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 |
Today's Wall Street Journal front page article declares that Digital's sales force is "the worst in the world". The article states: Long paid on a salary basis without commissions, Digital's sales force attracted "the opposite of the kind of person drawn to sales across the rest of the computer industry - it wasn't a risk-taking culture," says Jack Falvey, a management consultant. Comments.
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3026.1 | it's the process not the people who are to blame | CVG::THOMPSON | An AlphaGeneration Noter | Tue Apr 26 1994 14:49 | 10 |
I've worked with Digital sales people and with sales people at other companies. They are different. I've worked with some really good sales people at Digital so I wouldn't say that we attract only bad ones. Just different types. On the other hand the processes which our salespeople have to work with are without a doubt a serious block to their success. That in my opinion is why our sales force looks and performs so poorly. Alfred | |||||
3026.2 | WSJ Article | MIMS::SANDERS_J | Tue Apr 26 1994 15:06 | 239 | |
-< Wall Street Journal article ( posted without permission) >- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Striving to Adapt: At Digital Equipment, A Resignation Reveals Key Problem: Selling; Moving Goods but Making Scant Profit, Firm Ousts Head of Its Sales Force; Board Puts Pressure on CEO By John R. Wilke Staff Reporter of The Wall Street Journal Just last month, Digital Equipment Corp.'s chief executive officer, Robert B. Palmer, had reason to believe the loss-plagued computer maker was turning around: Reports from the sales force indicated revenue was holding up and new products were taking off. But Mr. Palmer was jolted by a rude surprise. While product sales weren't bad in the company's fiscal third quarter, service revenue was off sharply, sales costs were rising and rampant discounting was swallowing any possible profit. The resulting $183 million loss led to a run on Digital's stock, lower credit ratings and new worries about the future of a company once regarded as among the best in the business because of its well-engineered machines. In the wake of the poor results, the board of directors is giving the 53-year-old Mr. Palmer one more quarter to show new progress toward a turnaround, company insiders say. At a board meeting last week, it also agreed with Mr. Palmer -- who inherited a company burdened by the excess of its huge successes throughout the 1980s -- that the company's No. 2 executive, sales and marketing chief Edward E. Lucente, had to go. Mr. Lucente resigned yesterday, effective immediately. Digital named Enrico Pesatori, head of its fast-growing personal-computer unit, to succeed him. Mr. Lucente, 54, regarded by some as a possible successor to Mr. Palmer, is apparently being held accountable for not cutting expenses deeply enough and losing control of a huge and expensive push to close business at the end of the latest quarter. Both Mr. Lucente and Mr. Palmer declined comment. Indeed, selling strategy is a central challenge for Digital. The company faces problems that have long proved intractable with its sales force, which Mr. Lucente, once one of International Business Machines Corp.'s star sales executives, couldn't get into shape. Years of neglect by top management formed the sales force into "the worst in the world" in individual productivity, Mr. Palmer said shortly after taking the CEO job 18 months ago. Long paid on a salary basis without commissions, Digital's sales force attracted "the opposite of the kind of person drawn to sales across the rest of the computer industry -- it wasn't a risk-taking culture," says Jack Falvey, a management consultant. And at about 20,000 strong, the sales force now accounts for almost a fifth of Digital's work force of 92,000, down from a 1989 peak of 126,000. But it is certain to shrink. The board also backed an accelerated cost-cutting plan likely to slash the work force by an additional 20,000 people in the next two years, which will prompt another charge against earnings, people close to the company say. But Mr. Lucente's departure could also add to turmoil in the senior ranks, which have already been reorganized repeatedly. In a year on the job, Mr. Lucente rapidly consolidated power, touching every aspect of the company's operations and filling essential posts with loyalists. "Everything that wasn't nailed down, he owned," a sales executive says. Another says that Digital management "is going to discover Lucente's people are now running most of the company." Mr. Lucente's ouster, according to people familiar with the board's deliberations, was also a rejection of an abrasive and autocratic management style. "People were afraid to tell him the bad news," despite worsening conditions in the