T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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234.1 | Clarification | QUILL::BOOTH | What am I?...An Oracle? | Mon Nov 07 1988 15:52 | 19 |
| Just so no one gets confused...
"Are the top...databases on VAX VMS" could be deceiving. While they
are certainly the best databases in that environment, to be correct,
we must say that top as in "market leader" is questionable.
According to Computer Intelligence, Oracle still is the number one
relational database on both VAX VMS and VAX Ultrix/Unix systems in the
U.S. The margin of leadership is shrinking. However, I would hate
to have someone tell a customer that we are "number one on VAX VMS"
as long as Oracle could show the CI numbers that indicate the contrary.
Worldwide, Rdb may have a lead, but it is impossible to prove.
Again, this reply is only inserted to clarify the comment in the
base note.
---- Michael Booth
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234.2 | Depends on who you believe! | BANZAI::CARPENTER | Exiled Canard | Tue Nov 22 1988 21:46 | 24 |
|
re: -1
Jamey Nordby (DBS, Colorado) sent along these Dataquest numbers in response to
the Computer Intelligence Corp. report They show the same general trends but
with markedly more robust share of market for Rdb. I think they support the
original statement.
Dataquest
Share of market numbers
Market Share by 1987 revenues:
Rdb 27%
Oracle 27%
DBMS 10%
Ingres 16%
Market Share by total Licenses
Rdb 33%
Oracle 24%
DBMS 17%
Ingres 9%
(this is after Calandar 1987)
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234.3 | Survey Contradictions | QUILL::BOOTH | What am I?...An Oracle? | Wed Nov 23 1988 18:20 | 27 |
| Something is wrong with these numbers.
According to this survey, Oracle sold almost 75% as many licenses
as Rdb last year. But the Oracle revenue was equal to Rdb. Since
Oracle prices are more than twice Rdb's, and Oracle has no run-time
license, Oracle's revenue should have been drastically higher than
ours.
Further, it is generally accepted that Oracle is very effective
at the high-end sales, while Rdb has until very recently tended
to the low-end. That should further increase the Oracle revenue
advantage.
It is because of these discrepencies that I question the IDC survey
numbers. They conflict with numbers put out by Computer Intelligence,
and frankly with every other marketing survey numbers I have seen.
So all we can say is that there is not a unanimous decision by the
market surveys. It is, however, worth noting that IDC is the only
survey that shows Rdb leading the VAX/VMS market. If there were
any corroboration, I would welcome the IDC information, and be one
of the first to trumpet the "we're number one" theme. Until and
unless that corroboration occurs, I will accept the information
from the vast majority of market surveys that show Oracle as number
one.
---- Michael Booth
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234.4 | I'm tired of this - This note is now SET WRITE | BANZAI::CARPENTER | Exiled Canard | Tue Nov 29 1988 15:05 | 23 |
| <Please feel free to reply to this note if you wish to comment>
ref: .3
It would seem to me that by selling more licenses at a lower price (Rdb/VMS)
would be close to selling less licenses at a higher price (ORACLE). This is
what the Dataquest revenue numbers apparently show. Rdb/VMS has more licenses
than ORACLE but the revenues were approximately equal. I say approximately
since I don't believe ANY survey to be exact.
It is a known fact that at the last ORACLE Users Meeting, ORACLE announced
that they had sold 7500 licenses and we know that Digital already had 8000+
licenses at that time. This appears to me to put us in front of them which
is in line with the Dataquest Total Licenses sold numbers.
Those of us in the Database Systems Consulting Group have always, and will
continue to, put forth as positive as possible message about Rdb/VMS.
You sir, may continue to be negative if you wish.
Sincerely,
Larry M. Carpenter
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234.5 | | COGMK::CHELSEA | Mostly harmless. | Tue Nov 29 1988 22:23 | 20 |
| Re: .4
>It would seem to me that by selling more licenses at a lower price
>(Rdb/VMS) would be close to selling less licenses at a higher price
>(ORACLE).
Depends on the differential between prices and numbers of licenses.
Given his price estimate (ORACLE more than twice Rdb/VMS), he's
right; they're mathematically inconsistent.
