T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
2447.1 | Think channels | KCBBQ::DUNCAN | | Mon Apr 05 1993 23:57 | 6 |
| Thinking about the Fortune XXX may not get you all of Digital's large
customers. For example, Pioneer and Avent are VERY large distributors
of Digital products (very large = >$50m/year). In the market I know
(healthcare), Digital's top 3 CSOs probably generate more than $100m
per year. Both the distributors and CSO represent the kind of "yields"
I believe the Company wants, FYI.
|
2447.2 | No! That's secret!! | 42702::WELSH | Think it through | Tue Apr 06 1993 07:27 | 20 |
| No doubt that information is confidential. As if the competition
couldn't find out! The only effect is to blindfold Digital
employees who may not realize that the guy who just rang with
an awkward request at 5 o'clock on Friday represents Digital's
third biggest customer...
Where I sit, it sometimes seems that the names of account
managers are confidential. A few years ago, in a sporadic and
not-to-be-repeated attempt to work more efficiently, I tracked
down a "Strategic Accounts Group" in Digital UK, and had the
temerity to write and request a list of the accounts and the
associated account teams. In reply I received a sharp note
suggsting that if my manager's manager were to request the
list, he might be allowed a copy provided it were to be kept
under lock and key.
Otherwise, no doubt, they might have run the risk of being
pestered by people wanting to buy stuff.
/Tom
|
2447.3 | Keep our secrets secret! | GVAADG::PERINO | A bit of serendipity | Tue Apr 06 1993 10:13 | 30 |
| As you Tom I really do not understand this politic of secret.
I bring two more stories to illustrate:
Recently a friend of mine working in a small software company
had to do a study for a large customer including a hardware
configuration. He told me that he will go for a VAX and many
PCs from Compac. Of course I draw his attention on the fact that we
were also competitive on PCs, so he asked his Digital salesman
who, of course, was more than pleased to show that we can do a good
offer.
Two days later he realised that to study the different hardware
combinations he needed a complete price-list, so he phoned his DEC
salesman who was in vacation. Guess what? He had to wait the man's
return to get the *confidential* list of price. By chance this guy
still has the good old DEC's technical expertise in mind otherwise
Compac would have one new client.
Less recently another friend of mine in another software house (yes,
I maintain my network, just in case) asked me for a list of Digital's
clients for a mailing to sell their expertise on our systems. I told
him to follow the official way. He answered: I already tried without
success!
It seems that we have not recovered from the days customers were
queueing for our machines. A question comes to mind "Is somebody
managing this confidentiality?" or "is it a sort of self-censorship
that nobody knows why it is going on?"
Jo�l
|
2447.4 | | XLIB::SCHAFER | Mark Schafer, ISV Tech. Support | Tue Apr 06 1993 10:53 | 5 |
| A "friend" asking you for a list of Digital's clients is no friend at
all. Please do not give out this information, if you have access to
it.
Mark
|
2447.5 | Any more question? | GVAADG::PERINO | A bit of serendipity | Tue Apr 06 1993 12:20 | 16 |
| Mark,
Are you serious? My friends can ask me any question they want. In
fact anybody can ask me any question. In French we say "there is
no indescreet question there are only indiscreet answers." You can
count on me to manage the discretion of my answer in this case and
in others.
Instead of giving me a lesson of professional behaviour can you
answer why our list of clients is secret for a partner who want
to sell his/her solution on OUR machine? Business is always based
on confidence and as Tom said all our competitors know our list of
clients as we know theirs (at least I hope we are enough market and
customer driven that we know who is buying from who and possibly why).
Jo�l
|
2447.6 | Who are they? | XLIB::SCHAFER | Mark Schafer, ISV Tech. Support | Tue Apr 06 1993 15:33 | 15 |
| Well, there's "lead generation", just for starters. We would lose the
ability to approach a customer and say, "Hey, our new Storage product
will go REAL GOOD with that 3rd party software you just bought."
Then there's cooperative marketing campaigns, like featuring 3rd party
software products in our catalogs (which go to all our customers).
Does your friend's company have a real relationship with Digital? If
not, I'd like to help establish one. Give me a call or send me some
mail and let me know about them.
Mark
Independent Software Vendors Group
297-3524
|
2447.7 | | RELYON::MITTAL | | Wed Apr 07 1993 11:14 | 24 |
|
This has been an interesting discussion ! I know a couple of people
who work for/with companies that write software on Digital platforms.
