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2164.1 | Profile of a salesperson | RANGER::BACKSTROM | bwk,pjp;SwTools;pg2;lines23-24 | Fri Oct 16 1992 12:42 | 60 |
| Something I read a couple of years ago...
Jim Seymour,
PC Magazine,
September 12,
1989
"It's just not true that all computer retailers and salespeople
are terrible. Let me tell you about the best computer salesman
I know.
"He has better understanding of products he sell --- than many
daily users of those products. He can do effectively hands-on
demonstrations of them - and does, at length, to his prospects.
"With every sale of a computer or major peripheral ---, he comes
to the buyer's office or home and installs the equipment. When
the process of delivery and installation is complex or time-
consuming enough to require a technician, he still comes out and
holds the buyer's hand while the technician hooks up the equip-
ment. A week after a sale, he calls the buyer to make sure he's
happy. Three months later he calls again.
"If a new customer mentions that he was recommended by a previous
customer, he sends the previous customer a thank-you note. And if
the new customer actually buys a system, the previous customer
finds a messenger at his door with a bag of cookies, or a box of
chocolates, or a bunch of flowers.
"When the customers' equipment comes in for service, he tracks its
progress through the shop. If there are unexpected delays, the cus-
tomer gets a call from him, not from some sleepy techinician. ---
"In the buying process, he respects his customers' intelligence.
He makes them comfortable by spending time with them, so that when
they reach a buying decision, they're happy - not uneasy - with
their choice.
"After the sale, he shows up on the customers' doorstep to help
them each get the new computer or peripheral up and running. He
does that whether they're computer wizards or computer tyros.
I don't need someone to help get an HP LaserJet Series II connected,
but when the guy I just spent the better part of $2,000 with shows
up with the printer, remembers the cable I forgot to ask for, and
sitsand chats with me for a few minutes while I plug things together,
I feel stroked.
"Of course those installation visits let him size up the nature of a
customer's business and possible needs. And his postsale calls let
him make sure that things are still running right, as well as convin-
cing his customers that he wants them to be satisfied with what they
bought.
"The whole process, of course, encourages referrals. And his acknow-
ledgements of those referrals cement that bond: 'Thanks for the vote
of confidence. What else can I do for you to earn that trust?'"
...petri
|
2164.2 | NO sales support???? | PHDVAX::RICCIO | Help me Mr. Wizard! | Fri Oct 16 1992 12:59 | 37 |
|
In my 12 years at DEC I've worn a few hats, 2 of which have been
sales and sale support (Currently sales support consultant for the G.E.
AeroSpace team.) I can tell you first hand that these positions require
2 very different sets of skills! In my opinion, there is an absolute
need to have both sales and sales support.
If you really understand the process, you would see this as well. In
fact every vendor (IBM, HP, SUN, Amdal, Convex,) or large distributor
(Avnet, Pioneer) uses sales support throughout there sales cycle. In
large SI programs, which is what I support, there's NO WAY a sales
person could do it alone. It fact IBMs ratio of sales and sales support
is almost 1 to 1. HPs is about 3 or 4 to one and DECs is about 3 or 4
to one. (3 or 4 sales people for every sales support person to
support.) SUNs ratio is higher, but they also do not have the product
set or the installed base of IBM, DEC and HP. A good way to look at it is
SUN has a sales force that is similar to DECs 15 years ago.
I do agree we need to do things smarter, use channels more
effectively and get more done with less people. But this will not be
something we can accomplish over night. Right now we have no focus, to
many products across to many vertical markets. We have been trying to
be "all things to all people all the time" for the last 6 to 7 years.
If you look at SUN for instance, they focused on the desktop with open
(UNIX?) systems. I seem to remember that we had this type of focus at
one point. The major difference was it was the department level
computing. We've made mistakes as a company, we missed judged the
markets and it's tough playing catch up. But it's even tougher if you
are under staffed and under skilled!
Phil...
|
2164.3 | oops | PHDVAX::RICCIO | Help me Mr. Wizard! | Fri Oct 16 1992 13:04 | 9 |
|
regarding -1
missed judged should be misjudged
|
2164.4 | | METMV7::SLATTERY | | Fri Oct 16 1992 13:40 | 86 |
| RE: .0
> 1. The salesperson is self supporting - They don't need
> sales support because they are technically literate and can
> make phone calls/sendmail when they need an answer they cannot
> supply.
This could be a reasonable goal to shoot toward. As mentioned
elsewhere, things are generally too complicated for this to occur.
Technical expertise is far overated (for a sales person)
if it is defined as...
Someone who understands Digital products and services well enough
to make them do useful work.
What the sales person MUST have is "technical" expertise like...
The ability to understand a customer's business better than the
customer does and apply proven solutions to improve that business.
The first definition is DEC centric and customers don't value it (at
a business level). The second one is what customers value.
The first definition is needed for two reasons
1) At some point someone has to actually wire things together etc.
this is valuable and needed
2) Digital's culture requires the sales team to "devine" the value
of our solutions and figure out how to put them together.
This is not valuable and is wasteful. Rather than have 6000
people figure out how to put together a network, why not have
a few people create a tool that does it. Currently, the
sales team must have someone who is technically good or they
will fail. Much of the reason for this is wasteful.
Also, the sales rep is required to do many things that
should be automated. These things should not require any questions
but generally take up 65% or more of a sales/support persons time.
These things are:
1) Defining/Configuring/Quoting what the solution should be...
- What SW
- Clusters or standalone
- what type of network
This is valuable stuff to do but there are no standards or tools
to help this. There are at least 6000 answers to every question.
336 VAXes in the price book
X 3 types of configs (standalone and at least 2 types of cluster)
X 3 types of SW (capacity, personal, concurrent)
______
3000 answers
Since this doesn't include things like mixed clusters and other
"creative" configurations, the number is easily double this.
No tools exist to help this...
I spend 25% of my time on this clerical task alone.
If a tool existed to automate the configuration process the sales team
would be much more self supporting. 800 DECSALE exist solely because
this is so difficult. Also, the customer does not value this time
spent...they assume it is easy. This is a separate discussion for
another time.
On the delivery/installation side, similar issues exist.
RE: .1
This article provides a reasonable set up guidelines, I have the
following comments...
1) It was written by a PC person and focuses on the end user and
the "computerland" sale
2) Most of the stuff I sell gets installed hundreds or thousands of
miles away so I cannot provide the hands-on stuff that this article
asks for. I must rely on Customer Services to do this.
Ken Slattery
|
2164.5 | was that 1890's | MAASUP::FILER | | Fri Oct 16 1992 14:02 | 13 |
| Which '90s were you talking about? Computers, particularly hardware,
are bought like basic office supplies. A salesperson can not afford to
come out and help you stock your shelves every time you order a few
boxes of paper. Each salesperson needs to sell mega$s not k$ each
quarter. The customers have demanded the low prices and therefore
low proffit margins. To make up for the lack of proffit on each sale
the sales person needs to sell more. To sell more they can not be
involved with every other job (service manager, service tech,
installer) that is needed.
