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Dell moves away from build-your-own-PC

Posted Apr 03 2008, 04:18 PM by Kim Peterson
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Customization is a big business these days. Starbucks says it can customize 87,000 drink combinations for its patrons. Whether it be clothes, cars or gadgets, allowing customers to order a unique version is becoming a successful business model.

Not so for Dell, a company who made a name for itself on its build-your-own-PC policy. This week, the company said it will focus less on the build-to-order model and more on selling pre-built versions. The switch is part of the company's mission to bring down costs.

When it comes to computers, people don't need an extreme level of customization anymore, executives told analysts this week. Customers are giving up the luxury of picking their own computer features and opting for cheaper, pre-made PCs from other companies. Dell's share of the worldwide PC market has slipped to under 13% from 19% in 2006, and it has lost the title of top computer maker to Hewlett-Packard. Its growth has slowed to a trickle, while HP's 2007 growth could hit 30%.

Dell is now embracing the retail channel that has long been dominated by rivals, and has gone so far as to pull up stakes on the kiosks it installed at shopping malls. Give the company credit for trying to change with the times, although the change has been too slow so far.

Dell was also in the news today becuase it's going to have to cut more jobs than previously announced. It's fine to say you're going to cut 8,800 jobs, but don't go and hire for other positions if you want to reduce costs. That's exactly what Dell did.

So far, it has eliminated 5,500 of the 8,800 positions it announced last year. But it hired people in sales and customer support at the same time, so the net reduction has only been 3,200. The company won't say how many further job cuts it plans to make. Dell plans to close its desktop manufacturing plant in Austin, Tex., as part of the layoffs.

Dell also said it will buy back at least $1 billion in shares this quarter after repurchasing $4 billion last quarter. You'd think investors would be happy with all this news, but no: Dell shares rose less than 1% today to close at $20.12.

Dell aims to cut expenses by $3 billion a year by 2011. The computer maker is adopting a take-no-prisoners approach to cost-cutting this time around, execs told analysts.

"Every area of the company is being pursued," CEO Michael Dell said. He added that the "journey to transform the company" has begun, with major change taking place in five areas: notebooks, emerging countries, consumer, enterprise and small and medium businesses.

Analysts are responding well to Dell's plans. The company can be successful, wrote Citi analyst Richard Gardner, but it will struggle with soft demand for several more quarters until it sees savings in 2009 and 2010. And though Dell wants to cut costs, a Banc of America Securities analyst said that the company will have to spend money to grow in emerging markets and small businesses.

Comments

 

I would be very happy if Dell actually lowered prices by not selling customized computers.  I have a Dell 17" notebook and I love it. I'm not interested in playing games and I very rarely view a DVD. A basic computer with Norton, IE and Word suits me fine.

I think the executives at Dell are miss the boat, their growth is failing because of their very poor customer service. Everyone I know that owns a Dell who has had experience with CS will not be buying another one, myself included. They need to get back to what made Dell great in the first place, taking cars of their customers. When you receive a new computer with a broken monitor or missing software etc, it should not take weeks on end and countless phone calls to resolve issues. Walk-in retailers generally correct problems immediately and by the end of the day your back in business.  

I'm pretty glad about this. I work at a retalier that just recently started selling dells, their products aren't the best but they aren't the worst either. Dell put a lot of mom and pop shops out of business and screwed a lot of people over. I know that every major manufactor has done this but i have a burning hate for dell deep down. HAHA...

I have purchased several Dell computers.  

When their customer service moved overseas and their policies became customer-unfriendly (my opinion based on my experience), I told them they had lost their way and had lost my business.  It is so fitting that someone from Citi (Richard Gardner) states that "The company can be successful" (look up their Citi's financial collapse...if you need customer service, you will be talking to "Tom Jones" in India, next door neighbor to the customer service rep "John Wayne" at Dell).  

I have nothing against people from India but Dell uses them as a buffer between their customers and customer service by limiting the customer service reps' ability to actually make a decision that could help.

I remember an article in which a certain high level executive from Dell threw a barb at an HP executive relating to a difference in marketing ability....This article makes me chuckle a bit...when a company grows to the point where the customer is a commodity instead of the employer (who provides the revenue to fund the paychecks), that company has lost its way and heading downhill!!

I don't see anything in this article telling me Dell has figured this out.

Zip drive ????

HUH?

Sorry but zip is dead.

bye.

That sucks. I like dell because the option they give to CUSTOMIZE! They still sell computers that are pre-built anyways. Now I'll be looking at price more than at Dell. No one hardly sells CUSTOMIZE anymore. Dick Saunders is RIGHT. "One size does not fit all".

Derek,

GM and Ford didn't have slave labor.

Sorry to hear this!  I agree totally with Dick.  He covers it very well.  IMHO no two people will need or require the same configurations.  The BUYER should be able to purchase EXACTLY what he/she wants in an ever changing IT market.  Dumb move, Dell!

P.S.  I feel Dell is losing a lot of its customer base due to the exorbitant interest rates on their preferred Dell credit account.  30% a.p.r.?  Come on!!!

In about 5 years, maybe less, Dell will be history; just like another once well respected PC manufacturer who’s CEO and other top executives where financially rewarded with outrageous stock options and six-digit bonuses while the company was basically bleed to death from the top down until Acer gobbled up what was left of the company in 2007.

I have bought maybe 60-70 Dell PCs, laptops and servers over the years.  They have always been good small business machines. They have required little service and I have always upgraded when it was needed. I am ready for another round of upgrades in my business, getting ready for the inevitable move to Vista and the MS server upgrades that are just around the corner.  I am about to replace 5 servers and 2 laptops and 14 PCs. Normally I would have gone to Dell again. I keep looking at them and configuring them but I haven't bought yet becuase there appear to be other products, just as good, that are less expensive.  This news may cause me to take a harder look at the competition

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