T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
3512.1 | not all our chips | ASABET::SILVERBERG | My Other O/S is UNIX | Tue Nov 15 1994 06:10 | 6 |
| No....we've also got Intel systems, which ship in much higher volumes
than Alphas from Digital ever will.
IMHO
Mark
|
3512.2 | Intel has 0% of the current technology microprocessor market | BOXORN::HAYS | I think we are toast. Remember the jam? | Tue Nov 15 1994 10:05 | 48 |
| RE: 3512.0 by GVPROD::DOIGTE::Chisholm
> This weeks Business Week says that Intel has 80% of the w/w microprocessor
> market and that Motorola, IBM, HP, SUN, MIPS and DEC, plus a few others in
> Japan are fighting for the remaining 20%.
Intel has this market share based on the x86 family. As long as the
software written for the 186, the 286, the 386 and the 486 will run on
the next generation (Pentium is the "586", but is not called that for
legal reasons), users have a real motivation to stay with Intel. The
problem for Intel is that the x86 family is at near end of life. For a
list of instruction set issues, a x86 will run at 1/4 the speed of an
alpha, all other things equal (number of transistors, etc). Intel can't
change the instruction set without making the old software non-functional.
Intel can't continue to just push x86, as users are switching to new
microprocessors. Intel knows this and has killed the P7 (the "786") as not
competitive.
Intel needs to do one of several things:
1) Design a new microprocessor with an instruction set something Alpha like,
or "RISC", and play catch up with Alpha, MIPS and PowerPC. Playing catch up
isn't fun, at best, and about the time Intel might have catch up, the
generation after "RISC" will be starting up. What then?
2) Try to define the next generation processor. While a "RISC" machine has
a roughly four times advantage in speed over a "CISC", a "Very Long
Instruction Word" machine or perhaps some other possible machine will
probably have a similar advantage over "RISC" machines. The problem here
is you spend a lot of dollars and might not get a marketable machine. DEC
did this with uPrism, and did get a very marketable machine in 1988, which
was killed to aid marketing the VAX9000.
3) Regardless of what they pick above, keep making and selling x86 chips.
Just as digital is still making and selling VAX and PDP-11 products.
> Correct me if I'm wrong but are we betting our company on winning this
> battle ?
The Alpha is going to get a significant market share of the "RISC"
microprocessors, which is going to be a majority of the market in 5 years
or less. This means that the bet will probably pay off in terms of the
survival of digital. If we don't bet on alpha, digital's survival is much
more in doubt.
Phil
|
3512.3 | not just quantity -- dollars, too! | GRANPA::JWOOD | | Tue Nov 15 1994 10:06 | 5 |
| We also generated larger revenue from Intel-based sales for the past 2
quarters; as I recall it was Intel #1, Alpha #2, and VAX #3 in both
quarters.
JW
|
3512.4 | Some dinosaurs were big before they became extinct | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Tue Nov 15 1994 10:13 | 4 |
| Intel are the dinosaurs with their CISC systems, and they haven't
got an alternative. In 5 to 10 years one of the current RISC systems
will have won out, and I have shares to show that I believe it will be
AXP.
|
3512.5 | HP/Intel and VLIW? | WRKSYS::LORD | Our forgetteries are in fine working order. | Tue Nov 15 1994 10:55 | 11 |
| Could someone comment on the HP/Intel alliance and the "very long word"
(I've forgotten what it's actually called but VLIW seems to stick in
my mind; it's in the same Business Week article referenced in the base
note) technology and how that might play out vis-a-vis Alpha, PowerPC,
and the other possible players.
HP/Intel think they've got the winner with VLIW (hope that's the right
acronym) technology and that they'll be able to retain the majority
of that 80% share Intel has now.
-j
|
3512.6 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Tue Nov 15 1994 11:05 | 11 |
| HP and Intel haven't said what technology they'll be using - there's
speculation that they intend to use a VLIW (Very Long Instruction Word)
architecture, mainly because HP acquired some people and technology from
a defunct VLIW company called Multiflow.