I'm sure most of us would like to buy from the type of salesperson in
.0 but could we afford to? Some one has to pay for all the hand holding
most customers will not. (and can't afford to)
Jeff Filer
|
2164.6 | Dont' look back | BONNET::BONNET::SIREN | | Fri Oct 16 1992 14:08 | 28 |
| If I have understood the speeches, our management is looking of having
different skill sets for different lines (They have not told where we
really want to be in 5 years time?)
Commodity HW and SW -- Not very much handhelding with the prices
in that market area in future. Good sales and
services points (via distributors?) and excellent
marketing. And products must be made for that
market.
Computing utility -- Solutions selling and respective support. End
user equipment for utility users will be purchased
through commodity channels. (Will we be an utility
provider or a systems provider for others?)
Systems integration - Similar skillsets as in utility business.
Needs plenty of consultancy until more standard
systems and packaged applications make things
easier. If IT usage goes towards utility
service, it means strong standardisation in all
levels. Look at the telecom business or broad-
casting. (Will we be doing SI in large scale in
future?)
Takes plenty of effort to be on the road to that. And the ship may sink
before it is fixed. The investment for the new must be earned from the
present business.
Or may be that I have not understood anything :-(.
--Ritva
|
2164.7 | | TLE::TOKLAS::FELDMAN | Opportunities are our Future | Fri Oct 16 1992 14:10 | 12 |
| re: .4
Could you please expand on this:
>The ability to understand a customer's business better than the
>customer does and apply proven solutions to improve that business.
How well must the sales person understand the solutions in order to apply
them? What is the distinction between "applying proven solutions" and
"understanding products well enough to make them do useful work"?
Gary
|
2164.8 | Ones persons $.02 | ESGWST::HALEY | PowerFrame - Not just an Architecture | Fri Oct 16 1992 14:20 | 89 |
| re .0
> 1. The salesperson is self supporting - They don't need
> sales support because they are technically literate and can
> make phone calls/sendmail when they need an answer they cannot
> supply.
I think of myself as rather technical, but if you want me to sell, you have to
give me some help. I sell software systems to engineering, and so my customer
is very technical. I can not keep up on the latest in data base technology as
well as stay current with my customers business problems. I just don't have
time. I emphasize understanding my customer, and staying just technically
knowledgable enough to engage them in discussion about their true problems.
I will not spend the time to understand the ramifications of using
interuptable long transactions versus sequenced short transactions. Nor do I
plan on learning the tradeoffs between single threaded servers and their
inherant security versus multi-threading and its performance. I know what they
each are, and in general I can ask questions to get a customer to think about
the issues, however, I am not an expert nor do I think I can become a data
base expert.
After all, the data base is only one small part of the solution, I would
rather understand the basics of a lot of things and have sales support
available to back me up. I do think the sales people trying to sell all the
thousands of products DEC has are at a disadvantage with our sales appraoch
and it's inherant lack of available systems engineers.
> 2. They have a history of success in previous accounts or job
> positions. Don't just move bodies from position to position.
I agree.
> 3. They understand that to be successful they must understand
> their customers business. They must partner with their customers.
Carefull of the P word, many people use it to justify making poor business
decisions and justifying them only on the long term "opportunity" where we are
treating them like a partner, but there is no like commitment from the
customer. I all too often see DEC back down from enforcing the T & C's of the
contracts we write based on "partnering."
> 4. Initiative should be encourage and rewarded. Good ideas should
> be shared with the company immediately.
How can anyone disagree with this? I only disagree in that spending time in
meetings with DECies is time spent away from Custis. Lets put the onus back
on first level managers to require honest, complete call reports and then
extract usefull information and pass it on.
> 5. Salespeople should partner with their counterparts throughout
> the country. If a salesperson is assigned to manufacturing they
> should talk on a regular basis to other salespeople with the same
> account background. Learn from each others mistakes and victories.
Who pays? We currently have sales people that are not comfortable calling on
engineers and then they want excessive handholding. Since we seem to have a
sales person call on a wide variety of functions in an account or account set,
there is no way to have them spend time with all the types of successful sales
people and still have time to sell.
I would rather see sales training be a rotation location where successful
sales people spent a quarter every two or three years. No training sales
people allowed unless you have sold and made quota (budget) with in the
last year.
I took a rediculous training course (called BASE) where the first day was
spent learning how to:
a) ask the customer how much time we have
b) recap the last call
c) tell the customer why you are there
This is was being offered (and required) for people that had been selling for
years, but were new to the Digital Sales Way. What a crock. This is a fine
10 minute reminder, but to spend a whole day on this was just stupid.
If we can't even train people that go to training, how can we expect general
meetings to help people exchange meaningful information?
> 6. One base salary level for all salespeople. Commission should
> be encouraged and those over budget rewarded accordingly. No
> trips, DEC 100 etc. Cash rewards are great incentives.
How about 4 base salaries, one for each of the basic sales experience levels?
I expect to make more than a person who has only sold for a year and didn't
make quota. I expect a larger base AND I expect that we could each make as
much at the end of the year if she sells as much as I do. How about using
nonrecoverable draws as the differentiator?
Matt
|
2164.9 | Profit is not a dirty word. | AUSTIN::UNLAND | Sic Biscuitus Disintegratum | Fri Oct 16 1992 18:11 | 22 |
| re: previous "salesman" characteristics
I see one major ability missing from all the previous lists: The
ability of a salesman to also be a businessman. The ability to know
when he's doing something profitable and when he's not. The ability
to walk away from business that's not profitable, or to maximize the
return on a sale by managing the effort required to get the sale.
I work with a top salesman from one of our distributors. At any point
in a sales effort, he can tell you what it costs him to make the sale,
and what the profit is that he will return to the company if he makes
the sale. That number directly affects his paycheck. He still seems
to achieve an acceptable level of customer satisfaction, and he gets
lots of repeat business, so he can't be accused of skimming the cream
on choice accounts.
We need more of this kind of person, both as sales reps and as sales
management in order to get our SGA numbers into line. We need to focus
on being a business again, not a "good ole boy" back-slapping club.
Geoff Unland in Austin
|
2164.10 | Profits fall from metrics | ESGWST::HALEY | PowerFrame - Not just an Architecture | Fri Oct 16 1992 18:30 | 27 |
| re .9
This leads back to the whole metrics problem. You said he gets affected
(paycheck) by the effect of his business dealings. No Digital sales rep is
affected by the profit effects of their work. There is a gret deal of noise
about it, but nobody can tell me the cost to the company, net of any corporate
taxes, of teh software and services I sell.