field, says one person. Digital has lost more than $3 billion in the past three years in its so-far unsuccessful struggle to adapt to a changing market. More computer buyers want smaller machines that run on standard software, not the proprietary VAX systems that have been Digital's mainstay. Annual revenue is stagnant at about $14 billion. Digital has products that address the new needs, including personal computers, and a speedy new microchip, the Alpha. But companies like Digital that are shifting to standard, low-margin products also need different distribution channels, such as retail stores and direct-mail sales. Mr. Palmer's problem is that Digital doesn't have a large number of those channels open. Without them, he still must rely on the sales force. After last quarter's disastrous results, Mr. Palmer said Digital had too many salespeople -- but added that the company can't cut them without forfeiting revenue. For a long while, Digital's products were the hottest alternative to mainframe computers, and because they were cheaper, they almost sold themselves. But when competition arrived, the Digital sales staff was hopelessly outclassed. Digital founder Kenneth H. Olsen had always preached that the company should never sell customers something they didn't need, so Digital's salespeople spent much of their time dwelling on technical explanations, and did little hard selling. The lack of commissions for years drove away good salespeople. When commissions were put in place by Mr. Palmer, the new system backfired under Mr. Lucente's oversight, insiders say. Some salesmen sold product at little or no profit to pump up volume -- and their compensation. The sales force has been reorganized over and over, the latest shakeup overturning a new structure that Mr. Palmer himself put in place. When top management wanted middle managers cut from the sales ranks, they asked middle managers to carry out the order. So, many front-line people serving customers got the ax while the bulk of managers remained. Russell Forquer, a former Digital salesman in Erie, Pa., was one of the people let go. Only weeks before he was dismissed in December 1992, he was given a raise, a bonus and a trip to Hawaii, to recognize his strong performance along with several hundred of Digital's other top salespeople. Mr. Forquer says he sold $2.1 million in Digital equipment in his last year, but was let go in an across-the-board cost-cutting move. But when his boss's position was eventually eliminated, Mr. Forquer says, he was able to find another sales-management job with the company. "They were supposed to eliminate the overhead in the sales force, not the people on the street making sales," he says. "But the old-boy network was too strong." He contends upper management "has no idea what is going on in the trenches." Today, he still sells Digital computers, "the best on the market." But he sells them for one of the company's outside distributors, which yields a lower profit for Digital. He did more than $1.7 million in sales in his 11 months away from the company. Although Digital, which is based in Maynard, Mass., retains many top-notch salespeople, its sales productivity overall is wanting. Hewlett-Packard Co., which recently surpassed Digital as the No. 2 computer maker behind IBM, has revenue roughly equal to more than $300,000 for each employee. Digital's current revenue per employee is half of that, at $155,000. Indeed, Digital's engineering-driven culture had long placed sales and marketing in the back seat. At a 1990 exposition of the company's products, for instance, a special area was set up to show customers some of the hottest products the company still had in the development laboratories. But the night before, while the exhibit was being set up, salespeople who needed a preview were barred from the area; the show's manager erected a wall of large potted plants to keep them from seeing what was inside. John Whiteside, a software engineer and management specialist who left Digital in 1992, says isolation of the sales force from the engineering heart of the company caused its products "to become more and more detached from market realities and what customers were telling the sales force that they actually wanted. Without that input from sales, we were blind to that." At the same time, he says, "the engineering community often wouldn't explain products fully, or when salepeople would ask for help from the field, they'd be told to figure it out for themselves." In the latest quarter, insiders say the new sales-commission plan may have helped deepen the loss. They say that discounts or other sweet terms were struck in the field, without adequate management controls, and that this lack of oversight is being placed at Mr. Lucente's door. Meanwhile, with so much talk about the need to shrink the sales force, those who are left