T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2558.1 | my $.02 | GLDOA::KATZ | Follow your conscience | Tue Jun 29 1993 09:19 | 22 |
| I think the whole point of the CBUs is that if they are not
profitable they can be let go with one cut, and if they are
we could sell them...
Here in Michigan one of the best technical salespersons and
the only Network sales person just lost his job. Fortunately
he got picked up but he is now leaving the state. Our loss
another districts gain. Who is going to sell network consulting? Our
salespeople are good at giving quotes and many other functions but do
you/they want them quoting a multi-county wan? Its a sure loss leader.
I keep hearing we are serious about UNIX. How many UNIX partners
got hit this last time around? The numbers are outrageous. So
perhaps we should quit the workstation market too. That leaves
VMS, NT, network hardware and PCs. Oh yes NT runs on everyone's paltform.
Our margins on PCs are not that great, notice the telemarketing campaigns?
I believe that salespeople no longer get credit for PC sales. Last
but not least remember when we were a networking company? Well
today we sell everyones products but our own, Cisco, Wellfleet,
Cabletron etc etc. and to make matters worse our channels partners
sell these products for less then we do.
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2558.2 | One answer | ANNECY::HOTCHKISS | | Tue Jun 29 1993 09:35 | 22 |
| Patrick,
I enter another category-your optimistic view but split-call it
the SPLIT digital.I agree with the optimism scenario but it won't be
October-we will pass through another Digital short term and we won't
reach the optimism scenario until the CBUs realise that just being
tough mouthed is not enough.You can be as tough as you like but with no
value added,customers won't buy and right now the lack of investment in
Digital owned intellectual property which can be specifically applied
to a vertical(ie CBU)market means that a)we don't know better than our
partners and that b)we are a number of dollars and months from changing
the situation.
So,this means that the CBUs have three choices:-
a)Return to profitable growth but reduce direct sales and
essentially become partner managers in a smaller company
b)Don't return to profitable growth and wait for the next
reorganisation
c)Accept a holding period of less than acceptable profitability
and rebuild the industry profiles such that we have the real inside
track on certain industries and not others.
I favor scenario c) but would not be surprised if b) was the outcome.
There again,I am guilty of listening to customers....
|
2558.3 | my take on these | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Tue Jun 29 1993 09:41 | 38 |
| Those do look like the options. I'm not sure which is the most likely
one to come to pass. I'd have to wait and see what FY94 brings. I don't
see the optimist(1) or the acquisition(4) scenario being very likely
though. Acquisition is unlikely because by the time Digital gets to
that size all that's left would be maintaining existing customers.
That's a losing deal and few would see that as attractive. It's easier
in many ways to start a new computer company than fix an old one.
I'm not optimistic about (1) for the simple reason that I believe
Digital has too many poor senior and middle managers to make that
happen. Now it's been my pleasure to work with some really great
managers at Digital but there are too many who are really bad for
good balance. Also our infrastructure is in sad shape. It's still way
too hard to take an order from the customer handing a PO to customer
paying the bill. I don't see any indication that there is either the
will to commit the resources to fix that or a real understanding of
how bad things are.
For these systemic reasons I believe that the "right size = small
size"(2) is more likely than the optimistic scenario. We can build
product, though quality is not yet what I'd like it's improved. We do
not seem to do labor and talent intensive work as well as we need to
to make money in systems integration. We have had some successes but
I fear that we don't have what it takes to make those successes often
enough and with good enough margins.
For "Boutique"(3) to happen we'd have to become more modest and stop
thinking of ourselves as a serious computer company. This plan could
work but I don't really believe anyone is seriously interested in
planning for this to happen. So it will not.
Extinction is a real possibility. Our installed base means that this is
unlikely in the short term (5-10) years but 20 years from now it could
happen. If it does it will be because we fail to innovate in new
technology, fail to really try to learn how to satisfy customers and
that we collapse under the weight of our own bureaucracy.
Alfred
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2558.4 | To little (nothing) to late..!!! | BSS::GROVER | The CIRCUIT_MAN | Tue Jun 29 1993 09:41 | 35 |
| IF (such a big word, for only two letters).., Digital is to survive,
Digital MUST get started on advertising on national networks.
Digital has been doing NETsupport and outsourcing support longer than
most competitors. However, I have seen IBMs' advertising for
outsourcing on the networks. It is a classy advert, very tasteful. They
weren't the first to start outsourcing, BUT the public is going to
think so, because IBM is the only/first one to advertise the
product/service.... There are wouldbe customers out there. There are
company executives drinking coffee, watching these commurcials and
thinking about outsourcing.....
