T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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3367.1 | | PNTAGN::WARRENFELTZR | | Fri Sep 02 1994 09:25 | 1 |
| ...maybe they (the directors) all have golden parachutes...
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3367.2 | No people, no projects! | STKHLM::STENSTROM | Still Crazy After All These Beers... | Fri Sep 02 1994 09:47 | 5 |
| Well, since Digital Consulting was killed-off this to me is a clear sign
that we shall NOT have any SW people and that means we shall not have any
projects either.
/Tom
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3367.3 | Good logic, Faulty assumptions | KYOSS1::BOYLE | Dirty Jobs Done Dirt Cheap | Fri Sep 02 1994 09:51 | 11 |
| I disagree that DEC is great at projects and OUR projects are what sell
our hardware. DCs profits do not come from large SI type projects.
We are much better at small quick in/out projects.
Although projects sell machines, those projects can just as easily be
run by someone else (ANDERSON, EDS, etc.). Problem as I understand it
is that those guys use vendors that DON'T compete for SI business.
Enrico will make sure that we get those guys to sell our products at
the expense of DC or anything else (IMHO).
Jack
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3367.4 | | FORTY2::DALLAS | Paul Dallas, DEC/EDI @REO2-F/F2 | Fri Sep 02 1994 10:01 | 4 |
| Given that we've sold off Rdb and that the fate of the ENTIRE software
business is due to be revealed in a couple of weeks, what makes people
so sure we'll have any products to sell? The way we're going, we may be
left with only AXP chips to sell.
|
3367.5 | 4 what it's worth | WARFUT::HEROND | | Fri Sep 02 1994 11:30 | 11 |
| My 2 cents
I dont think Digital will stop it's DECline until it produces and
sells chips only.
As for the resellers, They get better every day as more and more
people from Digital join them.
Soon to be a reseller. *8-)
Dave
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3367.6 | The three S's are dead - long live the three S's | AYOV18::AYRDAM::DAGLEISHP | DM, an enabler for successful OO... | Fri Sep 02 1994 12:03 | 19 |
| It was only a while back that I was told that the new Digital ( versus the
old DEC ) was in the 3 S's ...
Silicon
Software
Services
Rumours abound that SQF ( the Scottish foundry ) is about to be sold to
Motorola and that might just be the first - strike 1
We have sold Rdb and looks as though only we will only have
O/S and layered software in the future - strike 2
We have tried to sell DC and have now moved it to BTS ( ? ) under John
Pacy's OMS organisation; unclear where this will lead - strike 3
Not too sure where any projects fit with the latest picture.
Who has the vision?
|
3367.7 | 2$... | LARVAE::HARVEY | Baldly going into the unknown... | Fri Sep 02 1994 13:26 | 33 |
| Just to share my understandings of things here in the UK...
DC folks (those that remain) will be "absorbed" into the ABU structure so as
to provide pre-sales capabilities/resources to the account teams as well as
bodies for sale to those customers who will pay for them... To my mind this
is where we were several years ago - a bit of "back to the future"....
Quite whether implementation and individual metrics will still get in the
way remains to be seen...
ie. Q? "Want to help (presales) my $m project ?"
A. "Nope, gotta make my weekly/monthly/quarterly target earnings !" %^(
I'm heartened by some of the attitudes etc. I see in MCS and the new
approach to business that's emerging there too... Support for project work
is being made available where they can see potential in and beyond the
project itself. Mind you, you've got to have a persuasive argument that you
have a good chance of winning.
Direct "house account" sales teams (those that remain) will be the direct
sellers to those "lucky" selected customers and the projects that arise from
them. The emphasis will be demand creation within the customer base for DEC
products and to satisfy that demand with the best resource or facility we
can. If we can use DEC people fine, if we need a VAR to deliver kit, that's
fine too.
When we see a project we can determine how best to approach it - direct on
our own, via a VAR channel, in partnership, as a sub-contractor to a.n.other
or not at all. Part of the qualification process as to how to win should
look at the best approach.
Optimistically......
Rog
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3367.8 | OK, enough is enough, reality is real... | POBOX::CORSON | Higher, and a bit more to the right | Sat Sep 03 1994 15:09 | 39 |
| Rog -
You are more right (as in correct) than a lot of people in the U.S.
would like to admit. As a quick example, Andersen Consulting sold over
$100MM in H-P equipment last year, while reselling less than $3MM in
DECproduct. Why? Because we compete with them. Even more stupid, we
lose almost all those deals, but we delay their sales cycle so they
give us the proverbial "bird".
Now for the first time in my nine years at DEC, we seem to be
finally facing the realities of a highly competitive, and fragmented,
marketplace. The trick folks is not competing, it is winning. More
than your competitors' and every day. I, for one, would be in seventh
heaven if the US Justice Department were investigating us for "unfair"
competition, instead of Microsoft or IBM.