Somewhere (ALPHANOTES?) I saw a detailed analysis of the announcement, which
is an accomplishment considering that the announcement itself was just
smoke. How anyone can take this alliance, with its seemingly impossible
to meet goals, seriously is beyond me.
Steve
|
3512.7 | beating Intel won't be easy | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (DTN 297-5780, MRO3-3/L16) | Tue Nov 15 1994 12:11 | 28 |
| re Note 3512.2 by BOXORN::HAYS:
> 1) Design a new microprocessor with an instruction set something Alpha like,
> or "RISC", and play catch up with Alpha, MIPS and PowerPC. Playing catch up
> isn't fun, at best, and about the time Intel might have catch up, the
> generation after "RISC" will be starting up. What then?
In what sense would Intel have to "catch up"?
Do you mean catch up with the technology? Recent history
demonstrates that the second or third comer to a technology
isn't at that much of a disadvantage, as long as they are
aggressive and invest heavily. They even have the
opportunity to avoid others' mistakes and take advantage of
others' market-building. Besides, Intel is not a
semiconductor technology lightweight; they have invested in
RISC for many years.
Do you mean catch up in the market? If Intel can in any way
leverage their current market presence (and I'm sure they
will try), it might not take them long to surpass whoever is
the leader of the RISC 20% of the market.
Of course they have to catch up. But sometimes an elephant
can dance, e.g., IBM had to catch up in the PC market in the
early '80s.
Bob
|
3512.8 | | BOXORN::HAYS | I think we are toast. Remember the jam? | Tue Nov 15 1994 12:13 | 17 |
| RE: 512.5 by WRKSYS::LORD "Our forgetteries are in fine working order."
> Could someone comment on the HP/Intel alliance and the "very long word"
> (I've forgotten what it's actually called but VLIW seems to stick in
> my mind; it's in the same Business Week article referenced in the base
> note) technology and how that might play out vis-a-vis Alpha, PowerPC,
> and the other possible players.
VLIW is a next generation (ie: after Alpha, MIPS and PowerPC) machine.
"VLIW" stands for "Very Long Instruction Word", and it deals with a
problem in current machines with instruction pipelining clashing with
multiple issue of instructions. While it should allow for higher
performance, it's not clear if it is the whole answer for the next
generation of processors.
Phil
|
3512.9 | BYTE Articles provide background ... | CGOOA::WARDLAW | CHARLES WARDLAW @CGO | Tue Nov 15 1994 13:19 | 27 |
| FWIT -
Please see the last two issues of Byte Magazine (Oct'94 & Nov'94) for
discussions on RISC processor announcements. The October issue covered
our 21164 chip, and the November issue reviews the major competition:
o From Workstation Vendors (64 bit competition)
- MIPS / T5
- SUN / UltraSPARC
- IBM-Moto / PowerPC 620
o From INTEL "wanna-bees" (Pentium competition)
- AMD / K5
In the November issue is also a discussion on the VLIW issue
(pp 287 - 288).
My conclusions are that (a) everyone else in the workstation vendor
group *except* HP will have volume production of 1st-gen 64-bit
processors by 2HCY95, or 1HCY96, and that (b) Intel may need VLIW
in order to perform x86 emulation fast enough to keep up with the
competition (the AMD-K5 discussion is of particular relevance here,
because it looks like they have done something similar in their x86
to RISC translation process). Given all this, I still expect HP
and INTEL to make some sort of announcement for the 1996 time frame,
even if it turns out to be some form of "marketecture".
Charles
|
3512.10 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Tue Nov 15 1994 13:21 | 8 |
| Re: .8
I'm sure Intel and HP would like you (and everyone) to think that VLIW is
"next generation", but in fact it is very old technology that just didn't
pan out. Nobody I know of has been successful marketing a VLIW system -
they couldn't compete with RISC or even good CISC implementations.
Steve
|
3512.11 | More info on HP/INTEL chip | MEMIT::PORTER_J | | Tue Nov 15 1994 15:17 | 14 |
| re: HP/INTEL alliance
One other thing that nobody here has mentioned (and more FUD for the
fire)...
