T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2908.1 | | JULIET::LEZAMA_RO | | Fri Feb 18 1994 20:07 | 10 |
| maybe that's why Digital will have a group of people in FY95 who do
nothing but sell Digital network products. They will have a sales
budget and will be responsible for all aspects of the nmetwork products
sale.
In the field, sales without a large Digital product component are now
being frowned upon. In fact, Lucente was here a few months ago and
singled out a very large sale, which the CBU claims to be a great
success, as the sort of business we should not go after, which is a lot
of third party hardware.
|
2908.2 | Are you really sure that is what he said? | CSC32::MORTON | Aliens, the snack food of CHAMPIONS! | Fri Feb 18 1994 22:24 | 8 |
| Re .1
Hmmm! Let me get this straight. We have products to sell, but since
the are not made by DIGITAL, we shouldn't sell them. We are being told
that selling products we have, that are built by another company is bad
business. I guess I really don't understand business...
Jim Morton
|
2908.3 | one stop shopping | HGOVC::DAVIDCHERSON | the door goes on the right | Sat Feb 19 1994 01:22 | 11 |
| There's an easy solution to satisfying Ed Lucente, the BOD, our
stockholders, and any other interested party:
When trying to sell consulting to customers in the U.S., they'd always
accuse us of "just trying to sell us a box". I fought this for a long
time, but I now have come back to the realization that Digital is a box
maker, and so what's bad about that? Let's just put together package
deals in which the customers not only get the box, but they get X
amount of consulting with it also. One stop shopping.
/d.c.
|
2908.4 | blame the metrics! | CSOADM::ROTH | | Sat Feb 19 1994 01:30 | 15 |
|
For years we were beat up for being ironmongers; new visionaries have
recently tried to convnce us that all iron is commodity and the that the
new paradigm is in services. When we *do* have iron that is great and
competitive, it does not fit into someones pre-concieved notion of what
customers want... if it doesn't match with our metrics, then customers
don't want/need that, right?
Meanwhile, other vendors that focus on customers rather than their own
internal metrics continue to pick us off.
'Think customer' is given lip service, 'Think metrics' is our bread and
butter.
Lee (Hi Pete!)
|
2908.5 | I dare you to come to my customer sites... | NEWVAX::MZARUDZKI | I AXPed it, and it is thinking... | Sat Feb 19 1994 07:52 | 23 |
|
Billable hours............ cannot have them without selling something
right? The metrics are on a short-term cycle, we want cash now!
>>>'Think customer' is given lip service, 'Think metrics' is our bread
>>> and butter.
Most unfortunately true, have seen it first hand. Customer has cash
laying on table, set amount, "digital I need ....", digital responds
we cannot go after that business because it does not meet our models.
Customer goes elsewhere, gets what they want, elsewhere grows business
five-fold. You figure it out. When you bringup what is happening,
everyone says we know, but we cannot do anything about it. Senior
management cannot do anything about it?
We cannot sell products or services with our metric system. It is up
to senior management to fix it. Witness other notes in this conference
about shadow certs, sales credits, shark meat.
-Later,
Mike Z.
Digital Consulting
|
2908.6 | | MR4DEC::SRINIVASAN | | Sat Feb 19 1994 22:41 | 22 |
| About 7 years ago, I used to work as a consultant in the field
organization. After spending the first week in the customer site, I
submitted the weekly report with Billable hours as 36 hrs for the week.
( I had to attend the staff meeting for the during week at my unit,
which obviously did not bill the customer. My manager called me to his
office and asked me change the Billable hours to 36 divided by 4 ( i.e
9 hours) to look good on paper. When I asked for the clarification, he
told me that it appears that one hot shot sales rep sold the consulting
services for $35 per hour as a part of major system sales. Obviously we
cannot tell this to the corporate. So for every 4 hour I spend at the
customer site as I was asked to report in paper as 1 hour ( so that the
consulting fee will appear as decent $140 per hour. This is well and
good till the review time, when the employee gets shafted for reporting
only 25% Billable hours ;-)..Being new to Digital at that time, I could
not believe, that one arm of Digital cheats the other arm of Digital..
Well ! This was a old story..
About 3 months ago I happened to meet one of the managers who has several
consultants working for him told me that such a practice still goes on
at some places. No wonder we are in such a trouble.
|
2908.7 | | HAAG::HAAG | Rode hard. Put up wet. | Sun Feb 20 1994 21:03 | 8 |
| this whole scenerio would be laughable if it's result were not so
tragic. i have said for years, sometimes in this forum, that the
metrics are absurd. i have also forwarded to senior management concrete
examples and recommendations on what I think is needed to change the
mess we are in. I'll be the first in this company to jump in here and
scream "THERE IS A GOD IN HEAVEN" when i don't have to COMPETE with the
guy sittng next to me for the next sale.
|
2908.8 | Trapped in Its Own Birth Canal | ANGLIN::ROGERS | Sometimes you just gotta play hurt | Mon Feb 21 1994 19:07 | 88 |
| Metrics are only part of the problem. The Digital Consulting (DC)
business model suffers from a major disconncect with the business model
of our traditional core business.
