T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2253.1 | sales rep, 1995 A.D. | SPECXN::MUNNS | Dig-it-all | Tue Dec 01 1992 14:45 | 26 |
| When I resided in software services, I worked with sales reps as well as
sales support, marketing, engineering, and external customers. Over the
past 2 years, I have seen Digital outsource more of their work - services,
products (agreements with 3rd parties). This trend seems to be reinforced
as the company reduces headcount.
What does this mean to sales and the rest of Digital?
I envision a much smaller Digital that remains competitive by concentrating
on system development and system services. A common complaint (outside
of Digital) 5 years ago was that Digital was involved in the development of
too many products, and was not able to remain competitive in product
functionality, support, and selling.
Leave end user products to the client machines. Digital will build products
that require more resources and knowledge than the smaller shops have.
Digital will focus on a smaller, product set and sell it through sales reps
(both internal & external) who have the best skills of our current sales
reps and sales support people (think of them as the sales hit team).
There will be no need for the 'generic' sales rep who sells a number of
products. There will be no need for sales support people.
The market will certainly influence Digital's course, and we do have some
ideas of where that is - based on current buzzwards that the customers
seem to like - "open systems", "client/server", "free",...
|
2253.2 | Wal-Mart Business Model | BTOVT::SOJDA_L | | Tue Dec 01 1992 15:22 | 10 |
| >> I envision a much smaller Digital that remains competitive by concentrating
>> on system development and system services.
As much as I agree that this makes a lot of sense, some of the other
things that are happening make it appear that we aren't even doing
this. Cuts in both software engineering and the services organizations
seem to be as bad as anyplace else.
It seems that we have jumped on the outsourcing bandwagon for
everything -- even our supposedly "core competencies".
|
2253.3 | Stong thoughts from working with customers every day. | STOHUB::DSCGLF::FARLOW | Simplify! | Tue Dec 01 1992 17:55 | 30 |
| Reducing the sales force is a huge mistake. We may have a lot of overhead
built into our corporate structure, but I don't think that we have too many
sales representatives. While we often hear of revenue per employee comparisons,
as a measure of effectiveness, I would like to see this contrasted with a revenue
per sales rep comparison. If that comparison is competitive with other companies
(which I think it would be) we might see how bloated we are with overhead.
Cutting the sales force goes completely against the idea of listening to the
customer and providing products that customers want. In fact customers are
expressing concern about losing their representatives. Sales and sales support
are the closest Digital representatives to the customer. They see customers
day in and day out and know what they need, why they need it and what the
value is to them. One of our problems has been that we have ignored input
from customers that has been received by the sales force.
Our customers are everywhere, not concentrated in Maynard. Some customers are
comfortable buying from a 1-800 number, but most need someone to help them
understand their problem and explain the options available.
The pancea of distributors and ISVs selling our systems for us sounds great but
in reality, today, most applications run on multiple hardware platforms. If
your application runs on HP, Sun, IBM, Digital, and NCR which platform do you
recommend? Why would you prefer one over another? Why do we think they are
going to recommend ours?
Simple ideas may kill us.
My two cents,
Steve Farlow
|
2253.4 | The Past as Prologue | MAIL::ROGERS | | Tue Dec 01 1992 19:18 | 73 |
| One group is sure they've seen the future, and it's chips and software
being sold to other companies who in turn will sell to customers. A
smaller Digital won't have to mess with the end-user customers anymore.
(See note 2242.63 for a good statement of this vision).
It will all be very clean and surgical, don't you see. A few focused
sales people, knowing everything there is to know about their chips.
Selling to a few customers who also are experts on chips.
Our customers will sell to the end-users. The difference is that each
of our customers will concentrate on a slice of the market: how to do
medical case tracking, or retail inventory accounting.
There will be companies that will advise end-users on how to solve big
problems, like how to hook all the heterogeneous platforms together.
But Digital won't be one of them. Those companies will be providing a
service that isn't really SI (because it's not complex enough or
customized enough). Not every customer will need this level of help,
and some will need it but refuse to buy it.
The companies that provide this service will need to understand the
customer's over-all problem, and be able to quickly provide the right
expertise and advice.
The companies that provide this service will be customer-driven. They
will understand that only the customer's satisfaction with the level of
service will bring them back for a return engagement.