HP is claiming that this "POST PA-RISC" chip (the HP/INTEL chip) will
be BINARY-COMPATIBLE with both its current PA-RISC architecture and
with Intel's x86 architecture.
In the words of Bob Palmer, "That's nonsense."
It seems that HP (and Intel?) can say anything they like right now and
the press will just believe them. We should be challenging this
statement PUBLICLY (in the press) every chance we get.
|
3512.12 | | NETCAD::SHERMAN | Steve NETCAD::Sherman DTN 226-6992, LKG2-A/R05 pole AA2 | Tue Nov 15 1994 17:10 | 6 |
| Well, I think that it is possible for them to maintain binary
compatibility. It'll make it chock full of gates and painfully
slow. Albeit, that kind of defeats the purpose ... An image of a
smoking golf ball comes to mind ...
Steve
|
3512.13 | Commercial UNIX | MIMS::SANDERS_J | | Tue Nov 15 1994 17:20 | 6 |
| IDC says that in 5 years 90% of all commercial UNIX applications will
be running on the 4 major RISC platforms (ALPHA, PA-RISC, SPARC,
POWER-PC). Where will this leave Intel in the commercial UNIX market?
They don't rule the world, just part of it.
|
3512.14 | | MU::PORTER | First character in personal name must be alphabetic | Tue Nov 15 1994 17:30 | 20 |
| Why doesn't the 'obvious' solution of two CPUs work?
It doesn't have to be a dual-processor system, it could be
a tag-team arrangement like was done on the Mipsfair machines,
which had a fairly powerful onboard CVAX just to get the system
running (and to run diagnostics). Only one CPU runs at once
and when it detects it's got code for the 'other' one, it flips
a toggle which freezes it and starts the other one.
(Easier when you don't have pre-emptive multitasking!).
If you want to use the right words you could call it
a 'compatibility coprocessor'.
Is this a bad solution because (a) the component cost is
thereby increased in an extremely cost-sensitive market,
or (b) because it requires Microsquish to write some clever
software?
|
3512.15 | | GEMGRP::gemnt3.zko.dec.com::Winalski | Careful with that AXP, Eugene | Tue Nov 15 1994 17:48 | 17 |
| RE: .13
Intel may only rule part of the market, but it's the highest-volume
part of the market. By comparison, the entire Unix market is down in
the statistical noise.
RE: .14
Co-processor solutions (1) increase box cost in an extremely
price-sensitive market with low margins, and (2) would require
Microsquish software support, and Microsquish isn't exactly tripping
over its own feet in the haste to provide it. Microsoft's answer to
moving to RISC is Windows NT, and Microsoft doesn't really care which
of the hardware vendors wins out in the end.
--PSW
|
3512.16 | we did it too | ODIXIE::SILVERS | dig-it-all, we rent backhoes. | Tue Nov 15 1994 18:13 | 9 |
| re - HP and intel can say anything and get away with it....
Remember, we said that the VAX 8800 was a 'supercomputer' (I still have
some old literature) and expected the market to beleive it -
unfortunately they did, and were very disappointed when the performance
claims did not pan out....
The beginning of the 'disbeleif' of DEC claims. (Jupiter
notwithstanding...)
|
3512.17 | Try this on for size... | POBOX::CORSON | Higher, and a bit more to the right | Tue Nov 15 1994 18:18 | 14 |
|
Microsquish (I really like that term, much better than Cutler's
Microsloppy) owns PCs thru Windows. Usquish plans on owning the RISC
market with WindowsNT at the server. Are these guys geniuses, or what?
I suggest we tune Alpha to run NT like two bats out of hell. Our
current focus on recruiting NT ports is probably a very good move, and
we should do more.
Unix as statistical noise is only partially correct. Measured in
units, yes. Measured in dollars, and especially margin dollars from a
hardware standpoint, no.