DEC sales people aren't dumb, just managed by dumb metrics. Metrics set by
people who have never really carried a bag in many cases. Naturally dumb
metrics are created by managers who have no concept of what they want,
therefore they manage like their predecessors did. Naturally that leads to
the same results their predecessors got. What a suprise.
I try not to write unprofitable business, but there is a software package used
to evaluate profits called PET that ensures DEC will never know whether or not
a project is profitable. I worked (very shortly you can be sure) on a project
where the people making pricing decisions did not understand the difference
between margin and markup. Now that is O.K. if all you do is run AQS (the
assines quote system), but is unconscienable if you actually want business
responsablity. The people were IBU second level managers, a Program Manger,
and several EIS consultants.
Needless to say, we lost the opportunity because while we were technically
superior, we did not make the short list due to our pricing.
Matt
|
2164.11 | | HAAG::HAAG | Folks, we're gettin' in a rut again. | Fri Oct 16 1992 19:14 | 14 |
| re. .10 don't get me going on metrics again. i'll just get in more
trouble. tho metrics are still killing us big time.
re. .0
>The salesperson is self supporting - They don't need
>sales support because they are technically literate and can
>make phone calls/sendmail when they need an answer they cannot
>supply.
Absolutely not possible today. Salespersons, mostly don't specialize.
They sell everything from DEREPs to mainframes. I doubt any
salespersons even know of all of DECs products let alone anything about
them. Not a criticism. Just Fact.
|
2164.12 | Superman/woman?? | LURE::CERLING | God doesn't believe in atheists | Fri Oct 16 1992 19:24 | 30 |
| re.0 - self-sufficient salesperson
I will reiterate what some others have indicated. If a salesperson has
only a few products to sell, they can be very self-sufficient. Digital
salespeople have hundreds of products to sell, depending on what the
customer is asking for, this time around.
I have spent nearly 20 years in this business, focused on the technical
side for the entire time. What I have found in the last few years is
that it is harder and harder to understand the individual products, let
alone the inter-relationships among them. If I am to be of assistance
to my customers, I have to recognize when my knowledge stops and when I
have to call on someone else with the requisite knowledge and
expertise.
That is the beauty of the sales support function. I can become and
`expert' on several related products. My compatriots do the same. As
a team, we can provide local support for the high-volume products and
rely on other experts elsewhere for the other products. Sales deal
with the customer issues. There is not enough time for an individual
to be expert in everything that a customer will ask for. I have a
tough time keeping up with the technical stuff. If a salesperson had
to know how all the pieces went together, in addition to knowing how to
deal with internal and external politics and competion and ...
I'm not looking to justify my job, because I know that support is
required both inside and outside Digital. If the sales person could do
everything, we wouldn't need any other job code. 8^)
tgc
|
2164.13 | cont. from .3 | PHDVAX::RICCIO | Help me Mr. Wizard! | Fri Oct 16 1992 23:11 | 11 |
|
Some great replies, and I could not agree more with Mr. Haag in .10!
Something I left out of .3. I don't know about the rest of you, but
I'm already seeing opportunities "slip though the cracks" because of
layoffs. Reps being spread to thin. I've actually been making sales
calls because the reps are comfortable with me, and know I have a
background in sales. As far as I'm concerned if we cut our sales force
by 2/3s, 6000 to 2000, we might as well just close the doors!
|
2164.14 | 1-800-help ? | GLDOA::KATZ | Follow your conscience | Sat Oct 17 1992 21:27 | 6 |
| I think as we downsize people we will also downsize product lines.
Perhaps we will get to the point where sales support can be derived
not locally but nationally from an 800 number similar to our
help facilities. I use DEC Sell because they save me a lot
of time looking for answers they have at their finger tips. They
also provide me with timely answers.
|
2164.15 | Prospect every day... | DPDMAI::VETEIKIS | | Sat Oct 17 1992 23:14 | 15 |
| re. Metrics and Good Salespeople
As a salesperson, I know it is tough finding and closing new business
(especially when you are taking it from the competition).It is much
easier to grow the installed base. Our metrics don't provide any
real incentive for reps that seek out and close these new opportunities.
Zereski, in his last DVN, mentioned that there will be a new incentive
for reps to close new business. I hope this becomes reality, even
though Zereski is now gone.
Bottom line: Good salespeople are prospecting all the time. Good
companies reward them for it when it pays off.
CV
|
2164.16 | Answer to .7 | METMV2::SLATTERY | | Mon Oct 19 1992 12:38 | 62 |
| RE: .4
>How well must the sales person understand the solutions in order to apply
>them? What is the distinction between "applying proven solutions" and
>"understanding products well enough to make them do useful work"?
Good question...
Much of what I am about to discuss is in several books by Mack Hannon
(not sure of spelling). I just finished his book Consultative
Selling. I would recommend this book to everyone.
The way things work today is roughly...
Customer describes a business problem to a Sales/Support person
that does not understand their business. Next, the sales team either
pulls in some third party that does understand or locks themselves in a
room and figure out (configure) a solution.
This approach requires enormous skills in our products and how to
relate them. It also puts us at great exposure since every config
is custom.
This is the "understanding products well enough to make them do useful
work approach".
Another approach is...
The sales rep/team is well trained on the industry of the customer.
That person can look at what is normal for the industry and what the
customer is currently doing.
An example of this in insurance would be something like...
-Claims processing cost 20% of gross for medical insurance accross the
board
-Company X is spending 30%
This descrepancy is an oppurtunity.
The next step is to reach into your tool bag and pull out the proven
solution that has worked 10 other places.
This is the "applying proven solutions approach"
This sell is done to business managers on the basis of reducing cost or
improving profits. It has nothing to do with technolgy.
To sell this way, I believe industry marketing must...
- Create training to make the sales team industry knowledgeable
- Gather "norm" data about the industry
- Create "packages" of solutions to solve problems.
In reality, both forms will always be needed. Today we do the first
in most cases. When we do the second it is becuase the local team
has done it. As we move toward the consultative selling approach
are value added goes up (we are directly putting money on the
customer's bottom line), we can proactivly go after deals instead of
being told when they exist.
Ken Slattery
|
2164.17 | The secret formula for Industry Marketing ? | AUSTIN::UNLAND | Sic Biscuitus Disintegratum | Mon Oct 19 1992 13:15 | 30 |
| re: .1 "I believe industry marketing must..."
> - Create training to make the sales team industry knowledgeable
> - Gather "norm" data about the industry
> - Create "packages" of solutions to solve problems.
I don't disagree with your approach but:
When I was in Sales Support, I got about 3 messages a day inviting me
to some "Industry" event. Kickoffs, "training", boondoggles of every
shape and size. The few that I went to usually ended up being a cry
for help from marketing people looking for input from the field,
followed by a "team-building" exercise. Notably absent from any of
these events were industry speakers from outside the company. After
awhile, I got tired of wasting my time, and shortly thereafter local
management put the squeeze on expenses related to these events.
