and we'll be right
back where we started with everybody looking good, but no cash in the
drawer. If L.L. Bean operated like we do, they would have been out
of business ten years ago.
We used to laugh ten years ago at how "someday, even DEC will learn how
to use computers...ha-ha." The chickens have come home to roost. The
problem is, they are also crapping.
I am a service product manager. I should be able to pull up a report
on service contract margins, cut anyway I want it, reflecting
worldwide business, and NEVER over 24 hours old. I have nothing now.
My gut tells me some of my products are losing money, badly, but I
can't prove it. To be honest, I don't even care anymore. I'm tired
of complaining about it...and I'm equally tired of hearing about
"next year".
|
1492.14 | Backroom politics, canceled projects... | PEACHS::BELDIN | | Wed Jun 12 1991 14:40 | 14 |
| > RE: .2 Yes it was late. So it was late AND didn't work. That was
> apparently someones idea of a good thing. A few more units of time
Gee! I remember working on a project named Argonaut that was
real close to completion when this thing was LATE! I even heard
that a year or two after Argonaut was CANCELED, Jack Smith
went to Spitbrook and said, in essence, "we goofed. Had we not
canceled Argonaut, we would have had shippable product by now."
Sigh... Also heard rumors from 9000-land that managers were
changing jobs faster than you could keep track...
Oh... Digital keeps changing! :-(
|
1492.15 | | COOKIE::LENNARD | Rush Limbaugh, I Luv Ya Guy | Wed Jun 12 1991 14:54 | 12 |
| re -1, yep, I heard Ole Jack say that with my own personal ears. At
the same meeting he also implied that he was there to pick our minds
for ideas, inasmuch as "senior management" hadn't made a correct
decision in the last two years.
I have a relative in 9000-land, he (a manager) says he has never seen
such turmoil and craziness. He's bailing out, as is almost everyone
else.
A previous entry here talked about a manager so-and-so stating "we're
in this for the long haul". Translation? "We're in deep trouble,
everything is turning to crap, and we don't know what to do."
|
1492.16 | | RICKS::SHERMAN | ECADSR::SHERMAN 225-5487, 223-3326 | Wed Jun 12 1991 17:46 | 6 |
| Oh, no. In the past I have been witness to "long haul" commitments for
other machines. Like, the Adam computer, the IBM PC Jr., the TI/4 Home
Computer. Also, the Amiga though evidently folks in Europe bought off
on the "long haul" story and saved the product. Come on Alpha!
Steve
|
1492.17 | Starting to smell bad.... | COOKIE::LENNARD | Rush Limbaugh, I Luv Ya Guy | Thu Jun 13 1991 12:14 | 10 |
| Very interesting article on the 9000 in the June 10 issue of DIGITAL
NEWS. With tongue-only-slightly-in-cheek (I think) John Gantz makes
a point that IBM is behind our misery. He says they deliberately
suckered us into a niche market that was already in it's "twilight",
knowing full well that we would shoot our corporate wad in the effort.
He holds out the possibility of a "total market defeat" if we don't
do something quickly to redefine our market thrust.
Personally, I think the 9000 is emitting early gangrenous fumes, and
the bailout of critical personnel is already starting.
|
1492.18 | Has the race really started ? | BAGELS::RIOPELLE | | Thu Jun 13 1991 16:02 | 30 |
|
I'm really saddened to hear the news in here about the 9000. If we
cant keep our attitude straight internally, then its very hard for
the sales folk to keep a smile as the customer signs the dotted line
for one. Coming from a strong IBM background into DEC to work with DEC
based IBM customers, and help develope DEC IBM based products, has been
rewarding. With the announcement of the 9000, I personally had many
hopes for a NEW generation of mainframe computers that would
be less cumbersome, easier to use, low overhead, and FAST. So far its
been impressive, and its seems like the customers still don't realize
what it is we created, maybe we don't either.
One note on the donation to MIT to work on the next America Cup Boat.
If they win and our 9000" DEC Flagship Computer" was used to aid in the
design. Then the marketing possibilities are enormous.
DIGITAL WINS THE AMERICAS CUP WITH THE VAX 9000. Sounds great an
AMERCIAN company, with a MADE in USA Box, with a MADE in USA Boat.
Can you just picture the TV spot Boat-digital-MIT-USA.
So maybe all those people are jumping ship a little too early, its
seems like the race hasn't really started yet.
Hey ! You over there get those sails up higher. We've got a race
to win.
|
1492.19 | And another thing! | HERCUL::MOSER | It's a Girl! Anne Marie Moser 7May91 | Fri Jun 14 1991 08:57 | 20 |
| The thing I don't understand is this:
With a machine that has a multi-million dollar price tag and a 1-2 year
selling cycle, why do we expect it to have taken the world by storm already.
People don't drop 1-2 mill on a whim, it takes hard work and it takes *time*.
I have personally been involved in two of these sales (successful) and am
involved in new opportunities that could net several more. I am not a VAX 9000
driver or in any other way focused on these machines, they just happen to be
very kick-butt machines and in the right applications, there is none better.
Let's stop whining and get out and sell, and let's hope this corporation does
not orphan this machine before it's had a chance to establish a track record.