Now a Digital/Usquish UNIX/NT "Universal Server" could be a real
show stopper.
the Greyhawk
|
3512.18 | aacccckkkkktthhhppppttt!!! | MU::PORTER | First character in personal name must be alphabetic | Tue Nov 15 1994 20:02 | 3 |
| Dunno who invented "Microsquish", but *I* stole it
from Berke Breathed - the strip where Gates's mind
was projected into Bill the Cat.
|
3512.20 | Commercial UNIX | ASABET::SILVERBERG | My Other O/S is UNIX | Wed Nov 16 1994 06:52 | 25 |
| re.13 Commercial UNIX
Intel has been winning the Commercial UNIX VOLUME business with SCO.
However, from a revenue $$ perspective, they're way down the list.
(HP has over 40% of the Commercial UNIX market using revenue as the
criteria). With the rapid growth of HP, IBM, SUN, ATT/GIS and perhaps
even Digital, eventually, in the Commercial UNIX market from a volume
perspective, the Intel lead is eroding (maybe SOLARIS on Intel will
keep things moving for a period of time).
It remains to be seen how the Intel/HP next generation RISC technology
and platforms will do in the market, and that will determine Intel's
Commercial UNIX future.
(We had a chance to do much better in this market a couple of years
ago when Dom LaCava created the Commercial UNIX Marketing Group to
attack this fast-growing segment of the UNIX market. Unfortunately,
soon after, the Central Engineering Managers decided that was not
a market/product focus and the Group was eliminated....we could've
been a contender 8^)).
IMHO
Mark Silverberg
|
3512.21 | RISC didn't make sense in 1974 | BOXORN::HAYS | I think we are toast. Remember the jam? | Wed Nov 16 1994 09:22 | 53 |
| RE: 3512.10 by QUARK::LIONEL "Free advice is worth every cent"
> Nobody I know of has been successful marketing a VLIW system - they
> couldn't compete with RISC or even good CISC implementations.
RISC machines are faster than CISC because prefetching of data is done as
soon as possible under the control of the software (and other reasons as
well). A CISC machines can and do prefetch data under hardware control,
but such hardware prefetch is quite complex, meaning slow, hard to design
and test, and takes lots of resources that could be used in other ways to
speed up the machine.
To speed up a RISC machine, several instructions can be "issued" (started)
at the same time under hardware control. Hardware multi-issue (beyond a
small number) requires very complex hardware, meaning slow, hard to design
and test, and takes lots of resources that could be used in other ways to
speed up the machine.
VLIW is ONE way of making a software controlled multi-issue machine. There
are others, and Intel/hp are taking the risk that one of them might be
much better than VLIW. While I think Intel/hp is wrong, digital isn't
doing a next generation design that I have heard of.
Now, VLIW machines COULD BE MADE TO BE 100% BIT LEVEL COMPATIBLE WITH
SEVERAL EXISTING MACHINES. How? Simple. Let's design a simple VLIW
machine that is 100% 8085, Z80, 6502, PDP-8 and 6809 compatible. These
are old 8 bit microprocessors, for ye youngsters, other than the PDP-8,
which is a 12-bit minicomputer.
Instruction word formats:
|<8 bits>|<8 bits>|<8 bits>|<-8 bits->|
|<-8085->|<-6502->|<-6809->|<control >|
|<8 bits>|<--12 bits-->|<--12 bits--->|
|<-Z-80->|<---PDP-8--->|<--control--->|
The hardware is one of each microprocessor, plus some address and control
logic.
To run an 8085 program, the existing code would be put into the left
column, and the control field would be set to enable the 8085 machine,
and to give the 8085 machine control over instruction address space (on a
cycle by cycle basis). As some 8085 instructions require data cycles,
instructions to other machines could be interleaved into existing programs.
To run a 6502 program, the existing code would be put into the second
column, and the control field would be set to enable the 6502 machine,
and to give the 6502 machine control over instruction address space. This
example is to show 100% bit level compatibility only, and would have only
a very limited performance advantage over a single issue machine.