are on edge. "People are scared. Tap someone on the shoulder and they're liable to jump a foot in the air," says a top salesman. "Everyone's working flat-out to make their fourth-quarter numbers -- yet a lot of them know that on July 1st they're history." Some salesmen staunchly defend Mr. Lucente, saying he represents the toughness and discipline that has long been lacking at the company. But it was Mr. Lucente's harsh management style that clinched his departure, say people familiar with last week's board meeting. One person at the meeting says the board received reports that his senior management group was "riven by resentment and anger" over what was described as Mr. Lucente's domineering management style. Last month, for instance, Mr. Lucente visited Dallas to meet some of his troops in an attempt to boost morale. His message: I'm here to listen -- ask me anything. But when a salesman requested elaboration of the company's software strategy, which he called "unclear," Mr. Lucente shot back that he was "sick of answering this question," according to one attendee. Mr. Lucente then "took his head off, belittling him in front of the whole room. Needless to say, no one else asked anything." So Digital turned to the 53-year-old Mr. Pesatori, effectively making him second in command. Under the direction of Mr. Pesatori, a former senior executive of Ing. C. Olivetti and Zenith Data Systems, Digital has jumped from also-ran to one of the top 10 PC makers, with more than $1 billion in sales last year. The unit recently turned profitable, and its sales continue to grow at more than a 100% annual rate, executives say. Indeed, the PC unit is poised to overtake Dell Computer Corp. in sales. It will bring in higher revenue in the current quarter than Dell posted in its just-reported fiscal fourth quarter, insiders say. More important, the Italian-born Mr. Pesatori's unit, which is battling in a brutally competitive market, has succeeded in building a structure that Digital now hopes to establish on a broader scale. The unit has become profitable by selling machines through retail and other indirect channels, not through Digital's traditional and costly direct-sales approach. "Enrico clearly understands the direction the business has to go," says Jay P. Stevens, an analyst at Dean Witter. "He's shown he knows how to make a low-margin, volume-driven business profitable." Mr. Stevens notes that Digital has said it hopes to redirect its sales model so that about 60% of its business flows through indirect channels, with the rest through the direct sales force. As it now stands, that ratio is 75% direct sales to only 25% indirect. As for Mr. Lucente, Digital announced that he will become executive in residence at one of the graduate schools of Carnegie Mellon University, his alma mater. The latest events are a bitter turn for Mr. Lucente. He has been in the upper echelon at three companies now, but always missed the brass ring. Barely a year ago, Digital hired him with hopes he would tighten and professionalize its sales force. Mr. Lucente spent 31 years at IBM, and was seen as one of a handful of candidates for the top job before leaving in 1991 for Northern Telecom Ltd., where he was the second-ranking executive. He resigned early last year. At IBM, one of Mr. Lucente's assignments was to turn technicians, office workers and manufacturing workers into salespeople. It was a difficult and unpopular task. When he was hired by Digital, many analysts applauded, predicting cost-cutting and more aggressive sales incentives would improve overall results. At the time he announced Mr. Lucente's hiring, Mr. Palmer said: "I don't think I've interviewed so many people for any one position . . . it took a while, but I'm confident that we now have the right person." Now, the departure of his hand-picked lieutenant reflects badly on Mr. Palmer. And it has heightened the pressure on him to produce results. An executive close to Mr. Palmer denied last night, however, that he had been given an explicit performance deadline by the board. "They didn't put a time clock on this," he said. "But there isn't a CEO in America anymore who isn't on trial every day." DEC's Directors -- Robert B. Palmer, president and chief executive of company. -- Vernon R. Alden, former chairman, the Boston Co. -- Philip Caldwell, senior managing director of Lehman Brothers, retired chairman of Ford. -- Colby H. Chandler, retired chairman of Eastman Kodak. -- Arnaud de Vitry, engineering consultant. -- Robert R. Everett, retired president of Mitre Corp. -- Kathleen F. Feldstein, president of Economics Studies Inc. -- Thomas P. Gerrity, dean, Wharton School of the Univ. of Pennsylvania. -- Thomas L. Phillips, retired chairman of Raytheon. -- Delbert C. Staley, retired chairman of Nynex. | |||||
3026.3 | ISLNDS::YANNEKIS | Tue Apr 26 1994 15:16 | 18 | ||