The companies that provide this service will be comfortable in dealing
with confused customers, ones that don't really understand what they
are asking for, because that is exactly the condition that creates a
need for the service company.
These service companies will get their business by having some of their
people develop contacts with some of the customer's decision makers,
establishing credibility by learning the way that customer does
business, and then occasionally offering suggested improvements that
just coincidentally can be implemented by the service company. In
other words, they will have a sales force.
These service companies will not be beholden to one technology or one
equipment manufacturer. They will live or die on their ability to
provide excellent solutions from whatever source, and whip them
together with just enough expertise to get them to work together.
No brand loyalty, no missionary work, no uphill battles to convince the
customer that another road is the only right way to go.
The chips and technology companies, like Digital, will live or die on
the raw speed and low cost of their product, and on the excellence of
their software. No brand loyalty expected, no quarter asked or given.
They too will have a sales force, but of a totally different kind. At
the low end will be order takers, those familiar with part numbers,
billing policies, shipment schedules, and end-of-life closeout
specials. At the top end will be highly technical ambassadors, able to
talk one-on-one to the technical gurus of the VARs and OEMs to convince
them not to use the competition's chip.
The Digital sales reps reading this description will realize that they
have been doing all three types of sales: Strategic Selling, Order
Taking, and Technical Selling. In the future, you'll specialize.
You'll specialize by deciding which type of company to work for.
Digital moved away from Order Taking and Technical Selling as it moved
away from selling boards and components. The problem was that
management still thought of Sales in the old way: "if we could just
help reps get the quote printed while they're still in the customer's
office, we could shorten the sales cycle."
Now Digital may move back to the old way. In doing so, it will settle
for a new niche. In a fragmented market, it will compete with
down-sized sub-units of Baby Blues, and would likely no longer be
"Number Two" -- or hope to be.
|
2253.5 | | MR4DEC::GREEN | | Tue Dec 01 1992 22:23 | 8 |
|
re: .-1
Best summary of what's going on that I've seen. The vision you describe
is just what I think they have decided to implement. Good luck.
|
2253.6 | thought this was odd!!! | ODIXIE::SMITHJ | | Tue Dec 01 1992 23:01 | 15 |
| Last june I was in school in atlanta and noticed what I thought was an
unusual class posted on the monitor showing classes and there location.
It was called 9wk sales training or something like that. Already having
heard of layoffs in the sales force I thought this was most odd so when
I returned to class I asked the instructor what was going on. He just
turned and looked at the two other instructors in the class and
kind of looked funny then told me we would talk about it later. At the
beginning of lunch he told two of us that it was an ongoing class
hireing and training young college grads. to make them salesmen. His
comment was that this was an ongoing class and in fact it was going to
or had been extended to include support people also.
Just thought this might fit in with the question about what type of
salesman for the future.
|
2253.7 | We owe a certain amount to salespeople | STUDIO::HAMER | look on my works ye mighty | Wed Dec 02 1992 09:09 | 21 |
| What a company.
We move seamlessly, almost invisibly, from "we don't need salespeople
because our products are so peachy keen they sell themselves" to
"salespeople are obsolete, let's dump all but two or three of them."
I tend to think the vision of the world expressed a few replies ago is
probably close to right. However, I think its view of sales is a little
too antiseptic; it hints too much of a technologist's fantasy world. As
I understand it, this coming world order is still to be filled with
human beings who will, for the most part, continue to act like human
beings.
The entities that buy from whatever remains of Digital will still be
"customers" and we will still be completely reliant on them for
existence. Honesty, relationship building, personal credibility,
shrewdness, attentiveness to customer satisfaction are all going to
continue as important characteristics of the most successful
salespeople (and their employer!) whatever the future holds.
John H.
|
2253.8 | THE DIGITAL BAILOUT! | SPESHR::BENOIT | Life is just a cherra bowlies | Wed Dec 02 1992 09:15 | 20 |
|
. Hire Lee Iacoca, VP sales, marketing, AND ADVERTISING. Pay him 20
mil.
. Get away from the name "digital" on our consumer products. People
still think digital is a watch and get confused when they see a digital
computer. Go with DEC, or something like Sapphire, or anything people
can relate to a little better.
. Advertise, advertise, advertise. How can people buy what they don't
know is for sale?