I think that DC cannot be successful while still tied to the rest of
us. I think that the rest of us cannot be successful while we are
still tied to DC.
I believe that DC should be cut loose, and that the traditional company
should maintain only a small core of system designers who can quickly
customize solutions based on off-the-shelf software products.
Anything complex (new inventory systems, etc.) should be referred to
consulting companies like DC, or AC, or EDS. The complex solutions and
resulting projects can support the management overhead, project
management methodology, and financial tracking/reporting procedures
used to control such efforts.
For the traditional core business, the empahasis would be on using our
middleware in combination with the software packages of others to craft
quick but workable solutions. This class of solutions leverages
product sales, and leverages account relationships. It is closer to
what we used to do.
DC metrics say nothing about leveraging the well-being of the rest of
the company. We need a support arm that does that. DC metrics say
that they will meet their utilization numbers and their budgeted profit
goals -- they don't say that they will help increase hardware or
software sales, or build Digital's credibility with the customer.
The traditional core business is based on building trust relationships
with large customers (yes, I know I am leaving out our commodity
products...those are vital to our well-being, but our core business is
built on accounts and account relationships).
Our account relationships are based on mindshare, a willingness to talk
to us, to share their problems. In doing so, the customer has an
expectation that we will try to solve his problems, or at least the
majority of them. Otherwise, he does not have time to deal with us.
DC's business model is based on picking off the good prospects: the
ones we can win, and deliver most profitably. This is a most rational
and understanable and supportable model for a pure consulting company.
They are always resource constrained (if not, they are very
unprofitable because their utilization is low and they have many
available resources). Their metrics force them to turn away from the
vast majority of the opportunities, optimizing their profits.
Yet our customer expects us to suggest solutions or propose to solve the
vast majority of the problems they bring to us, or else we are wasting
their time. Business model disconnect.
Fortunately, most of the problems they bring to us can be solved with a
minimum of customization, using mostly existing middleware and
interconnect solutions. Unfortunately, however, our attempts to do
this in the current model must undergo the same procedures, embrace the
same methodology, and support the same profit models, as the large and
complex project opportunity. Business model disconnect.
The result is often a slow response, frustrating in its ponderous
procedure-based methodology. The answer is usually no (by definition,
being resource constrained).
After one or two of those, the customer avoids asking us again. The
result is that our equipment doesn't go in, our softare isn't running,
and the account relationship is de-leveraged. The spreadsheets and
profit models of DC doesn't show those effects.
The result is a slow malaise. The fact is, almost every sale today is a
systems integration sale of one sort or another, by definition, because
it is not going onto a blank piece of paper. Every one of those
existing systems will be affected by whatever solution is picked. The
company that can solve those interoperability solutions will prosper.
Of course, the main benefit is hardware sales, and DC doesn't benefit
from downstream dollars. There's the disconnect.
There is a math theory called "global sub-optimization through local
optimization." It means that sometimes to leverage the whole, you have
to accept less in a certain area.
DC is trapped in its own birth canal. It is wants to be an "SI" company,
when our traditional core business just needs some "si." DC suffers
from the perception that it is pushing hardware, and therefore can't
succeed. The irony is that it is not leveraging the hardware much at
all, and in fact is interfering with those sales because of slow
response, overkill methodology and resulting overhead, and a disregard
for the effect their business decisions have on customer relationships.
|
2908.9 | The agony of victory | PARVAX::SCHUSTAK | Who IS John Galt!? | Tue Feb 22 1994 07:17 | 25 |
| Re .8
"The fact is, almost every sale today is a systems integration sale
of one sort or another, by definition, because it is not going onto
a blank piece of paper. Every one of those existing systems will be
affected by whatever solution is picked."
Deinately a "truism"...EVRY system sales is integrated into the clients
existing systems and the basic infrastructure. In my case, my client
has an in-house SI business entity, which then supplements SI projects
with either AC (in the US) or CAP in Europe. The SI prime then
supplements the team with technology resources from either local
body-shops or DC (in most cases...we've "primed" one or two projects).