The norm packages you speak of do exist, they contribute to the
plethora of different part numbers and prices that we have for
basically the same widget. We don't need any more of these.
So, where does the answer lie? Are our marketing people doing the
right thing, just not very well? Or do we need to throw out the
current stuff and look for a new approach? The only thing I'm sure
of is that we can't afford to stick with "ol' tried and true" methods
in this day and age. We have to innovate again, or the company is shot.
Marketing is an excellent place to start, followed by Sales.
Geoff Unland in Austin
|
2164.18 | | NEMAIL::SLATTERY | | Mon Oct 19 1992 13:37 | 34 |
| RE: .17
Your analysis is a bull's eye...
I have drawn the same conclusions as you.
Industry marketing must change from an organization that reports data
from the field to upper management (this can be done with a
spreadsheet) to one that supplies value to the person on the street or
the customer directly.
This will require a HUGE change...
If we don't do this we will only be a vendor, not a business partner.
Vendors sell commodities on price (sound familiar) and thier margins
approach zero. Business partners get paid for the value they add.
I was recently at an Insurance Idustry marketing gig. This one was a
very good first attempt at doing the sorts of things we need to do. I
don't know if other Industry marketing groups are doing the same.
RE: comment about lots of packages for the same thing...
You are absolutely right. Instead of creating a new part number, I
would suggest a system or person (a system would be better and cheaper)
that embodied the rules to put together the standard part numbers to
create a "custom package". The value in a package isn't that it is a
single part number (although in Digital this has value since our
admin systems are soooooo bad). The value is that it is the right
combination of things to solve the business need.
Ken Slattery
|
2164.19 | SWIFT & SLC | FSOA::KDUHAIME | | Mon Oct 19 1992 16:56 | 31 |
| Re 2164.4
I agree that SW complexity is one of the most confusing issues we face
today.
However, we have existing sales tools that address the SW issue. The
Software License Configurator (SLC) guides the user through a selection
process to help determine the correct License part number.
SWIFT (Services & Warranty Inquiry Field Tool) enables the user to
identify the environment (systems/networks/Multi-Vendor ) and tailor a
solution for that particular configuration. Users can then
automatically add the part numbers back to the AQS Quote.
I am the business manager for SWIFT. SWIFT is a 3 person team that
simplifies the Software Product Services selling effort. SWIFT
enables a user to tell the system that a customer has a number of
systems, with the appropriate software on each system and then asks the
user what services are desired. SWIFT eliminates the need to
understand the QT part number structure, while still ensuring that the
correct solution is built.
SWIFT has been available for almost 3 years. Customers are currently
using SWIFT via the E-Store to order their own services.
We as a corporation must understand the need to provide the selling
team with easy to use, automated tools to assist in the selling
process.
Kevin Duhaime
|
2164.20 | Automating a problem is nothing like fixing at source! | IW::WARING | Silicon,*Software*,Services | Tue Oct 20 1992 04:49 | 3 |
| And a typical question might be : "Why don't Lotus or Microsoft need such
tools".
- Ian W.
|
2164.21 | We have a diverse services portfolio | FSOA::KDUHAIME | | Tue Oct 20 1992 09:41 | 17 |
| Re: -1
You raise a valid point. I was merely responding to a claim that
no automated tools exist to currently assist the selling team.
I fully agree that we need to simplify our portfolio of services.
However, I think it's realistic to accept the fact that due to our
strategy of offering services on both DEC and other Vendor's products,
the need for an automated tool will always be here.
Studies have shown that the average turnaround time for a DEC quote
is close to 16 hours (including administrative/research/etc). If
existing automated tools can assist in lowering this cycle time until
the portfolio can be simplified, we must utilize them.
Kevin Duhaime
|
2164.22 | | METMV2::SLATTERY | | Tue Oct 20 1992 10:59 | 117 |
| RE: -2
Ian, there are two answers to your question.
The first is that it should be a goal to make it so easy to understand
this stuff that it is obvious to everyone. Like MicroSoft.
The second is that we are in a different business (more businesses)
than MicroSoft so it will be more difficult for us. In addition to
this, as MS gets to more complex stuff, their configuration gets
somewhat more difficult. For example, configuring MS mail server (as I
understand it) is not straightforward. They are much better than us but
not always obvious.
In the end, as with most things, the answer is somewhere in between.
In a prior note, I stated that we had 6000 answers to everything.
We have 336 variations of
over 25 basic models
-4 3100s
-6 4000s
-7 6000s
-4 7000s
-4 10000s
-?VAXft
of 4 chips
-CVAX
-Rigel
-Mariah
-NVAX
We could probably eliminate at least 2 of the above chips
We could eliminate half of the basic models
We could have one and only one variation of the basic models
This would simplify things greatly (and probably not limit real choice)
but we would still have 12 or so hardware platforms on which
Services can be configured xxx ways
Software can be configured 3 ways plus variations of those
The pieces can be interconnected in infinite ways.
This is still complex.
RE: -1 and the study of 16 hours to complete a quote...
This is great data!!! I think the numbers sound fairly accurate.
This 16 hours should approach 0. Practically, anything more than
30 minutes should get sales management on the warpath. This is
unproductive time and is a large cause of the fact that our cost of
sales is about 35% when the industry average is about 24%.
Some arithmetic...
16 hours = 2 days
There are about 22 days/month*12-20(holidays, vacation)=244days/year
10%(approx. delta between our cost of sales and industry) of 244 = 24
24 days = 12 quotes.
The average rep does far more than 12 quotes/year
If we got this down to 30 minutes, our cost of sales would get back to
the industries.
This arithmatic may be a little tough to follow, but I hope it makes
some sense.
In addition to this 16 hours there is probably an equal time spent
"preparing" to sit down at AQS.
RE: SLC and SWIFT
Any tool is better than none. I have used both of these in the past
but have not recently. The reason is that I drew the conclusion that
as of the time I used them, they didn't really help. It is my opinion
that for whatever reason almost no one in my office uses these tools.
The reasons could be training, functionality or other things.
Basically, they help if I already know what I need. For example, how
does service effect the cost of the 6000 answers to my question (not
the one that I decided to sit down at AQS with). My point is that, by
the time I sit down with these tools, I already have to have gone
through the info they provide on paper.
For example, SLC helps me decide whether to do Personal, Concurrent or
Capacity licenses. The answer to this question depends on the system
you are configuring. Capacity may be the best deal on a 3100,
concurrent on a 4000 and personal on a 6000. As I decide which way to
go (before AQS since it would literally take forever to configure all
the possibilities) I currently use "Rules of Thumb" since the hard data
is not in a form that I can use it. By the time I sit down to AQS I
have committed (right or wrong) to one or a few systems. I have
probably done the arithmetic by hand on which license to use. If I
haven't, SLC can help some but not much (I have already done most of my
work).