> I've worked with Digital sales people and with sales people at other > companies. They are different. I've worked with some really good sales > people at Digital so I wouldn't say that we attract only bad ones. Just > different types. > > On the other hand the processes which our salespeople have to work > with are without a doubt a serious block to their success. That in > my opinion is why our sales force looks and performs so poorly. I spent a summer at Motorola in their communications sector. The company and the 6-Sigma program are great. Lesson #1 taught is that people perform to the level the process allows them to. So if you find a function underpeforming inevitably it implies the process is brocken. Lesson #2 taught is to fix the process not the people. Greg | |||||
3026.4 | out of context | CADSYS::RITCHIE | Gotta love log homes | Tue Apr 26 1994 15:26 | 4 |
re .0 You took the quote out of context. The statement was past tense, when Palmer took over. | |||||
3026.5 | GLDOA::KATZ | Follow your conscience | Tue Apr 26 1994 16:02 | 7 | |
RE .0 I have no doubt that Digital has some of the best sales people in the world. Take the handcuffs off of them and they can outperform anyone. -Jim- | |||||
3026.6 | MRKTNG::BROCK | Son of a Beech | Tue Apr 26 1994 16:05 | 6 | |
And, to put the statement in context, if memory serves, Palmer indicated that 'we have the worst sales force' and it precisely was NOT the responsibility of the sales force. He put the blame pretty squarely on sales management and marketing for not doing the right training, product positioning, demand creation, etc etc. He did not intend it as a slam at our sales people. And, the quote is now over 12 months old. | |||||
3026.7 | How does sales commision work? | CAMONE::ARENDT | Harry Arendt CAM:: | Tue Apr 26 1994 16:34 | 15 |
I am no expert in sales however I would think that the best sales commision system would be to give the sales person X percentage of the profit earned on a sale. A decent base salary would be allocated to get them through dry times and I also would put no upper limit on the amount that they could earn. Sales people should be able to get rich on thier territories if they are good enough. Each product in the sale would then be credited with a fixed amount for the product. This would allow the sales force to have an overall number to work with for the sale and the more they discount the more it cuts into thier own commision. Is this not the way it works here at Digital? | |||||
3026.8 | One workable model | WHOS01::BOWERS | Dave Bowers @WHO | Tue Apr 26 1994 17:30 | 13 |
A percentage of actual profit is difficult, if not impossible, to administer (especially with OUR admin systems). One approach I've seen that did work was to break all products out into groups based on approximate gross margin (or some other profit-related criterion) and then pay a varying percentage of selling price for the different groups. Something of this sort makes it MUCH easier for the sales rep and his management to arrive at the same commission number at the end of the pay period. There is probably mothing more demoralizing to a commissioned sales rep than constant bickering about the money due her. | |||||
3026.9 | Radical surgery may be in order ... | DPDMAI::UNLAND | Tue Apr 26 1994 19:20 | 20 | |
re: .6 "quote is over 12 months old" Even though Palmer's statement about "having the worst sales force" is over twelve months old, it still holds validity. For one thing, many of the same people who caused that situation are still around, and are *still* planted squarely in the path of progress. We still have our share of empire builders and people who aren't interested in dealing with customer issues and concerns. They're interested in contorted metrics and risk avoidance, without any concern about where these tactics will damage our future. Sometimes, radical surgery is the only cure, when you can't precisely locate the diseased parts. If Mr. Pesatori reduces direct sales to a shadow and shifts support to the channels, a lot of excellent DEC employees will lose their jobs. But it would also eliminate many of the true problems once and for all. If the company survives, then it can rebuild the direct sales force once again. Maybe this is the true gamble that Palmer will have to take ... Geoff | |||||
3026.10 | Whooaa up there, Nellie! That's a garden hose, not a snake! | DPDMAI::EYSTER | Another Prozac moment! | Tue Apr 26 1994 19:28 | 14 |
We're not selling Tupperware. Selling EDI requires knowledge of networks, communications protocols, value-added networks, etc. Sales of EDI generate sales in RDB, DecForms, DecMessage Q, OFTP, etc. and so on. Often it's the first Digital box in a big blue shop, paving the way. Let's not toss out the baby with the bath water here, relying on a Wal-Mart approach to sell our wares. We DO have some great salespeople out there who's work helps keep me employed. If management is incapable of identifying and supporting them whilst cutting the deadwood then...maybe it's time to find the RIGHT management, not merely change it like underwear. Tex (NOT in sales) | |||||