BUT.... are they thinking of Digital when it comes to this service.
NO..... they only think of IBM....!!
So, if Digital wants to survive, Digital MUST get some advertising out
there NOW!!!!!!!! As it is, Digital will be thought of as a copy cat
to IBM for any outsourcing/NETsupport type adverts.... BUT Digital MUST
get some advertising...
My Sinario for Digitals' future....! I truly beleave Digital has NO
future... SORRY folks, BUT this company isn't moving quick enough. This
company spends to much time thinking about what they want and not
enought time doing it....
If we have a product people/companys want then get something out there
where people can see what it is Digital does.... Why we exist and why
they can not do without Digital Equipment Corporation..
My opinion!!
Bob G.
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2558.5 | | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | You are what you retrieve | Tue Jun 29 1993 09:43 | 22 |
| I didn't coin the phrase but it captures some of the sense of .0 and
.1, there's a "dino-DEC" or, "dino-Digital" if you prefer.
The holdover from the 1980's that represents the idea that a "full
line" computer company of which IBM and Digital are really the only
examples were a good model for a these companies to use and furthermore
a good model for customers to adopt as a "business partner".
The early 90's reflected two forces:
(1) The realization that commoditization made things inexpensive and a
"business partner" wasn't needed if the technologies got simpler.
Complexity, proprietary technology, and high margins had been Digital's
friend for a long time.
(2) Digital's and IBM's own reluctance to change with the times and
hope the old model of doing business could sustain profit a bit longer.
The uncomfortable truth with "value Digital" looking at the rest of
Digital as their customers would is that they don't like what they see
and would prefer dealing with third parties that are more focused,
responsive, etc.
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2558.6 | | GRANMA::MWANNEMACHER | Being a Daddy=The best job | Tue Jun 29 1993 10:03 | 12 |
|
Digital will become much smaller I fear and the reason is that we are
looking to installed base to get us out of our quandry. I was in a
meeting recently where we were discussing how long we should let
percall item remain in the services database. They want them to be
left in for about 1 year to 1 1/2 years otherwise how are the service
sales folks going to get their leads........
Mike
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2558.7 | Quality implements strategy successfully | YUPPY::MOYES | Working in Finance <> Making Money | Tue Jun 29 1993 10:34 | 13 |
| May I venture that you have looked at the wrong dimension? I believe
that any of the scenarios you have sketched out can happen and that
"success" is not down to which way we go.
The clue comes in a previous reply - we are a company of good people
and bad people and, until we weed out the bad instead of weeding out
whole groups I doubt we can make a success of anything.
The process which converts us from what we are into what we need to
be is more about QUALITY than STRATEGY. When I see real passion for
quality then I will keep my ESPP stock instead of selling it every
6 months. This passion has to come from the top. Eat your heart out
Tom Peters, Martin has spoken !!!!
|
2558.8 | Possibly one more | KYOA::BOYLE | Dirty Jobs Done Dirt Cheap | Tue Jun 29 1993 11:04 | 14 |
| Possibly 6:
Digital spins off all commodity businesses. Uses proceeds from equity
sales to create a super-value Consulting practice and chip facilities.
Although not convinced about Alpha, many major vendors use Digital
facilities to produce super fast versions of their chip designs.
Isn't this the longer term view from the top? Let us see what has
value by letting it prove profitable by itself. Then, let us figure
out what the market will pay for it. We are far from being a growth
company. We should consider what pieces are growth businesses and
spin them off.
Jack Boyle
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2558.9 | Back to the hardware | COUNT0::WELSH | Yippee! I got the package!! | Tue Jun 29 1993 11:04 | 46 |
| Hardware is looking quite good with Alpha hitting the streets in
quantity. But even that is not enough: it looks good from a
distance but ask for details...
- OpenVMS is on a long slow decline. Basically, OpenVMS is past
its peak. Few new customers will adopt it. It is a cash cow.
- OSF/1 is a great Unix technically, but it will take a big
marketing effort to get on a par with Sun or HP. How many
customers will go with Sun, HP, or else specify System V,
and will COSE grow to dominate the Unix world?
- Windows NT is neat, it was developed by Cutler (whom we used
to hate when he was here), it is VMS + 1, etc. Fact is
however NT is never likely to be more than a stopgap for
Microsoft. They will drive DOS and Windows to become Chicago
for the mass market, and long before NT reaches a similar
volume, Cairo will land on top of it. Also, of course,
now there is NeXTStep, which looks rather like Cairo already.