Yes, there is going to be a lot of pain and suffering. We have 35
years of cultural "fixing" that needs correction, and refocusing. This
will take serious time. It will be two-three more years before we are
a lean, mean fighting machine. Get use to it.
The new focus, as I see it, will be on systems engineering,
systems software support, after market support, and sales. Virtually
everything else is up for grabs. If the price is right, some of the
units comprising the four areas above could get sold also. Spending
cash and people time for product maintenance that will not be market
leaders is a waste of capital. Therefore goodbye rdb. There are going
to be a lot more goodbyes as time goes on. But it is necessary, and
needed.
Alpha is a winner. PCs, if you produce high quality, is a winner.
Networks is a winner. Everybody else better hustle to become market
leaders, or else.
I go on and on whenever, or wherever. But we can survive, and grow,
and prosper; but like raising children, it ain't going to be without
some serious pain.
the Greyhawk
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3367.9 | | NOVA::FEENAN | Jay Feenan - Rdb Engineering | Tue Sep 06 1994 09:56 | 27 |
| > units comprising the four areas above could get sold also. Spending
> cash and people time for product maintenance that will not be market
> leaders is a waste of capital. Therefore goodbye rdb. There are going
Technologically Rdb is a market leader. Any Digital database engineer
that was out on the interviewing circuit knows this, Digitals
competitors in the database market have voted unanimously on this. What
Rdb did not have is a company that understood what database market it was
going after, a company that was confused on who their competitors
really were and basically no marketing whatsoever.
Rdb survived all these years because of its technical excellance.
Digital did not know how to kill it.
The sad part is that I could have replaced Rdb with a number of
different software products over the past 10 years at Digital.
People that had to draw up the 'Rdb deal' realize how central it was
to all software, support and consulting within this company. For
those that don't know there are about 10 software projects/products
lumped under the banner of 'Rdb' in this sale.
From my perspective good luck with the alpha chip sell those boxes.
-Jay
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3367.10 | DC Focus | SULACO::JUDICE | May fortune favor the foolish... | Wed Sep 07 1994 08:16 | 11 |
| re: -previous...
Properly structured, large and small projects can and have been
profitable. I think the key to success (and the direction of Digital
Consulting), is to focus on being experts at applying our technical
knowledge to solve a problem using our products - not to be a be all,
end all, consulting house.
/ljj
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3367.11 | | PNTAGN::WARRENFELTZR | | Wed Sep 07 1994 09:01 | 17 |
| .10
How are we to determine what business we want to be in and what
business we don't?
If we measure it by $$$ only, the small sales will never turn into big
sales. If we measure by our product only, some inital sales won't
qualify at the expense of future projects.
Example, in FY94 a customer purchased a little more than $100K in
Digital Consulting. Now, in FY95, we're entertaining a possible
multi-million, multi-year opportunity.
If we would put too many restrictions on what business/projects we want
to do, this will be at the expense of future business.
My .02.
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3367.12 | I would like to be remain optimist ... but it's difficult ! | KETJE::SYBERTZ | Marc Sybertz@BRO - DTN 856-7572 | Fri Sep 09 1994 10:30 | 16 |
| Hi Greyhawk,
I like your note .8 ... (your notes in general)
The problem is that what you say is already reality since years now ...
and look to what some people still think ...
I would like to remain optimist as you seem to be but reading all what internal
people can still say (for example about RDB) show clearly that this company is
not yet ready to admit market *facts*.
It seems also that within this company, instead of doing what your boss tell you
to do, everyone begin to enter a debate ... Result : a lot of ressources spended
for nothing, and nothing is done ...
Marc.
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3367.13 | We must focus on strengths | POBOX::CORSON | Higher, and a bit more to the right | Wed Sep 14 1994 15:51 | 25 |
|
Yo, Marc - you're right about the market facts, and in most cases,
the assumption that business as usual still permeates middle management
at ol' DEC.
Where I draw the line today is that thinking is different at the
very top, and is not reflected by our middle management folks. This is
why all MM jobs now go to outsiders.
The key to all this will be in the execution of whatever strategy
results from *their* thinking (read experience in the new job). I've
talked with many of the newbies, and they are, for the most part,
pretty hip as to the marketplaces we are in. Their focus on improving
our marketshares will tell the tape.
None of this stuff is rocket science anymore. I know it used to be,
but it isn't now. Remember what it was like in the late 70s to make a
SNA/SDLC network interop with anything? Now SNA is a dead duck
everywhere. Most anatysts, and users, agree that in five years this
technology is history. So what is going to replace it? Not APPN I'll
bet, nor IBM's HPR. Probably TCP/IP at the backbone level with very
sophisticated architectural enhancements.
Is anybody there yet? Are we close? I'd put my money on our
engineers in front of anyone else given resources to be the leader.
Hey, watch this space. It may very well determine our entire future as
a company. After all, we really did invent networking!!!
the Greyhawk
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