Title: | DEC Rdb against the World |
Moderator: | HERON::GODFRIND |
Created: | Fri Jun 12 1987 |
Last Modified: | Thu Feb 23 1995 |
Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
Number of topics: | 1348 |
Total number of notes: | 5438 |
The following article was taken (ahem... WITHOUT permission) directly from ORACLE - THE SQL DATABASE JOURNAL, Spring 1989 Vol III Number 1. It took me a bit by surprise, and would be disappointed if it were actually true. Can anyone comment? Tear it apart? Shed some light and insight into what the ISV agreement actually allows? Somehow, this just doesn't seem right. "DEC's Independent Software Vendor Program Oracle Corporation is now a charter member of Digital Equipment Corporation's (DEC) Independent Software Vendor (ISV) program. The ISV program is designed to support Oracle and other key independent software vendors that collectively provide complete systems across a range of industries. The program provides an extended technology agreement between DEC and Oracle, including advanced hardware and software, early release training, developer conferencing via DEC's "Notes" electronic conferencing bulletin board, developer kits, and assigned labs to test and verify applications in DEC's systems and software market. "Initially, the DEC/Oracle agreement will allow both VMS- and ULTRIX- based Oracle products to support the DECWindows environment. DEC released an early version of the interface to Oracle's developers, allowing them a head start in developing DECWindows applications for both VMS and ULTRIX. "Other provisions of the ISV agreement include allowing DEC to resell Oracle products within ULTRIX environments; allowing DEC's DEV-direct (sic) customers to order Oracle's PC-based products directly from the Personal Computer Systems Catalog; and allowing DEC to act as a prime contractor on sales opportunities specifying Oracle products within a VMS environment." *End of Article* Is this true? Or is it just more O-B-S?
T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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335.1 | I don't know all the details | COOKIE::BERENSON | VAX Rdb/VMS Veteran | Tue Apr 18 1989 18:39 | 3 |
But this program is open to any and all ISVs. It is not a special relationship of any kind, and I don't believe there is a provision to reject an ISV based on them also being a competitor. | |||||
335.2 | OK, but WHY is it so? | KYOA::HANSON | Guns don't kill-NJ insurance does | Tue Apr 18 1989 19:07 | 40 |
Indeed, there may not be a provision to "reject an ISV based on them also being a competitor," but I would imagine that if ever there were such a time to do so... My impression of the article is that Oracle is taking a few of the "percs" of being an ISV and bloating them up to make it appear that it extends much farther than it actually does. (They wouldn't do a thing like that, would they? Nahhhhhhhh.) I have two problems with this: First, perception is often reality in this market. If they can say it, if they can tout it, if they can puff it up, then the world will think that Oracle and DEC are in close company with each other. WE may know what ISV is about, but what about those customers left with the impression that "DEC and Oracle are working closely together, therefore DEC must actually SANCTION Oracle. Secondly, if we are going head-to-head with Oracle, if we are always trying to find Oracle knock-offs, if we are always losing database sales to Oracle (and much to the dismay of all concerned,) then why on Earth would Digital do ANYTHING to give them an advantage? Why give them the competitive edge by giving them early release of DECWindows? Developer kits? Labs? If this is really true, I would think we'd soon run out of feet to shoot. 8^( I would add, though, that it's not the first time I've seen something like this happening; Once I went into a distributor account. One of the techs was running a DEC application on a non-DEC workstation. We had *given* them the application... so that they could demo the box... and the box directly competed against our own workstations. (Or something similarly twisted like that.) I asked one of my peers how this could be so, and he replied "If it makes Digital any money, then it's good business practice." That may be so, but I still fail to see how giving up the tools and giving up the database can be a good business practice in this case. Oh yeah, we keep the CPU sale. Right. | |||||
335.3 | all marketing & pr? | NUTMEG::SILVERBERG | Wed Apr 19 1989 16:34 | 23 | |
The programs are available to many, and some make the extra PR/ Marketing efforts to tout their "closeness" to Digital. The press is loaded with constant stories/testimonals by 3rd parties who are working with Digital, and how they have a "close" relationship with us in the technical, marketing, and sales areas, and how Digital is "investing" in their products. ORACLE is one of the more PR oriented firms, and leverage it to their advantage. Maybe we could learn a thing or two about the power of perception. The Distribution agreement is focused on ULTRIX, and given that, we should not see too many Rdb competitive issues on VAX or RISC. The Special Sales agreement is available from Digital for those customers who require a "prime" or single-point-of sales/service selling model. Digital has closed a few large visible deals with ORACLE, and these have been written up in LIVE WIRE and Digital has made press releases and stories available. Given that ORACLE, and many other competitive 3rd parties, are going to get their share of the business, let's make sure the largest part of that is on Digital's VAX and RISC platforms. The margins on a 3rd party VAX win may be low, but they are larger than a 3rd party IBM, HP, Sequent, Tandem, Convex, UNISYS, NCR, SUN, etc win. | |||||