Why are we relegated to this role (lower volumes, and typically lower
margin)? Well, either we've shown ourselves:
A) Unwilling to undertake the business (cherry picking is in -.1)
B) Not competitive in costs because our
1- risk factors have priced us out
2- we don't effectively leverage the change order process
opportunities
C) Our track record on the ones we've one is NOT good (due both to
B-2 and the good/bad aspects of overengineering an elegant
solution)
|
2908.10 | re: .8 -- nice. | BOOKS::HAMILTON | All models are false; some are useful - Dr. G. Box | Tue Feb 22 1994 11:23 | 8 |
|
re: .8
Well put! That was one of the most cogent analyses I have seen
here in a long, long time. I hope you are in a decision making
position.
Glenn
|
2908.11 | Measure the added value | CHEFS::PARRYD | Only connect | Wed Feb 23 1994 05:31 | 21 |
| Am I missing something obvious or is the answer as simple as it
appears to me? -- an internal market. The full nine yards with
separate P&L, economic (not Mickey Mouse) pricing, contracts,
invoices etc. Then the Systems and DC businesses are both free to
buy and sell where they will but will tend to resort to each other,
DC because Systems will be by far their biggest customer and Systems
because DC will be the largest source of Digital expertise available
to them. Systems and DC would also do joint planning so that they
get their volumes in synch. The DC unit would then get the added
value of their services sale and the Systems unit the _incremental_
value of their product sale. Incidentally, Systems sales would be
able to bid for the DC sales account.
Of course this would require a major change in our plan of
accounts and systems to reflect the recursive relationship,
"ProfitCentre TRADES_WITH ProfitCentre" rather than the two-level
model that bookkeepers understand: REVENUE and EXPENSES. Still, they
haven't had an original idea since double entry, about seven hundred
years ago :-)
dave_P
|
2908.12 | Recipe for chaos? | ANNECY::HOTCHKISS | | Wed Feb 23 1994 06:52 | 13 |
| re .11
You are probably right and it would work too.Eventually the
relationship would be both symbiotic and parasitic but would allow the
freedom for each to do what it is good at.The fear I have is that,once
the boys have implemented this simple idea,we would have much room for
many reorganisational tuning exercises,much room for politics and
strategy and much room for abuse.Imagine this scenario(which actually
happened at Honeywell)-your sales team can sell what they want as long
as they get money in,even if it has nothing to do with your direct
business or is in direct competition with the company product
strategy.I can easily see this as an outcome of a split.You can see it
now-Systems has just won a major outsourcing contract against strong
competition from DC,who bid with IBM and EDS.....
|
2908.13 | Turnabout is more than fair | ANGLIN::ROGERS | Sometimes you just gotta play hurt | Thu Feb 24 1994 15:09 | 30 |
| re: .12
Systems and DC might bid against each other?
That would be the natural outcome of a true spinoff. In an "arms
length" relationship, there would be internal pressures to try to bid
together.
I agree that there would be lots of politics and room for abuse.
re: .11
It would only be fair for DC to be able to solicit bids on a sales
force, if Systems was free to team up with competition. In actual
fast, today there is NO requirement TODAY that sales reps give DC first
crack at any project. There is, however, a natural inclination to do so,
given that the sales rep doesn't get credit for the SI content
otherwise (and would just get credit for hardware and maintenance).
There is also a tendency to use DC because you have a better chance of
maintaining some measure of account control (although DC is sometimes
apt to start doing things that benefit their project but poison the
long-term account relationship).
I would recommend that DC actually hire their own sales force. They
would then start to find out some of the problems involved. As it is,
they don't know how tough it is to build mindshare in an account, and
they don't have to stick around while the account is cleaned up after
they leave.
|
2908.14 | | POCUS::OHARA | Reverend Middleware | Thu Feb 24 1994 15:42 | 6 |
| Re: <<< Note 2908.13 by ANGLIN::ROGERS "Sometimes you just gotta play hurt" >>>
>> I would recommend that DC actually hire their own sales force.
They did. They're known as Customer Service Principals (CSP's).
|
2908.15 | If so, DC needs to step up the pace | ANGLIN::ROGERS | Sometimes you just gotta play hurt | Fri Feb 25 1994 18:05 | 10 |
| Don't think so. Those people are resources to the sales force, to help
guide them once an opportunity is identified. I don't yet know how
this will work, since ours has never bothered to talk to the sales
team, even by telephone.
