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 |
Palmer's DVN supposedly has already been taped in Marlboro (according to comments in other notes here)... surely people will want to discuss it (and someone is bound to post the transcript from it too?) Any comments from those present at the taping for this DVN? Jim
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3255.1 | quick notes | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (DTN 297-5780, MRO3-3/L16) | Tue Jul 19 1994 14:24 | 38 |
re Note 3255.0 by TPSYS::LAING: > Any comments from those present at the taping for this > DVN? Palmer emphasized that our balance sheet was one of the best in the business and one of the best in the Fortune 100. (One possible translation: we could continue to lose money like this for years without going out of business.) Palmer presented one result from the employee survey, which came across (to me and others with me) as saying that employees would like to be able to work harder. The Advanced Technology Group was described as one whose job was to develop technologies to be transferred to the other divisions. (My observation on this is that technology transfer, which was almost always unsatisfactory between CRA, advanced development, and the product development parts of the one engineering organization, would be at least as difficult in this setup.) One of the questions from the audience was whether Internet access was going to be extended to all employees. Palmer's response indicated that he wanted to avoid non-business access to the Internet (at least during business hours). (It's not clear how this could be done, other than simply issuing a statement of policy.) Palmer showed his greatest displeasure for the sales people who gave excessive allowances in Q3 -- he said that they would be let go. (He described them as if they had directly led to the loss of jobs.) (I don't want to steal all the thunder -- I'm sure a transcript will be available soon.) Bob | |||||
3255.2 | nix to matrix | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (DTN 297-5780, MRO3-3/L16) | Tue Jul 19 1994 14:30 | 6 |
I couldn't resist one more thing: time and time again Palmer said that this re-org was the end of Matrix Management and that Matrix Management was responsible for much of our recent problems. Bob | |||||
3255.3 | 'excessive allowances'? | AZTECH::LASTOVICA | straight but not narrow minded | Tue Jul 19 1994 14:32 | 5 |
> Palmer showed his greatest displeasure for the sales people > who gave excessive allowances in Q3 -- he said that they what are 'excessive allowances' - I've never heard the term before. does it have something to do with too much discounts or something? | |||||
3255.4 | KDX200::COOPER | Revolution calling! | Tue Jul 19 1994 14:33 | 4 | |
Buy two PC's and get a free AXP? Get 'em while they last!! | |||||
3255.5 | Correction | STAR::PARKE | True Engineers Combat Obfuscation | Tue Jul 19 1994 14:38 | 10 |
Re <<< Note 3255.4 by KDX200::COOPER "Revolution calling!" >>> > Buy two PC's and get a free AXP? > Get 'em while they last!! No, no NO! Buy two PCs and get a free VP. | |||||
3255.6 | ODIXIE::MOREAU | Ken Moreau;Sales Support;South FL | Tue Jul 19 1994 15:14 | 29 | |
RE: .3 (what are excessive allowances?) Allowances are discounts above and beyond the discounts built into the system. For example, a volume discount (buy Ethernet cards in 10-packs instead of singly and get 5% discount from the single unit price), or a Digital Business Agreement (aka DBA) which most large customers based on their volume of purchases over the last few years. So for example, my customer wants to buy a widget for $1000. He has a DBA which says he gets 6% off, so his cost is $940. But if he buys 10 of them at once, he gets an additional 5% off, so total cost is $8900 for 10 units. But let's say that IBM comes in and offers my customer a similar widget for $850 (or 10 for $8500). The Digital Sales Rep might decide to ask for an allowance of $500, bringing our price down to $8400 for 10 units. There are business people in each District who know the costs and profitability of each widget (and this information is *very* tightly controlled) who decide if the allowance is acceptable. If it is, then the Sales Rep goes back to the customer with a new price of $8400, and we hopefully make the sale. This negotiating process (finding out the amount the customer will pay for our widget, finding out what the competition is charging for their widget, figuring out all of the discounts built into the system which we can take advantage of (such as last quarters Software Upgrade Program), and then talking with the business people in the district to get an allowance which will make the sale) is a very large part of what a Sales Rep does for each sale. I have nothing but respect for their work in this area. -- Ken Moreau | |||||
3255.7 | TOPDOC::AHERN | Dennis the Menace | Tue Jul 19 1994 15:21 | 9 | |
RE: .2 by LGP30::FLEISCHER >I couldn't resist one more thing: time and time again Palmer >said that this re-org was the end of Matrix Management and >that Matrix Management was responsible for much of our recent >problems. When you've been whipped by Donna Matrix, you know you've been beaten. | |||||
3255.8 | And her sister too! | MPGS::CWHITE | Parrot_Trooper | Tue Jul 19 1994 16:21 | 5 |
doesn't she have a sister named Dot!???? ;^) parrot trooper! | |||||
3255.10 | The metrics drive the behavior...The metrics drive the behavior...The metrics drive the behavior... | SYORPD::DEEP | ALPHA - The Betamax of CPUs | Tue Jul 19 1994 16:43 | 26 |
The problem is that our sales people are not goaled on the PROFIT of the deal, just the REVENUE. So under this system, if it costs $100 to make a widget, and we sell it for $90, the Sales Rep gets credit for $90. Its an incentive to sell below cost. An alternative, used by every other company in the business, is to pay the Sales Rep based on the profit margin. Using this plan, the Sales Rep is given a list of widgets, their cost, and the suggested selling price. Sales Rep sells at whatever price s/he can get for the widget. If its greater than the cost, the Sales Rep is paid a commission on the PROFIT. No incentive to sell below cost, since commission = 0. This also causes products to be built at competitive prices, since if it can't be sold for a profit, its quickly dropped from the Sales Reps bag of offerings. And, it eliminates the game playing that goes on to set budgets, based on the well established GOBN (Good 'Ole Boy Network) that gives preferential budgets to its members, and screws the rest. Under a straight commission on profit plan, budgets become meaningless. The more you sell, the more you make. I expect Digital will get serious about its commission plan soon... hopefully, it won't be to late. Bob | |||||
3255.11 | SEAPIG::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA,USPSA/IPSC,NROI-RO | Tue Jul 19 1994 16:59 | 9 | |
<<< Note 3255.9 by GNPIKE::SMITH "Peter H. Smith,297-6345,MR04-2 C3,Digital Consulting/FBE Toolkit" >>> >Then we whip the > people who discount to avoid losing a sale? We're goners... If you have to ship a hundred dollar bill with the order, you didn't really wnat the sale in the first place. Jim | |||||
3255.12 | Its the unvarnished truth | POBOX::CORSON | Higher, and a bit more to the right | Tue Jul 19 1994 17:03 | 22 |
re:10 Absolutely. One of the biggest problems we have in Digital sales is not competing with H-P, IBM, or SUN, but with each other. During this past year I have personally been on the "losing" end of several transactions that occurred because a Digital end-user rep gave an allowance (some in excess of any profit at all) to **win** the business from one of our VARs, who already had the business at their normal business practice discount. This conflict between end user reps and channels is throughout the field and is fostered by managers who feel they must book the business direct, instead of taking a credit from a sale thru a reseller. It is the primary reason I am so disgusted, and frustrated, by our own sales models. Sales people should be, must be, compensated on margin contribution and from $ one. Not revenue; and not you get compensation after you reach some artifical $$ number. Until we correct these problems, sales will continue to suffer and fail. the Greyhawk | |||||
3255.13 | I vote for Gross Margin | GLDOA::DBOSAK | The Street Peddler | Tue Jul 19 1994 17:12 | 33 |