335.4 | No Loyalty | SELL::BOOTH | What am I?...An Oracle? | Wed Apr 19 1989 18:26 | 14 |
The "margins" are indeed very low, sometimes even negative when we win hardware sales without owning the software involved in the sale. Further, such sales are usually one-time sales. There is little to no account penetration and control at the hardware level. Additionally, if we have a box and no software on the system, is there really much difference between that and no hardware at all. Since the user interface will be third party and all the applications will as well, there will be no loyalty to Digital. ---- Michael Booth | |||||
335.5 | Sick of Oracle in Boston District | BOSTON::SWIST | Jim Swist BXO 224-1699 | Fri Apr 21 1989 18:03 | 11 |
Well field reality is pretty scary. The sales force, even though all the points mentioned in the previous reply are well known, continues to see little difference between VAX-Rdb and VAX-ISV solutions. In fact since they know they can reply on slick demos and plenty of snake-oil from Oracle and Ingres, as opposed to the stick-to-the-facts-soft-sell they'll get from internal software presales people on Rdb et al. So why even bother with Rdb to an audience susceptible to hype and flash. At least they'll sell the $2.74 profit margin hardware. Very scary. | |||||
335.6 | Soft Sell? | BROKE::BOOTH | What am I?...An Oracle? | Fri Apr 21 1989 21:11 | 11 |
If indeed you are still seeing "stick-to-the-facts-soft-sell" I'd really like to know about it. I'm really not trying to provide all this competitive info just for my health. I'd like to see it routinely used in competitive situations. ---- Michael Booth The current Rdb slide show (#863) has all kinds of places to conveniently emphasize capabilities that competitors can't. In addition, subtle "digs" can be included any number of places. | |||||
335.7 | Come on Michael! | COOKIE::BERENSON | VAX Rdb/VMS Veteran | Mon Apr 24 1989 18:26 | 30 |
This is still stick-to-the-facts softsell. Where is OUR nationwide seminar program? This give Oracle, RTI, and SYBASE a foot in the door by having their slick marketing and/or technical people present directly to the customer. We rarely apply this level of direct marketing of Rdb/VMS to a customer, except maybe AFTER they have started their database search and have already heard the Oracle et al message. Where are OUR flashy demos? These other vendors have put together demos that show off the flashiness of their products. What are we going to demo, SQL? Where is OUR forms interface, where is our windowing interface, where is OUR report writer? We do not demo these things because they aren't part of Rdb/VMS, they are separate and unrelated products. We get our ass kicked in the slickness department because of this. Where is OUR CLEAR 4GL message? The lack of an integrated product isn't just a slickness problem, its a real marketing/sales dilema. Instead of the field having a clear strategy on what to sell, and significant expertise in that product set, we instead have an every man for him/herself situation. Some people are Rally/Teamdata fans, some Ingres Tools, some Cognos, some Smartstar, etc. Its great to give the customer a choice, but without a preferred solution that is highly tuned to take advantage of Rdb/VMS both technically, and in marketing, sales, and service, we are at a competitive disadvantage. Where is OUR advertising? The other vendors keep their message, and some false assumptions, in front of the market at all times. We only give our message to those who ask to hear it! We are, at best, fighting a holding action on the marketing front. | |||||
335.8 | Rebuttal | SELL::BOOTH | What am I?...An Oracle? | Tue Apr 25 1989 01:07 | 41 |
That's one view, Hal. Another would be that in the last year: 1) For the first time, we have a slide show that at least has an "edge". 2) There is a competitive presentation on line that anyone can get. Yes, it is really intended for internal use, but the information can be used to leverage sales. 3) There are people assigned to work with industry consultants/analysts/press people. These people, in DBS, spend many hours attempting to get the message out. 4) Our literature has improved drastically in the last year. 5) My newsletter goes out every two weeks telling people in the field exactly what is happening in the database marketplace. 6) We are getting reprints of relevant magazine articles. 