3026.11 | :-) | ELWOOD::LANE | Running on empty | Tue Apr 26 1994 19:55 | 4 |
...and people accuse me of wearing out the cliche. (The e needs a little dohicky over it but this is MSDOS via kermit to VMS to notes....) | |||||
3026.12 | Give us a strong B | DPDMAI::ROSE | Tue Apr 26 1994 19:58 | 14 | |
I am a rep out in Dallas. I would say that DEC has some of the most creative and resourceful reps around... because they have to. We also know much more about client's concerns and how to treat the enterprise. Opposed to Microsoft, let's say, where the reps are clueless in how to talk to the customer and comprehend his/her problems. Ask them a question about why Word and Excel are better than Lotus equivs great. Beyond that, forget it. They also carry no loyalty. Even if we bring them into an account, they'll give the same messages to the customer with HP and NCR. Our NT specialist ends up teaching them about NT and why its so important... COM, CORBA, OLE v. Taligent. ..Larry | |||||
3026.13 | We have to do the job right, *and* the right job ... | DPDMAI::UNLAND | Wed Apr 27 1994 00:31 | 26 | |
re: .12 and our Sales force ... >I am a rep out in Dallas. I would say that DEC has some of the most >creative and resourceful reps around... because they have to. We also >know much more about client's concerns and how to treat the enterprise. I too, am cut from this mold. I talk solutions with customers, and I've spent seven years learning the intimate details of the industry that I support. But that's not the issue. The issue is: Does our work and our *way* of working lead to profitable sales? The answer today is NO. It used to, because the customers were willing to pay top dollar for hardware, for solutions, and for peace of mind. Back then, our profit margins were big enough to cover any mistakes we made in our corporate strategy or management. But today is different, and we have to make changes. Their are many people in this company who are doing outstanding jobs. But if they're doing the wrong thing, then it doesn't matter *how* well they're doing it. The company has to have a person in charge who can properly judge today's market strategy (industry vs. product) and put DEC back on track with the right plan to capitalize on today's market. I'm not smart enough to say what that is, but I am able to see that what we are doing today isn't working. Geoff | |||||
3026.14 | NASZKO::MACDONALD | Wed Apr 27 1994 14:51 | 17 | ||
Also, as I understand it: o the sales force is still saddled with the problem of a maze of products, o only a few of which any one person can develop enough understanding of to sell effectively, o and an unclear, and often contradictory corporate strategy so they have no easy time knowing what, if they were to sell it to their customers, will still be supported a year or so from now. Add that all up and its a wonder they can do the job at all. Steve | |||||
3026.15 | Let's complicate the rep's life a little further! | TOHOPE::REESE_K | Three Fries Short of a Happy Meal | Wed Apr 27 1994 18:30 | 16 |
Anyone want to venture a guess as to how the change in warranty for our storage products and now the Sable are affecting the reps? The quote system will not quote uplifts on these devices automatically, so reps have to sit with their calculators figuring it out manually and forcing the numbers into their quotes. I've assisted reps who have numerous and varied storage devices on their quotes and some have spent DAYS trying to pull it all together (all storage devices do not have the same length of warranty)!!! I'm amazed all our sales reps aren't stark, raving mad. Karen | |||||
3026.16 | Wrong!!! | EDMUND::SCHUSTAKS | Wed Apr 27 1994 19:37 | 19 | |
Well. speaking for THIS rep, I don't (WONT!) deal with this ridiculous issue. I understand my client business. I understand the role that technology in general, and more sepcifically OUR products and related services can help my client achieve it's business objectives...BETTER THAN THEY COULD WITH HP, IBM, OR COMPAQ (and you BETTER believe they are our competition!). I don't have the TIME to rassle with this stuff. I tell mny client what the on-site warranty is, and have an MCS Base rep follow up to either uplift or put in a "tickler" file. Folks, I've got to move MILLIONS of dollars of $25k - $50k systems to feed my family. I've got to understand in depth MANY technologies, and apply these to a very compl,ex, multi-division customer with (believe it or not!) as much internal politics (yet MUCH less divisiveness since their privately owned) as we do. Until we simplify towards some degree of consistency (sp?), I can't handle this part. Later, Steve | |||||