Guess I'm gonna go to the DVN -- I agree with the noter who said metrics drive performance. Last FY was a Revenue driven year -- That does have a potential for disaster if the peddler dumps the deal. A previous year, we did business on the basis of profitibility on each and every deal. That is better for behavior modification because the Sales person gets paid on gross margin. The S/R is given the choice of investing his/her money in the account for "strategic" reasons. The gross margin focus also has drawbacks, but I believe they are easier to manage. The thing about allowances is that they don't happen in a vacuum. There's at least 3 people involved in the allowance if it doesn't involve cross-functional organizations. The reason for the allowances are discussed and if it makes good sense BASED on CURRENT Metrics, then the deal goes down. When we did the profitibility approach, we had stuff in there that made you want to puke --- BUT -- given that you didn't make the rules, you just swallowed often. I'd opt for the gross margin approach -- and if Palmer wants to ice some peddlers because of the allowance hits - let him -- they are just the first of many anyway. my .021734685 (approximately) Dennis | |||||
3255.14 | Unanticipated Consequences | NYOSS1::DILLARD | Happiness is a 1300 with one end to go. | Tue Jul 19 1994 19:29 | 17 |
re .10 Sales measurement based on margin was a key point in NMS (you don't remember the New Mgmt. System :-) ). In fact the other key point was to have the business account based. NMS seemed to be a great concept; if the product group did not make competitive products at a competitive price sales would sell something else including third party products. One of the unanticipated (or intended) consequencies was that sales did just that. I clearly remember the mid year call to "do the right thing" and ignore metrics because we weren't selling enough product and had to cover our expense base. Peter Dillard | |||||
3255.15 | Why not margin based? Any clues?? | LIE495::CITRON | Marty - NY PSC Network Consultant | Tue Jul 19 1994 23:56 | 22 |
RE: All revenue .vs margin based comp. Does anyone have a clue as to why sales is not measured on Margin? It's real clear this is a solution to the problem of selling ourselves out of business but I can't pull together the reasons/problems in doing so. The systems can't handle it answer I don't buy...Since Our systems can't handle the current compensation system anyway. I can't beleive this is not seen as a fixable problem. Reps are smart (did i really say that?).. Give them the game rules and they figure out how to win. Simply change the gamerules and they will work on winning under the new rules. This time they help Digital as well. I am sure Digital spent much more Sales Comp dollars than was planned. Especially in light of us loosing money!!! Almost done trying to figure this one out, Marty | |||||
3255.16 | PERLE::glantz | Mike, Paris Research Lab, 776-2836 | Wed Jul 20 1994 05:49 | 9 | |
.1> One of the questions from the audience was whether Internet .1> access was going to be extended to all employees. Lemme guess, Bob, you asked that question, right? :-) Just curious: all Digital employees (with VMS or UNIX accounts) currently have access to Internet mail and newsgroups (maybe even ftp, for all I know). Was the question intended to mean when would all systems run IP, and thereby provide direct access to the Web? | |||||
3255.17 | More on Allowances | FILTON::ROBINSON_M | The Titanic had only 4 stovepipes | Wed Jul 20 1994 05:50 | 27 |
re .6 - What are allowances? In addition to allowances made to directly win cost-critical business, there are at least two others forms or allowance: 1) Marketing allowances: buy two, get one free. This obviously makes sense if it creates sales that would otherwise not have happened. BUT if the customer was going to buy three anyhow, but gets them for the price of two, this allowance hurts our profit margin. 2) Foulup allowances: where due to a DIGITAL ERROR, we have to give stuff away, this is an allowance. If we cannot deliver the correct stuff at the correct time, or the order is missing a small but critical component (disk controller, tape drive, memory, licences), we end up GIVING IT AWAY as a customer satisfaction issue. Not all allowances are due to 'irresponsible sales' simply 'giving away the farm'. [Not my words - please imagine a sarcastic tone] Regardless of the source or reason for the allowance, sales are being beaten up for permitting them. Also, when the ritual floggings take place for 'excessive allowances', I see no breakdown into type of allowance. Thus, our difficulty in correctly delivering an order appears as a sales problem. Cute, eh? Martin [Not sales - just a sympathiser] | |||||
3255.18 | VANGA::KERRELL | Hakuna matata! | Wed Jul 20 1994 07:03 | 15 | |
re.10: If "The metrics drive the behavior" then >Using this plan, the Sales Rep is given a list of widgets, their cost, and the >suggested selling price. Sales Rep sells at whatever price s/he can get for >the widget. If its greater than the cost, the Sales Rep is paid a commission >on the PROFIT. No incentive to sell below cost, since commission = 0. will not work because it still allows for a sales rep. to heavily discount part of the sale in order to sell another product. The commission should be paid on the margin of the total sale (or better still across all sales within a reporting period) and not individual products. Dave. | |||||
3255.19 | ;^) | SUBURB::POWELLM | Nostalgia isn't what it used to be! | Wed Jul 20 1994 07:31 | 7 |
Re.5 >>> Get a free VP Shouldn't that read "get a free DEC 154VP?" Malcolm. | |||||
3255.20 | POCUS::OHARA | Reverend Middleware | Wed Jul 20 1994 09:31 | 22 | |
Re: .15 >> Does anyone have a clue as to why sales is not measured on Margin? As Peter pointed out, the NMS was an attempt to begin the process to do just that. However, we quickly found out that, with the current systems in place, we really have no way to accurately measure margin on any given product, much less on an entire sale. We found out that many product groups were adding their own "profit" to their specific cost component, and there was this enormous overhead component added to the cost of each product. The result was a meaningless cost model on each product. It's very easy for our distribitors and VARs to measure reps on profit. They know exactly what the pay DEC (and other vendors) for each and every product. As long as they can accarately measure their internal costs, margin should be a relatively no-brainer. BTW, I worked for Unisys and we weren't measured on margin either, contrary to what a previous noter said about "every other vendor" measuring their reps that way. Rev | |||||
3255.21 | PARVAX::SCHUSTAK | The Few, The Proud...Digital! | Wed Jul 20 1994 10:02 | 22 | |
Re .10 & .18 .10- Yes, totally agree. Sales does what sales is inspected/measured/incented to do. PLEASE change my metrics to measure and compensate me on profitability...as soon as I can be given accurate data on product margins. Under NMS, I had access to what was *supposed* to be costs w/overhead, and could quickly determine what I had to do to make a sale. In fact, I developed a little spreadsheet that worked very well. If you know you products, your competition, and most importantly *your customer*, under this type of approach the rest really does sort itself out...and quickly. .18 This type of approach has to measure all sales...not really sure how it could be otherwise. As mentioned above, under NMS, our account was certainly willing to have "loss leaders" (more like "close to breakeven" leaders) which would drive some VERY profitabel related sales. Kinda like Gillette selling razors at close to/below cost to get the blade sales, or Toys 'r Us practically *giving* away diapers to get people into the stores with their kids. It made a lot of sense, and still does. Steve | |||||
3255.22 | Its the Information, stupid | UNYEM::GIBBONSJ | Wed Jul 20 1994 11:19 | 39 | |
Lets not forget the widely distributed February 1994 memo EMPHATICALLY telling sales not to lose on price. Then the "disastrous" Q3 comes, and sales is blamed for excessive allowances? Insane. The fundamental problem is that our beloved organization has lots of data and no information. Inconsistent sales budgeting and compensation metrics are the way they are because Digital does not understand its costs. Period. Excessive allowances? Not from this sales dog. Outrageous costs? Yeah, you have a point. Where in everybody's wonderful measurements are the costs of account management, customer service, paper-training a distributor rep, articulating Digitals strategy, keeping multi-platform application suppliers pitching Digital, etc., etc., reflected? We do not understand our costs. Did Digital sell its gazillion PCs on the strength of a catalog? Via a streamlined selling organization of X number PCBU specialists? No way. We sold them by end user reps priming the pump, positioning the product, explaining the strategy, utilizing distribution. But no one acknowledges those costs. They only count the revenue, and then have a big party because "the numbers" look good. With all the exciting work we have done to develop a 21st century architecture, to lead in open client/server computing, to migrate a 32-bit installed base, to woo application suppliers to our platforms, we have lost sight of the crucial reality that we must run a business. Reading management journals and hanging with process consultants is great, but our leaders left the barn door open. We blew it with PCs, we blew it with UNIX, we hired people in the late eighties like the party would never end. We have some of the worst information systems tools imaginable. We gave up on having a industry selling focus after only five months. We are on the endangered species list and senior management thinks it is the Lion King. Ironic as it seems, lack of information is our downfall. | |||||
