T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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3836.1 | Try VTX CALOOK | MAIL2::MICEK | They're God's rock stars | Fri Apr 28 1995 11:56 | 6 |
| Carrier and UTC in general have a large presense in the Syracuse, NY
area. I don't know the Account Manager's name, but the Syracuse office
number is DTN 256-5711.
Also, you could check VTX CALOOK for info (appro. eight months old) on
account coverage, Acct. Managers, etc.
|
3836.2 | And your answer... | POBOX::CORSON | Higher, and a bit more to the right | Fri Apr 28 1995 11:58 | 5 |
|
UTC Corporate Account Manager is Mike Garaffa in the Northeastern
Region ABU. He's in ELF, give him a call...
the Greyhawk
|
3836.3 | Carrier Account Contact | MAIL2::ESULLIVAN | | Fri Apr 28 1995 11:58 | 10 |
| You may want to start with John Nanno @SYO (DTN 256-5762) who i believe
is the account manager for Carrier, that should lead you back to UTC.
Regards,
Gene
|
3836.4 | I am no salesman but... | CSC32::C_BENNETT | | Fri Apr 28 1995 12:06 | 26 |
| I myself think the tangent that Sun is attempting to throw into the
bid is not even worth a response. In my opinion the price/performance
and the benefits of buying into 64 bit operating environment NOW,
today... when other vendors are years behind us in their implmentations
is the PRIMARY issue that MIS / Engineering heads look at...
I am sure that Sun would agree (ok who cares about Sun anyway) let say
ELEVATORMAN would agree that if Otis Elevator has a better product than
vendor x, ELEVATORMAN would want to buy the best product for the money
and would buy on that basis. If there is such a GOODOLDBOYS/GOODOLDGALS
network at play that's about the only argument I would make.
Lay the FACTS on the table.... Sure Digital has bought elevators
from Otis before, Otis (202 CSC contracts indicated) has bought alot of
Digital Equipment..... bottom line here is that we have a better
product for the $$$$...
Good luck!
Chip
|
3836.5 | Try this ! | MKOTS3::DQUINN | | Fri Apr 28 1995 12:13 | 27 |
|
Try Mike Garaffa @RCH - 295-6534 , not listed in CAlook but listed on
the "Selling News" fold-out March 95 as the Corp. Acct. Mgr. for UT.
Suggestions:
How far along is the construction of the new Sun facility ? Is Otis
recognized as "best-in-class" for safety, services, performance or
selected based on price. Check with the engineering firm doing the
design work. Contracts and orders may already be in force - meaning
that SUN is throwing FUD in the sales process.
Compete against them by focusing on the Technical buyers with strong
technical comparisons, the PTC benchmark is proof positive that our
products will win. Your description of the FUD is a "you scratch my back,
I'll scratch yours" attempt to win-over a customer against overwhelming
odds. What is the customers approach to the implementation of
distributed (C/S) computing ?
Keep in mind that UT is a "major technical account" to SUN and will
drive some potentially deep discounting as the sales cycle moves
forward.
Win one for the kids back home !
Dave
|
3836.6 | Don't bite too fast | ULYSSE::ROEMER | | Fri Apr 28 1995 13:10 | 27 |
| What are the chances that the SUN salesman actually gets their building
department to reconsider? The scheme must be something like: Salesman
talks to sales boss talks to Sales VP who talks to Property VP.
Property VP has his own worries like .? suggested. If he gives in to
this one, he is going to see his choice of vendors limited every time
SUN needs to compete for a large order and does not have the
ammunition.
You still need to convince your Customer. In my mind, the question
is: Is this the official SUN position, supported by no matter whom you
would ask in SUN? Or just FUD dreamt up by the salesman and his boss?
In the first case, perhaps, we should have a simular official Digital
position. In the second case you make a mistake to take this position
since when you get into a dirt fight, you stand to get dirty.
I recommend that you point out to your customer that, clearly, SUN
believes they can not compete on a product/service basis, but does
what SUN says make the difference in his buying decision? If it does,
escalate. If necessary, your VP can call their VP and discuss the
limits of proper Sales behavior. And like you said, no doubt we can
either point at some buying we are doing, or start discussing a deal,
or make it up alltogehter.
Al
|
3836.7 | What's the purpose in telling us? | POBOX::SETLOCK | | Fri Apr 28 1995 14:00 | 7 |
| Re .6 excellent reply Al.
Additionally, it's not that I don't always believe customers/potential
customers (:^)), but why do you suppose the customer told us what SUN said?
And did SUN actually say it??? Sounds pretty unethical to me.
