Title: | The Digital way of working |
Moderator: | QUARK::LIONEL ON |
Created: | Fri Feb 14 1986 |
Last Modified: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
Number of topics: | 5321 |
Total number of notes: | 139771 |
"TURNAROUND HOPES FUEL DIGITAL STOCK" By John Schneidawind USA TODAY After only five months as chief executive, Digital Equipment's Bob Palmer is writing the book on how to turn around bloated, confused computer giants: Turn them into lean, mean chipmaking machines. There's some hyperbole in that sentence. But the Palmer recipe for Digital Equipment's recovery rests squarely on his processor that will serve as the foundation for Digital's computer line this decade. Palmer is carefully scripting how that recipe is circulated. Until recently, he'd only granted interviews to obscure computer trade publications. Wednesday, he phoned and visited with several Wall Street analysts to shed light on Digital's plans. Now those same analysts - many of them burned by sticking with Digital too long when its stock was falling from a peak of $199 1/2 in 1987 - are beginning to write decent reviews. Digital closed Thursday at $48 1/4, up 1 3/8 and almost 60% since its low in late December. The stock has quietly attracted a lot of investors. Here's why: > New management. Palmer's first moves were to clean house. By naming a new management team. Palmer impressed Wall Street because it showed he was serious about changing Digital's corporate culture, which had been dominated for more than 30 years by aging founder Ken Olsen. > Cost Cuts. The USA's second-largest computer maker has chopped its payroll almost 20% since 1989. Palmer is telling analysts he might chop another 17% the next year or two, bringing Digital's total employment worldwide down to 85,000 to 90,000 people. He's spent only $500 million of about $1.5 billion set aside last fiscal year to cover severance payments. > Revamping products. Slowly, Palmer is shifting Digital's midrange VAX computers to its Alpha chip, a microprocessor that's based on reduced-instruction-set computing, a superfast technology that's responsible for the boom in computer workstations. Computers based on RISC technology also can run more that just one computer maker's software - making them more flexible than old Digital systems. "I think the recovery is just starting," says Shao Wang of Smith Barney, one of several analysts who spoke to Palmer. "There's every indication to date that it's moving along very well. I've had it as a speculative buy for the past three months." Could the same sort of turnaround happen at IBM, once that computer giant names a CEO to take over from John Akers? Possibly. But it would take much longer than it did at Digital, says Wang. Palmer must feel pretty good after only five months on the job, notes Wang, who expects Digital to post break-even results in its fiscal third quarter, which ends in March. But such fast turnarounds are "the exception, not the rule, in the computer business."
T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2399.1 | THEBAY::CHABANED | SBS is a crime against mankind | Tue Mar 02 1993 14:38 | 7 | |
Re: Break-even GOD I HOPE SO! -Ed | |||||
2399.2 | MIMS::PARISE_M | Southern, but no comfort | Tue Mar 02 1993 17:01 | 7 | |
>> "TURNAROUND HOPES FUEL DIGITAL STOCK" Your mileage may vary. The market's up...and we're down.......terriffic! :-( | |||||
2399.3 | SNOC01::NICHOLLS | Problem? ring 1-800-382-5968 | Tue Mar 02 1993 17:55 | 3 | |
> Turn them into lean, mean chipmaking machines. What sort? Silicon, potato (maybe with an e?), cow .... | |||||
2399.4 | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney in New York | Wed Mar 03 1993 08:24 | 9 | |
Notice that the title was "turnaround hopes fuel Digital stock". There's little evidence in that article that the attitudes and behavior of customers, suppliers, and employees are going to turnaround soon as well. It may be the case here, as in other turnarounds in business, that under stress, the interests of shareholders, customers, suppliers, and employees are are aligned. | |||||
2399.5 | ECADSR::SHERMAN | Steve ECADSR::Sherman DTN 223-3326 MLO5-2/26a | Wed Mar 03 1993 11:30 | 3 | |
Well, *I* certainly feel a lot leaner and meaner of late ... ;^) Steve | |||||
2399.6 | I know why... | STAR::DIPIRRO | Thu Mar 04 1993 09:23 | 3 | |
That's because with Digital nibbling away at your paycheck and with Democrats in office, you can't afford to eat anymore. We'll all be lean and hungry soon, and when I'm hungry, I'm mean too. | |||||
2399.7 | about hunger and mean and stress and related | STAR::ABBASI | i think iam psychic | Thu Mar 04 1993 11:11 | 23 |
.6 >That's because with Digital nibbling away at your paycheck and with >Democrats in office, you can't afford to eat anymore. We'll all be >lean and hungry soon, and when I'm hungry, I'm mean too. i think i saw an ad for some Burger place having a special going on , like all the burgers you can eat for only $1.99 . so no excuse for any one getting hungry around here even with a very small salary. about the mean thing, did you try some of my office-based exercises for stress relieve? i designed these exercise specially to help cope with the same office stress and its related issues that you alluding to, i think i posted them somewhere in this note file sometime ago. i hope they help. \bye \nasser |