3255.23 | Here - here! | GLDOA::DBOSAK | The Street Peddler | Wed Jul 20 1994 12:19 | 38 |
Re .22 Well said. Regarding PCs and priming pumps -- When Lucente was fdoing his town meetings, I raised my head above the rampart to suggest a similar message AND I told him of my sensitivity in using the lowest cost channel for the sale -- He told me I shouldn't worry about the low cost channel AND I shouldn't be selling PCs. Well, I sat down - only had a few holes in me - not fatal - and some of my counteparts get up and talk about "priming the pump." Low yield explosion -- I figure - Well, where he sits in the food chain, he just doesn't get it. I continued the iniative -- Straight pricing -- Took down 50+ PCs, 5 servers, complete fiber Hub Networking system, and some piss-ant consulting dollars -- System is going to be replicated in 12 sites over time. The pump was primed, the deal went through DECdirect, PC By Dec direct, and Networks -- I didn't see one PO direct to me -- But every other channel got credit -- Ya know -- those low cost ones that are the darlings of DEC. I called my PC by DEC direct counterpart and told her that Lucente wanted be to drag my buns outta the initiative -- She wondered that if that was the case, how could they get business if they didn't get the DIrect peddlers doing the referrals. My personal opinion in the corporate kabookie dance is that the music is soon going to stop and when it does, I'll be ready - one way or the other -- In my world, this one counts -- Palmer and crew need to get it right or I'm gone. My HUMBLE .02 Dennis | |||||
3255.24 | More here - here! | POBOX::CORSON | Higher, and a bit more to the right | Wed Jul 20 1994 13:13 | 15 |
re:-1 That last missive, sports fans, probably sums up how most of the sales professionals still left at Digital really feel. When I, for example, sit here on the 20th of July with no budget, no comp. plan (Mr. Roeth's brief memo to the contrary does NOT tell me HOW I'm going to be paid), no sales focus on FY95, my attitude is "it's job hunting time". The base reason is real clear - I have four other people who depend on my income to have shelter, food, etc. If I do not know what my income is going to be at Digital, I'm damn sure going somewhere where that fact will be known. the Greyhawk known. | |||||
3255.25 | Why is it always sales? | ODIXIE::GELINEAU | Wed Jul 20 1994 14:44 | 25 | |
I do not know of a single sales rep that has the authority to approve any allowance beyond discounts available as a result of standard business practice! As stated previously we have business ops to help determine the profitability on a deal. As far as Q3, managment's directive was bring in revenue NOW! And I for one, being a sales professional, took management's direction and went after ALL the revenue possible and got my share. Based on the quarter to quarter revenue comparisons it appears to me that my fellow sales professionals did a hell of a job responding to management's directive. For those of you trying to write the FY95 compensation plan for sales professionals keep in mind that whatever the plan, assuming it is viewed as fair, a sales professional will deliver on his or her commitments to the company. Any way you choose to slice it it will come down to driving REVENUE. If you are thinking to yourself that I am somewhat offended by the reported comments of Palmer in the DVN, as well as, what I consider to be the periodic bashing of sales professionals in this conference, then your right! John Gelineau Sales Representative | |||||
3255.26 | Let's rumble | POBOX::CORSON | Higher, and a bit more to the right | Wed Jul 20 1994 15:01 | 22 |
John, baby, lighten up. I am also a sales professional and the revenue driven metrics in DEC's Comp. Plan are causing the WRONG kind of behaviors. Giving a customer 20% off on PCs to get a deal (based on revenue) is pure crap, and costs the company money. It sets the price expectation of the customer to an unprofitable model, and it cheapens our value-added. Business Ops people in the field are always approving whatever field sales management tells them to approve. They hold their paychecks. So using that as a check/balance is pure hogwash. Have margin contribution set sales compensation, and you don't need Bus. Ops in the field. Can you guess why that type of program hasn't been adopted? Hell, even IBM pays its sales force today on customer satisfaction (20%), margin contribution (40%), and NET revenue production (40%). I think its high time Digital got with the program, don't you? And our current Plan for FY95 stinks. Period. the Greyhawk | |||||
3255.27 | It's just like in the Navy | ANGLIN::BJAMES | I feel the need, the need for SPEED | Wed Jul 20 1994 18:13 | 35 |
Well it appears that the train is leaving the station on this one. Mr. Corson is correct. We have no budgets, goals, metrics, true query based sales compensation database to access, no approved account assignmentss, no 300 member SME sales force in place ready to rock & roll on July 1 as promised in Q4, and in many cases around the country no local management in the trench *LEADING* our talented hard driving and survivor focused people up the hill. After 11 years here and having just completed 1/2 of my MBA where we did case studies on what happened to companies that previously exhibited this kind of behavior this is absolutely amazing. It feels like it's a big huge ass aircraft carrier roaming the seas. The fleet admiral is up on the bridge pleading with the airboss to continue to launch jets against the enemy while downstairs on E-deck the steam catapaults hav broke down and there is no way to launch the Tomcats. It's enough to send you off to your home and crack open your favorite mind alternating beverage and sit down with yourself and ask the almighty question: "Does anyone really have any idea of what is going on?" I don't know if the Airboss or Fleet admiral reviews any of this stuff but if they do please just tell us what targets you want to hit and I guarantee you out of blind loyalty, love of country, family and SO's, we will all come back with lots of kills (read orders) under our wings and will get this outfit back on the move. It can be done, we do have the capability to win this war, so let's get on with it for the good Lord's sake. Mav | |||||
3255.28 | sanity check? | BBRDGE::LOVELL | � l'eau; c'est l'heure | Wed Jul 20 1994 18:31 | 16 |
re last 2, I'm sitting here in Digital Consulting, attempting to deal with a Sales model problem that I thought was specific to DC - i.e. industry focus, budgets, goaling, profitability, etc.... and I've been stalling Field consultants' queries based on the newness of this as a "business" and its inherent complexity whilst escalating this up the management chain. Now I'm reading in last few that our beloved stack 'em high and sell 'em cheap new powerhouse products business (ABU, SBU et al) don't even have *BUDGETS* defined for FY95!! Tell me that this isn't true - Please? /Chris. | |||||
3255.29 | The REAL problem ... continued ... | BKEEPR::BREITNER | Field Network Mechanic | Wed Jul 20 1994 19:04 | 3 |
.-1 From whom would you accept "It isn't true!" and believe it? | |||||
3255.30 | HAAG::HAAG | Rode hard. Put up wet. | Wed Jul 20 1994 22:31 | 6 | |
just try to deal with customers these days. we don't know what the hell is happening inside of DEC. not so slowly that chaos leaks into the customer base and the press. and none of that does any of us any good. and really. does anyone expect clear direction (re: leadership) anytime soon? | |||||
3255.31 | MAASUP::MUDGETT | We need Dinozord Power NOW! | Wed Jul 20 1994 23:47 | 21 | |
I have several thoughts here: 1. There is a Beavis and Butthead episode where they are watching a video. One of them says, "hey this video sucks, change it!" The other one says "yah, I know it sucks now but it'll be really cool soon!" The video, of course, never got any better. 2. I'll second what Gene said that customers are very interested in what the heck we are doing. To them it looks like total confusion. At least one reorganization too many. So much, it would appear, for no-excuses management. Even customers who have nothing to do with DEC stop me to ask what we are doing. I can only imagine what a HP or SUN salesmen will use to push their products. 3. The quarter numbers must be awful. With the deafening silence about what how we are doing mandates this, I think. We have been installing everywhere and STILL can't make a profit. Charlie Matco had it about right when he talked of the 275 MHZ alpha chip "and as surely as night follows day DEC is having another loosing quarter." Fred | |||||
