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Dell on Friday again disappointed its investors, warning that both revenue and profit would be below expectations for its second fiscal quarter. Analysts polled by Thomson First Call had been expecting $14.2 billion in revenue and earnings of 32 cents per share. But Dell now expects to record $14 billion in revenue and only 21 cents to 23 cents per share in earnings, a solid dime off expectations.
What's gone wrong with the PC industry's low-cost wonder? To start, analysts wonder if Dell's costs are on the rise. Also, after years of wowing investors and the PC-buying public with its online sales and marketing, the
Dell executives worship at the altar of the direct-sales model. For almost 20 years, Dell has used mail-order, telephone and the Internet to avoid the channel and inventory problems that can be a painful part of life for retail businesses. Even though it wasn't always true, Dell also managed to create an impression that it was a price leader, when its real advantage was that its costs were lower than retail-heavy companies like Hewlett-Packard and Gateway.
And that's still the message from the company with the leading market share in the PC industry. "The direct model remains our not-so-secret weapon," Chief Executive Officer Kevin Rollins told shareholders Friday.
Over the last few years, consumers have become the driving force behind the PC market, and more often than not they want to buy systems from retailers, said Samir Bhavnani, an analyst with Current Analysis.
The U.S. retail PC market is growing at a 25 percent clip, Bhavnani said, much faster than the 9 percent growth rate of the overall market. Dell is missing out on this category and companies like HP, Gateway and Acer are benefiting, he said.
But this is also coming at a time when the main part of Dell's business, the commercial PC market, has decided to
Dell also suffers from a dependency on desktops and U.S. sales, Smulders said. Desktop PCs account for 36 percent of Dell's overall revenue, the company said in its report for the first fiscal quarter. Sales in North and South America make up 65 percent of Dell's total revenue, with the U.S. comprising the largest part of that segment. In the U.S., commercial desktop shipments are expected to decline by 4.5 percent this year, said Richard Shim, an analyst with IDC.
Several more immediate concerns are also plaguing Dell and the rest of the PC industry. Intel's aggressive launch schedule for its
"The market was caught by surprise that Intel was bringing forward their product launches; they thought they had a longer lead time to get rid of their inventory," Smulders said. "Intel's actions have sort of shaken up the industry and put additional pressure on the pricing environment in the second quarter."
Dell has tried to work its way up the PC price list, with heavy emphasis on its
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complement my work machine. These laptops were Dell. None
experienced hardware failures. Software failures, were a
different story. After becoming sick and tired of having to reload
software, redo drivers after a new program was installed...and
dialing India for help, I finally got an Apple Ibook. 'Nuff said.
This one is going on 3 years old. No reboots. Ever. No
crashes...ever. Viruses - yup, I know they're out there, but no
problems yet. When I get something at work that doesn't work, I
usually ship it home. Again, has always worked on my Apple.
My house has gone from a 5 machine - all Dell/Microsoft to 3
Apples/OS-X, one Dell/Microsoft, one Dell/Red Hat, and
counting. As soon as Crossover gets perfected so that I do not
have to own any MS OS, I'll transition to an almost Microsoft free
(and so far, malfunction free) environment.
As for customers, they have been disappointed by poor customer service, poor technical support, and poor product quality.
I switched from Dell to HP, and my next computer is definitely going to be another HP.
According to IDC, Dell's Q2 2006 USA market share is 34.2% compared to 4.8% for Apple.
Things could be worse...
Go HP! :-)
"That must be the tenth alienist they've had on Williams. Even if he wasn't crazy before, he would be after ten of those babies got through psychoanalyzing him."
-- Porter Hall, as Murphey in "His Girl Friday"
else's $300 Windows PC, other than the ability to run more
viruses a bit faster? None, really. Sure the $300 machine may
have a slower processor, less RAM and a smaller hard drive, but
so what? They both run the same OS with the same litany of
problems. One just runs the viruses faster!
Windows PC Makers aren't so much computer companies as PC
assemblers. They don't really design these things so much as
slap a bunch of parts (made by other companies) together. They
don't even own the OS!!! In a situation like that, it's just a race to
see who can make the cheapest box. That's a race nobody wins,
not even the buyers, because the cheapest box has to include
support from the cheapest labor pool. Don't be surprised when
you can't understand the tech support person for your Dell or
any Windows based PC ? it's what you bought into when you
bought the box.
Those days are gone, as one reader pointed out, this has become a race to the bottom, and service and support naturally have become the victims of this. Basically when you, as a consumer customer buy a windows PC, you are buying this with the implied understanding that you are on your own.
Take the support and ship it offshore, make PC's look really affordable only to dissappoint the buyer when the price skyrockets after all the "customizations," show apathy to customer complaints...... it's a recipe for disaster. It does not matter how big your company is.. customer service eventually catches up with you...shall I name a few?.... Dell, of course, MCI, MBNA, Home Depot .... WAKE UP management - when the foundation is weak (yes - your customer service is your foundation)- YOU WILL TOPPLE OVER!
- Waiting for Vista? A hypothetical:
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by Penguinisto
July 24, 2006 1:09 PM PDT
- I think that commercial buyers (esp. business IT departments) are likely holding out for Vista to see if it's even worth doing in a business environment, or if they can just continue to use their current hardware and put the saved $$$ into training workers to use Linux or BSD on their desktops, and just keep using XP until it dies for those instances where, say, a custom-built or niche-built Win32 app is still necessary.
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Reply to this comment
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(15 Comments)It'd be a safe bet to make, considering that a lot of businesses are feeling rather burned over Microsoft's Software Assurance...
/P