One of them is based outside the US. And they know more about Digital
products and Digital customers than I can ever hope to know. In fact,
whenever I have met them, they have given me information which I
wouldn't have received otherwise. They work with Digital customers of
all sizes to write specialized applications for them.
Mark, is it a good idea for Digital to have a formal relationship
with them ? I can try and get them to contact you, although I am sure
that they must have tried to do that to begin with.
Re. the base note about the large Digital customers: I still don't
see why that would be a secret ... CNN/NBR/local-media have
talked about the $27M order from Goodyear tires recently; the $125M
contract with Hughes aircraft and so on. I would think that Digital
would use these large customer names to get other large customers.
And they have done exactly that in the "Digital has it now" ad-
campaign.
Nitin.
|
2447.8 | | STAR::ABBASI | i know what iam talking about | Wed Apr 07 1993 12:27 | 32 |
| when i worked for EDS at the GM account before becoming a DECeee, we
were a big customer to DEC, iam sure EDS is still is, at GM plants
VAXes we very important link in the overall plant operation, most of
the plants architectures sort of looked like this, computer wise:
IBM main frame <----- vehicle data, orders etc..
+ ^
| |
V |
Vax'es
+ ^
| |
v |
Cell controllers (mostly HP), Numerical controllers, etc..
+ ^
| |
v |
Robot controllers, Automated Guided Vehicles
(AGV's etc..)
dont know how big money wise all of this was, but VAX'es were used
heavily in EDS/GM accounts, DEC workstations also for CAD work etc..
also when working on Boeing account, there was some VAX'es, there
was a big DEC project 'SMARTS' in seattle where DEC equipment were
involved, but Boeing is mostly IBM shop. GM uses more DEC hardware
(lots of PDP's too!) than Boeing i think.
\bye
\nasser
|
2447.9 | | XLIB::SCHAFER | Mark Schafer, ISV Tech. Support | Wed Apr 07 1993 12:30 | 8 |
| I'm sure that the press releases that you are referring to were agreed
upon by both Digital and the customer.
Please send me the names and addresses of the software vendors. I'll
try to have someone from their country contact them (if they aren't
already).
Mark
|
2447.10 | | POCUS::CUFF | | Wed Apr 07 1993 13:19 | 22 |
| re: .0, for a different outlook on your request:
Some large customers, like the one I support, wish to have their
name and application kept confidential so their competitors do not
learn anything through the vendor. In fact, there is a current
legal non-disclosure between Digital and this company. As part of
the team, I'm the "messenger" of this agreement to all in DEC.
I have gotten reamed by senior customer management more often than
I care to mention when someone in Digital sent mail about my
customer's application internally, that mail got sent/forwarded and
someone in the chain gave it to their customer, who then called
a friend back at my customer saying "DEC told me you're......" and
in fact, has faxxed a copy of the DEC mail to prove it. Never
mind the legal implications, clearly confidentiality didn't happen.
Consequently the team here won't support anything publicizing the
customer's use of DEC product as we don't know how/where the info
will be used.
Know I'm going on and on, but we'd rather be safe than sorry.
|
2447.11 | tough group to belong to | GENRAL::CRANE | Barbara Crane --- dtn 522-2299 | Mon Apr 19 1993 14:10 | 11 |
| Another interesting perspective:
If most of our business comes from the Fortune 500, then
we are in a world of hurt.
FORTUNE magazine observed that several years ago, the net
profit of the entire 500 was ~$15 billion. THIS YEAR, the TOTAL
NET profit of the 500 is ~$10 million. A lot is due to accounting
changes, but still!!! (I am doing the numbers from memory, but yes,
the three orders of magnitude reduction is correct)
|
2447.12 | | MSBCS::BROWN_L | | Tue Apr 20 1993 12:51 | 8 |
| Not a terribly relevant comparison, as you eluded to.
This recent change in the accounting of retirees medical benefits has
caused massive "paper" losses (witness Chrysler's $400m loss last
week, really a gain if that was taken out). The majority of these
writeoffs have occured at some point over the last year (DEC, IBM,
etc). Since Fortune 500 companies tend to be the older established
companies, this accounting change has had a huge impact on posted
profits.
|