Suzanne
|
3836.8 | Trade-Linking | BBRDGE::LOVELL | � l'eau; c'est l'heure | Fri Apr 28 1995 14:02 | 17 |
| Do yourself a favour. Sell on the benchmark, not on trade-linking.
Trade-linking is highly illegal, and I believe, a jailable offence.
Either your customer contact is a professional, deciding on the basis
of the professional criteria he set you, or he is a minion, subject
to the whims of the CFO and the Sales people who might be moved by
trade-linking arguments. If he is the latter, just laugh, tell him
that you are not interested in a jail term and remind him that you
kicked butt in the benchmark. Walk away if necessary.
Don't get me wrong - despite being illegal, these sort of arrangements
happen all the time and I have certainly witnessed them. I'm just
saying that you will do yourself and Digital no favours by visibly
playing the same game.
/Chris.
|
3836.9 | ECLIPSE SUN | GRANPA::BDOYLE | | Fri Apr 28 1995 14:39 | 11 |
| Ask the customer if Sun is saying "We won't buy your elevators if you
don't buy our workstations?" Ask the customer "What kind of business
relationship is that; would Sun be the kind of company the the
board and stockholders want to do business with?" Ask the customers
"What's the product weakness that Sun is trying to mask with this
linkage? What is the trend of that weakness?" Will a Sun decision
look bad today and worse tomorrow?
Digital is crushing Sun. Turn Sun's proposal weaknesses as well!
|
3836.10 | go for the kill | KOALA::ngneer.zko.dec.com::hamnqvist | Mailworks for UNIX | Fri Apr 28 1995 14:49 | 7 |
| It is heartwarming to read a string of notes like this one. And a just
a few notes back we had HP reacting. It sure beats a ra-ra DVN. If these
aren't signs that we are onto something hot then tell me what is. Please,
please, marketing turn up the heat even more .. we are finally seeing some
tangible results.
>Per
|
3836.11 | Result | GRANPA::MMARKHAM | | Fri Apr 28 1995 14:53 | 4 |
| Let us know how it turns out !
Good Luck
Mike
|
3836.12 | We don't play that game-do we? | DV780::BECKSTROM | | Fri Apr 28 1995 15:12 | 6 |
| I would encourage you to call the Ethics Office first. Your counter-
attack may not fall in line with our Code of Business Conduct.
Hopefully, wiser thinking at Otis will prevail and their purchase
decision will be based on what equipment is right for them. I doubt
that they want to be stuck with something they don't want just because
somebody buys a couple of elevators from them. I wish you luck.
|
3836.13 | | NETCAD::BRANAM | Steve, Hub Products Engineering, LKG2-2, DTN 226-6043 | Fri Apr 28 1995 15:34 | 3 |
| You might also point out to Otis that SUN is de facto admitting they
cannot compete on a product basis with Digital and is instead trying to
use strong-arm tactics unrelated to his system needs.
|
3836.14 | Relax, and go back to work... | POBOX::CORSON | Higher, and a bit more to the right | Fri Apr 28 1995 18:31 | 18 |
|
As a pretty savvy sales guy I was just going to let this string
play out, however...
Mike, just ignore SUN - don't even verbally comment. Practice your
head shake with a grin that says "Now don't that beat all" and the deal
will be yours. The SUN rep has already executed himself, no sense
getting any of his blood on your shoes.
Keep selling Digital as reliable, solid, well-engineered and
quality crafted and conduct yourself as exactly such.
As Forrest Gump so aptly put it, "Dumb is as dumb acts".
This deal is in the bag.
the Greyhawk
|
3836.15 | You should not even KNOW what SUN said... | ASDG::SBILL | | Mon May 01 1995 09:03 | 10 |
|
I am under the impression that Otis should not have told you anything about what
SUN said. If you act on that information it could get you into trouble.
Definitely talk to the ethics people on this before you proceed. The
relationship between bidders and buyers should be a confidential one. When we're
considering a capital purchase, we aren't supposed to even tell the different
vendors what each other's bids were much less what strings they're pulling to
get the sale.
Steve B.
|
3836.16 | G2 on UTC/Otis | MUNK::DOIRON | | Mon May 01 1995 12:48 | 44 |
| I am a workstation sales rep in CT where both UTC and Otis corporate
headquarters reside. A couple of things you should be aware of.
1. About 3 years ago, we lost a huge deal to SUN, about 2000 seats to
be exact, at Pratt and Whitney. At that time, SUN and Pratt supposedly
had a contract that any new UNIX workstations had to be SUN! So UTC, or
at least P&W, has a huge SUN installed base and McNeely has made more
than one visit to P&W over the past 3 years.