. DON't cut the sales force. Sure we can sell to resellers, but where
is the profit margin. And if you loose a sale, it's big bucks, not one
or two machines.
. More commission and less salary for the sales force. One really learns
how to sell if he/she is trying to put bread on the table.
If these don't work, we could go into real estate.
|
2253.9 | Who needs new shoes when we no longer have feet? | CSOADM::ROTH | Call off your goons, I give up! | Wed Dec 02 1992 09:25 | 7 |
| re: .8
Few of the items you mentioned are necessary if we are to embrace the new
paradigm of silicon and software. Advertising and name recognition will
become unimportant in a commodity market.
Lee
|
2253.10 | Hogwash and Porkbellies... | WHO301::BOWERS | Dave Bowers @WHO | Wed Dec 02 1992 10:01 | 8 |
| I suppose that's why Intel is spending big bucks on the "Intel Inside" campaign.
This "commmodity" mind set is going to be the death of us. Chips and systems
aren't commodities. They are differentiated by quality, reliability, service,
support and, most of all, buyer perceptions.
Wheat is a commodity.
\dave
|
2253.11 | | TUXEDO::YANKES | | Wed Dec 02 1992 11:02 | 30 |
|
Re: .10
>I suppose that's why Intel is spending big bucks on the "Intel Inside" campaign.
>This "commmodity" mind set is going to be the death of us. Chips and systems
>aren't commodities. They are differentiated by quality, reliability, service,
>support and, most of all, buyer perceptions.
>
>Wheat is a commodity.
I suspect that if we were a bunch of wheat farmers discussing
"life", we would consider wheat to be a finely differentiated product
given all its different varieties and that computers are "just that box
over there that I use for our spreadsheet and to check on wheat futures
prices". We differentiate computers because perhaps we're too close
to them to see them as the commodity tool that they are. Just two
weeks ago I finally bought a PC for home. I didn't buy it because I
wanted "it", I bought it because there are some job skills that I'd
like to learn, and to learn them requires a chunk of hardware to run
C++ and Windows 3.1 on. I bought it used, and frankly can't tell you
who made the case, motherboard, memory chips, hard drive, floppy drive,
monitor or any of the other whizmos stuffed inside the case -- or even
if they were all originally sold together as the exact package that I
now have. I _can_ tell you that when I bought it, I made sure it had
a standard CPU (for software availability) of reasonable power to run
Windows and that it has enough disk space to store everything that I
want to store. Beyond that, "the box" is a purely commodity tool to
me like a box of nails at a hardware store would be.
-craig
|
2253.12 | | WHO301::BOWERS | Dave Bowers @WHO | Wed Dec 02 1992 11:22 | 4 |
| If that's the case, we should be cloning the 486 and P5 as fast as we can
instead of messing around with Alpha_AXP.
\dave
|
2253.13 | | MOCA::BELDIN_R | Free at last in 44 days | Wed Dec 02 1992 11:29 | 10 |
| "commodity" is just shorthand for "don't bother me with the details,
just get results"! I'm sure that there are folks who consider all
wine a commodity, even though there are others who can distinguish
between different vinyards by taste. If the customer wants the
details, we need to send a salesperson who knows them. If the customer
thinks computers are commodities, then send a relationship building
salesperson. Bottom line is we've got to know our customers better.
And working in Maynard doesn't build that kind of competence.
Dick
|
2253.14 | | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney in New York | Wed Dec 02 1992 12:06 | 17 |
| It would probably be a book-length document to fully develop the idea
that computing is a "commodity". It is and it isn't.
At one level, the ability to run or not run applications that are
described as "IBM PC compatible" informally divides all computing
hardware in the world into two parts.
For many people at the end of the value chain, only the finished
product, namely the ability to run 1-2-3 or Excel matters, so it's
correct to say they have a commodity view.
Typically though, behind that person, there's a person who realizes
that it isn't a commodity and that there are many attributes besides
price and the ability to run 1-2-3 or Excel that matter greatly.
DEC's 8-years-too-late recognition of commodity aspect of computing
still is not well understood internally.
|
2253.15 | Before we cross the Rubicon | MAIL::ROGERS | | Wed Dec 02 1992 12:48 | 46 |
| It's very depressing to read how easily people are giving up the vision
of being a full-service company. It makes me think that we were never
deeply committed to that idea -- it was grafted on to a board-level
mentality that we never shook.