This gets even worse when you have to make decision like...
When is a NAS package a better deal than a la carte.
If these tools currently do these things, then I should look at them
again.
By the way, I have created a prototype tool that does exactly the
things I am discussing here. People in my office that have seen it
absolutely think I am on the right track. I have "presented" it to
people responsible for these things and have gotten no real response.
The tool runs on MS-Windows on a standalone PC.
Ken Slattery
|
2164.23 | | SOLVIT::ALLEN_R | Is there profit in this? | Tue Oct 20 1992 12:08 | 6 |
| i had a friend here at DEC that was working on increasing productivity
of the sales force. Tools was a problem they wanted to address but
before they got to that they found there were two areas that by in
large had to be addressed first. One was basic understanding of
business and the other was basic understanding of computers, etc.
I understand pilots in both areas were undertaken.
|
2164.24 | | POCUS::RICCIARDI | Be a graceful Parvenu... | Tue Oct 20 1992 13:32 | 7 |
| I chaired a corporate sponsered "study" on improving sales
productivity. Number one goal was to spend more time with the
customer. Number one impediment was having to focus internally too
much.
Sales people need sales tools, but more importantly, they need systems
behind them that work.
|
2164.25 | | METMV1::SLATTERY | | Tue Oct 20 1992 16:32 | 9 |
| RE: .24
What was the outcome of the study?
Is anyone acting on it?
Is anyone taking suggestions for tools?
Ken Slattery
|
2164.26 | | POCUS::RICCIARDI | Be a graceful Parvenu... | Tue Oct 20 1992 17:59 | 13 |
| The outcome was a beautiful document.
No one is acting on it.
We really did not focus on tools, rather on the business/information
needs of sales people.
Like the need to spend more quality time with customers and not chasing
logistical information about orders that should have shipped or will
bew shipping or what happend to that BC16e-25 cable.... or digging
around looking for competitive info....(should be shipped auto)
|
2164.27 | A simple VAXcluster upgrade takes its toll | QUICKP::KEHOE | Mr. QuickPIC | Wed Oct 21 1992 02:32 | 53 |
| Just doing a simple upgrade for a customer can take alot of time
and internal systems effort.
I am in Sales Support. We just presented a proposal to a manufacturer
for an upgrade to their VAXcluster. We did all the right steps and
here is how much time it took me:
1) DECps and Capacity Plan - Done by EIS so other than a workstatement
it took no time. Confirmed, "Yup, gotta get bigger VAX systems".
2) With 3 nodes, there were endless possibilities (lots of ways
to get to more VUPs):
- Upgrade to more CPUs in for their 6000 class machines
- Get new single processor 6610s and trade 6410s
- Get one, two or three 7610s
- Lease, buy, buyout lease then trade in, or sell on open market
- Will all their software work on a 7610 (new version of OpenVMS)?
This took about 1 full week of time to narrow down the possibilites
that we wanted to present. We came up with three alternatives that
would meet their needs. We presented them, and left the meeting
with three more alternatives they wanted us to price out (valid ones).
4) Software licensing, and figuring out how much it would cost, was
unbearable. We researched:
- Are they license-compliant as is? (No, they were out of compliance)
- What would it cost to get them compliant, then upgrade?
- Should they do clusterwide, or newer user-based licensing -- for the
20 or so layered products they have! Which is most cost-effective?
- Remember that this needs to be done across 6 scenarios now!
- We brought in a licensing consultant, and he worked a couple of weeks
on it.
5) AQS quoting these scenarios also took a long time. I had to
get all the part numbers written out, for 6 scenarios, 3 machines
and all the products, send it to our CAS person in ALL-IN-1, only
to have it all re-typed in as a quote. That took a day or two.
The quotes, which were basically unreadable, were relegated to an
appendix of supporting documents with a hand-done summary sheet
presented to the customer.
6) Finally, creating the proposal and presentation package took
several more full days, each of the three times we did iterations.
Numbers kept changing. "Oops! Forgot we need 600 point licenses on
scenarios 3, 4 and 6 but not on 2. Unless they lease it."
Now, this is a "simple" VAXcluster upgrade. No systems integration,
all-DEC shop, no third-party involvement.
There is no way an 800-number sales support person could have done
this! And this was an easy one!
|
2164.28 | Other computer comanies can create a quote in 48 hrs | USHS01::HARDMAN | I do Windows | Wed Oct 21 1992 10:06 | 15 |
| Re .27 is a perfect example of why we are losing so much money. We have
too many overlapping products, incredibly complex (and expensive!)
licensing schemes, and entirely too much 'process' and 'processors'
built into the task of selling to our customers. (Too much process and
processors are also built into nearly every task at Digital. We can't
keep supporting this level bureaucracy with our current margin levels.)
I wonder how often sales folks spend this much time and effort on a
single customer only to lose the sale? One only need to read .27 to
figure out why our cost of sales is so high. Extrapolate that same
level of red tape to the rest of the company and you can figure out why
our general and admin costs are also so high. :-(
Harry
|
2164.29 | Part number explosion | ESGWST::HALEY | PowerFrame - Not just an Architecture | Wed Oct 21 1992 18:27 | 18 |
| The problem is about to get worse for those of you that still work mostly
with Hardware as DEC finally makes some SW available on other peoples HW.
I sell PowerFrame which has only 4 types of licenses, running on 2 Sun
Architectures, 3 HP architectures, IBM RS6000, NEC, and 2 DEC architectures
with 2 OSs. This combination has 234 part numbers as of now. This is
beyond stupid, it is laughable. The Product Manager has been spending
months trying to simplify this before we release support for 4 new
architectures.
How many part numbers does it take to define a product?
For profitability reasons we would like to break out some parts of the
product, but making the current 4 types of licenses into 16 seems to be a
nightmare. Because of the archaic part numbering system that assumes
people run all of our software on DEC boxes, we are limiting income.
Matt
|
2164.30 | | SOLVIT::ALLEN_R | Is there profit in this? | Wed Oct 21 1992 18:42 | 2 |
| right, and the day after it is announced some clown will ask for variant
#235 and tell you they can't sell it without that one. ;)
|
2164.31 | do not manage size of price list | RANGER::BRADLEY | Chuck Bradley | Wed Oct 21 1992 19:21 | 26 |
| There are a lot of problems that make it hard for the customer to give
us money, including many that make it hard for the salesperson to know
what to recommend. The number of part numbers is not one of the problems.
Minute differences that customers do not care about are problems.