Give me a family of machines, let's get out the next generation of this thing
and lets show the world what desktop to glass-house computing is all about!
rah-rah!
|
1492.20 | | RICKS::SHERMAN | ECADSR::SHERMAN 225-5487, 223-3326 | Fri Jun 14 1991 11:21 | 8 |
| I note that this article only really has one tidbit of real news.
That's that Digital gave away a VAX 9000. The rest of the article is
an observation by a reporter who feels that the sales of the 9000 do
not meet expectations. What is of most concern to me are the notes
indicating that we are losing talented people from the 9000 project.
Now, THAT'S news, if true.
Steve
|
1492.21 | | BUNYIP::QUODLING | Cooooiiiieee, cobber... | Fri Jun 14 1991 12:21 | 20 |
| re .19
Amen...!!!
Far too many short sighted people in this corporation touted the 9000 as the
3090-killer (which it is, too most extents). What they forgot, however, is
that the average 3090 site probably has probably a $20M+ investment in
Hardware and a $10M+ investment in Software (not to mention the people
training etc...)
We may have a better mousetrap but does in run CICS? Can you plug and play a
VM application to it. If we were that serious about that market place, we
should have considered a 370 based INstruction set emulator or the like.
Now what we should be doing with it is going out and selling it to replace all
of those aging CDC, Honeywell, NCR, BUrroughs etc mainframes, Most of whom
aren't even seriously in the mainframe market anymore.
q
|
1492.22 | | COOKIE::LENNARD | Rush Limbaugh, I Luv Ya Guy | Fri Jun 14 1991 14:08 | 4 |
| re .21 ..... that's really great, and I couldn't agree more. Let's
start this new thrust by getting a list of the DM's who are willing
to agree to a 24+ month sales cycle, with a probably 30-40% penetration
rate. Man, that was easy!
|
1492.23 | on no bundling again...;^) | TRLIAN::GORDON | | Tue Jun 18 1991 09:50 | 6 |
| re: .9
as I recall, it took the justice dept about 12 years to break up
the "bundling" practices of IBM...since the final court decision
around 1964-68(?) the practice has been very carefully avoided
in the industry.....
|
1492.24 | | SICVAX::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney in New York | Tue Jun 18 1991 11:15 | 2 |
| Another article with more fact and opinion on the VAX 9000 has appeared
in the current issue of Business Week.
|
1492.25 | RE: .23 - The "bundling" refered to in .9 is not the same "bundling" as ... | YUPPIE::COLE | Proposal:Getting an edge in word-wise! | Tue Jun 18 1991 12:39 | 8 |
| ... IBM was slapped for. IBM gave no choice in that you had to
use certain of THEIR software on THEIR processors, and "Chinese Menu"
picking wasn't allowed. This locked out the PCM's for a while.
The "package" pricing David and I refer to is more of a business
decision in a particular sales environment. The services bundling is
our focus, in .8 and .9. But nothing is "locked", just making the smartest
business decision
|
1492.26 | 22-Aug Press Release re: Info. Sys. Business | SWAM2::MCCARTHY_LA | Now, don't get me wrong, but... | Mon Aug 26 1991 17:01 | 44 |
| ----------------------------PRESS RELEASE-----------------------------
MARLBORO, Mass. -- August 22, 1991 -- Digital Equipment Corporation
announced today that it would reorganize its Information Systems Business
(ISB) unit. ISB includes VAX 9000, fault-tolerant, VAXcluster and
production systems.
During the past ten years, under the direction of Vice President
Robert M. Glorioso, ISB launched Digital into the high-end, scientific and
fault-tolerant marketplaces. One year ago, the engineering
responsibilities for Digital's high-end VAX 9000 series of mainframes and
supercomputers were transitioned to the VAX VMS Systems and Servers (VSS)
group, under VSS Vice President William R. Demmer. Today, Digital
transitioned marketing responsibilities for ISB to William Johnson, vice
president of Corporate Marketing Planning.
"Our progress in the mainframe business continues, and our investments
in these markets are considerable and well aligned within the VAX/VMS
business," said Digital President Kenneth H. Olsen. "Digital's
commitment to our high-end information systems business increases as we
continue to focus significant resources on each of these markets."
"Bob Glorioso has made a significant contribution to the company's
growing presence in the mainframe information systems business, first as
the leader of technology and engineering efforts, and most recently by
providing its business management," said Olsen.
For the next month, Glorioso will attend to pressing family concerns.
He has decided to relinquish his leadership of ISB while retaining the
position of vice president. He also plans to use this time to explore
new career opportunities at Digital.
Richard Whitman has been named acting manager for ISB, reporting to
Johnson. Whitman, who has worked for Digital for the past 17 years,
has participated in Digital's high-end marketing efforts for almost six
years. Most recently, Whitman was Production Systems marketing manager.
Digital Equipment Corporation, headquartered in Maynard, Massachusetts,
is the leading worldwide supplier of networked computer systems, software,
and services. Digital pioneered and leads the industry in interactive,
distributed and multivendor computing. Digital and its partners deliver
the power to use the best integrated solutions -- from desktop to data
center -- in open information environments.
|