7) A marketing newsletter goes out quarterly to inform other segments of Digital what DBS marketing has been doing. No, Digital does not have a strong 4GL position. Yes, it needs one. In the meantime, I am trying to develop more thorough comparsion sheets on what is available. And yes, there is currently such a comparison on-line as well. We, DBS Marketing is also attempting to get published more often. Yes, we need to do more. But we have done quite a lot this year. Also, let's remember that some of these problems we can fix, and some are corporate difficulties (i.e advertising). We are trying to cover all the bases with, as you should know, a small staff. It is not easy. Time is rationed for all of us. If you have specifics in mind, call me. Otherwise, please don't make it sound as if no one is doing anything. I believe you will find the field is receiving more and higher quality marketing assistance on Rdb than it had ever received in the past. We will, of course, continue to improve as quickly as possible. ---- Michael Booth (DBS Marketing) | |||||
335.9 | We were talking about slick marketing | COOKIE::BERENSON | VAX Rdb/VMS Veteran | Tue Apr 25 1989 02:13 | 8 |
DBS marketing is doing lots of good things and no one, certainly not I, denies that. It's just that it is still in the class of soft-sell just-the-facts stuff from the customer's viewpoint. And, this has nothing to do with DBS as it is all corporate related restrictions. The point was that you implied we were somehow matching Oracle et al in marketing, and the truth is that we aren't even playing the same game. In many many cases, we have lost the sale before the competition ever starts. | |||||
335.10 | I hate bullies ! | KYOA::HANSON | Guns don't kill-NJ insurance does | Tue Apr 25 1989 17:57 | 381 |
A little insight into the game that Oracle is playing goes a long, long way. Now, if only it reflected reality! I found the following article a couple of weeks ago while on a trip to California. I've not transcribed the article previously due to time constraints, but I think that it might be appropriate here. It makes for VERY interesting reading; Digital is mentioned, both in a positive and negative light, and it shows the basic philosophy by which Oracle sells. It should serve to remind us of what we are up against when dealing with Oracle. To make a possibly poor analogy, it seems from this article that DEC is assuming a Queensbury-like stance against Oracle, while Oracle is gonna kick us, scratch us, pull our hair, and then follow with a kick in the groin. How can you win with that? But most importantly, a side article dismantles a typical Oracle ad. Fun stuff! It's long (@ 400 lines) but definitely worthwhile. Have a go at it, and then let us know what you think... Bob H. The following article is reprinted without permission from the San Francisco Chronicle, Monday, April 10, 1989. ORACLE PLAYING TOUGH IN SOFTWARE WAR ------------------------------------ BY DON CLARK Chronicle Staff Writer Larry Ellison's office is known for its Oriental art. But Oracle Corp.'s chief executive talks more like a samurai than a Buddha. When he speaks of competitors, for example, he recalls a Japanese friend's attitude toward other American managers. "You live and let live, we'll compete to the death - then we'll see who wins," Ellison said. Oracle is winning. The Belmont-based database software company has doubled its sales in 11 of its 12 years. Oracle should easily grow another 100 percent to top $500 million for the year ending in May, possibly exceeding Microsoft Corp.'s quarterly sales pace to become the No. 2 U.S. software company. A symbol of the growth: On Friday the company announced one of the biggest deals ever for office space on the San Francisco Peninsula. Oracle will lease five buildings and 530,000 square feet on the old Marine World site in Redwood City for a new corporate headquarters. Ellison, 44, owns three houses, a red Ferrari and a $1,400 bike he rides 20 miles to work. His 28.4 percent stake in the company's stock is worth $426 million at current prices. But he is not content. Oracle's target is $5 billion in sales in four more years. Databases are a stepping stone to that goal. They are the foundation layer of software needed whenever computer hardware is used to store and retrieve information. Oracle's customers, for example, use its products to custom-tailor systems to control everything from banking transactions to manufacturing plants to ship movements for the U.S. Navy. The company started delivering databases on Digital Equipment Corp. minicomputers, but now offers products ranging from a $99 development kit for Apple Computer's Macintosh systems to a $162,000 license to use Oracle at an IBM mainframe installation. Ellison now is moving beyond that $2.8 billion database market. The company has begun selling add-on application software to carry out specific jobs like accounting, plus services to help users integrate its software with computer from many different vendors. One-Stop Outlet --------------- As more and more of these computing tasks are shifted from large computers to desktop machines on complex networks, Oracle is driving to become a one- stop-shopping outlet - possibly even reselling computers. "Oracle is going to be the agent of change that allows companies to convert from centralized to decentralized computing," predicted Roger McNamee, a vice- president and portfolio manager a T. Rowe Price Associates. "I