From the field, we've always felt that the corporate structure was
self-absorbed and isolated in its own world. I think that same
self-absorption is still at work. For those comfortable with building
chips, the antiseptic user-less "brave new world" is oddly comforting.
Digital as a chip-maker would be a tough competitior, but I wonder how
it will make the transition. It needs volume to reach economic
production and profitability on chips alone, and that won't come
quickly.
Digital's growth was fueled by end-user computing, and that is still
the bulk of the revenue and profit. How do you maintain market
position and morale in the face of a going-out-of-business mentality?
Because the ideas being presented are, indeed, a plan for going out of
the end-user business.
I had hoped that Digital would come out of this smarter and more
efficient, still reaching for the brass ring and still trying to be
the best computer services company in the world. We could still do
that.
We don't have to design and build everything ourselves in order to
be the best customer-oriented, service-oriented company in the
business. We do have to have a commitment to jump when the customer
needs us to jump.
Many of the opinions I'm reading in Notes about Digital sales people
unfortunately don't reflect a good understanding of what Sales in this
company is all about, or what it requires. I fear that that lack of
understanding extends all the way to the top, and our leaders don't
know how their own business works down where the rubber meets the road.
Their views are the ones that are antiseptic, and lead to "simple
answers," the ones that Steve Farlow said will kill us...like doing away
with 1-(800)DEC-SALE support.
Getting out of the end-user business is one of those "simple answers."
I know that I don't fit in the brave new world of chip making. I work
best in applying technology to solve real-world (i.e. messy) problems.
When Digital reaches that brave new world, I will move on.
|
2253.16 | effectively a NOP -- or worse! | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (381-0899 ZKO3-2/T63) | Wed Dec 02 1992 13:12 | 19 |
| re Note 2253.15 by MAIL::ROGERS:
> From the field, we've always felt that the corporate structure was
> self-absorbed and isolated in its own world. I think that same
> self-absorption is still at work. For those comfortable with building
> chips, the antiseptic user-less "brave new world" is oddly comforting.
Yes, I strongly feel that what's happening in Digital these
days is that the people who exercised the greatest degree
over strategy for the past decade or so are consolidating
control under the guise of "downsizing". The core will be
what it has always been, but everything else will be gone.
The irony of the Board of Directors' "firing" KO is that KO's
greatest failure perhaps was that he wasn't in control (or
didn't exercise it). So letting Ken go allowed those who
really controlled Digital simply to gain total control.
Bob
|
2253.17 | So, 40% > 37%+42% ? | IW::WARING | Silicon,*Software*,Services | Wed Dec 02 1992 13:34 | 11 |
| Re: .8
> . DON't cut the sales force. Sure we can sell to resellers, but where
> is the profit margin. And if you loose a sale, it's big bucks, not one
> or two machines.
Let's play some real numbers here. I can sell my software through an average
CSO here at 30-40% off list. Or I can sell via another distribution channel
that carries a 37% cost of sale *and* gives discounts+allowances averaging
42% on top. Now, which one is more profitable for Digital?
- Ian W.
|
2253.18 | Sell to anybody that wants our products | ICS::SOBECKY | It's all ones and zeroes | Wed Dec 02 1992 14:08 | 21 |
|
This may have already been addressed, or may not belong here,
but...so what? Jerry asked, so here goes.
The thing that amazes me about the Digital sales force is that
they typically couldn't be bothered with what they consider
'small potatoes' accounts. So many times during my DEC career
I have heard stories of a small customer that called DEC in
order to buy a system and was never accorded the courtesy of
a return telephone call.
Now, I'm kinda aware of the numbers that the sales force needs
to make, and the amount of time that they have available to them
to 'invest' in one sale over another. And maybe there are other
forces at work here. But any system that can afford to let us
ignore any sale under X amount of dollars is a flawed system,
in my account, and smacks of a certain arrogance. Call it my
old-fashioned (and poor, money-wise) upbringing, but I never
could understand this way of thinking.
