Comments on: Turnaround time for Michael Dell
His credentials as a tech entrepreneur can't be questioned, but why does Michael Dell find himself reinventing his company and career?
His credentials as a tech entrepreneur can't be questioned, but why does Michael Dell find himself reinventing his company and career?
December 26, 2009 11:19 AM PST
December 26, 2009 10:04 AM PST
December 26, 2009 9:10 AM PST
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Michael Dell was always driving behind the wheel. First and
foremost its his company, Rollins was a babysitter at best.
So theres a big hoopla article now that hes suddenly taking back
the CEO position.
Where's the story?
Or--it could be that he WASN'T!
intergrated sound blew.
Memo to Dell: stop buying crappy components. Stop shafting us. We can very easily take our money elsewhere. It will be a LONG time before I ever even look at a Dell.
You suck, Dell.
Now I have a DEll. First Dell mixed my order up with another person and was not going to send the upgrade for office. Then I had problems with cold boot; evidently others had the same problem. For 3-years though extended warranty the problem was not fixed by Dell. Guess what on a recent update of the computer, Norton find a registry problem and fixed the problem. Evidently Dell left the Audit Mode in Windows turned on; this was supposed to be turned off prior to shipment. In spite of logs sent, copies of the register the service people did not discover what Norton found.
Selling the first computer to someone is easy, Building a loyal following that will buy additional computers is harder.
I know that us people at home only buy them one at a time, but we deserve help too. I would bet that now there are as many computers at home as at work.
Dell has never replied, to E-Mails that I sent recently to tell them what the real problemis.
(Sorry, couldn't resist. :-)
Here's my Dell story...
A good friend bought a pretty high end Dell system ... about $2K.
Each time she has a problem, she asks me to help her call Dell tech support, since she can't understand their very heavy accents.
One of the problems was her optical USB mouse. The pointer on screen would sometimes become eratic or jump around on its own. Dell support insisted this was normal or that she was using it on the wrong type of surface. They wouldn't help her, and I got tired of hearing her complain about it. So I bought her a $10 replacement USB optical mouse ... the cheapest mouse I could find! It works perfect.
Many people do not want a mini-tower form factor PC in their living room or bedroom. They want something small and quiet that they can put in a bookshelf. The lack of form factor diversity shows a lack of imagination on Dell's part. Also, in this day of instant gratification, Dell's 5-10 day turaround seems an anachronism. You can drive to a CompUSA or Circuit City and have a new PC in an hour. You can even order online and go pick it up at the store in 15 minutes. What could be simpler.
who nicely refused to deal with my machine because it was from the US. The PC now sits in my basement with a large screwdriver through it's heart. My resolve, never another Dell!
Behaviour by compamies of that kind will in time make itself felt to be sure, plus the mouth to mouth word. Thank you kindly for listening to me griepe:) Best regards, Hans H Mueller
- Dell started on the cheap
- by mjd420nova February 4, 2007 10:41 PM PST
- When Dell first started, he hired the cheapest people, built with the cheapest parts to the cheapest designs. A pattern for a good startup to compete against IBM, Apple and Compaq. He made his money and turned his profits back into the business. Smart, money wise but dumb for the consumer.
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