view it as the most exciting idea in technology in the next three or four years." Some other reviewers aren't so positive. Oracle's boastful magazine ads, for example, have upset everyone from competitors to Edgar Codd, the former IBM scientist who invented the "relational" database technology first comm- ercialized by Oracle. "They don't have any ethics when it comes to what should be in advert- isements," Codd said flatly. Ellison admits a fondness for hyperbole as a technique to attract attention (see related story, below). One well-known ad, for example, portrays Oracle as a fighter jet shooting down a biplane labeled as competitor Ashton-Tate. But Oracle does nothing unethical, he insists. "We do not tell lies in our ads," Ellison said. Analyzed in Many Ways --------------------- Relational databases began to take over in the 1980s. Earlier systems, in essence, allow users to easily find and update data in a specific file. Relational systems organize those files into tables that can be analyzed in many ways: a user <text illegible> - ware to schedule faster payment to every supplier that has delivered on time. It's a fiercely competitive business. Relational Technology of Alameda, Sybase Inc. of Berkeley and Informix Inc. of Menlo Park also jumped into relational databases early, and also have grown swiftly. Giant IBM and Digital Equipment Corp. (DEC) now sell similar products. Yet Oracle's relational database sales are larger and growing faster. The company will add about 1,800 employees in the current fiscal year, bringing its total to 4,000. More than half of those employees are involved in selling that software, maintaining and servicing it at large corporate computer sites. Like Ellison, the sales force is sophisticated and cocky. "Ellison's personality infiltrates and directs the entire organization," said Chris Nicholson, founder of a Seattle company that designs add-on software for databases. "They are out to dominate the marketplace and everybody knows what they are going to do." Understanding and Style ----------------------- Ellison, who once taught physics at the University of Chicago, combines a shrewd understanding of the technology with a style some find abrasive. At a database conference last year, for example, he got in a near-shouting match with Informix Chairman Roger Sippi over software speed claims. "Larry really gloats with arrogance," said Mike Seashols, a venture capitalist who was fired as Oracle's vice president of sales in 1986 in a conflict over management styles. But he adds: "No question, of all the people I have worked with, Ellison is the best." Ellison left Ampex Corp. to found the company with colleagues Robert Miner and Ed Oates in 1977. Instead of using venture capital money, they boot- strapped development of their first product with fees from a contract programming job. Oracle now recruits large numbers of top graduates from Stanford, Caltech, and the University of California at Berkeley. The work environment is described as stressful even by Silicon Valley's frenetic standards. Employee turnover at times has been frequent. "Basically, it's a burnout shop," one former employee said. "You hire bright young people, work them until they drop and then say goodbye." But they are treated well in other ways. Around one-fourth of Oracle's U.S. sales force make more than $200,000 in commissions; its new Redwood City campus will have a full-length pool. Portable Software ----------------- One of Oracle's key early decisions was picking a technology called structured query language (SQL) that was later endorsed in IBM products. Another was designing its software to be portable - able to run on nearly any vendor's hardware. The latter choice came about, Miner recalls, when its first database program for DEC minicomputers was made obsolete by DEC's later VAX machines. The founders vowed not to let that happen again. "It may look like it was incredibly insightful, but it was obvious," said Miner, now a senior vice president of the company. Portability, Ellison argues, makes it possible for customers to buy the newest, cheapest hardware that keeps coming along. For that reason, it is a threat to vendors that would like to lock customers into sticking with high-priced proprietary systems. DEC, he points out, was recently forced by competitors to begin selling a faster workstation based on an outside vendor's technology, a machine that will not run the database DEC sells for its VAX machines. By 1992, Ellison predicts, more will be forced to follow suit. A Free Bundle ------------- Some observers say DEC may yet derail Oracle's growth. The computer giant's salesmen once made joint calls with Oracle's; now DEC is aligned with competitor Relational Technology. And last week, DEC began bundling its database software free of charge when it sells a computer. "What would you pay for a database management system that didn't allow you to run your applications on DEC's newest line of fast, inexpensive computers? Nothing," Ellison retorted, with characteristic sarcasm. "Well, DEC thinks so too and that's what they are charging for it." Lately Ellison has been winning the argument. A recent survey of buying intentions by Computer Intelligence of La