T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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3308.1 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Sat Aug 06 1994 06:28 | 22 |
| 1) provide a written guarantee to customers of the product that it will
be sold and serviced for a certain number of years. This is quite
common in other industries. If I buy Royal Doulton china, then for some
(not all) of their patterns I get a guarantee that I will be able to
buy replacements for broken plates, etc. for the next 10 years with the
same style and pattern.
This guarantee is not just a guarantee to customers, giving them
confidence in the lifetime of a product, it is also a guarantee for
employees. It says to an employee "In x years time we will still be
selling and supporting this product, and if, at that time you are the
best person available to do the job you will have a job". Some of us
who have mortgages and families are motivated by job security as much
as working on the latest new product. Working on a new product gives
*no* job security. Remember the PDP-16, PDP-11/60, Trax, ...? The only
reason that some of DEC's employees that became experts on those
systems still have jobs is that DEC was rapidly expanding at the time
and could easily move them. Any new product can be a failure.
2) Convince the employees and customers that the above customer
commitment is binding. Doulton has kept this type of commitment over at
least 50 years or so, so you can start to believe them.
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3308.2 | new VP rumored... | ANNECY::HOTCHKISS | | Mon Aug 08 1994 04:34 | 15 |
| re .1 the markets aren't the same-you can do this with Royal Doulton
because it never goes out of fashion and doesn't require massive
capital to reengineer.We used to do just this with Vaxes until quiter
recently and are constrained by law in some countries to ensure 10
years supply-however,since it is a computer we supply we know it is
unlikely to be needed.
Sorry,but the only way to do rampdowns is not to dither around-decide
and kill instantly has always been the strategy of successful
companies.It is painful but it is like pulling teeth as apposed to six
months toothache.
I also believe it is quite refreshing to do-you avoid a lot of the
uncertainty problems with employees and customers and if you deal with
clients directly it is often painless and manageable.
Our problem,as in most domains,is management by rumor and dithering.
Now can I be a VP please?
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3308.3 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Mon Aug 08 1994 05:37 | 25 |
| I agree that some things go out of fashion, but they can take a
long time, even in the computer business. If DEC had produced a
portable Fortran compiler at the time it produced the PDP-6 we might be
celebrating 30 years of very boring, very profitable updates, upgrades,
simple ports to new platforms, and DEC would have been a little richer.
If Unix had gone the way I thought it ought to go when I first saw it
then it would have been dead 20 years ago, but maybe it still has a
year or two left of profitability, even if it is ancient and boring.
What customers want is stability. This is the reason for the
popularity of open systems. The customer *knows* that some of his
suppliers will go bankrupt, change their line of business, or whatever
in the next few years, and he wants some sort of guarantee for the
product he is interested in. Where we have a unique and differentiating
product (knowing the basenoter I would guess we might be talking about
VTX here) then possibly we don't want to ensure that we have
competition by showing the customer an alternative supplier.
And it is the *old* products that make the profit. At the time DEC
was writing VMS, if we had scrapped *all* our PDP-11 products we would
still have been more profitable than DG or Prime because of our PDP-8
business. If we had tried to kill that quickly as "obselete" then we
wouldn't have had the money to develop and market the VAX, which in
turn didn't make much money in its first 5 years of business. We still
have a significant PDP-11 business, after 2 years of AXP.
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3308.4 | Focus on money - not age ! | RDGENG::WILLIAMS_A | | Mon Aug 08 1994 06:04 | 25 |
| re .3
Excellent point. We should be focussing on products (old, or even if
they are new) that are not profitable, and killing them quickly.
Even if something is old (and perhaps rather inelegant by modern
standards), if there is a profitable market, we should retain (even
enhance ?) it. Note that IBM will still sell you VSE on mainframes (why ?
because they can make money - even though Fred and Wilmah would be
familiar with it.)
I suppose that then raises another question - do we *know* how
profitable any particular product/offering may be ?
Oh, and the quickest way to 'dump' a product ? - outsource it, plus any
staff that need to go with it. There will always be a player who can
produce a return to suit his requirements, even with 'old' products.
That way, Digital could still support the installed base, via a
'partner' instead.
AW
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3308.5 | Haven't we already "dumped" the PDP11 in this way? | SUBURB::POWELLM | Nostalgia isn't what it used to be! | Mon Aug 08 1994 08:42 | 1 |
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