Assume, just to make the math easy, that the number of licenses
in the market is 100. So Rdb/VMS has 33 licenses and ORACLE has
24 licenses. Now Rdb/VMS costs $1 and ORACLE costs $2. So Rdb/VMS
revenues are $33 and ORACLE revenues are $48. ORACLE's revenues
are about 150% of Rdb/VMS revenues.
The only way I can think for the numbers to be valid (barring a
false assumption of price ratio) is if ORACLE sold lots of licenses
for smaller machines while Digital sold more Rdb/VMS licenses for
bigger machines (since license price is based on CPU, right?).
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234.6 | | BANZAI::CAMERON | Buy their tools and we'll give you the engine | Wed Nov 30 1988 16:32 | 12 |
| We now know where the study comes from so we can now choose to quote
from the study or not.
We can discuss what the study means all we want, but without knowing
they looked at and how they looked at it, it is just an interesting
conversation.
There was a quote in the Columbus Dispatch that I read a few years ago
that applies here.
"Statistics are like a street light, some use them for support,
others use them for illumination."
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234.7 | Too much Bullshit | COOKIE::BERENSON | VAX Rdb/VMS Veteran | Wed Nov 30 1988 19:22 | 16 |
| 1) We charge different prices on different systems, and so does ORACLE.
So, how can one be sure what the actual licenses/dollars mix is? Also,
isn't ORACLE more likely to discount off of their list prices to lock in
the business? Finally, what is the situation (or was the situation)
with OEM pricing between the two vendors?
2) The 2:1 pricing ratio is absolute bullshit. Maybe if you buy ALL of
ORACLE then they get up to the 2:1 mark, but they don't sell it that
way. For example, the precompiler for each language is a separate line
item! How many people buy more than 1 or 2 precompilers?
3) I don't understand why we would use the less positive of the surverys
for marketing purposes. For engineering planning purposes we may want
to see ourselves in as negative light as possible to ensure that our
future plans are aggressive enough. But for marketing purposes, we want
to shove the positive numbers down the throats of whomever we can!
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234.8 | It IS Getting Old | BROKE::BOOTH | What am I?...An Oracle? | Fri Dec 02 1988 16:03 | 23 |
| This IS growing old. ALL I was trying to do is to say that there
is overwhelming evidence that Oracle is currently number one. I
just got back from Euro. Despite the success of Rdb there, IDC shows
Oracle leading in UK, France, Germany...the three largest European
markets. I just got market numbers from IDC Australia, and they
show Oracle with a sizable lead as well.
On Pricing:
I didn't spend weeks looking at the pricing and strategy of Oracle
to be erooneous in my conclusions. Yes, they discount. But I ask
you, did we make $140,000,000 on Rdb last year as Oracle did in
the VAX market?
ON Marketing:
Certainly we can trumpet the IDC claim to customers. But be prepared
that Oracle has surveys "out the wazoo" that dispute it. My argument
isn't with the numbers. Externally, I would always go with the positive
numbers. But I do not think it is wise to kid ourselves internally,
thereby becoming complacent in the database market.
---- Michael Booth
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234.9 | Apples vs Oranges Again | COOKIE::BERENSON | VAX Rdb/VMS Veteran | Fri Dec 02 1988 16:10 | 13 |
| > you, did we make $140,000,000 on Rdb last year as Oracle did in
The real question is, did Oracle make that on its database system or
other software as well? What happens when we include Datatrieve,
Teamdata, Rally, TDMS, and CDD in our revenue totals? How about adding
in the services generated by these products (which already show up in
the Oracle numbers)? I'll bet we blow away the $140 million in a true
apples-to-apples comparison, if such a thing exists.
Oracle is likely the real number one, however we should use whatever
data we can to point out that their position is not overwhelming and is,
indeed, tenuous. This will at least blunt their claims to be the clear
leader of VAX, and falsehood we should not let them exploit.
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234.10 | THE OFFICIAL DBS MARKETING OPINION ON Rdb MARKET SHARE | BROKE::FARRELL | | Fri Dec 02 1988 16:25 | 94 |
| Several references have been made here regarding the Computer Intelligance
Corp. database market share numbers. A summary of the actual numbers is as
follows: (Note that the survey covers all VAX/VMS database products
including CODASYL).