- However, the SUN contract is up at the end of this year and we
are in the middle of an RFP/benchmark process to replace the
existing SUN workstations (IBM and HP also made the short list).
- The major application at Pratt is Unigraphics, not Pro/E.
2. We had over 20 Pro/E seats at Otis in CT that were replaced by SUN
about 2 years ago. Not to beat a dead horse, but the whole Ultrix/MIPS
fiasco did us in there.
- We have been trying very hard to get back into Otis in CT, but
they claim to be very happy with SUN and are your typical SUN bigots.
We have, however, been successful in selling some Pro/E Alpha NT
seats into their facility in Germany. Take a hard look at NT. It
is something SUN cannot offer, and puts us in a better price
performance range.
- I'm not sure how they operate now, but when I was working with
them 2-3 years ago, the engineers in CT had significant impact
over decisions made in Bloomington and some of the initial
DECstations purchased in CT were sent there.
- There is also some bad blood regarding 180 VAXstation VLCs that
were purchased by OTIS in CT that they think we sold them down
the river.
As you can see, the politics are very heavy in this account. Please
give me a call if you want to discuss any of it. I am very familiar
with the key people in CT and may be able to help.
-Ron
DTN: 320-5492
HO: 203-228-8607
|
3836.17 | | SX4GTO::WANNOOR | | Mon May 01 1995 14:50 | 18 |
|
I really like the tone and direction of this string!
With all the field contraints, this could/would be an effective
forum for competitive selling (.16 brought that point home).
The legacy political baggage that .16 talked out is something that
is very difficult to overcome; establishing TRUSTED and CREDIBLE
relationships would be a way, except I am not entirely sure where
from we can get it with CONFIDENCE (I mean further up the chain...)
and COMMITMENT. I also learn that customers have "elephant memories"
lasting years; the problem is compounded when their beliefs and
displeasures are propagated down and across the lines to their
reports and peers, even when they themselves are no longer around.
|
3836.18 | "15" Questions to ask Sun | TAV02::HUBERMAN | | Tue May 02 1995 05:40 | 96 |
|
Hi,
I got this from our Marketing a few weeks ago.
Moti Huberman
Israel MCS
=============================================================================
=============================================================================
"15" Questions to ask Sun
Re: Tough questions to ask Sun! (in no particular order)
1) Why does Sun say that service is not one of their corporate core
competencies? Does that explain why they have hundreds of third party companies
doing maintenance for them?
Maintenance is definitely a Digital competency. In fact Digital maintains over
10,000 Sun workstations!
2) Why is Sun late with coming out with 64 bits. Scott McNealy said we could
expect it by 8/95. Now the trade publications are saying Q4, CY95. Are you
experiencing the same problems that you had when you announced SPARC 10'S in
May 1992.
3) How about 64 bit Solaris? Is it going to take (4) software revisions before
you get right like it did for Solaris 2.X.
4) Why did the editor-in-chief of Unix Review accuse you of debugging your
operating system at the expense of your user community. (Source: "Too Soft at
Sunsoft"- 12/93) "Four revisions in one year ... is a sure sign that something
is wrong with the product... generally means that the vendor is fighting bugs
and debugging the product through its customers."
4) How painful is the 64 bit migration going to be; as painful as moving to
Solaris 2.X? That migration according to 8/93 issue of UNIX REVIEW "was
difficult even for experienced programmers."
5) Are you also going to debug 64 bit Solaris "through (your) customers."
6) How painful will it be to move Open Step/ NextStep development environment.
Your track record on moving customers to new environments has not been "pain
free."
7) Just many more migrations are you going to put your user base through?
32 bit Sun OS to 32 bit Solaris 2x
32 bit hardware to 64 bit hardware
32 bit Solaris O/S to 64 bit Solaris O/S
Open Step to Next Step
Are your customers in the business of doing SUN migrations or are they in the
business of running their own businesses? Hard to tell!
8) What is your plan for migrating 9,300 applications (only 3,300+ run under
Solaris 2.X) currently running in a 32 bit environment to a 64 bit environment?
All 6,500 applications from Digital run on 64 bit hardware today.
9) Why have you had so many problems adding faster microprocessors to your
product line? You had promised 90 and 100 Mhz SuperSPARC systems by now and
they are still not here?
(Yes, Ross Technology bailed you out with their HyperSPARC, But you've even
said the HS11 workstation is not a mainstream product.)
Where's the SuperSPARC versions?