Also, operating systems are EXPENSIVE to maintain. David Stone
told us about a year ago that he foresaw that very soon there
would only be 3 or 4 companies developing their own Unix.
Software is being strongly de-emphasized from all I can see. What
software we have is reverting to the old function of leveraging
hardware - in common parlance, forcing customers to buy our computers
in order to enjoy the unique advantages of our software. Put that way,
of course, it immediately sounds laughable.
And Services. Ah yes. At least three quarters of the service revenue
is annuity revenue stemming from product sales. As the OpenVMS
business gradually shrinks, together with most of our layered
software, this annuity revenue will also shrink. It will shrink
more slowly than annual product revenue, causing the managers whose
idea of "long term" is two quarters to go into raptures about how
Services will save the company. The other quarter includes all sorts
of stuff, among others our much boasted "Systems Integration",
"Business Consultancy", etc. But since we are best at integrating
"other" systems such as Unix and PCs with our own beloved OpenVMS,
there will be fewer and fewer opportunities.
Verdict: I plump for scenario (2), but with 25,000 employees
instead of 60,000. Move over, Intel and Motorola.
/Tom
|
2558.10 | | MIMS::PARISE_M | Contemplating mid-life cruises... | Tue Jun 29 1993 11:28 | 7 |
|
6) Pessimism
Digital has grown up...and still does not know what it wants to be.
That fact virtually guarantees mediocrity.
|
2558.11 | It isn't that difficult | PIKOFF::DERISE | I'm goin' to Disney Land! | Tue Jun 29 1993 12:00 | 55 |
| Everything is a function of time, and the big question is how much time
does Digital have? How long will the company's existing resources be
able to sustain the current organization? Will the organization be
able to sustain itself, while finding new areas of growth to exploit?
In order to find new areas of growth, the company has to do a number of
things, all of which have been discussed numerous times:
- truly become customer focused
- re-engineer the way we do business, making it easy for other
organizations to do business with Digital
- streamline our product lines, and focus on producing leading edge
products and technologies in our "core competencies"
- improve our time to market for products so that we are either first
or second to introduce a new product (as opposed to 4 years behind
the competition on some things)
- improve our time to profitability by adopting leading edge process
and mfr'ing technologies.
- streamline the field organization to give local managers more
decision making authority and flexibility, especially in the area
of consulting services.
The question, again, is how much time does Digital have to adopt these
changes - what is the window of opportunity?
It seems to me that Palmer and his CBU managers understand this.
Unfortunately, there is an entire layer between them and the people at
the bottom that just don't get it. They are trying to preserve a
management model and, more importantly, a culture that is completely
unrealistic in today's market.
There is evidence to support this:
- a number of products that customers are interested in and would give
us some advantage have been delayed due to engineering budget cut-
backs. Instead of getting rid of organizational inefficiencies, they
cut product development budgets!
- instead of reducing inefficiencies in the field organization, they
reduce headcount in the field, disabling our ability to sell and
deliver products and services
- I see no evidence whatsoever of us becoming customer focused; Palmer
talks to a lot of customers, but where is that being translated into
real product and services development?
- I don't see any evidence of improved ways of doing business with
Digital. Product and pricing catalogs are still bloated and
confusing, for example.
- Advertising; the one subject people in Digital seem to love to hate.
It is discussed more frequently in more quarters, yet we do precious
little. Ed Lucente is supposed to have a strong sales and marketing
background, I hope he changes this.
So, how much time do we have? How long, given the ingrained culture,
will it realistically take to fix these problems? How many of these
problems we solve, before that window closes, will determine what Digital
will look like afterwards.
|
2558.12 | Split it Down the Middle | KAOU30::JAMES | It's the MANAGEMENT stupid!!! | Tue Jun 29 1993 16:57 | 39 |
| Yup. There's a scenario missing. It's called partition - sort of like
spinoff only bigtime. The commodities and the value-added pieces have
to be separated and made independently accountable, to succeed.
You could apply the other five scenarios to each independently.
Actually, this fixes a bunch of problems dicussed in other threads of
this notes file.
Let's call the commodities company DEC (equipment you know)
and call the value-added company Digital Solutions (people can't make a
nasty three-letter acronym). This would seem to me to retain any
brand identity we already have and free the middle-management quagmire
to start creating perceived value in the new brand.
I suspect that our difficulty with perceived "openness" in the
marketplace has to do with trying to be all things to all people.
Would Microsoft be perceived as open if they acquired Intel???
If we separate applications software from hardware it would help.