Phil
|
3512.22 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Wed Nov 16 1994 09:53 | 15 |
| VLIW processors are very complex by nature and to get anywhere close to
peak performance out of them, hand-tuned code is generally needed. Compiler
technology is having a hard enough time getting good performance out of
RISC - VLIW is several times more difficult than that. Also, few applications
can take advantage of the type of parallelism that VLIW offers. RISC offers
most of the advantages of VLIW without many of the problems.
As I mentioned, VLIW has been done before. Its promoters promised great
performance which never materialized, and this was WITHOUT any requirement
for compatibility with two completely different existing architectures.
We designed Alpha to take us for at least 25 years, and I think it has every
promise of doing so. Don't let vapors cloud your mind.
Steve
|
3512.23 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Wed Nov 16 1994 09:54 | 6 |
| Almost all CISC machines were VLIW if looked at from the microcode
level. On the PDP-11/60 the instruction length was more than 50 bits
(don't remember exactly - ask Rich Lary) and the VAX/11-780 was 98
bits. Those are the only two systems I can remember off-hand where we
offered VLIW programming to customers, but we have 20 years of
experience with it.
|
3512.24 | | NOVA::DICKSON | | Wed Nov 16 1994 10:35 | 1 |
| The IBM 360/50 had a microinstruction width of 80 bits I think.
|
3512.25 | 80 bits is tiny for a VLIW | HGOVC::JOELBERMAN | | Wed Nov 16 1994 11:26 | 25 |
| VLIW machines are from 256-1024 bits. i.e Multiflow has 256. They usually
have very high cycles per instruction and therefore need wonderful
compilers with brilliant branch prediction. But if that works they get
pretty good performance. If a bunch of 32-bit instructions get
compacted into a VLIW the apparent cycles per instruction get to be as
good as .33 in Multiflow, which is certainly in the ALPHA ball park.
But they need
the great branch prediction. And if they don;t get the code density
(compaction) from compilation, they run a lot of no-ops in the VLI.
They don;t have the problems of run-time syncronization or resource
scheduling that superscalar machines have, but again that means all
of that has to be done by the compiler before run time.
Read J. A. Fishers 1983 paper in the Proceedings of the 10th? SYmposium
on computer architecture.
I think it is one of those great ideas whose time may not come for a
while.
Alpha is a really decent machine. WHen we get OSF and NT and our tools
tuned up and when people start to take advantage of 64 bits, we should
really shine.
|
3512.26 | Just the 1st Inning | MIMS::SANDERS_J | | Wed Nov 16 1994 11:31 | 20 |
| In today's WSJ, Motorola announced that they would provide W/NT on the
Power-PC chip. This was considered a boost to Microsoft and a jab at
Intel. The article went on to explain the W/NT market and Microsoft's
plans for Windows and W/NT. In said that in the future, when a
customer can run their legacy Windows applications on W/NT, then they
will not be bound to Intel and will most likely pick the system that
provides the best price/performance (RISC). It also said that the RISC
chip chosen will have to more than 1.4 times faster than a Pentium.
This was an obvious swipe at the 133 Mhz Power-PC chip vs. the 90 Mhz
Pentium. The point of the article was that as W/NT is ported to other
chips, becomes more successful, allows you to run Windows applications,
runs faster on RISC chips, then Intels hold on the market is
threatened.
300 Mhz Alpha is 3.3 times faster than 90 Mhz Pentium. A recent Alpha
customer survey conducted by Digital found that the number one reason
for buying Alpha was cost of ownership (price/performance) and that is
how Digital should market Alpha.
This is just the first inning folks
|
3512.27 | What? The real #1 reason! | ANGLIN::BJAMES | I feel the need, the need for SPEED | Wed Nov 16 1994 17:51 | 18 |
| RE: .26
Wrong. The #1 reason to buy any computer is to create value for your
firm by solving a business problem or making yourself more competitive
in the marketplace through a lower cost structure, higher revenue
generation, higher margins, or lower cost of capital. It has
little to do with the speed of silicon, but rather how it is applied in
concert with a SOFTWARE APPLICATION TO SOLVE *THE* BUSINESS PROBLEM at
hand or creating shareholder wealth.