Small differences that customers care about are features. We need to
do a better job of identifying what customers want. We need to make it
easier to introduce families of products, so adding a ninth language
or a seventh platform is adinistratively simple. We need regularity:
now models a, b, c, d, e, g, h, and i come with a power cord.
We need lots of different kinds of improvements, and I bet some of
them will reduce the size of the price book as a byproduct.
Treating the size as something to manage will cause even more problems.
Some examples:
In the U.S. income tax revisions of about 1985, the number of tax brackets
was drastically decreased. Did that make it easier to prepare your
tax return or do any planning?
Does anyone here think sales would go up if we removed every n-th item from
the price list?
This reminds me of the common practice of "managing" the customer
satisfaction surveys, so we can insure that we can not learn from them.
Tirade over. Back to your regularly scheduled rathole.
|
2164.32 | part numbers on demand | SGOUTL::BELDIN_R | D-Day: 160 days and counting | Thu Oct 22 1992 08:55 | 11 |
| in response to .31
Well, if we never sell something, it doesn't need a part number. But,
if a customer ever asks "Can I get sw XYZ for platform ABC?" we need to
be able to give an answer. Maybe we need to have a system that answers
that question efficiently and then assigns a digital pn only when we
actually get a customer's order?
just dreaming,
Dick
|
2164.33 | | SOLVIT::ALLEN_R | Is there profit in this? | Thu Oct 22 1992 10:45 | 4 |
| that's how we do it in the EIC's. Custom part numbers for each
solution. When the quote goes out it has a part number in it but that
part number doesn't go up on the file until we're sure the customer is
going to buy. And after we deliver we take it off.
|
2164.34 | Perhaps redesign the part number ? | STAR::PARKE | True Engineers Combat Obfuscation | Thu Oct 22 1992 11:33 | 16 |
| Have a two part number, say Part/Platform
Then you would have Parh XXYY0791 - FORTRAN 90/Parallel
And say
Sxxx - For sun platforms
Mxxx - For Mips
Ixxx - I**
VOxxx - For Vax/OpenVMS
Axxx - For Alpha AXP (tm)
etc.
That way you have two lists, and a Matrix could tell you if it exists.
(Or a laptop could give a simple answer).
|
2164.35 | Remove part NUMBERS, not options | ESGWST::HALEY | PowerFrame - Not just an Architecture | Thu Oct 22 1992 12:49 | 25 |
| Why not allow us to have one part number for a license on any platform and
then part numbers for Media and Docs? We instead have growing part numbers
that add complexity, but no value to the sales and collection functions. I
am not asking to remove sellable objects from the parts list, simply to
rationalize it. A simple quote took an experienced sales person 7 hours in
AQS due to the complexity involved. the complexity had nothing to do with
the custi environment, simply our part numbering system.
I am moving to bundling SW and Service together and selling it through a
local Services manager( sorry, I can't keep straight the name of services
this week). He can bundle everything together, I can supply a commitment
for engineering, and then deliver a fixed price quote to the custi saying
it will cost $x, take y months, and result in a working system.
This is how I see quotes from Anderson, EDS, SCS, and other qualified
service companies. On a simpler level, it is actually what Microsoft does
where the service included is rather limited.
This method also allows me to create a quote in front of the customer that
is a rough order of magnitude, naturally done using resonable tools like
EXCEL, Word and PowerPoint.
One price, one part number, two page quotes.
Matt Haley
|
2164.36 | | METMV2::SLATTERY | | Thu Oct 22 1992 13:00 | 83 |
| RE: .31 and a few others
The number of part numbers is a symptom of the problem, not the problem
itself. We have so many part numbers because things are too complex.
Not the reverse.
I think this is basically .31's point...
To clarify some of the things I have stated in prior notes...
In a prior note I advocated knocking down the
336 VAXes offered to about 12. This was not to limit Part Numbers or
choice. It was to only offer choice where it was relevant and to
simplify the process of configuring them. I don't think that this
would reduce our ability to solve customer's needs AT ALL.
If I only have one base system to choose from on which I add all
options I don't have to price out several base systems to see if their
option package is a good deal or not.
For example, at Wendy's you can get 3 types of hamburgers (single,
double, triple) in 256 combinations each (Ketchup, mustard, pickles,
lettuce,onion, tomato, mayo, cheese and all combinations of these)
Does Wendy's menu have 3 * 256 = 788 lines for hamburgers...NO!!!!!
It has...
single 1.20
double 2.30
triple 3.05
Free
Ketchup, mustard, pickles, onion, lettuce, mayo
Additional Cost
tomato .10
cheese .15
Would you buy lunch at Wendy's if you had to understand a menu that had
788 lines in it just for hamburgers? Or, could Wendy's afford to be in
business if they had to employ a "Sales Support" person to explain
their menu to each customer.
Here's another thought...
Why do we need part numbers anyway...what is wrong with the English (or
whatever) language.
Why can't I buy...
A VAX 7000 with
256 meg of memory
4 2 GB disks
ALL-IN-1
Rdb
NAS 300
Why do I have to translate English into the DECspeak of part numbers?
The answer is because our internal systems need it and we insist on
forcing our customers to solve our internal problems. I can't begin to
count how many times my customers complain about our impossible to read
quotes (the document we FORCE customer's to use in order to do business
with us).
When you buy a car you buy it with...
Air Conditioning not AC-34596-GP
Air Bag not AB-58837-PQ
Sun Roof not SR-ROOf93-OK
I bought a PC about a year ago...
I bought (from the invoice)...
33 MHz 386
4 MB
85 MB Disk
Color SVGA Monitor
Ken Slattery
|
2164.37 | Yet more on parts affecting sales time | ESGWST::HALEY | PowerFrame - Not just an Architecture | Thu Oct 22 1992 14:15 | 37 |
|
re .36
I agree that part numbers are the a symptom, but they are also an easy
thing to fix. WE are at the point where I must write an English version of
the Service Description and the Statement of Work when I negotiate with
custis. This is stupid. Everybody admits that we want the custi to
understand what they are getting (we call this "Setting Expectations") and
then set up systems that ensure the custi can't understand what they are
about to get.
> The number of part numbers is a symptom of the problem, not the problem
> itself. We have so many part numbers because things are too complex.
> Not the reverse.
I agree if I read this correcly, the "things are too complex" refers to the
Digital "things", not the actual business problem we are tying to solve.
> Why do we need part numbers anyway...what is wrong with the English (or
> whatever) language.
> Why can't I buy...
>
> A VAX 7000 with
> 256 meg of memory
> 4 2 GB disks
> ALL-IN-1
> Rdb
> NAS 300
Because this makes too much sense and therefore some group will say we need
a common language (part numbers) for all parts of the world. They forget
that we must have a common description first or we could not have a common
part numbering system.
matt haley
|
2164.38 | syntax errors everywhere | SALSA::MOELLER | what else 'trickles down'? | Thu Oct 22 1992 14:20 | 7 |
| > 256 meg of memory
You mean '256 MB of memory', right ?