If you think they're sales people, just ask them how many customer
calls they made this month. Then ask them who set those calls up, and
who identified the opportunity. Ask them how many executives they have
personally met, who their key contacts are, which ones they talk to on
a regular basis...
|
2908.16 | | HAAG::HAAG | Rode hard. Put up wet. | Fri Feb 25 1994 22:35 | 30 |
| Note 2908.15 ANGLIN::ROGERS
>Don't think so. Those people are resources to the sales force, to help
>guide them once an opportunity is identified. I don't yet know how
>this will work, since ours has never bothered to talk to the sales
>team, even by telephone.
so we get to the crux of the problem. for the record, i have worked
extensively in sales and delivery/sales support/EIS/DC. also for the
record, i am NOT a resource to be used and summoned at beacon call for
the sales force. i am a professional, a network consultant, that
prefers to work with other professionals for the betterment of the
company, my peers, and myself. the animosity between these
organizations is real, long standing, and MUST end. simply put, they
NEED each other. yet today they frequently don't cooperate or
compliment one another. I sugest we all decide, for survivals sake, to
strive to overcome this me-you attitude that exists between them.
>If you think they're sales people, just ask them how many customer
>calls they made this month. Then ask them who set those calls up, and
>who identified the opportunity. Ask them how many executives they have
>personally met, who their key contacts are, which ones they talk to on
>a regular basis...
as a member of DC i talk to customer DAILY. I set up calls and identify
opportunities WEEKLY. and i get asked, yes ASKED, by senior executives,
regularly, to develop strategies and present DEC products.
we're in this together. i suggest you start thinking like that or get
rid of any/all stock you may currently have.
|
2908.17 | | POCUS::OHARA | Reverend Middleware | Sat Feb 26 1994 18:11 | 18 |
| >> <<< Note 2908.15 by ANGLIN::ROGERS "Sometimes you just gotta play hurt" >>>
>> -< If so, DC needs to step up the pace >-
>> Don't think so. Those people are resources to the sales force...
I don't think you understand Brebach's long range plan. Yes, the CSP's will
work with the account managers, but don't think for a second they're a
"resource" for sales (quite the opposite, if you ask me). Sales will simply
get them up to speed in the account, and they (CSP) will drive (uncover,
propose, close and manage) all consulting efforts in their account. Sales will
get credit and will work with DC to coordinate activities relative to the
account plan, but sales will not "drive" the consulting business for very long.
Now, as far as whether the people currently named as CSP's and whether they're
capable of handling the job, you've hit upon the key to the puzzle. Many of
these folks come out of the management ranks in the old DC organization and
wouldn't know a customer if they tripped over one. I predict there will be
quite a turnover in the CSP ranks in the next 12-24 months.
|
2908.18 | The insanity continues. | GLDOA::TREMBATH | | Fri Apr 22 1994 18:52 | 32 |
| Just though I'd finish off the note...
Well, the project DID close. I wasn't for $180K, it was for $230K !
So you think DEC management would say "Great job Pete ( and Don
and Bill ) "
Nope.
I though I'd do the right thing by letting the organization that was
CREATED for such things ( namely NETexpress ) deliver the project instead
of doing it myself so I could have time to chase the next VA job in the
pipe ( which has a potential of $1M to $2M dollars ). I turned the job
over to the NetExpress people to order, ship and track the parts.
My manager called me in today to basically threaten/warn me ( and my
counterpart ) that if we didn't get my BILLABLE UTILIZATION up to a
higher level it was very likely that I might become a TSFO victim.
He suggested strongly that I take a 911 call in California for 5 months.
This was done in the presence of my counterpart in the group ( who is
married ). My manager didn't even copy my counterpart on the 911 call
because he knew that this individual is unwilling to work away from home.
This is exactly what he said.
Gee, lets' have some JUSTIC along with our poor management. I'm gonna
be the one that get's TSFOe'd because I'm single and should be willing
to put MY life on hold for 5 months because the married guy isn't really
expected to take out-of-town assignments in order to keep HIS billable
utilization up !
Pete
|
2908.19 | Its not just the single ones being asked... | DECWET::FARLEE | Insufficient Virtual...um...er... | Fri Apr 22 1994 20:57 | 13 |
| Ummm,
I know a LOT of married folks in DC who have been given basically no
choice about jumping on planes and spending long streaches
(3-9 months) accross country from their families.
This is not new. Its been going on for a couple years at least. If
you're just now being hit with it, you've been lucky.
I am not saying that its a great way to live. It sucks. But then, that's one
of the reasons I bailed out of the field.
I have a friend up here who'd probably trade his stint in Alaska for yours in
California...
|
2908.20 | | GLDOA::TREMBATH | | Tue Apr 26 1994 20:05 | 12 |
| My only complaint is ... " fair is fair " ...
If I ( the single person ) is being asked to accept long term away from
home assignments then my married counterpart here should be asked to do the
same.
It's really a local issue :^{
I agree. I'm seeing LOTs of people ( married and otherwise ) who are
being asked (or forced) to spend HUGE amounts away from home.
Pete
|