It's a commodity folks. The technology is being sold at rock bottom
prices with margins so low you wonder how anyone can make any kind of a
profit even in the best of times. If you have a solution to the
customers problem that supports goal #1 better than anyone else in the
marketplace you have just created a cash engine that will chug out
money like you can't believe.
Maverick
|
3512.28 | | PLAYER::BROWNL | The InfoHighway has too many side-roads. | Thu Nov 17 1994 04:44 | 3 |
| RE: .27
Hear! Hear!
|
3512.29 | Customers Know Best | MIMS::SANDERS_J | | Thu Nov 17 1994 10:17 | 40 |
|
re. 26
RIGHT!
This is an excerpt from the report pertaining to the reason customers buy
Alpha. It was produced based on the responses of BUYING CUSTOMERS, not the
repsonses of Digital's employees.
Subj: MAJOR FINDINGS AND IMPLICATIONS: ALPHA CUSTOMER STUDY 1
Survey recently conducted for us by the Boston Research Group.
Executive Summary of 1994 Alpha Customer Feedback Study
with implications for the business
------------------------------------------------------------------------
-- The Reasons for Buying Alpha --
FINDING: "Performance", "price", "cost of ownership" and
"service/support" dramatically dominate the reasons for
buying Alpha in a competitive environment, far outweighing
"choice of operating system" and "scalability".
IMPLICATIONS: Any loss of leadership, or loss of awareness of
leadership, on these attributes will strongly affect
Alpha's momentum.
In low-end server and workstation market segments where
Alpha may not have price leadership and where CPU
performance leadership matters less, Alpha won't win often
enough to establish a defensible position.
We should consider raising the visibility on "cost of
ownership" messages in our Alpha advertising and
communications.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
3512.30 | It's enough to make you crazy... | POBOX::CORSON | Higher, and a bit more to the right | Thu Nov 17 1994 12:31 | 10 |
|
My continual amazement is in why we insist (that is to say
Digital's management structure) that what customers say has no validity
as to what we do. Even my three year old has got that part down. If
Mommy or Daddy is focused on this is the way *we* want the job
accomplished, she performs accordingly. Just substitute M&D for our
customers, and voila. Am I missing something here, or did we just get
stupid along with arrogant?
the Greyhawk
|
3512.31 | And the answer is............. | MPGS::CWHITE | Parrot_Trooper | Thu Nov 17 1994 12:57 | 7 |
| Arrogance is just another form of stupidity! So you answered your
own question.
In fact, arrogance is the end result of GETTIG AWAY with stupidity!
p/t
|
3512.32 | | BOXORN::HAYS | I think we are toast. Remember the jam? | Thu Nov 17 1994 13:47 | 31 |
| RE: 3512.22 by QUARK::LIONEL "Free advice is worth every cent"
> We designed Alpha to take us for at least 25 years, and I think it has
> every promise of doing so.
You can still buy PDP-8's, (not from digital). Digital still sells PDP-11's
as well. Alpha is current technology today, but it's not likely to be
current technology in 10 years. Why? Simple. Technology changes.
A simple fact of more and faster transistors per chip. You just can not take
any design and scale it up. There are two competing ways to use the more
transistors that can be put on a chip. You can make the chip run faster or
you can put more things on a chip. In both cases Alpha loses.
In the first case, hardware multi-issue costs are of the order of k1*n^2,
and software multi-issue costs are of the order of K2*n. As n rises, there
will be a point in time when software multi-issue machines will win. My
guess is five to ten years from now.
In the second case, an Alpha is not a good fit for a System On a Chip.
Put (say) 4 M to 16 M bytes of RAM and a simple processor on a single chip.
Fast, as main memory access times would be greatly reduced. Very Cheap
system. Five or less years away.
> Don't let vapors cloud your mind.
Don't fall in love with a cart when everyone starts to fly.