Jolla shows that 26 percent of DEC hardware installations expect to buy Oracle in the next 12 months. Relational Technology is second at 18 percent. Only 8 percent of those users expect to buy from DEC, though its database software is used by 36 percent of all the sites. Other hazards? Software designed to work on all machines doesn't excel on any of them, customers and consultants say. Sybase frequently beats Oracle in bidding contests determined primarily by speed. Moreover, big names in software like Microsoft and Ashton-Tate are joining in technical alliances to link easy-to-use personal computer databases with mainframe systems. Oracle seems determined to do it all itself. One-Size Philosophy ------------------- "In practice, this one-size-fits-all philosophy does not work and users are not buying into it," said Umang Gupta, a former Oracle employee whose Menlo Park company is now working on PC databases with Lotus development. Others contend that Oracle wants to lock customers into its software, just as IBM and DEC want users to commit to their hardware. "While Oracle is protecting a company from IBM, who's going to protect the company from Oracle?" asked Ed Esber, Ashton-Tate's chief executive, in a recent debate with Ellison. Ellison tends to lump such remarks under the category of sour grapes - from competitors who are getting bloodied. "We think the market isn't stupid," he said. "We think customers can tell the difference between a good technology and a bad technology. The market- place has decided that Oracle has a better product than anyone else." *** End of Main Article *** *** Side Article *** ANATOMY OF AN ORACLE CORP. TRADE MAGAZINE AD -------------------------------------------- How far does Oracle Corp. go in its marketing? The answer may depend on your perspective. The software company admits to bragging a bit, but nothing out of the ordinary. Some outsiders think it stretches reality a bit further, both in its magazine ads and when it promises to deliver new products. "Most people put their toes on the line," said Mike Seashols, a former Oracle sales and marketing vice president who generally praises the company. "Oracle puts their heels on the line and then they bend forward." Oracle...<text obscured> ad that ran in January in trade magazines. Head- lines asked readers, amongst other things, to name: * The industry's fastest growing company. The ad noted that Oracle increased its sales by 137 percent in fiscal 1986, 135 percent in 1987 and 115 percent in 1988. In smaller type, it states, "No other fortune 1000 company is growing as fast as Oracle." Actually, Fortune magazine hasn't put out a listing of the top 1,000 companies in three years, said Mark Rawlins, director of marketing comm- unications. So the company, which doesn't make the Fortune 500 list, did its own review of corporate financial data published by Forbes magazine, limiting the exercise to companies of a comparable size. * The only software product in history that has been a success on mainframes, minicomputers, and PCs. The statement is accompanied by pie charts listing percentages in each computer category for Oracle and other key vendors. In personal computers, for example, it give Oracle <obscured text> percent compared with 25 percent for Ashton-Tate. The charts are based on a survey by Datamation magazine of sites with IBM-compatible mainframe computers, the ad points out. What is not stated, however, is that the percentages represent respondents' plans to buy in the future, not past sales. A research report by PaineWebber estimates that Oracle accounted for only 9 percent of personal computer database sales in 1988, compared with 67 percent for Ashton-Tate. o The world's fastest relational database management system. The ad lists three performance records that Oracle claimed last summer, including an "all-time" record of 265 computer transactions per second on an IBM-compatible mainframe system. In a note below it adds: "Audited benchmark results are available upon request." Actually, no audited benchmark results are available for that all- time record. That is mainly because Oracle ran out of time on an Amdahl computer that was borrowed to run the time-consuming speed test, said Pete Tierney, an Oracle senior vice president responsible for marketing. Codd and Date, a San Jose-base consulting firm, audited results for the other tests on Digital Equipment Corp. and Unix-based computers. Edgar Codd, a well-know former IBM scientist, complained in an interview about the way his firm's auditing work was portrayed in other Oracle ads. "They mentioned us in such a way as to imply we had done the auditing of all three," Codd said. "I generally find their ads very objectionable." Tierney denied trying to mislead anyone. The ads never state that Codd and Date audited the IBM-compatible test, he noted. Moreover, the consulting firm saw ad copy before it was run and did not object, he contends. The whole episode, Tierney said, was triggered by audited speed claims made by competitors in the months leading up to a major new version of Oracle's database software. Oracle has always believed the only meaningful test is running a specific customer's application software, he said. The