John
|
2253.19 | A lead is a lead... | KAOOA::HASIBEDER | Trekkie DECie | Wed Dec 02 1992 14:19 | 10 |
| RE: .18
Here, here John!!! My sentiments exactly. No potential sale is ever
too small, nor should any lead be overlooked. That guy who today wants
to buy one station may one day be the guy who signs the cheque (or
"check" in the U.S.) for a multi-million dollar order.
Always been one of my pet peeves too...
Otto.
|
2253.20 | Fading fast | MIMS::STEFFENSEN_K | Thanks for the instructions | Wed Dec 02 1992 15:07 | 13 |
|
John, I have to agree with you too. I have never understood how we
could pass up a sale just because it is small. It's arrogance and that
is something I'll probally never understand. Act arrogant to me and
I'll never deal with you again. Kings of other countries may be
somewhat arrogant but they still collect the taxes on everyone. If DEC
had "collected the taxes" from all the small customers, we might not be
in the shape were in now.
Ken
|
2253.21 | problem statement fine; what's your proposal? | IW::WARING | Silicon,*Software*,Services | Wed Dec 02 1992 15:35 | 14 |
| From another point of view, I don't know why:
- Engineering don't always ship new products on time
- Marketing don't know the total addressable market we're losing through
not having 32 bit support on OSF/1
- Stuff often doesn't get delivered to commit
- Finance...
- IM&T...
sheesh! It's a common courtesy to have phone calls returned and for the
appropriate distribution channel to be engaged to handle the lead. If it's
not happening, name names and complain. Anecdotes like this don't help the
cause of team Digital to move forward...
- Ian W.
|
2253.22 | | ECADSR::SHERMAN | Steve ECADSR::Sherman DTN 223-3326 MLO5-2/26a | Wed Dec 02 1992 16:21 | 23 |
| re: .21
>From another point of view, I don't know why:
>
>- Engineering don't always ship new products on time
Probably because Engineering is sometimes told that they have to ship
by X if they are going to be funded. X may or may not have anything to
do with how long it actually takes to design a product. But, since it
is easier to get forgiveness than permission ... BTW, "no excuses
management" won't fix this problem. Any engineering group that knows
it can't make the deadline will still commit. It's better to be funded
now and cut off later than to not be funded at all. Standard rule
applies: good, cheap and fast -- pick two.
I have no "solution" to the problem. But, from what I understand, a more
successful approach involves having a patron lined up to buy a product
and allowing Engineering to work closely with this customer. That
frees up the deadline as necessary, allows for customer feedback and
participation, and has a better chance of resulting in a product that
the customer will be happy with.
Steve
|
2253.23 | | CSC32::S_HALL | The cup is half NT | Wed Dec 02 1992 17:01 | 26 |
|
Well, here's what the new DEC Sales Rep *won't* be like:
My wife ( just quit DEC and went to work at MCI ) met a
prominent VP at a company function last week.
This guy carries an MCI "Friends and Family" application
form in his suit pocket all the time. He's always promoting
the service and the company -- at the club, on a plane,
etc.
When one of the MCI folks at the function mentioned an aging mother
that had balked at switching to MCI, the VP asked why.
"Well, she thought she would have to rip out all her phones,
get new wiring and that sort of thing," the son answered.
The VP offered to call her himself, to reassure her that the
changeover would not be anything like that.
Anybody seen a DEC VP that interested ?
Steve H
P.S. Three guesses where this guy worked before he started
with MCI....
|
2253.24 | | FORTSC::CHABAN | Pray for Peter Pumpkinhead! | Wed Dec 02 1992 17:17 | 15 |
|
Like some DEC salesreps, DEC VPs offer help where:
potential_revenue > $X
Where:
X >= $2.0M for VPs
X >= $100K for salesreps
My $.02
-Ed
|
2253.25 | | FORTSC::CHABAN | Pray for Peter Pumpkinhead! | Wed Dec 02 1992 17:30 | 5 |
|
The New DEC Salesperson....
Young, Single, Childless and Hungry.
|
2253.26 | not always the case... | DPDMAI::VETEIKIS | | Wed Dec 02 1992 22:20 | 19 |
| re. small sales getting dropped
Please don't assume this is happening as often as it use to. As a DEC
sales rep I get several small sale inquires from customers every week.
If its a PC sale I pass to Desktop Direct and have found them to be
quite good. If it looks like something more complex I send it to one of
my distribution reps and they handle it. The nice thing now is we have
somewhere to hand the small opportunity where it will be handled
professionally.