3026.17 | Time wasters | SWAM1::MCCLURE_PA | Wed Apr 27 1994 21:23 | 13 | |
Re:16 Amen, Amen, Amen. I'm on a corporate account with multi-territory responsibility. The amount of time wasters in this company which detract from actual customer sales are ridiculous. I've given up selling much of anything direct, unless on very big sales. I simply don't have time to fool around with our complicated and arcane AQS system, don't have time or patience to deal with our "lead-time" problems, don't want to spend all my time with customer complaints about short-ships, and can't get involved in customer service complaints or licensing issues etc etc. Until we implement systems allow me to effectively do my ONE JOB (which is Sales !!), I will continue to be so distracted as to impact my performance. | |||||
3026.18 | Trying to do the right thing | ANGLIN::KILSDONK | AI vs Natural Stupidity | Thu Apr 28 1994 03:45 | 29 |
re:15 Well, I'm trying to do the right thing for my customer, to give them a complete solution, not only for the sale up front, but for the service after the sale is done. I want them to be :-) happy before, :-) during and :-) After the sale. In order to do that, I spent about 2 days trying to figure out this storage works service-add on 'stuff'. After talking with 5 people, both in MCS and decsale, I think I finally got it. But it added, let's see,... 1,5, 8...10...15 line items to my quote. What a pain!!! The customer just looks at me with his eyes crossed, and just shakes his head in amazement at how difficult this is. This cost me time, cost decsale time, cost the local MCS reps time and, worst of all, cost the customers time and goodwill...and he is buying a VAXcluster system from us. Gee-willickers!!! In talking to decsale, they indicate it will be a YEAR before this is fixed. This "new improved" service also applies to the sable line. This is absurd. And then the quote system itself is a pain to work with; who ever heard of being part number oriented. Customers and reps think of 2100's, rz26's, Pathworks, linkworks, DEC 10,000 clusters[I wish ;-)], not FM-ex612-12 or DV-415db-EA's or QM-0TLAA_AA. I spend more time looking up the right part number, instead of talking to customers. but this is a string for another note... trying to do the right thing Frank | |||||
3026.19 | Imagine, buying something by what its called!! | 45464::ELLIOTT_G | Getting phone calls from Elvis.. | Thu Apr 28 1994 11:32 | 39 |
Try installing the stuff,wondering what half the numbers are and what they consist of. My example of the worst : Storageworks stuff,its all Ba35*-** Get one of the splats wrong and you end up with psu instaed of an hsj40 enclosure.Ridiculous! At the end of the day its all well and good that some clever dick somewhere can decipher part numbers in his sleep but if it costs one sale then its TOO EXPENSIVE!! "Well sorry sir you ordered a -DA when the small print in the DECdirect catalogue clearly states that with a -MA you need a -CA." The truth is you need an MD ,just to talk to them about it. My customer buys everything from a reseller because the reseller doesn't insist on using our stupid part system. He phones up and says "I want an HSJ40,six shelves and 24 rz26's,when can you deliver?" He's not interested in what they are "really" called. He just wants to spend money. Imagine going into a garage...... "Yes sir I know you want the Ford Maverick but its actually a Fd-01002-fwd.Also the catalogue clearly states that to get an engine with it you have to order an Fd-01002-fwe.Paint is an Fd-01002-fa and seats are an Fd-10002-fws." Er OK I'll order it. Some months later. "Hello can you hold please............................ No sir the Fd-01002-fwe is on product hold....also the salesman should have told you that you can't order wheels on the same order that has to be handled by our FORDwheels direct line.No sir you'll have to talk to your salesman I can't tell you when its being shipped." I dont think so!! All I can say is we MUST have good products for them to put up with it. Geoff | |||||
3026.20 | It contnues even after the sale... | USHS01::HARDMAN | Massive Action = Massive Results | Thu Apr 28 1994 11:59 | 14 |
It's not just on the sales end. MCS puts up with the same stuff while trying to service things in the field. I can't call and ask what the part number is for the floppy drive in a DEC 320p laptop. First, I have to know that the part number for the 320p is PCP-17. Ridiculous. We also convert all of the multi-vendor parts from the vendor part number (which all of our parts providers use) to a DEC xx-xxxxx-xx format part number. BUT! I have to order the part using the vendor part number, then it arrives in our local logistics under the DEC part number (and no trace of the vendor part number). Wastes time and money... Harry |