Phil
|
3512.33 | | MBALDY::LANGSTON | our middle name is 'Equipment' | Thu Nov 17 1994 14:17 | 7 |
| re: .26-.29
I think that saying price/performance is the number 1 reason for buying assumes,
given that we're talking UNIX here, that the application the/a customer has
identified to solve their business problem runs on our and competing platforms.
Bruce
|
3512.34 | oops(?) | STAR::PRAETORIUS | what does the elephant need? | Thu Nov 17 1994 14:50 | 10 |
| > Even my three year old has got that part down. If
> Mommy or Daddy is focused on this is the way *we* want the job
> accomplished, she performs accordingly. Just substitute M&D for our
> customers, and voila. Am I missing something here, or did we just get
> stupid along with arrogant?
>
> the Greyhawk
Isn't it interesting that the only place you appear in your
own example is on the telling (as opposed to listening) side?
|
3512.35 | YES | MIMS::SANDERS_J | | Thu Nov 17 1994 14:53 | 4 |
| re. 33
I would say that you have it just about right. Some existing VMS
customers may choose to add new applications on VMS, some on OSF/1.
|
3512.36 | Nice try, but.... | POBOX::CORSON | Higher, and a bit more to the right | Thu Nov 17 1994 15:58 | 8 |
|
.34
- Nice flame; however I suggest you re-read the note. No telling is
involved, just accomplishing agreed tasks according to plan. Just
like what our customers expect of us. Last I remember we live in an
adult world where expectations equal performance.
the Greyhawk
|
3512.37 | How 'bout delighting customers for a change... | POBOX::CORSON | Higher, and a bit more to the right | Thu Nov 17 1994 20:50 | 27 |
|
Also let me add a little more....
Today I received my annual report from Solectron, a $1.4-billion
contract manufacturer of PWBs. A quick quote -
"*Structured for customer success.* Solectron's corporate structure
provides centralized purchasing power, global account management,
regional operations management, and local customer support. Our goal is
to use this infrastructure to 'leverage globally and excute locally',
giving our customers the best of all worlds."
This company also has monthly, and in some cases-weekly, customer
satisfaction surveys on quality, delivery, communications, and service.
Any grade less than a B requires a specific Solectron action plan by
all levels within the company associated with that customer.
BTW, their SGA is 3.6% of revenue, margins are only 10%, and profit
is 5.8% of sales.
As Tom Peters' preaches constantly, "Have a passion for the
customer, empower employees, and the profits will follow."
And some noters have a problem with me? Come on, get real, do you
actually know someone more passionate?
the Greyhawk
|
3512.38 | Who cares what technology? | MUDIS3::JONES | Selling Wales by the quid | Fri Nov 18 1994 12:11 | 21 |
| Hi folks,
the best entry in this whole discussion was 3512.27. The processors
don't matter - it's the business that counts. A CEO (I think it was
Apple) once said "it doesn't matter what's powering it - it could be a
hamster wheel". I liked that phrase.
If you look at most companies in Germany we have basically three types:
i) Innovative, state-of-the-art computing ie. Client/Server e.g. Audi,
BMW, VW to name a few
ii) "Wait-and-see" companies still using main-frames and planning a
move to newer technology "after it's been proven". We're talking
about the majority here because they'd rather be safe than sorry
e.g. most major banks, insurances, chemical companies
iii) "As long as it does the job", "never touch a running system" companies
e.g. Siemens, Avon cosmetics, Maizena (CPC), electricity suppliers
the list is endless
BUT: there is no correlation between the technology a company is using
and its financial performance. Or in other words: you can have a (i)
doing badly and a (iii) doing well.
Mitch
|
3512.39 | The installed base is not the whole world | MROA::JJAMES | | Fri Nov 18 1994 14:07 | 32 |
|
-- The Reasons for Buying Alpha --
reference 3512.29
FINDING: "Performance", "price", "cost of ownership" and
"service/support" dramatically dominate the reasons for
buying Alpha in a competitive environment, far
outweighing
"choice of operating system" and "scalability".
IMPLICATIONS: Any loss of leadership, or loss of awareness of
leadership, on these attributes will strongly affect
Alpha's momentum.