;-)
karl
|
2164.39 | hang on tight, the ride is just beginning | TOOK::SCHUCHARD | Don't go away mad! | Thu Oct 22 1992 17:42 | 11 |
|
simplification of the product mix has to occur. We no longer achieve
the margins necessary to afford allthe variants. Choosing the right
products to be part of the simplified list is not so easy a
proposition. Aside from what's selling, theres the complicated job of
untangling the internal politics and web of interdependencies, which if
done incorrectly or haphazardly can cause much pain also. I have no
doubt that we will accomplish this, but we won't solve it in a day or
a week. Maybe a quarter or 2 though!
bob
|
2164.40 | The New VAX Hardware Line-Up | METMV2::SLATTERY | | Thu Oct 22 1992 17:55 | 27 |
| RE: .39
First cut at the new VAX hardware product mix
MicroVAX 3100 Model 80 priced like a model 10e
MicroVAX 3100-90/4000-100 same product priced like a model 90
VAX 4000-600 priced like a 4000-500
VAX 6000 empty cab you add as many boards as you want(this could
actually be dropped because of 7000)
VAX 7000 empty cab you add as many boards as you want
VAX 10000 does not exist an add-on to the 7000 is the extra stuff
All systems are stripped (no memory, disk or software)
You add these options
This just brought 336 part numbers to 6. This has not limited anyone's
choice. It is simpler and therefore better/more cost effective for sales
and the customer.
Ken Slattery
|
2164.41 | Software is the problem | FORTSC::CHABAN | Pray for Peter Pumpkinhead! | Thu Oct 22 1992 18:17 | 13 |
|
Hardware products ain't the issue folks. Most of my questions involve
SOFTWARE. I don't know how many times I've tried to explain the
differences between X, Motif and IXI X.desktop and what they do
and don't do to some braindead individual.
Here's one for ya: just TRY to find a salerep who can explain the
features and benefits of the various NAS packages!
-Ed_Sales_Support_SOFTWARE_Consultant
|
2164.42 | Benes are a result | ESGWST::HALEY | PowerFrame - Not just an Architecture | Thu Oct 22 1992 18:28 | 13 |
| re .41
I will find a sales rep who can explain the features and benefits of NAS
when you can find an architect who can explain teh architecture as anything
but a string of loosely tied existing products. NAS as a solution can help
solve a custi business problem, but not before the custi says what the
problem is. No product has benes just because the vendor says it does. A
product can only have benes after the custi explain the problem she wants
solved. Benes respond to neeeds and wants, not to some silly brouchure.
matt haley
dumb_sales_rep_who_only_makes_quota_on_selling_software
|
2164.43 | | FORTSC::CHABAN | Pray for Peter Pumpkinhead! | Thu Oct 22 1992 18:54 | 10 |
| Re: .42
Hey, nothing personal dude! I am more critical of NAS than you are!
Point is this: too many sales types cannot communicate benefits
because they cannot grasp the technical aspects of the products
they sell. You are obviously an exception to this rule.
-Ed
|
2164.44 | Chilling now | ESGWST::HALEY | PowerFrame - Not just an Architecture | Thu Oct 22 1992 19:28 | 5 |
| Sorry Ed, I obviously over reacted.
I will chill out! I will chill out! I will chill out...
matt haley
|
2164.45 | Build a better quote system! | CIVIC::COUTURE | Gary Couture - NH Sales Support | Thu Oct 22 1992 20:21 | 10 |
| I can tell you one way to save this company thousands of person-hours of
field personnel time and much aggrivation:
Build a good quote system!
Anyone who has had to use the AQS system can understand that. It has a
very poor user interface and response time, and it can take forever to make
simple changes to a quote.
gary
|
2164.46 | | METMV2::SLATTERY | | Fri Oct 23 1992 10:45 | 93 |
| RE: various since
Ed Chaban re: software being the issue
I agree... It is at least as bad as hardware...
If you want yet another nightmare, we can take up services...
I usually use hardware in my examples because people can "feel" it. I
have equal concern about the three levels of VMS (Base, Trad,
Advantage-Server), three forms of SW licensing (Capacity, Concurrent,
Personal).
When I discuss these, people's eyes usually glaze over. Therefore, I
start with hardware.
RE: Sales Reps needing to understand NAS...
Ingoring the other issues with NAS, I disagree that a Sales Rep needs
to be able to articulate what NAS is/does...
In an earlier note I discussed Value selling and having reps
concentrate on how to solve customers business problems. This does not
require knowledge of NAS. What it requires is an understanding of
the business, what leverage points exist for improving the customer's
business and whether we have been successful doing this in the past.
I do think that marketing should create a few "sound bites" about what
NAS and all our products do at a business level that all reps should
know/understand. This doesn't exist.
Since this would not cover all situations (many are new problems)
Sales Support should know this stuff cold. A Sales Rep that can do
this and the other stuff is better than one that can't but I would
concentrate on making Sales better at business first.
RE: needing a better quote system...
I believe that AQS is a resonable system when you accept it for what it
is...
It is a system that accepts part numbers, verifies that they exist (not
correct), applies discounts and prints a report. The report stinks but
the rest of it does what it is supposed to do.
Could the interface be better? Yes...
Instead of doing that, though, I would create a "Configuration
Assistant" that had you enter data (in MS Windows) like
1) What software do you want
2) How many users or transactions will this system support
3) What systems exist and how much more capacity do you want
4) How many VUPS, Disk, Memory do you want
Then give you a comprehensive list of all forms of systems and configs
that meet those requirements with pricing. This should do this in less
than a few minutes.
The output would look something like...
VAX 7000-610 600,000 DSSI is least cost, then SDI, then Cluster
VAX 6000-610 585,000 "
VAX 4000-600 367,000 Single node (dual host not needed)
VAX 4000-500 300,000 "
(2) VAX 4000-400 357,000 Dual Host needed to achieve performance
(3) VAX 4000-100 257,000 Thi-Host needed to achieve performance
Next, the user (Sales Rep) looks at all the answers and chooses the
ones that look most interesting.
Various options exist now. They are:
Produce Quote - This would go to an MS-Word Template and be
customizable
Produce ROI anqalysys - Excel spreadsheet.
The technology to do this exists, it is only a matter of spending a few
months cleaning it up. No one with funding is yet interested.
The proto accurately configures all a la carte 4000s, 6000s and 9000s
as they existed in December of 91 as standalone, DSSI or CI clusters.
It also accurately configures 5 software products (ALL-IN-1, Rdb,
DECforms and two others that I can't remember now). The reason it
doesn't do more is because data entry is a hassle. It configures in
about 30 different systems in about 5 seconds on a 16 MHz
386. Compare this to 16 hours to do an AQS quote that someone brought
up before.