CHANGES IN VAX/VMS DBMS PRODUCT PENETRATION
FROM END OF YEAR '87 TO OCTOBER '88
FOR VAX Rdb, ORACLE, AND INGRES
Source: Computer Intelligence Corp.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Licenses % of All # % OF ALL
LICENSES SITES SITES
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
VAX Rdb/VMS:
Y-end 87
1071 16.61 405 13.29
Oct 88
1489 17.85 658 15.35
Delta
+39% +1.24% +62% +2.06%
____________________________________________________________________________
Oracle:
Y-end 87
1117 17.32 461 15.12
Oct 88
1496 17.94 713 16.63
Delta
+34% +0.62% +55% +1.51%
___________________________________________________________________________
RTI (INGRES)
Y-end 87
859 13.32 330 10.83
Oct 88
1087 13.03 514 11.99
Delta
+27% -0.29% +58% +1.16%
What the summary shows is that:
1 - The Rdb installed base increased by 39% between mid-1987 and Oct. 1988
vs. an increase of only 34% for Oracle.
2 - Rdb and Oracle are virtually equal in market share, even though Oracle
has been shipping since 1979, and Rdb only since 1984!!
Note: The same survey shows that the "formidable" competitor, Sybase, has an
insignificant .13% of the VAX/VMS database market vs. Rdb's 17.85%.
The only surveys with which I am familiar that track database market share on
VMS are the CIC and Dataquest surveys. They clearly show that Rdb is the
fastest growing RDMS on VMS, mostly at the expense of Ingres, and that
Rdb has the
largest installed base. I have seen NO numbers to refute that!
Attempting to validate these numbers by extrapolating from revenue figures
seems to be a waste of time. 1) It is impossible due to discounting,
different ways of reporting revenue, etc. and 2) and more importantly, a
statement by two respected independent consultants that Rdb is the market
share leader and fastest growing VMS database is the ultimate goal. Let's
not waste effort questioning or disputing it, let's get out and market it
while it is current! This is the message that I delivered at the
Federal Govt. Sales Training Symposium in November, at the Channels
Marketing sponsored Executive Seminar earlier this week, and that I will
present at the National Database Symposium next week in Boston. It is
the message that we will deliver to internal and external audiences at every
other forum in which we participate. It will be a major component of the
Digital Database executive overview currently being developed for use by
sales.
Vickie Farrell,
Marketing manager, DBS
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234.11 | my two cents worth | COOKIE::JANORDBY | Lloyd, YOU are no Vice President | Fri Dec 02 1988 17:10 | 34 |
| my two cents worth.
1) The market share analysis that I have been looking at is from
Dataquest, not IDC.
2) Oracle mad about $50million on the database product in 1987,
not 140,000,000.
3) There is at least 2:1 difference in prices between the oracle
database kernel and the Rdb kernel. (List price on a 6240 for
oracle is $120,000, Rdb: 57,000. Rdb includes precompilers and
VAX/SQL. A look at maintenance charges is mind significantly
INCREASES the gap when looking at true cost of ownership.
4) Computer Intelligence is considered one of the most unreliable
sources for VAX information. I had on-line access to their database
for over a year in a previous life.
5) Which of you are in marketing and which of you are the engineers.
Don't marketeers present the best possible light to EVERYBODY,
internally and externally. RTI is still claiming to be the #1
database in their sales seminars, quoting a 2 year old study
that favored them. Find whatever source you can that says we
are the best, and USE it.
6) In addition to the CI report, what other myriad of studies are
there. please list them and their results.
7) Oracle and Digital both discount heavily and each has a different
hardware penetration. Having talked to the author of the Dataquest
report many times, I am fairly confident that these are acurate
numbers for what they are studying.
Jamey
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234.12 | and growing rapidly | COOKIE::JANORDBY | Lloyd, YOU are no Vice President | Mon Dec 12 1988 20:53 | 10 |
| Gartner Group Research Note # K-440-595.1 shows the following market
share on VMS platforms:
Licenses 12 month growth
Rdb 7,550 3,500
Oracle 7,000 500
Sybase 300 230
Ingres 3,500 400
Estimates as of 10/88
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