confusion over contradictory speed claims last summer helped spur the formation of an industry council aimed at setting up reliable speed test, Tierney said. "We admit to hyperbole in what we do but isn't that the essence of advertising?" he said. "We don't fool our customers." - Don Clark *** End of Side Article *** A table was included in the main article... ORACLE SYSTEMS AT A GLANCE o Business: Oracle Systems Corp. sells relatioonal database software, financial and other office automation packages, consulting and systems integration services. o Headquarters: Belmont, CA o Employees: 4,000 o CEO: Lawrence Ellison o Friday's Stock Price: 24 5/8 o 52-week high-low: 25 � to 14 � OPERATING RESULTS in millions, year ended May 31 o Revenue $600 * * 450 (Well, it looked better * in the article!) * 300 * * * * 150 * * * - * * * * 0 -------------------------- '84 '85 '86 '87 '89* o Net Income * $ 80 * * 60 * * * 40 * * * * 20 * * * - * * * * 0 -------------------------- '84 '85 '86 '87 '89* * Donaldson Lufkin & Jenrette estimate *** End of All Articles *** | |||||
335.11 | Another thing to add to Hal's reply | BOSTON::SWIST | Jim Swist BXO 224-1699 | Thu Apr 27 1989 19:25 | 21 |
Thanks, Hal. You are right on the money, from what I can see. Lets throw field training into the same flame. We are losing a current deal in my office to RTI not only for all the reasons Hal flamed about but also for the fact that the RTI tech support guy blows the doors off what this district can provide. This guy is not only flash, but also knows the Ingres internal optimizer algorithms backward and forward. His counterparts in this office cover about 35 products and are lucky if they've ever even USED the product they're trying to give presales support for. They provide ZERO knockoffs against the competition because in most cases they have NO idea what the competition can and can't do. 99% of the people in this office think Oracle is 10 times faster than Rdb. Etc, etc. I've worked in engineering and I've worked in the field. If we don't get some semblance of that high powered engineering talent out here to help sell, you guys can invent 'till the cows come home and no one will buy it. | |||||
335.12 | VAXnotes Monkeywrench enclosed | KYOA::HANSON | The Youngest Curmudgeon! | Tue May 02 1989 21:45 | 30 |
The good guy in me says, "Gee, Mike (Booth), sorry to open this can of worms. I didn't expect that we'd get into ~flaming~ as we have!" While the bad guy in me says, "OK, the last entry was 4-27. Let's redirect. Perhaps it would be useful to discuss how some of the field people have gotten *around* such situations. True, it's easiest to discuss how we've all been burned by lack of expertise, lack of focus in product or communication, or simply from the 'other guy' being 'slicker'. Would anyone care to relate how, if ever, they've been able to circumvent these situations? Cases where they've used techniques to de-fuse the 'other guy' before the customer had been sold by slick marketing or technical knowledge? "Or, rather, what you would have needed to accomplish the same?" Frankly I've found this dicussion rather interesting, 'cause I'm pretty much in the same boat as many others... I love database, I've been doing it for years, but I always find myself a bit behind the times - a little bit lacking in some cases. I've got multiple customers, multiple salespeople to support, multiple products to know, and yet only a single minute left over in any given day. "What can I use to make my job easier? More effective? Efficient?" BH | |||||
335.13 | ..And the meek ... | TRCU09::NAISH | RDB4ME Paul Naish @ 637-3352 | Fri May 05 1989 18:43 | 34 |
Potential Cartoon: Picture of a partially opened door with the title 'DEC Director of Corporate Advertising Policy'. On the wall you can see a framed saying of 'And the Meek Shall Inheriet the Earth'. I agree with Michael Booth the message the field is delivering is more agressive but is still very low tone above our level. Don't forget that the world revolves around metrics. How is an ORACLE salesrep measured? SOFTWARE SALES. How is a DEC rep measured? HARDWARE SALES. Now I know that a certain componet of a rep's budget is SPG but ... You also have to remember that a salesrep always is looking at the amount of time and risk associated with trying to close business with a certain strategy. One way to reduce time and effort and risk is to support a customer wishing to buy ORACLE. Now we all know that a DB purchase is a long term benefit for both the customer and DEC but most salesreps I know are not on the same account longer than 2 years. The reality is that we measure our sales force on short term goals. But, we are getting there. We have significantly increased RDB sales in this district largely due to specialists merrily dancing on salesreps heads to the point of refusing SW support on an account if RDB was not position as our prime solution. We've been pushing the message of why the DB is important. The sales organization has also had a couple of close calls with customers looking at SEQUENT! This last point hit them where they live. But just think what we could gain by running one ad in DIGITAL review with the true market share and license numbers! |