My budget is big. I do have to focus on the large opportunities.
Digital trains me to do that.
BTW, I know no offense is intended. I just wanted to make the point that
we are getting better in the field at handling this kind of thing.
Unfortunately, some small sale opportunities do still get dropped. That
is reality as well (human nature).
Curt
|
2253.27 | Why is the ATD concept so hard to understand? | TOHOPE::REESE_K | Three Fries Short of a Happy Meal | Thu Dec 03 1992 02:59 | 20 |
| Curt mentions something that has been discussed here many times, i.e.
the reason we have ATDs is to handle the smaller accounts. Talk to
any sales rep and they'll tell you of the countless times they've
been backed into a corner and forced to quote to a small account
(knowing full well this same "potential" customer is also shopping
amongst several of our ATDs). Many of you don't seem to understand
that the ATDs can almost always come in under an identical quote
(price) generated by an internal sales rep.
Even when we had a large sales force it would have been difficult
to follow up on all leads; now it's darn near impossible. Our sales
reps are NOT being arrogant; they are just following a strategy that
has been in place for some time. This type of lead is fowarded to
ATDs on a regular basis. If the ATDs are not responding to the leads
DEC sends them, then perhaps some in the Channels organization should
look at that particular distributor and see if it can be determined
why the distributor is not sticking to their part of the bargain!
Karen
|
2253.28 | Why not a 'minor league' sales group? | ICS::SOBECKY | It's all ones and zeroes | Thu Dec 03 1992 03:04 | 17 |
|
re .26 and others
Desktop Direct is a step in the right direction. And I did not
intend to make it sound like dropping small sales leads was the
fault of the sales rep. I understand that, given the metrics that
they are (were?) forced to work under, they often had no choice
but to go after the larger sales leads. The *system* is what I had
an issue with, not the people called on to implement the system.
I once proposed that DEC have a portion of its sales force dedicated
to addressing these small accounts (this was about 8 years ago). I
believe now, as I did then, that there are lots of people in DEC that
could adequately work these small accounts. The response I got was,
'It would cost too much..not profitable enough' in so many words.
John
|
2253.29 | | FSDEV::MGILBERT | A man from Hope, A new beginning... | Thu Dec 03 1992 10:58 | 45 |
| While I appreciate the comments in .26 and understand the problems faced by
sales I think sales needs to understand the perception that is created by
this process on the "customer".
I have had the distinct displeasure of watching Digtial work this process
from the other side twice. This was a public sector account, in fact a school
system. The competition was IBM and NEC. When I sat back and looked at the
process afterwards I saw a few things that disturbed me as a DEC employee.
1. All 3 companies used a 3rd party but the difference was in how they were
used. NEC simply sells their equipment to the 3rd party but provides both
sales and technical training to that party. The vendor we dealt with was
very familiar with both the hardware and software. IBM appears to do the
same thing but stays involved with every sale. An IBM sales person
accompanied the 3rd party on every call. Digital, in both instances, bid
the hardware and operating software itself and picked the 3rd party to
application software.
2. Throughout the entire process IBM has maintained a relationship with the
school system even though we have yet to buy a single piece of hardware
or software from them (we did buy our business system from the NEC 3rd
party).
3. The impression that many people who worked on these processes have come
away with is that Digital, at least in Massachusetts, is not familiar
with the legalities of the bidding process in the public sector.
4. This school system is out to bid again right now on a system package for
technology education in it's elementary schools. IBM is out front because
they've paid attention to what we were doing. I recently attended a statewide
conference of school committee members and superintendents in Hyannis. At
this conference there was a 2-day exhibition of education related products.
IBM and Apple each had 2 booths at the conference. I watched them both
for awhile and the one thing I was most impressed with was the number of
superintendents and school committee members they already knew. DEC was not
even represented by a 3rd party.
The bottom line is that other companies appear to leave no rock unturned in
seeking out customers. We appear to still be working under the old premise
that they'll come to us.
While these are my impressions and they're based on a very narrow experience
I'm concerned that I'm not the only one with these impressions.
|
2253.30 | Small Business Sales of Today | DPDMAI::VETEIKIS | | Thu Dec 03 1992 20:19 | 20 |
| re. .28 (DEC's Small Business Sales Force of the past)
That was back when we had larger profit margins on every sale. That
margin is not there any more.