3255.34 | Let me make is very clear ! | ORO50::REEVES | Fire and Forget. | Thu Jul 21 1994 12:31 | 9 |
I really feel sorry for the folks that attend that DVN who think the problem is sales. Q3 sales were driven by marching orders from on high, not over eager salereps ready to given away margin dollars for any sale! If any of you think that the problem is going to be solved once we become channels based I only have one thing to say "GET A LIFE". | |||||
3255.35 | RE: .33 | SMOP::glossop | Kent Glossop | Thu Jul 21 1994 12:38 | 26 |
> As a general > and officers do for the army the management needs to do for us... > lead. Note that a well-functioning system is a combination of bottom-up (enumeration of options that are available that higher-ups may not be aware of, plus cost estimates, etc.), and top-down (providing a focus based on the available options so that there isn't a lot of working across purposes, redundant efforts, etc.) To be successful, the top-down strategy typically has to be evolutionary over time (and one problem we seem have had for many years if frequent right-angle or 180 degree turns annually for a while, and more frequently over the last few years.) Likewise, to be successful, "bottom up" needs to yield new ideas/options that are viable based on market considerations. If either one falters you can get into trouble relatively quickly (and if they both falter, you can get stuck in a nosedive.) Yes, we need a consistent, strategic "evolutionary vision" of what businesses/markets we're after. We also need ideas on how to address them (and address them ever more efficiently, etc.). There are a lot of people in this company, and that can translate into a lot of ideas, and of which may be helpful. Don't presume that the SLT (or whoever) is going to generate all of the ideas to help us get out of the current jam we're in (though they're definitely responsible for assessing/ deciding which options are the right ones and leading based on the results of those decisions.) Decisions can't be made (successfully) in a vaccuum... | |||||
3255.36 | Lethargy grows exponentially | ULYSSE::ROEMER | Thu Jul 21 1994 12:48 | 33 | |
One more reply: I saw the DVN too and took offense when I heard I was supposed to stretch myself/work harder. I think now what he meant was that employees want to be, and should be asked to be, part of the solution more often. It may be that our current model of listening hard to the Customer goes this way: Customer -> Business Unit Mgr -> Engineering -> Planning/Implementation -> bloke who deals with the Customer and who goes "these Corporate people just are not with it" It just may be that in our hurry to get the Voice of the Customer (VOC), reduce costs and improve Time To Market we forgot to ask Mr. Bloke (who sees the Customer every day) what HE thought. It also may be that Mr. Bloke WAS asked, but he was so busy supporting revenue that he could not find the time to make it better for the next go-around. This is the case *I* am seeing. A lot. Guess what happens if Mr. Bloke does not like what he gets..... OK! Time to go home errr back to work. Stay with it folks. Decisions are too important to leave them to managers, but if you do not tell them what to decide, they'll make them anyway. Al | |||||
3255.38 | GLDOA::DBOSAK | The Street Peddler | Thu Jul 21 1994 14:38 | 19 | |
That Pricing discipline comment was interesting -- Lucente stood up in front of us and told us CLEARLY that we were NEVER to lose a deal on price. Further, my management told me in the Q3 frenzy that upper management said we were looking at revenue Period -- Just get the deal. Soooo, as a tribe of ranting, raving peddlers we did just that -- We did what Lucente told us to do. This reminds of the 6 phases of a project - Something about the 6th one -- Praise and rewards for the non- paricipants -- Death to all others -- Or something like that -- Anyway -- On balance, I liked Palmer's comments and I especially loved his "DEC-Nod" comment -- He could have only topped that by refering to the "DEC WHINE!" Dennis | |||||
3255.39 | anyone has a transcript of the DVN? | WRKSYS::RICHARDSON | Thu Jul 21 1994 15:09 | 7 | |
I was too wrapped up in what I was doing to go to the DVN this morning, and it doesn't look like I will make it to the 3 pm one either. So, I'd really appreciate it if someone as usual eventually posts the transcript of it so I can read what BP said to us. Anyone found it on line yet? /Charlotte | |||||
3255.40 | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Thu Jul 21 1994 15:50 | 1 | |
Criswell predicts it will be on Livewire by tomorrow. | |||||
3255.41 | CTHQ::DWESSELS | AlphaGeneration = Digital's Alpha AXP 64-bit products and servic | Thu Jul 21 1994 16:13 | 544 | |
Worldwide News LIVE WIRE Text of Bob Palmer's 'Employee Forum' ... Date: 21-Jul-1994 Text of Bob Palmer's 'Employee Forum' address on DVN (Following is the text of President and CEO Bob Palmer's "Employee Forum" address to employees. A transcript of the question and answer session will be posted in LIVE WIRE tomorrow.) Introduction I know that you all have a lot of things on your minds, and, in times of uncertainty, clear communications are more important than ever before. Today's special edition of the "Employee Forum" is designed to explain the reasons behind our strategic announcements of last week, and to provide you with an outline of our actions and the context in which those actions will be taken. In this time of critical transition for Digital, it is important that all of us avoid overreacting to rumors and stay focused on our individual responsibilities. As one example, I am particularly concerned about the disruption that has been caused by the rumor that Digital is seeking to sell its systems integration capabilities. I would like to make a few points: Digital's capability in systems and networks integration is absolutely essential to deliver our core value proposition to our customers. We have a significant market share in systems and networks integration. External analysts place Digital in the top five when ranking systems integrators, and our objective is to grow our market position and to extend our leadership in client/server computing. We are not planning to sell this capability, as has been rumored. We are looking for ways to increase our effectiveness in supporting our largest customers and in reducing real or imagined conflicts with other systems integrators whom we want to encourage to sell Digital platforms. They represent an important indirect channel for Digital's products and services. Similarly, we are in the business of providing outsourcing services for client/server computing where we can capitalize on our core networking and systems platform capabilities in supporting our major accounts. There are many other rumors concerning Digital operations that might be sold. I want to assure you that I am dedicated to maintaining those capabilities that support our core value proposition, which is to deliver and support, directly and through partners, networked platforms and applications in heterogeneous environments more quickly and more cost-effectively than any other competitor. This value proposition is a key message in the Employee Forum that you are about to see. The forum provides answers to many questions on the minds of you, Digital's employees. You will undoubtedly continue to have questions, even after you view the rest of this DVN. Ask them. My management team and I plan to go to great lengths to keep you informed -- consistently and clearly -- about important decisions and changes that will affect you and the future of Digital Equipment Corporation. Thank you. This Employee Forum is a little different than the others we've done. Most of the others have been after the earnings announcements. This one is a little ahead of the earnings announcement, primarily because we've made some management changes. I wanted to be able to describe those to you, and where we are in the transformation of Digital. You've probably seen in print from time to time my reference to this being Phase II of our transformation. Phase I -- we've been at this 21 months -- in Phase I we analyzed what we had in terms of talent and bring in new talent to our company, stop the egregious losses that we were suffering at that time, and begin to work on our cost structure. We eliminated a lot of redundant engineering programs, as you may recall, and simplified some of the structure. We put in place some business units, and we set the