I doubt if this one company can ever get focused on TWO business models
that are completely different - commodity and value. The legacy of the
70's and 80's full-service company, with all the internal
cross-subsidies and leveraging is just too great. I work in a solution
integration group in the field, where we constantly have to fight off
management who is delerious about Alpha technology. Our success
depends on delivering "solutions" on whatever hardware, but management
wants to slip-stream on the success of Alpha (we hope).
The messages I'm getting from above (Palmer) indicate that we have a
reasonable chance to get focus on the commodities business. As for the
CBU's and Systems Integration in general, in spite of assurances that
this is important to Digital, the messages are content free, to date.
If we cut this business loose, it will have the focus to sink or swim
on its own.
Let's SECEDE in 93.
al
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2558.13 | Bang on | ANNECY::HOTCHKISS | | Wed Jun 30 1993 04:26 | 3 |
| Right on the mark Al.
A simple but brilliant analysis-I hope they promote you.
Cheers
|
2558.14 | Too mean and petty? | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | You are what you retrieve | Wed Jul 21 1993 21:59 | 6 |
| I was talking with someone with an unusual perspective on Digital, the
ex-wife of an ex-employee.
She said Digital became such a mean and petty place that even the
people who are left don't like working there. I'm wondering if this
attitude flows over to being apparent to our customers.
|
2558.15 | Yup, they know..! | BSS::GROVER | The CIRCUIT_MAN | Thu Jul 22 1993 12:36 | 11 |
| I know for a fact that the customers' I deal with are aware of the
attitude.... They ask me at least once per week... "how'ya hold'in up"
"things goin' ok for ya'"....
Putting on the good face for the customer, nothing but positive
feedback, back to them... (of course)...
They know..., boy do they know..!!!
Bob G.
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2558.16 | mother DEC already took one shot at me -- and missed | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (381-0899 ZKO2-2/T63) | Thu Jul 22 1993 14:36 | 11 |
| re Note 2558.14 by SDSVAX::SWEENEY:
> She said Digital became such a mean and petty place that even the
> people who are left don't like working there. I'm wondering if this
> attitude flows over to being apparent to our customers.
Well, Digital did attempt to fire me (TFSO) last month!
It's hard to completely forget.
Bob
|
2558.17 | | HAAG::HAAG | Rode hard. Put up wet. | Thu Jul 22 1993 21:21 | 12 |
| Note 2558.14 by SDSVAX::SWEENEY
>She said Digital became such a mean and petty place that even the
>people who are left don't like working there. I'm wondering if this
>attitude flows over to being apparent to our customers.
really pat? perhaps i should forward you (maybe BP might be more
appropriate - that's given me an idea) the email and voice mail i've
been fed as a regular dose for a long time now. many customers are
plainly worried about us. an increasing number are flat pissed at us.
we've got to get the internal turmoil under control. and damn quick.
|
2558.18 | | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | You are what you retrieve | Fri Jul 23 1993 10:25 | 13 |
| I'd expect customers who have a stake in us to be worried. Their
success as an enterprise and personally as well depends on Digital's
ability to return to profitable growth.
Potential customers without a stake on the other hand, are going to sit
on the sidelines and demand proof that Alpha is "real" which accepting
every vaporous statement made about Viking, PowerPC's, and other future
processor technologies. And they keep demanding more "proof".
Digital's credibility is one thing. My acquaintance was talking about
a lack of interest, a lack of courtesy, etc. by employees towards
customers. Not the product stuff but purely human behaviors that make
one want to do business with any other company than Digital.
|
2558.19 | | GSFSYS::MACDONALD | | Fri Jul 23 1993 10:48 | 27 |
|
Re: .18
> Digital's credibility is one thing. My acquaintance was talking about
> a lack of interest, a lack of courtesy, etc. by employees towards
> customers. Not the product stuff but purely human behaviors that make
> one want to do business with any other company than Digital.
People will *NOT* do business with a company when they feel unvalued
or unappreciated. It doesn't take a Harvard MBA to figure this out.
There used to be a poster from 10 years ago or more that showed the
results of a Digital study about customers. The most frequently
mentioned reason, by nearly 2 to 1 over all others, for changing
vendors is when people feel mistreated in one way or another.
Think about it, folks. Do you go back to a place where you feel
they've been rude to you? Do you spend your money in places where
you're left feeling that they're doing you a favor by taking your
money? I sure don't. I go out of my way not to do business in places
that don't treat me well and most studies show that I'm the norm.
If we are not respecting and valuing our customers as people then we
may as well shut the doors now and end the charade.
Steve
|