Now we have SME reps (Small-Medium Enterprise) of which I am one. We
handle many, many accounts - everything that is not handled by large
account managers (a lot of turf).
We have been given directions to leverage our efforts in an way we can
through the use of distributors, VARs, etc.
The goal is to do a large volume of small sales, to small business',
and still come away with a profit.
I now spend as much time looking for good local VARs and Software
Companies to partner with my distributors as I do working my large sales
opportunities.
CV
|
2253.31 | HOW does DEC sell? | CADSYS::DIPACE | Alice DiPace, dtn 225-4796 | Thu Dec 03 1992 22:43 | 52 |
| Not being in sales, I don't know how it is supposed to work, but I do know
first hand, but I'm less than impressed with those experiences I'm aware of.
I too saw DEC's lackluster response when our school system went to purchase
equipment.
My husband, a former DECcie from the 70's, worked for a company in the
city known once known a hard core DEC customer. Over the years, things
deteriorated (like the time DEC shipped them an 8700 to run ultrix on,
complete with the ultrix tape and a tape drive not supported by ultrix!).
Anyways, he found himself suppporting equipment from an ever widening array
of vendors, including APPLE, SUN, IBM, and HP along with some DEC equipment.
A year and a half ago, he left that company and went to a University.
Within 2 -3 weeks of being in his new position, his old reps from his
previous job met with him, introduced him to his new reps. The new reps
came armed with such info, as this is all the diffferent types of equipment
you have, this is what's on order, this is getting obsolete and we recommend...
Well, the SUN, IBM, and HP reps, that is.
After being on the job for 3 months, he still hadn't found out who his DEC
rep was. So he called his old rep to see if he knew. The old rep said he
didn't know, and hung up. Upset when I heard this, I called the 800 hotline
number in the front of our phone books. The person who answered listened
patiently to my story, then asked me why my husband didn't call the hotline
number himself. He didn't, because he's sick and tired of having to go find
DEC. The person at the hotline seemed to think that either or both my husband
and I had attitude problems. I was less than impressed, myself.
If DEC want's him as a customer, why doesn't DEC come to him! And he
has no motivation to go looking for DEC with SUN, IBM, and HP in his face all
the time. Well, his DEC rep did finally contact him after my call.
Since that time, the DEC rep hasn't exactly been in his face, either. He had
to call to get invites to the alpha announcment. The rep didn't follow up
to see if they were interested. The users group there finally called the rep
to come to a meeting to answer questions. And the rep didn't have alot of info.
Those at the group who had gone to the announcement seemed to know more in
some cases. It was suggested if they wanted to try a machine, that there
were some alphas on the internet that users could get free accounts on to
try some stuff. But the rep didn't know the names of the machines or how
to access them. Or they could come to the office and try out the alpha there.
A less then impressive meeting with some folks who are trying to knock
on DEC's door and ask do you have something that might be worth it!
The world is not going to come knocking on DEC's door and beg us to let them
buy our products. If we want to sell our products, then that is what we have
to do - GET OUT THERE AND SELL THEM, not sit around waiting for the customers
to come to us.
I guess my impression is that while we may have some shining stars in
the sales force, they're not where I see them.
Alice
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2253.32 | | FSDEV::MGILBERT | A man from Hope, A new beginning... | Fri Dec 04 1992 12:01 | 7 |
| RE: .30
I honestly beleive that there are lots of sales people who do as much
or more than the competition. The problem is that the competition does it
consistently and they do it well. We don't. We need every sales person to do
it and we need to have people dedicated to small business markets all the time
not as much time as on large sales.
|
2253.33 | | HAAG::HAAG | Bottom of the org. chart in Minneapolis. | Fri Dec 04 1992 15:07 | 10 |
| I've had 7 years of up front and close workings with sales people. I've
said it before but I'm going to say it again.
You get what your reward! Metrics drives behavior. And our sales people
are treated, compared to our primary ceompetitors, like garbage. I have
close friends that are sales persons for DEC, IBM, SUN, Apple, and HP.
Frankly, I'd never really want to be a salesperson. Least of all at
DEC.
Gene.
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