business units up differently. Some were stand-alone, essentially vertical organizations. Some of the business units had a traditional Digital culture associated with them, the matrix structure that we've had for our entire history. And we let that go for a while. We did well the first year. I think we improved the operating results by several hundred million dollars. But we didn't sustain it. As a matter of fact, our costs are still not competitive when benchmarked against those of our leading competitors in similar companies. And we're still working on it. So that's what I'm talking about in terms of the second phase of this transformation. We clearly had done some things very well, and we also had done some things that did not work well. It's interesting that when you analyze the things that worked well -- the PC division and storage -- you saw that they had a common characteristic, and that they did not have the matrix characteristic of the ones that didn't do so well, like our traditional core systems business. And so this phase is building on what we learned in the first phase, to make some very dramatic changes to Digital Equipment that will enable us to be much more cost-effective and return us to profitability in a sustained way. The new organization You've probably seen some headlines or whatever that talk about matrix management at Digital is dead. It's my intention that we, to a 95 percent level or so, expunge matrix management from our culture. This is quite a dramatic change in Digital Equipment. What you see in a lot of the press reports talks about the restructuring reserves and financial issues, but really from my perspective, this is a more dramatic and important and long-lasting change in our company than are some of the things that have been reported. With respect to discussions and reporting and that, I had the opportunity last week to talk to at least 150 of our top management. We actually spoke to management before we spoke to the press. I think that's quite important. It's impossible for me to speak to all employees before we speak to the press. But I personally spoke to the management, then went out and talked to the press, so that's the way we prefer to do it. The purpose of being here this morning is to recap the highlights of that announcement, explain the thinking behind that, and answer any questions that you might have about how does that impact you and what does it mean to Digital Equipment Corporation. This matrix management idea may have been right, as I've said, when Digital was an emerging company, a much smaller company. But my own perspective is that sometime in the 1980s it became too unwieldy. There were too many people you had to check with, because of all of the overlaps in our matrix structure, before anything could actually get decided and implemented. And the computer industry began to speed up quite dramatically, from four- and five-year product life cycles to the very short product life cycles that we have today. Those short product life cycles require a responsiveness to the marketplace, an agility, a decisiveness, that we lacked with our matrix management structure. So what we've done is eliminate that, reorganize the company into a very clean line organization, primarily by creating two new divisions, the Computer Systems Division and our Components Division. The two new divisions, they each have within them three business units. You might ask, what's the difference between a division and business units? Actually, a division is a collection of business units that have some synergy among them. Each of the business units has its own P&L, its own engineering, its own sales and marketing function, channels of distribution as appropriate. It's a complete line organization with a P&L, and is responsible for the assets employed for the first time in Digital's history. Traditionally, we worried about revenue, occasionally we worried about the cost, and the profit that ensued thereof after that. Seldom, I think never in our history, did we focus management on the assets employed, the balance-sheet items. The intent now, and what's in place today, ensures that each of the business unit managers is responsible for the assets as well as for the revenues, the costs, and the profits. This is quite a dramatic difference, in that the large functional organizations, like functional manufacturing, functional sales and marketing, functional engineering, are largely being disaggregated and being placed within the business units that they support. So that we then can have a very streamlined and market-driven, in terms of our engineering products, organization. And very easy accountability. In the past, some of our structures did not work well, for example the CBU structure that we put in place about a year ago. When you analyze why it didn't, it became quite clear. The CBU manager had the responsibility, but had to negotiate with engineering for the products, had to negotiate with manufacturing about the costs, had to negotiate with sales and marketing about selling those products, and it turns out most of the energy was spent negotiating and internally focused. In the case of the very successful business units, like our Storage Business Unit which was growing at more than 40 percent annually, the PC Business Unit which was growing at more than 100 percent annually, they had complete line control. They owned their own engineering, manufacturing, marketing, and they were very effective. And so we are implementing that structure that we've tested across all of Digital. In addition, you'll notice that there's an Advanced Technology Group under Bill Strecker, who's vice president and chief technology officer for this company. That Advanced Technology Group has the function of nurturing emerging technologies that might potentially have market success or the opportunity for market success. The kind of process that we have in mind there is similar to that which was implemented in Charlie Christ's organization around video on demand. This is where where got a team of people focused on a problem, bring some new technology to bear, were very, very successful. And we now want to spread that success, in the case of interactive multimedia, across all of Digital's product line. But the process is one that the Advanced Technology Group will utilize to develop new capabilities, for example, in mobile computing, object technology, or whatever. And as those technologies reach a critical mass, then we'd decide in which business unit should be the lead business unit for that capability as we take it to the market in a more aggressive way. But you need some way do the engineering and the advanced development without day-to-day worries about the P&L costs and whatever. So in a sense, it's a set-aside of research and engineering resources and investment to ensure that there's growth in the future. Because we want of course to maintain our technological leadership, at least within a few very defined areas. Downsizing Now, in addition to that, as you saw, there were a number of restructuring announcements this last week. They have to do with the continued work on our cost structure, restructuring the company, talk about an elimination of approximately 20,000 positions over the next 12 months. At the last DVN, I spoke of the need to get down to at least approximately 65,000 employees worldwide for our level of revenue in order to be competitive. We talked about that in terms of a two-year program. As we got into the details of this it's quite clear that we need to accomplish that restructuring in a one-year time frame. It's also what our employees are asking us to do -- to get the downsizing, at least these major downsizings, behind us so we can focus on growth and focus on the future. And so we're going to accelerate that into the next 12 months, and as much as possible, we'll be done within this calendar year. As much as we can, in a thoughtful and planful way. A lot of people are working on that right now. In addition to that, we'll continue the elimination of the facilities and office space that we don't need, some of which we never needed, that we had in our inventory. I'm going to take out another 10 million square feet or so. This will take us down at the end of the next couple of years to about 24 million square feet. This turns out to be about half the number of square feet the company had in facilities and office space in 1990, which was sort of our peak. When we started, as you'll recall, in restructuring manufacturing. To do all of that, and to pay for the transition of employees who will have to leave our company, we've taken a charge against fourth-quarter earnings of $1.2 billion. That's a cash charge. In addition to that, there will be a charge of between $300 million and $400 million dollars that relates to some acquisitions that we made in the past that