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Forkner Graduate Dellhater
Joined: 25 Dec 2007 Posts: 41
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Posted: Tue Feb 23, 2010 1:21 pm Post subject: If You Buy Dell, You Get A Dude And A Dud |
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| Quote: | It's been two years since Dell was supposed to shape up. Innovation happens elsewhere.
Forbes.com
Joan Lappin, 02.23.10
Almost two years ago I attended the Dell analyst meeting in Austin to hear about the rollout of the new management team and the new business plan Michael Dell was embracing upon his return to the company. After a day of presentations when all the new top folks were assembled on the dais, what was shockingly clear was that Mr. Dell had assembled yet another team of men.
Women have risen to the top of lots of other tech companies over the last 20 years, but never at Dell, and there was no departure from that in the new group. I raised my hand and observed that it was quite clear that the opposite of the successful ad campaign "Dude, you're getting a Dell" was true: "If you bought Dell you were getting a dude!"
Now it appears I was wrong. If you buy Dell you are getting a dud.
Eight quarters have elapsed since the supposed turnaround was undertaken. Still there is little evidence of an upward turn at Dell. Two years is an eternity in the world of tech. Each quarter the emphasis has changed on what went wrong. In some quarters the top honchos decided that it was best to reach for sales. Then when margins collapsed they altered their view.
They thought it was best to reduce the number of product lines, simplify the choices for customers, emphasize margins and drive less for sales. They have moved manufacturing out of the U.S. and also trimmed jobs outside and inside its borders. At various times international business was going to be the lead dog. At other times focus was on reaching into retail channels to better compete for the U. S. consumer where Dell was not top dog.
Michael Dell is no Steve Jobs. Michael Dell only ever did one truly clever thing: He decided to assemble computers in his dorm room and sell them directly to his very local customers without a middleman. He rode that direct-to-you formula to great success and mammoth wealth.
Professional managers were brought in and took the company into being a provider to the largest companies and away from being the low-cost provider. However Dell as a company never had an original idea in its corporate life beyond the direct model that caused other companies to sit up and take notice. It is an assembler of computers, a reseller of other related products, and not ever an innovator. It spends all of 1.18% of its revenues on research.
Jobs on the other hand has been an innovator forever at Apple, at Pixar and then at Apple again. Over the last few years Apple has introduced the iPod, the iPhone, iTunes, the App Store and now the iPad. While Dell cut R&D spending last year, Apple increased it.
Jobs wants to own proprietary hardware and software that you can't get anywhere else. He wants to forge new industries and product categories. Apple spends 2.5% to 3% on R&D--and how well it spends that money in constantly expanding its own unique product lineup. Jobs wants a moat around his intellectual property.
Dell's results for its most recent quarter were another repeat of the last eight quarters. Michael Dell admitted that sales exceeded their expectations and they had to "scramble to get parts" to assemble during the quarter. That is probably the essence of why margins weren't up to snuff and why investors are punishing the stock in the aftermath of the news.
It is very important to understand that every participant in the computer industry is suffering the same market dynamics. Prices keep dropping--this year by about 23% from a year ago. Consumers always want twice the speed, twice the memory, twice the features and at half the price. If prices drop by 25%, then you have to sell 25% more machines just to keep your sales flat. It's tough to grow in that environment. After a while you become the hamster running on the treadmill.
Dell understands the problem. Selling boxes is hurtling toward a zero-sum game. For sure there are still many people in the world who have never made a phone call or used a computer, but as the BRIC countries and others are brought into the modern world, the best chance for growth nowadays is outside the developed countries, or to offer ongoing services. That is why Hewlett Packard and Dell have made acquisitions to take them into the business of providing turnkey services or cloud computing where they maintain your computer functions offsite in another location and manage your data far more efficiently than you can do it for yourself. At least that's the sale pitch.
Sales to the government sector in the U.S. were also the subject of a question. One caller asked if the budget problems of many states and municipalities posed a risk to Dell's 27% of revenues to the public sector. Michael Dell replied that in all their years in business that number had never declined, but conceded it was a potential risk going forward.
I've been patiently waiting and hoping Dell would get its act together. It keeps buying sales through expanding its product line through acquisitions. Even that can't surmount the lack of innovation that leads to exciting growth. There is nothing special going on at this company, and at this point we must deem it a dud. It's hard to imagine Dell's current testosterone-heavy management group--or maybe any other group--will ever be able to change that. If the economy improves Dell will participate in a cyclical upturn, but beyond that it will never be a leader.
I pride myself in being a patient long-term investor for our clients. Patience is often a virtue, but not when years go by with little improvement.
Joan E. Lappin, CFA, is president of Gramercy Capital Management. Visit Joan at JoanLappin.com for more views and opinions.
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http://www.forbes.com/2010/02/23/dell-computer-apple-markets-steve-jobs.html |
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Tailmon Emperor of Dellhateology
Joined: 17 Dec 2008 Posts: 1054
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Posted: Tue Feb 23, 2010 1:39 pm Post subject: |
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Bout time someone at an important magazine finally said it like it is. Dhell is on the fasttrack to Phail. Mikey and company had the tallent and abilities years back but instead. They wasted money and forgot about inovation and quality and ran off with their money. That left everyone else in Dhell to loosing jobs and their livelyhood. Mikey does not care. He's got his billions. _________________ Former employee of Dell and can say that they
definitely Suck! |
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HellResident Chancellor of Dellhateology
Joined: 20 Nov 2005 Posts: 255
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Posted: Tue Feb 23, 2010 9:11 pm Post subject: |
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Wow, that article hits the nail so well on the head it's scary, mind it misses the fact that Dell is ripping off it's customers and using just about every shady trick and accounting fudge to make it look like they arent and that things arent as bad as they are, but things with Dell REALLY are that bad and then some
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