T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2283.1 | TQM, new era, support? | DWOMV2::CAMPBELL | Happy, happy...Joy, joy | Thu Dec 17 1992 22:17 | 30 |
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You have to understand that support that a customer isn't paying
for (directly!) probably is too costly for our company to support.
I see plans that require all kinds of training to support future
business, but our districts cannot afford to pay for that training.
I guess we'll have to hope that there will always be a core of
people who are willing to study on there own time, buy books from
a computer book store, and even buy there own systems to bring in
to work to learn how to provide that support.
I know there are many out there now, I talk to some of them in
Internal Support, in CXO and ALF. This was a company that one
could go the extra mile for, just because. Will it be so in
the future? Beats me.
Remember one fundamental quality principle - The further a problem
gets, the more expensive it gets. I have a hunch that someone
in this company feels that Digital can no longer afford to manufacture
and sell products that require the level of support ours have
always had. The only entity that should require support is the
CUSTOMER. And they should be happy to have someone fix THEIR
problems, at a reasonable fee.
I know its sounds unrealistic, but think about it. Called any
(900) numbers lately?
Dennis
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2283.2 | | CSC32::S_HALL | The cup is half NT | Fri Dec 18 1992 08:35 | 29 |
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Support is broken, broken, broken in this company.
It stems, I believe, from the mistaken assumption made
years ago that support should be a function of Field
Service, rather than the product group that produces
the hardware or software.
Since engineering ( software and hardware ) can keep
support folks at arms length ( "Shut up and read the
Blitz", "Don't talk to me unless you have a CLD number",
"Notes is not an official problem resolution channel", etc. ),
support is left twisting, slowly, slowly in the wind.
Much of this could be resolved if engineering paid all
costs of support of their products. Then, when they
rolled up all those beautiful balance sheets each quarter,
the turkeys and the disasters would be revealed.
As it stands, Field Service absorbs the costs of
engineering sloppiness and ineptitude.
Do I think this will change ?
No. Our "consensus" driven company will allow this
travesty to continue until we are a tiny outfit in an
old wool mill, making chips and boards, again.
Steve H
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2283.3 | Mea culpa... | CADCTL::BRAUCHER | | Fri Dec 18 1992 11:13 | 28 |
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re,.2 I'm in Engineering, I helped design some of those hardware
products requiring support later, and I suppose we have to plead
guilty. But in mitigation, realize what the cycle is in hardware
design. In the ramp-up phase, we are performance/time-to-market/
unit cost/driven. If we see something that may be a service
problem, we ask CSSE about it, and try to fit it in when we can.
But if the project doesn't get to protos in time, it gets cancelled.
At proto-build, the project reaches peak of staffing, funding,
interest, top-people's attention, and activity. Once the proto
works, the rewards (if any merit them) are distributed, and the
top people move on to the next project, the staffing falls, and
the project limps slowly into FRS, at which point less than half
the original funds/staff are still on it. Any manufacturing,
reliability, other service problems are handled by the 'B' team.
I know, I've been on it.
After FRS, it falls from interest, and from the engineering
budget very rapidly. Alpha AXP ? Why are we still doing
engineering on that, the hardware engineering manager asks.
We should move the performers from that to the next system,
and the non-performers out the door.
So by the time the customer reports a field problem, the
design team is usually gone. This is not new - DEC was this
way when it was very profitable also.
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2283.4 | | SPESHR::KEARNS | | Fri Dec 18 1992 13:45 | 13 |
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re: .2
Steve,
I think there are issues with service delivery's roles with support
as well. Engineering's response will be better if the escalation path
from the Field to Engineering is better defined and more efficient. The
person providing a service is also providing a level of support in many
cases. How good are our feedback mechanisms from the local Field level
to corporate Engineering?
- Jim K
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2283.5 | There's more to it than that | ARAGON::GARROD | From VMS -> NT; Unix a mere page from history | Fri Dec 18 1992 21:52 | 10 |
| I agree that engineering should have to fund support of their products.
From the engineering side we see the problem slightly differently
though. We don't get to see all that SPS revenue from maintenance
contracts on the P&Ls. This in the past has tended to cause engineering
to short change the building of fully functional support teams. This is
because support funding and development funding come from the same pot
so guess where the cuts take place. If there was a defined pot for
support this wouldn't happen.
Dave
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2283.6 | | SOLVIT::ALLEN_R | | Sat Dec 19 1992 12:27 | 16 |
| seems to me that since most customers are loathe to pay us for the
value of the support they desire but are quick to demand a higher level
of support from DEC than anyone else they purchase from we are in a
losing proposition. The trick is to educate the customer and that is
impossible to do, along the lines of teaching a pig to sing.
Some customers know the value of support, they have been educated by
making the wrong decision in the past and paying dearly for it. But my
experience is that they are a small minority. Many customers talk
about wanting to get good support and say they are willing to pay for
it, but in the final analysis they wait till the end of the qtr and hit
the sales person with some story about buying from a small vendor who
would be lucky to be able to provide a little support never mind what
the customer needs and the DEC rep ends up giving the customer a big
allowance. So no money is there to provide the support the customer
thinks they are going to get.
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2283.7 | More thoughts from Delaware | DWOMV2::CAMPBELL | Happy, happy...Joy, joy | Sat Dec 19 1992 22:26 | 19 |
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There are two forms of support. One is supporting the products
you sell (bugs, crashes, design faults, etc). The other is
technical support of the customer when they either don't know
how to do something that they want to do, or when they enter
uncharted territory with your products.