========================================================================
Question:
Since more people have not bought an Alpha than have bought one,
what is the message for the folks who have been walking away?
Why do we lose when we lose, despite all of these virtues?
|
3512.40 | | SMURF::STRANGE | Steve Strange - DEC OSF/1 DCE/DFS | Fri Nov 18 1994 14:25 | 6 |
| re: .39
Exactly. I want to see -- The Reasons for Not Buying Alpha --. Then
we can focus on eliminating those reasons.
Steve
|
3512.41 | Here are four good ones... | POBOX::CORSON | Higher, and a bit more to the right | Fri Nov 18 1994 15:58 | 31 |
|
The reasons are all over these files people.
1) Poor, or non-existent, technical support close to the customer.
2) Digital cannot deliver product on time; it cannot bill the
customer correctly for their purchase; it cannot maintain the
purchased items without causing a hassle for the customer;
and it constantly "grates" customers by its on-going "internal"
wars about who gets credit for the sale.
3) Product testing of software is marginal. More "things" don't
work than do - as far as the customer is concerned. This mainly
occurs because Digital people are stretched too thin to properly
support customer's operational questions within the CUSTOMER'S
timeframe.
4) Digital salespeople, and our distributors salespeople, are
poorly trained, badly managed, focused on extremely short-term
goals (has anyone anywhere ever heard of a sales compensation
plan measured in *QUARTERS*?), and in fear daily of being
TFSO'd.
I'm not the least bit surprised customers' aren't buying Alphas -
today, sportsfans, they actually have choices. So we better stop
being smug and arrogant and get our butts in gear. The customer is
always right.
the Greyhawk
|
3512.42 | Ok, so lets fix it. | NEWVAX::MZARUDZKI | I AXPed it, and it is thinking... | Sat Nov 19 1994 07:05 | 54 |
| re -.1
and how to go about fixing them. ics just cannot fix these problems
by themselves. Even groups of us are not going to fix these problems
you describe.
<<< 1) Poor, or non-existent, technical support close to the customer.
ics and CSCs only support a described set of products. Directions to
come from corporate on product production. See some evidence on this
now with the software strategy. IMHO we must move faster.
<<< 2) Digital cannot deliver product on time; it cannot bill the
<<< customer correctly for their purchase; it cannot maintain the
<<< purchased items without causing a hassle for the customer;
<<< and it constantly "grates" customers by its on-going "internal"
<<< wars about who gets credit for the sale.
the ones that make the sale get the credit. end of story.
revamp billing. Send bill, get check or cash.
deliver product on time. step one, do I have a product ready to sell?
step two, is it in quantity? yes no, on sale/off sale.
<<< 3) Product testing of software is marginal. More "things" don't
<<< work than do - as far as the customer is concerned. This mainly
<<< occurs because Digital people are stretched too thin to properly
<<< support customer's operational questions within the CUSTOMER'S
<<< timeframe.
software is a key component of our survival, the sooner someone
realizes boxes don't move without it, the better off we will be.
we need to become a highly focused software company. see gripe 1.
<<< 4) Digital salespeople, and our distributors salespeople, are
<<< poorly trained, badly managed, focused on extremely short-term
<<< goals (has anyone anywhere ever heard of a sales compensation
<<< plan measured in *QUARTERS*?), and in fear daily of being
<<< TFSO'd.
we have sales people? The ones I know of are excellent but stretched
way to thin. get longer goals. say "no" to the compensation plan, find
a consensus among your peers. demand better. educated our distributers.
Indeed a daunting task, but fixable. Present this to senior managers,
find out who ownes these problems, hold them accountable. We have the
products to compete! Just the internal mis-directions and strife remove
our focus. I have a problem with a customer right now that is trying to
send digital a check. The poor gentleman cannot find anyone to take his
credit card number. Just plain incredible. Start with picking up the
phone and seeing what works these days is interesting.
-Mike Z.
on-site at customers playhouse since 4am on a saturday.....
customer satisfaction in process '^)
|