no longer have the value that they're being carried on our balance sheet, and also some tax considerations, and so we'll clean all that up. If you think about it, going forward, Digital will have a very clean balance sheet, it's a very strong balance sheet, and we'll have the opportunity by business unit to be profitable and to meansure our success by business unit very clearly. In terms of that balance-sheet strength, it's frequently not noticed that Digital will have a balance sheet even after the restructuring that's in the Top 10, that's one of the best, of the top 50 companies in the Fortune 500. And for that matter, in the Fortune 500, we will remain in the top quartile in terms of balance sheet strength. So the company has a very strong balance sheet. We're not about to go out of business. We do need to start managing our affairs more effectively. We've got to start generating a profit, and as you know, I've stated that our objective is to generate a profit for operations by the end of the calendar year. That again is additional reason to do as much of the downsizing as we possibly can in the next six months. Now, as you talk to people, as you get out and talk to employees, there are several questions on your mind. Some of which I'm going to address up front, I hope, but I'll be happy, if I'm not thorough enough, to take your questions after on the same subjects, and others which we hope you'll ask after this presentation. One of the key questions of course is, am I going to have a job? People want to know, are they going to employed? What are the areas where we'll be doing the downsizing, how will they be impacted. People want to know what's different about this restructuring, although I've covered some of that already, in that this is building on our previous successes and learning from what works and what doesn't work in the marketplace of the 1990s. Hopefully, it'll be able to give you some confidence. I have a lot of confidence in this new organization and the leadership that we have in place. Hopefully you'll be able to gain some of that confidence. Well, "will you have a job" was the first question. As I mentioned at one of the previous DVNs, I can't guarantee your job. I can't even guarantee my own job. The only person that can guarantee that we remain employed are our customers. They're the people with the money, and we have the products and services. The object of the enterprise is to make a profitable exchange. Sometimes we make the exchange without it being profitable. We have to work on that, but the issue is, we have to service our customers more successfully than our competitors if we want to stay employed. And we've got to get our enterprise sized to a level that is cost-effective. Worldwide employee survey I want to show you a tape, this is an excerpt, of the conversation I had with the top 150 managers from across a variety of different functions, at the last meeting, which was the Computer Systems Division's kickoff meeting. I was talking to them about what I'd learned from a recent employee survey that we did. Now, we did a worldwide employee survey. And a lot of what came back was certainly no surprise to me. But there are a couple of points that I think really needed some emphasis, and hopefully this tape will cover those. You'll see that I am quite serious about it, having talked to my management in this fashion. In going out and talking to our employees wherever I go, I find a lot of motivated people out there. People who want to contribute. Yesterday, I sat through a presentation of the results of our Gallup poll. You may recall that we took a little poll here, worldwide, to find out what employees are thinking. It's not that pleasant, and yet there are a couple of positive things. Worldwide -- you'll get more data than give you here -- but worldwide, there are a couple of positive things, and one that's a real challenge to us in this room. One positive thing is that employees care about this company, and you know that. Another positive thing is that even if they're imacted in the downsizing, they wish us well. The challenge is that overwhelmingly, they say we're not asking them to do enough. They say that we in management are not asking them to stretch, and they don't feel engaged. They don't feel that their full capabilities are being brought to bear on this crisis that we have. Each of us has a responsibility, and I'm taking mine this morning, to ask everyone to get engaged. To get engaged. To participate. And you have a responsibility to listen to what they have to offer. Because as everybody in here knows at a theoretical level, whoever's closer to the work knows more about it. We're not all that great about listening, and we're not near as great as we think we are, based on this survey, about empowering our employees to participate. We are not going to succeed in turning this enterprise around unless we get the full participation from the employees that remain in it to contribute to that turnaround. You and I and the people who report to you and so on in this company have that responsibility. So that's fairly clear, and it's a message that each of us has to think about and internalize. You should be looking to your management for a clear understanding of what your job function is and how you can add more value to the company. You should not be satisfied with a management that can't provide you with that direction and guidance and leadership. And I have to make sure that our managers are thinking more expansively of how to engage all of our employees on a worldwide basis in the turnaround of this enterprise. Digital's value proposition Now, if you think about Digital's value proposition and our strategy and what it is we offer going forward, it's very clear. We said about a year ago that Digital was going to be a leader in open client/server computing. This is a similar statement. It means the same thing, but some slightly different words. It talks about the fact that we have the ability, directly and through our partners, to implement and support networked platforms and applications in heterogeneous environments more quickly and more effectively, [in] more countries, than anyone else. What does that mean again? It means that customers are almost all grappling with that problem of how to get a heterogeneous environment -- that is, one that consists of different hardware, different operating systems, different applications -- to function efficiently in their enterprise, on platforms that deliver good performance, good price/performance. How do they do that? This is a credible statement. It builds on Digital's history of essentially having invented distributed computing, of being a leader in enterprisewide networking, of understanding technically what's necessary in order to deliver a solution that lets applications interoperate on a network. Not just anybody can do that. It's much easier to describe than it is to make happen, and customers will pay for that. This requires that we retain the core technologies necessary to deliver that message or that promise. That depends, of course, on our platforms, which are based on two architectures: the Intel architecture and the Alpha AXP architecture. These architectures are complementary in that you have the widest possible range of platform performance from Digital Equipment Corporation, which includes Intel from portable computers, desktop, desk-side, to servers and Alpha on top of that with higher performance. And we support three operating systems. Digital's open, as opposed to what we had been a couple of years ago, which I'm going to talk about in a minute. We offer the highest performance. Now, as we go forward through this restructuring, we have to keep our minds on a few important principles that are deriving everything we're doing here in management, and I thought I'd share some of those with you. The first is that it's important that we protect our installed base. That means that we insure that customers who have invested with Digital's products and services in the past are taken care of as we move forward, pruning some of our offerings and managing our way into the future. The asset base that we have, loyal customers that want Digital to be successful, is our most important asset. And so we're certainly going to protect that. Anything that you read about in terms of divestments or strategies around Digital will have that uppermost in our minds. In addition to that, we have to organize our company to reflect market realities. It's unfortunate that the world is the way it is somehow, but we have to understand that, and organize Digital in such a way that we are competitive in today's environment and not the environment of the past. That's what we've been talking about in terms of this restructuring. It means that we have to depend on partners. We can't do everything ourselves. And it