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Turnaround time for Michael Dell
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February 20, 2004
There you had Google, the latter-day incarnation of the 1927 New York Yankees, tripling its fourth-quarter earnings on an obscenely strong 67 percent revenue gain. Less than an hour later, Dell, the one-time leader of the pack, issued an earnings warning and announced that founder Michael Dell was replacing Kevin Rollins as the company's chief executive.
A tale of two companies on a funky Wednesday.
Google does software, and Dell does hardware. The companies contend in entirely different realms. So at first blush, there's really not much to connect the two. But surface differences aside, both companies really do share a common DNA. Both charged out of the gate as ballsy upstarts and exploited a genius insight about their respective businesses before rivals could react.
For Google, it started--but did not end--at search. That was only a springboard. Others like Yahoo and AltaVista were in the search business a lot earlier but too slow to compete. Same went for Microsoft, which talked a great game about software as a service.
Fact is that Google did a better job putting the idea into practice. Now it's even branching into Web-based office applications, Microsoft's very bread and butter. The reality is that some, perhaps many, of Google's new ventures may fail, but there's no rush--not when the company's sitting on a hoard of more than $11 billion in cash and marketable securities.
Dell's misfortune is that its original gene pool mutated in the wrong ways. But for most of its 23-year history, the company was a scrappy outfit that gave fits to bigger, more established (i.e., self-satisfied) rivals.
In the early days, few people outside of Michael Dell believed he was destined to come out atop the heap. In fact, when Dell began what was first called PC's Limited, he wasn't breaking new ground. In 1984, there were already a number of mail-order computer companies jockeying with each other. Dell wasn't even first among equals. He had to battle his way past street-smart entrepreneurs like Northgate's Art Lazere and Greg Herrick at Zeos and Ted Waitt over at Gateway 2000.
It took less than a decade for Dell to establish its primacy and then set its sights on IBM, Compaq and Hewlett-Packard. At first, these fat cat companies were in denial. They couldn't believe a direct marketer could ever eat their lunch. But that's what happened.
There's an endless debate among historians whether the times make great leaders or whether great leaders paint their own canvasses. In this case, maybe it was a bit of both. By the time Dell was ready to expand into new businesses, PCs were no longer esoteric items. As a second generation of computer users entered the work force, most computer users no longer required specialized hand-holding from resellers.
The mainstream computer companies relied on so-called value-added middleman who tacked on unnecessary cost. But as PCs morphed into commodities, price and distribution--Dell's strong suit--put the big guys on the defensive. What's more, Dell could reconfigure its models on the spot to meet individual tastes. Before long, the IBMs of the world were struggling to keep pace in a cost game they couldn't win.
Dell's salad days seem like an eternity ago. But we're not talking about ancient history. The company took a wrong turn only a couple years back. First, there were problems with after-sale service. Instead of fixing the problem, the company denied its existence. Then it turned defensive. And then, inevitably, it lost customers.
Product quality issues also surfaced with annoying frequency. Laptop design, in particular, was a problem--above and beyond the recall of 4.1 million notebook computer batteries. Recurring complaints about the products came while Dell's rivals were learning how to squeeze expenses out of their business process. All the while, Dell faced a resurgent HP, a nimble, aggressive Lenovo and an Apple with a penchant for pulling rabbits out of its hat.
Now Michael Dell is back at the helm, but the Wall Street guys are making too much of a fuss about his return. He's not a miracle worker and any recovery is going to take time.
Of course, there's no reason why Dell can't rebound from past mistakes. The company recovered from a painful stumble in the early 1990s. But the technology industry has changed a lot since then. Even if Dell regains its form to the point where its service and distribution are the envy of the computer industry, can it again make customers excited about its products?
Solve that last question and life becomes a lot easier.
Biography
Charles Cooper is CNET News.com's executive editor of commentary.
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right???
or ro?
Dell promotes custom PC's. They need to get there "mojo" back so to speak, so they open a couple of super fancy looking stores and inside you pick the parts to go into your computer. They only need 5 or 10 stores maximum in downtown areas.
This would not be the Gateway store concept, Gateway opened too many stores that became a drag on the bottom line.
Of course Dell needs to fix there other problems like customer service.
have Apple stores. One is in Texas. I forgot where the other one
is.
The problem is the model: you can't walk out of the Dell store
with a computer. It's actually more of a showroom.
My HP desktop computer is now five years old, and going strong. I don't know if HP's technical support is any good, because I have never needed it. My HP Just Works.
Next I bought an HP and also a Compaq. I've never had to call tech support on these either. Both run superbly well, and the HP is about six years old and
runs just like the first day I tried it.
Problem with this model is eventually the Chinese will eat your lunch. And with no R&D skills in your DNA, to which segment of the market will you migrate?
I don't think so...
Dell and HP computers are usually built around a processor that sounds like it should be powerful. The problem is the processor is mounted on a main board that is the cheapest piece of junk on the market with zero upgradability and poor base performance. The peripherals follow suit. That's how they make cheap computers that look good..they're actually cheap.
I'm only surprised Dell has lasted as long as it has and I fully expect HP's computer line to go the same way. Wait until people3 want to upgrade the video on their Dell and HP boxes to accommodate Vista and find out what will and what won't fit on those sorry main boards!
- arrogance gets always punished
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by jelcnet
February 3, 2007 10:09 AM PST
- read back a long interview with Dell and its CEO in Fortune, just a few years back and the painting is on the wall, condescending masters of the universe never understood international business.. still as an internaitonal client based in Germany cannot order a notebook to be deliverewd in Italy, in Italian and invoiced to Belgian headquarters, not even to Germany ... NOTHING FAILS LIKE SUCCESS !!!
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