10) Why have you never been able to produce a SPARCstation 20/614- quad
processor; yet you do offer a 20/514? Is there a heat problem with the 60 MHZ
chip in a workstation enclosure? If not, then what?
11) Again you only offer a dual processor SPARCstation 20/712. Will there ever
be a SPARCstation 20/714? Didn't think so!
12) What is going to happen to your existing Sun OS users? We know Scott
McNealy said Sun's too small to support two (2) operating systems. I guess
that means Sun OS users have been and certainly will be abandoned when 64 bit
Solaris comes out!
13) When Sun announced the SPARC 10/51 in May, 1992 you withdrew the product,
not once, but twice due to technical problems. We know! It was a new
architecture!
But golly won't 64 bits be a new architecture too! Are you going to have
similar start-up problems all over again. Hmmmm!
14) I notice that when you quote SPEC results, you always say that results were
performed using compilers from Apogee Software. Anything wrong with your own
compilers from SunPro? Possible you wouldn't get the same results if you used
your own in-house compilers?
15) Why do you always quote "estimated" transactions per second? You never
quote audited numbers.
|
3836.19 | Make sure your FUD is 100% Credible! | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | E&RT -- Embedded and RealTime Engineering | Tue May 02 1995 08:53 | 31 |
| I always hate lists like these. They may have their place, but
they remind me of the glass house that we live in.
Digital: You've put your customers through at least four different
Unix strategies: "Snake Oil", then Ultrix, then OSF/1, then Digital
Unix"; what's to say you won't change strategies again, perhaps
even back to "Snake Oil"?
Now there's a subtle lie buried in that question (truth: "OSF/1" is
the same as "Digital Unix", aside from the name) but there's no guar-
antee that the rubes will catch it, so why not try? And it follows
three claims that are more-or-less true, ESPECIALLY the well-known
"Unix is Snake Oil" claim.
Digital: You always quote your FORTRAN numbers using the third-
party KAP pre-compiler. Isn't your own compiler capable? Why
does it need a third-party front-end to achieve publishable
results?
There's no lie here, just a slight mis-direction that leads the
reader to a conclusion favorable to the other company.
See what I mean? If Sun's spreading mis-truths and false claims,
call them on it. Provide specifics and back it up with technical
proofs. But don't spread half-truths and speculations (e.g., about
cooling) as FUD. It will detroy your (OUR!) credibility when
credible rebutles are offered.
Atlant
|
3836.20 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Tue May 02 1995 10:18 | 13 |
| > Digital: You always quote your FORTRAN numbers using the third-
> party KAP pre-compiler. Isn't your own compiler capable? Why
> does it need a third-party front-end to achieve publishable
> results?
For the same reason that all of our competition uses KAP when quoting
their Fortran numbers,
The gap between what KAP can do and what the compiler can do has
narrowed considerably, and will continue to do so.
Steve
|
3836.21 | | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | E&RT -- Embedded and RealTime Engineering | Tue May 02 1995 12:55 | 6 |
| Steve:
It was a rhetorical question, honest! I just wanted to show
how easy it is to take something and put a negative "spin"
on it.
Atlant
|
3836.22 | ya what he said! | POBOX::SETLOCK | | Tue May 02 1995 15:35 | 5 |
| Re:.14
I like your reply and the way you would handle it. I think it's good
advise.
suzanne
|
3836.23 | Also agree with .14. Let SUN beat themselves! | MUNK::DOIRON | | Wed May 03 1995 11:16 | 29 |
| I also agree with .14. We have beaten SUN in several cases here in CT
and are finding that often the best way to beat them is to let them
self-destruct. They really hate competetive benchmarks and have, on
more than one occasion, actually berated their customers for bringing
AlphaStations into their installed bases for benchmarks. Needless to say,
this did not sit well with their customers. This king of arrogance only
works when you have the products to back it up!
Just as an aside,
Recently we had a technology show for UTC in which we showed an
Avanti and Sparc 20/61 side-by-side running Pro/E. Often we would start
the benchmark on the SUN and "forget" to start it on the AlphaStation.
Customers were amazed when the Alpha caught up and still complete the
benchmark almost twice as fast as the SUN.
And just as luck would have it, the SUN booth was directly across from
ours! Since this was a 3 day event, we posted a guard in our booth on
the first 2 nights. Sure enough, the guard said several of the SUN reps
came back to their booth around 10:00 at night and "hung around for
about an hour staring at the Digital booth". I'm convinced that had we
not posted the guard, one or both of those systems would not have
worked the next day.
You gotta love it!
-Ron
|