It does not yet do cables but can easily be extended to. It doesn't
deal with Personal licensing because it was done before these existed.
As with cables, this is an easy add on.
Ken Slattery
|
2164.47 | we need to break more than wind! | TOOK::SCHUCHARD | Don't go away mad! | Fri Oct 23 1992 11:19 | 20 |
|
NAS at the moment can only perceived as added value internally. It is
an attempt, long over due, to force some systems interaction into a
series of point products. I see it more as a process isuue - try and
force issues of interoperability and synchronization of delivery dates
for our software packages. Up until now, all we've ever done is
release point products. Point products cannot compete functionally with
Lotus Works or Microsoft Works etc.
I've called it GAS just as long as any of you. But the idea of
building system like solutions is not new, and this may be the best bet
vehicle(even if it is a hot air balloon) to drive the needed process
changes(ie: a goal you get measured and payed for) to get from here to
there!
Even if the package idea does not get very far, we may be able to get
some milage out of forcing products to make use of each other,
simplifying option selection.
bob
|
2164.48 | | FSOA::KDUHAIME | | Fri Oct 23 1992 12:24 | 32 |
| Re: 2164.45
Ken,
I couldn't agree more with the concept you propose.
I fully support the idea of qualifying the customers environment,
recommending equipment/product/services and presenting the solution
in a clear, consise format.
The volume of SW part numbers is staggering. I have been told that
over 60% of the current price file is SW products and services.
There are steps being taken to simplify the process. However,
in the short term, I believe we need to communicate the existing
tools we have to assist sales.
Here's an example; If Sales wanted to sell All-in-1, there are 82
different model numbers that represent the license for All-in-1.
From a services standpoint, there are 204 part numbers.
Rather than rely on price books, Sales Updates and other manual
tools, I would recommend using the Software License Configurator and
SWIFT.
The qualification tool you discussed is a great idea. If that tool
could be the front end of the cycle (qualifying needs) and the
existing tools we have (SWIFT, SLC etc) act behind the scenes to
translate the needs into DEC part numbers, we have provided the
selling team with a useful tool.
Kevin Duhaime
|
2164.49 | Trademarks and our product names | QUICKP::KEHOE | Mr. QuickPIC | Fri Oct 23 1992 13:14 | 12 |
| re .48
Unfortunately we don't sell All-in-1. We sell ALL-IN-1.
Which is part of the problem. On any given day, Sales/Sales Support
people incorrectly spell at least half of our trademarks; given
the fact that additional salvos come in the form of product name changes,
it's amazing that any customers know what the dickens we are trying
to sell them (remember PCSA, no, DEC LanWORKS, no PATHWORKS?)
Dan
Official Self-Appointed Local Watchdog of
the DIGITAL logo and other trademarks
|
2164.50 | I'm not trying to put down SWIFT :-( | SUFRNG::REESE_K | Three Fries Short of a Happy Meal | Mon Oct 26 1992 15:53 | 14 |
| Kevin:
You and I have spoken in the past about SWIFT and I have often
mentioned it to sales reps who seemed totally frustrated when trying
to configure SW licenses or service part numbers. The answer is
always the same.......SWIFT is anything but......SWIFT is too slow!
More than one sales rep has indicated it is faster for them to call
us at 1-800-DEC-SALE than to try and use SWIFT. The reps are not
knocking the idea of SWIFT, but most feel it is too cumbersome to
use.
Karen
|
2164.51 | Have you tried the EXPert module? | FSOA::KDUHAIME | | Tue Oct 27 1992 15:06 | 32 |
| Karen,
I appreciate your feedback. However, in light of recent
enhancements that we've made to SWIFT, I wonder if SWIFT's
responsiveness is still an issue.
SWIFT used to require the user to enter a system and then configure
services associated with that particular system. If there was another
system in the configuration this step would need to be repeated for as
many systems as the customer had.
In our latest version, V2.3, SWIFT release the EXPert module.
Simply put, there are now three categories of information SWIFT
requires; the first is to identify all systems in the configuration.
The second is to identify the software running within the configuration
and the third is to identify the service requirements for all systems.
Using the EXPert module, the ammount of time needed to build a
configuration using SWIFT was cut by over 50%. Keep in mind that in
most cases, using the "regular" SWIFT was still faster than the manual
tools provided to the selling teams.
SWIFT is built exclusively for field use. I as the business
manager, encourage any feedback on the application. If I receive field
feedback on SWIFT, it receives the highest priority. If we provide
automated tools to help te selling teams, we better make sure the tools
meet the needs of the field.
Thanks again for your feedback and keep up the good work!
Kevin Duhaime
|
2164.52 | I'm just trying to stay ahead of the phone calls :-) | SUFRNG::REESE_K | Three Fries Short of a Happy Meal | Tue Oct 27 1992 20:43 | 24 |
| Kevin,
I had entered a rather detailed note, but lost it when the system
bought the farm.
I will try to pass on your information regarding the enhancements,
but bottomline today is that most reps are going flat out; when they
call us many of them are already in the midst of the quote and just
need a couple of part numbers. Since the name of the game is to
get that quote out ASAP, if there is any way they can invoke SWIFT
without backing out of the quote perhaps some will try it, but I
wouldn't bet the farm on it :-(
At one time I wanted to learn more about AQS myself, but since it is
not my job to generate quotes my chances of getting the training are
somewhere between slim and none. Like so many others, I would *like*
to take some spare time and fool around with SWIFT (assuming it will
let me do so since I don't have quote capabilities); but time is a
rare commodity for many of us. I did obtain an AQS User Guide about
6 months ago; are the newer enhancements included in it (should I
ever get a chance to utilize it)?
Karen
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2164.53 | SWIFT is integrated with AQS | FSOA::KDUHAIME | | Wed Oct 28 1992 09:01 | 34 |
| Karen,
Thanks for the feedback.
Regarding your comment on Salespeople and backing out of the AQS
quote to use SWIFT:
SWIFT is integrated within AQS. This enables the Sales person to
call SWIFT while they are in the middle of building the Quote, use
SWIFT to generate the service line items and then automatically pass
these line items back to the quote they are working on. We are in the
midsts of an effort to provide the same functionality to users of the
Electronic Connection.
We have done 2 releases within the past 6 months. If you (or
anyone else) would like a copy of the latest users guide, please
contact me and I'll arrange to have them sent to you.
The last release we did provides support for Open/VMS among other
enhancements. SWIFT is the only automated configuration tool to
support building the Open/VMS services.
Our next release, V2.4, will include configuration support for both
Alpha and OSF1.
The next step in the configuration/quoting process is to tie into a
tool like Ken Slattery described in an earlier reply.
Regards,
Kevin Duhaime
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