means that for those partners to put their applications on our platforms and move those platforms through their channels of distribution, that we have to stop competing with the major strategic partners that we have. This has implications on our portfolio of activities, and we're keeping those in mind as we go forward. We have to build on our strengths, which are network, computing, platform technology, the ability to build balanced systems, understanding again the elements of that core value proposition that I spoke about. We need to engineer our products so that they're ready for network interaction. Internet-ready would be a good example. As you know, we are investing in developing technology for the Internet. It'd be good if our products came ready to go. We need to differentiate ourselves with respect to our global service and support capabilities, which is one of our key differentiators when compared to most competitors. And so we think about all of that as we make this organizational change and as we move forward. Taken together, this is going to enable us to be far more agile, responsive, customer-focused, and we should be able to expand our business through these other channels. And that is essential for Digital. Progress in last 21 months If you think about the financials of the company over the last 21 months, it's been difficult. We've only had one good quarter. Most of the quarters, we've been improving for the first five, and then we had that Q3 which was a real wake-up call for all of us. Big surprise. And yet, if we focus too much on that, we might all of the things that we've actually accomplished in the last two years, some of which are quite dramatic. Now, some of you have been here for a long time. Just think back two years ago. Two years ago, Digital was described as being a closed, proprietary minicomputer company. Our primary way of generating a profit was we raised our prices every year. We were fortunate, because our largest competitor raised their prices more. So we looked like we're giving you a bargain if we only raised our prices a little bit. Those days are gone forever. We were considered proprietary two years ago. Today, we are considered open. And that "least likely to lock in a customer" quote is from an article in Gartner, one of the analysts that studies the computer industry. They said, Digital is the least likely to lock you in as a customer with some proprietary operating system. That is a dramatic change in perception. Not all of the customers have yet totally internalized that, but they will, because they read these reports, it gets picked up, and it begins to change the image of our company, and we certainly are different. Two years ago, we had, unfortunately, inferior performance in our products. And we had inferior price/performance as a result. Today, as you well know, because of our Alpha AXP architecture, we have leadership performance. Nobody even argues anymore about who has the phottest-performing systems. Alpha is the hands-down winner, the first fully 64-bit implementation, the only one that runs a 64-bit operating system, clearly ahead of the competition. And we are a price/performance leader in all of the price bands, in less than two years. Two years ago, we had a very inferior UNIX. We didn't believe in UNIX, we didn't invest in UNIX, our customers want to buy UNIX. Most of the growth in the last few years in the system side has been with the UNIX operating system. That growth has been enjoyed by our competitors because ours was inferior. In less than two years, our engineering team, with a lot of hard work and a lot of investment, has brought us from way behind to absolute leadership, according to some analysts. A couple of articles in the June time frame, one from Gartner again, one from D.H. Brown. The D.H. Brown article benchmarked Digital's UNIX against all of the major competitors, and some very minor competitors, and declared that we were the leader. I mean, I don't even make quite that expansive a claim with our customers, but I do say we're absolutely among the leaders. The Brown article said we're the leader. We have the best implementation of a second-generation UNIX in leadership position in terms of capabilities and performance. Two years ago we were hopelessly inferior. Two years ago, our PCs were considered primarily a joke. In the sense that it was well-known that we had tried in the early '80s and failed, tried again in the late '80s and failed, appeared to be trying in the 1990s and failing, to take PCs seriously and to be a real player in the PC market. We've been identified by several, including Dataquest, that in the last two years, Digital has had the fastest-growing PC business in the world. Today, our PCs are well-respected for their quality, reliability, and capability, and we're growing, as I mentioned earlier, at more than 100 percent per year. And we're profitable, which is no small feat in the PC business. We're going to continue to grow strongly there. We now have a business that just finished at about a billion and a half dollar run rate. Next year it'll be more than a two-billion-dollar business, and profitable. In just two years. New organization New talent and new organization. One of the key things, when we attracted Enrico Pesatori to the company to run the PC business, is I made a clear decision, and there were a lot of people advising me not to do it, made a clear decision to have the engineering for PCs, the marketing and sales channels for PCs, the whole thing for PCs separate. And there were people saying, no, no, we want that to be part of our central functional matrix-y stuff. I'm saying no, I want to set that up separately, like Charlie Christ's disks business had been separate. Like our semiconductor operations had been separate. You begin to get a trend here. Those things that were separate and lean and line organizations were successful. And Enrico delivered, and is getting promoted as a result to run the Computer Systems Division. Another executive that certainly delivers is Charlie Christ. He took our disk business, which was headed really into obsolescence. I mean we were pursuing a strategy of ever-bigger disks, ever-more-expensive investments with little return, the wrong approach entirely, and [Charlie] brought us into the modern SCSI disks, high capacity, high reliability, high performance, and profitable at the top end of the market. He did an excellent job, and Charlie's being promoted, as I mentioned, to run the Components Division. So it's good that we focus on these successes. We talk about what have we been able to accomplish, and there's other accomplishments as well. Progress with Digital's partners So we talk about the conflicts that we've had with our partners. Partners, whether they're distributors, value-added resellers, had come up to me and said how extraordinarily difficult it is to do business with Digital, to support their applications or their products on our platforms. Well, we've made a lot of progress. A couple of years ago, less than a third of our products -- talking about products now -- less than a third moved through indirect channels. In the year just ended, it'll be about 55 percent. Next year, we're going to drive that to over 60 percent. The goal is 63 percent. This is primarily because of the success we had in the business that drove those indirect channels -- PCs, disks, and Larry Cabrinety's Components and Peripherals. Larry in particular developed a lot of new channels that had never done business with Digital through which we moved all kinds of peripheral products. Things like our single-board computers to the OEMs. Things like our videos, our printers, were very successful. We can continue that success. It's a much lower-cost way of delivering our products to our customers, and we have to do that. You know, two years ago, we didn't even have any Alpha AXP systems. Hadn't shipped any yet. We had the chips, we hadn't shipped any systems. And today we have a full line of Alpha AXP systems as well as Intel architecture systems. We didn't have any applications. Today we have almost 6,000 applications for our Alpha AXP systems. About half are for UNIX, and a few hundred for Windows NT. A couple of years ago, we had all matrix structure, essentially no accountability, and no ability really for management at hardly any level to understand where we made money and where we lose money, where the investments pay off and where they don't. We've been moving steadily toward a much more accountable structure, and as I mentioned, we now have a structure that we've just implemented that not only includes revenue, costs, and profit, but also the balance-sheet items, the assets employed in the business. And each of those business units has its own model, so that you can measure it and benchmark it against external competition. And that is the benchmark: