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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

 

Why no comments from the ladies? I am a great grandma and never owned a pc till 2001. My children convinced me to come into the 21st century and I bought a dell. The salesman asked me what I wanted over the phone and I explained what I liked. I got a great pc & printer that I use with my dsl and have never had a problem.  I bought a new flat screen monitor because of my trifocals, and am thrilled with it also.  I for one love Dell products and I'm sure there are other seniors out there who would agree with me.  I think the prices are fair and from what I've seen on the internet, the value you receive for the price you pay is well worth it.

I have owned 4 dell computers and have customized every one of them, usually an upgrade from base configuration. If this will no longer be an option (or at least an affordable option) I guess I'll price shop from the most reliable local retailer I can find.

I agree with Don ....  Dell a few years ago promised to buy back your computer when you upgrade ....   Only thing was they never told you that the shipping costs to them was just about what they were going to pay you for them...  They have promised the sky but yet they are following the course of Packard Bell.... make it cheap and some fool will buy it because of the price.

My desktop is a Dell, and that is my second. My laptop is a Gateway.  They are both great computers, and I customized both to suit my needs.  As far as I know, Gateway still customizes.  Dell is not the only boy on the block.

I just went through a total of 8 hrs of hell with Dell "tech support" trying to get them to send restore CD's for a computer only 2 months old.  I went through horrendous hold times, techs that would contradict each other, techs that couldn't speak understandable English, and a Supervisor that blamed all the problems on me because I didn't follow an ownership transfer procedure that was neither documented and ultimately wouldn't work without another phone call to customer service.

As long as Dell doesn't clean up there customer service they will continue to decline.  At this point I will never buy another Dell computer or recommend one to anyone else.

In my opinion, Dell's big mistake was when they switched away from having a superior product with excellent customer service to competing with the majors with lower prices and crappy customer support from India. One taste of that whole mess with people that barely speak english, working from a preset set of troubleshooting skills has put a bad taste in people's mouths. Being an IT support person, Dell needs to go back to a superior product, excellent customer support, and focus on the business sector. My customers would pay extra for that type of business model. Stop playing the pricing war and focus on providing customer support.

lets go mets!

I staryed and bought an HP for the first time .  The quality is lacking, the system restore has never worked, and its service dept was never able to get it to work.

Its components are the cheapest available and the company doesnt stand behind its prooducts.  Ask HP users if the system restore has ever worked!

Based on Dells new policy, I am not sure if I will purchase another.  In the past 10 years, we only purchased Dell.  Currently we have 3 Dells in our home network.  Like Dick Saunders, I want what I want on my computer and not what Dell thinks I need.  I guess I will do comparison shopping with other brands now.

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