Digital (as most companies) cannot afford the first, at the field
level - too costly, because a customer shouldn't have to pay for
our mistakes (although now they really do). The second they
should pay for, willingly, even if the SPD "doesn't say I can't
do this", even if they're a "big customer".
The "trick" is proper marketing of support services. Nothing
ever given away, but an army attacks the problem, if need be.
We have given away far too much, to far too many, for far too long.
dennis
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2283.8 | Times better change... | FRSIDE::CRAPAROTTA | Joe, in Friendly NY.. SO WHAT!! | Sun Dec 20 1992 13:39 | 21 |
| Support in DEC stinks and is getting worse!! As was stated in another
note, after FRS it's just about everyman for himself...I do have ONE
exception to that one.. Being involved before and after FRS on the 9XXX
machines, I must say that these were the most dedicated engineers I
have ever worked with in Digital!!! I was able to get hold of them at
any time before and after FRS.. They never gave me the standard "log a
CLD or Where did you get my number?" garbage that I have ALWAYS seen
from Digital's prima donna engineering groups.. Now this is not to say
that all of the people in engineering are this way... Ninety Five (95%)
are though and that is what my generalzation is based on.. I am now
presently working an LOR issue at a Major site. It has taken countless
hours just to get a resource from engineering and when I do it will
only be for 1-2 days... I am fortunate to have some real GOOD people in
our Area support that can help us with this stuff.. Although they are
overwhelmed alot also.. Our customers see this and I'm tired of having
to go to Customer meetings to explain why CLD's are open for such long
lengths of times.. Not on intermittent problems but ones that can be
RE-PRODUCED..
Joe
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2283.9 | | CSC32::S_HALL | The cup is half NT | Mon Dec 21 1992 08:10 | 42 |
|
First, there are two types of support:
1) Remedial ( we fix our broken junk....Did I mention
the recently-released product that had 200+
oustanding QARs on it when it shipped ? )
2) "How do I do <something> ?" ( Note that some percentage
of this support would be unnecessary
with better-written manuals, but no
manual can prevent dumb-bunny mistakes. )
I believe it could work kinda like auto manufacturers
handle their warranty claims. Manufacturing defects, ECOs,
and product failures are paid for by the car division that
manufactures the product. But if you want extras installed,
tune-ups, or a different color, the dealer bills the customer.
It's interesting to note the following from Jerry Pournelle,
columnist, in BYTE Magazine, January 1993:
--------------------------------
"Microsoft has brought out a daring new product line -- at a time
when dealer and customer dissatisfaction with the cost and
level of Microsoft support is at an all-time high. If they
can't support what they have, how can they take on all these
bold new products ?
Microsoft is aware of the problem, of course. I was told that
one of four Microsoft employees now works in support services.
( Cynics will say. "Yes, and they're all new employees who can
barely look things up in a database.") There's also a bold
new strategy: support costs are billed back against the
product manager's profits. This gives the product managers a
strong incentive to make things work the first time."
---------------------------------
I rest my case.
Steve H
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2283.10 | Restructuring Attitude | 35261::ROGERS | | Mon Dec 21 1992 16:31 | 32 |
| From a sales perspective, the critical problem support has never been
good. I have scars from several critical situations that took weeks or
even months of finger-pointing to resolve.
In the mid-80's we started saying we were an alternative to IBM, and
actually started making some in-roads to a lot of MIS organizations,
when our main strength had always been with end-users.
Our momentum was high, the message was strong (one operating system
from desktop to data center). What happened? Those MIS managers
started seeing flaws in our support structure, and comparing us to the
mainframe people. We didn't know how to properly handle the
inter-personal relations with a frustrated customer; we didn't know how
to deliver full-strength support; we weren't as good as IBM and others
at "doing the PR".
Our technical support people saw no value in responding to site with a
whole team of people to work with the customer; they never understood
that to some extent "perception is reality" with a customer.
More damaging, the field support folks had to charge through minefields
and past machine-gun nests to get Engineering people to pay attention.
MIS lost interest.
The core problem is that we've always been an engineering company (I
speak as a former engineer). Designing products is what excites
engineers and their managers, not supporting products.
Until metrics drive proper behavior for those engineering managers, we
are trying to swim upstream while wearing concrete boots.
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2283.11 | some thoughts.. | 35261::OBLACK | Marty OBlack | Thu Dec 24 1992 11:33 | 29 |
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These notes bring some thoughts to mind. I work in Area (regional)
Support for Digital Services and support many of DEC's products.
Most employees (from engineering to the service employees) I work
with are customer focused and will help to resolve support issues
whether they are a CLD or not. Maybe I have just had a lot of
good experiences, but I don't think so. People seem to understand
that we are supporting paying customers, in most cases, and do
their best.
There are always exceptions. We support people tend to get
involved with many of the calls where the process has broken down
and miss many of the success stories that never get elevated.
We must strive for continous improvement to be competitive. I read
one estimate that the software support market will triple by 1995.
I (and my team) intend to help DEC capture as much of that market
as possible by giving customers the best support for their money,
REGARDLESS of any internal or external obstacles that we encounter.
What I want from a support vendor is the most for my dollar. It
doesn't matter if it's an appliance or an operating system; I'll
keep my business with the vendor that I perceive is giving me the
most value. My (our) customers are not different.
It's been fun reading the notes on this topic, keep 'em coming!
-marty
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