the external competition. Return to profitability I'm quite optimistic, frankly, about these changes. They're based on what we've learned worked, they're based on proven executives that came in and contributed and made a real impact on our company, or [who] had been here before and demonstrated their leadership and are being promoted. With that kind of leadership and commitment, with the dedication to this turnaround, with our employee involvement, there's no question in my mind that we will return to profitability. We need to have that profitability from operations by the end of the second quarter. The reason we need that is we need to restore confidence in our customers about Digital's prospects. Today, some of our customers are reluctant to buy our products and services because our competition is telling them we're not going to make it. That's far from true. Our balance sheet is stronger than that of most of our competitors. But until we start generating a profit, there'll always be some doubt in some of those customers. We need to return to profitability quickly. We have the talent that we need to do that; we have the organizational structure we need to do that; we have a value proposition that is credible with our customers; we have a strategy to implement; we need everybody involved. With that kind of involvement, there's no question in my mind that Digital will return to profitability, and we'll begin to grow again, which is a good deal more fun than all of the downsizing that we've been having to go through. Now with that I'd like to answer any questions that you might have about any of these remarks, something I didn't cover that you were interested in, whatever. It's very informal, and I would appreciate your questions. FOR DIGITAL INTERNAL USE ONLY | |||||
3255.42 | What's in a name? | SCAACT::RESENDE | Visualize whirled peas -- RUAUU2? | Thu Jul 21 1994 17:22 | 7 |
Thought stuck me as I read the latest reorganization story on BP. The phrase 'new Digital' is used in the org chart. Am I correct in recalling that the sequence over the years has been: DEC -> New DEC -> Digital -> New Digital ? | |||||
3255.43 | POCUS::OHARA | Reverend Middleware | Thu Jul 21 1994 18:24 | 1 | |
Ah, where is good old Petronius when we need him? | |||||
3255.44 | Text of the Q&A session? | MANIOK::BERLINGHOF | I'm out for sun & fun ... | Fri Jul 22 1994 02:57 | 7 |
Is there anybody out there who has 'taped' the Q&A session? We couldn't seee the DVN because our DVN coordinator was on vacation ... Ach!m | |||||
3255.45 | Just hit ON | CSOA1::ECK | Fri Jul 22 1994 09:37 | 2 | |
Does anyone in your office know how to turn on a TV and change the channel?? | |||||
3255.46 | distribution channel? | MANIOK::BERLINGHOF | I'm out for sun & fun ... | Fri Jul 22 1994 09:47 | 5 |
Re: .-1 What's a 'TV' and what do you mean with 'Channel'? Ach!m {�o�} | |||||
3255.47 | The ULTIMATE 1000? | VFOVAX::BRAMBLETT | Fri Jul 22 1994 10:02 | 9 | |
Well, I just have to wonder if the TOP 1000 accounts are the TOP 1000 accounts by REVENUE or PROFIT. If accounts are ranked by revenue, we are no better off determining which accounts are actually PROFITABLE. Anyone know the answer to this? LLB | |||||
3255.48 | Webesters definitions | CSOA1::ECK | Fri Jul 22 1994 10:12 | 7 | |
Re: .46 TV - that mysterious little box that carries images of things like World Cup Football, The OJ Simpson trial and Digital DVN's Some say TV is destroying the social fabric of human life. Channel - The stretch of water seperating Great Britan from the rest of the civilized world. | |||||
3255.49 | Ahhhhhhhhh! | MANIOK::BERLINGHOF | I'm out for sun & fun ... | Fri Jul 22 1994 10:20 | 11 |
Re: .-1 Eben ist der Groschen gefallen ... Thanxs Ach!m Bye the way: does anybody have the Q&A session 'online'? | |||||
3255.50 | Check Live Wire later today | CSOA1::ECK | Fri Jul 22 1994 10:28 | 1 | |
It's supposed to be on VTX Live Wire later today. | |||||
3255.51 | DIGITAL is a software comapny - redux | MONTOR::GLASER | Fri Jul 22 1994 10:33 | 18 | |
Prez Palmer made a very interesting comment in his DVN yesterday. > There are many other rumors concerning Digital operations that >might be sold. I want to assure you that I am dedicated to maintaining >those capabilities that support our core value proposition, which is to >deliver and support, directly and through partners, networked platforms >and APPLICATIONS in heterogeneous environments more quickly and more >cost-effectively than any other competitor. Note how he used the word "applications" (which I capitalized). I guess that the sale to CSC is off and DIGITAL is again in the business of being a software comapny in addition to being an ironmonger. I would say that the value od DC is much higher to DIGITAL than to CSC. How about that for the latest installment of the soap opera "Daze of our Lives". | |||||
3255.52 | PERLE::glantz | Mike, soon-to-close Paris Research Lab, 776-2836 | Fri Jul 22 1994 10:44 | 5 | |
I wouldn't read too much into Palmer's words. Partners can deliver applications too. Better than us, in some cases. Frankly, I didn't learn much from Palmer's talk. This wasn't one of his more articulate performances, in my opinion. Looking forward to the Q&A. | |||||
3255.53 | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Fri Jul 22 1994 11:08 | 9 | |
> We can't do everything ourselves. And it means that for those partners > to put their applications on our platforms and move those platforms > through their channels of distribution, that we have to stop competing > with the major strategic partners that we have. This has implications > on our portfolio of activities, and we're keeping those in mind as we > go forward. I read this as meaning that Bob intends to get rid of Rdb and applications software. | |||||
3255.54 | BP: I can't drive 55 | DPDMAI::TORRESE | Fri Jul 22 1994 11:46 | 14 | |
> At the last DVN, I spoked of the need to get down to at least aprox. >65,000 employees worldwide for our level of revenue in order to be >competitive. We talked about this in terms of two-years. Skip a couple of line > And so we're going to accelerate that into the next 12 months, and as >much as possible, we'll be done within this calendar year. repeat: We'll be done within this calendar year. Is it 12 month's or 5 months? | |||||
3255.55 | Just my op. | BIGQ::LAFORTE | Fri Jul 22 1994 11:47 | 9 | |
Reply .47 Linda, What he means by the top 1000 accounts is probably the top 1000 large accounts by $$$$. Just my opinion... | |||||
3255.56 | Clear to me | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Fri Jul 22 1994 11:49 | 4 |
re .54: He meant 12 months, with the bulk of the layoffs being complete by the end of the calendar year. | |||||
3255.57 | GRANMA::MWANNEMACHER | daddyneverwasthecadillackind | Fri Jul 22 1994 12:05 | 3 | |
Isn't that what was going to happen last year?????? | |||||
3255.58 | MBALDY::LANGSTON | our middle name is 'Equipment' | Fri Jul 22 1994 14:41 | 18 | |
One thing he said struck me as quite, mmmmmmm, curious. "Today, as you well know, because of our Alpha AXP architecture, we have leadership performance. Nobody even argues anymore about who has the hottest-performing systems. Alpha is the hands-down winner, the first fully 64-bit implementation, the only one that runs a 64-bit operating system, clearly ahead of the competition." Isn't everybody saying *they* have the "hottest-performing systems"? Bruce P.S.: Re: software company, I was walking back to my desk from the water fountain the other day. While attempting to shake the excess water from my "Digital is software company" coffee mug, I lost my grip and it shattered into about twenty pieces. I picked up most of them and Scotch(tm) taped them back together. | |||||
3255.59 | RE:.58 "Digital is software company" | IAMNRA::SULLIVAN | Stephanie! quantum mutatus ab illo | Fri Jul 22 1994 15:39 | 7 |
> While attempting to shake the excess water from my "Digital is software > company" coffee mug, I lost my grip and it shattered into about twenty > pieces. I picked up most of them and Scotch(tm) taped them back together. Yes, but it doesn't hold water... :-\ -Stephanie | |||||
3255.60 | Never did -- so what else is new... | WLDBIL::KILGORE | DCU 3Gs -- fired but not forgotten | Fri Jul 22 1994 15:49 | 1 |
3255.61 | exit | GLDOA::WERNER | Tue Jul 26 1994 15:59 | 12 | |
Just saw the Scott Roeth memo on the "new" Account Focused strategy for Global account..."now that we're moving away from geographical focus..." Is there an echo in here or have we reach some form of an organizational standing-wave state where organizational approaches and structure changes now reverberate back and forth across the organization perpetually? Also wanted to comment on the budgeting by quarters...at least they're getting closer to the real business horizon in todays world. Anything much more than a qurater out is a guess anyway. ;^) Norm |