Perspective: Where Dell went wrong

perspective The resignation of Kevin Rollins as CEO of Dell highlights one of the oldest and most important adages of the PC industry: you can stay on top for only so long.

Relentless competition, product commoditization, prickly customers and the sheer arrogance that comes with being No. 1 (or a strong No. 2) invariably conspire to bring a company down.

Apple was No. 1 in 1990 before flailing in the business market and being knocked out by IBM. IBM thought its name and prestige would carry it, but customers flocked to Compaq, which undercut IBM in price by using Taiwanese contract manufacturers.

Packard-Bell then threatened Compaq, but consumers quickly tired of its strategy of selling low-cost computers made out of parts from a 1977 Gremlin.

Eventually Compaq imploded because of: incredibly poor demand forecasting, an inability to come up with a workable direct sales strategy, and a failure to understand that there was a difference between being King of the World and King of Downtown Houston.

In late 1998, I saw Compaq's CEO at the time, Eckhard Pfeiffer, walking around a trade show flanked by two bodyguards. Six months later, he was out of a job.

So where did Dell go wrong?

Dell began to treat consumers and even some business customers like they were passengers on a Greyhound bus.

First, it hired too many former management consultants like Rollins himself. Back in 2004, a group from CNET News.com visited the Round Rock, Texas, headquarters. Nearly everyone we met had recently parachuted in from places like McKinsey and Co. I met only one guy with any authority who had spent time on the front lines of sales, i.e. setting up cardboard end caps at retailer outlets.

Management consultants typically have very impressive credentials. Unfortunately, most of them also associate only with their fellow Wharton graduates so they are often culturally disconnected from their customer base, which can and often does include 13-year-olds, IT managers at corporate branch offices, and people who skip the crossword puzzle in favor of Junior Jumble. In other words, the rest of us.

Although they try to resist the temptation, the average MBA-trained executive sees people like this as a cost sink and spends most of his or her day trying to figure out how to cut back on services without anyone noticing. Unfortunately, customers--particularly these days--really want to be sucked up to: sites like Yelp.com have seen astounding growth by giving people a way to vent their anger about dismissive waiters.

Dell began to treat consumers and even some business customers like they were passengers on a Greyhound bus. Customer service became a chronic complaint and people flocked to Hewlett "The Computer is Personal Again" Packard.

It was a weird turnaround for Dell. The company's secret weapon for a few decades was strong customer satisfaction. Michael Dell himself, even in recent years, could occasionally be seen in the call center donning a headset and answering the phone. Customer trust will take a while to win back.

Second, Dell has no style. Remember the WebPC, an all-in-one (sort of) computer back in the late 1990s? It looked like a peasant woman from Uzbekistan. The company's MP3 players have always seemed bland. What is one of Dell's most consistent advertising venues? The back of Parade magazine in the Sunday paper.

In some ways, being boring has been an advantage: business customers love dull. But consumer PCs and consumer electronics have become a larger part of the business in recent years. Dell has come out with TVs, but the market share is low. Overall, consumer is still only 15 percent of the company's revenue.

Third, price. Everyone thinks that Dell has been the low-cost leader among major PC makers. In reality, Dell's average selling price has been higher than the industry average and higher than that of rival HP for years.

In 2002, the average selling price for a consumer PC from Dell was $1,084, according to research firm IDC. HP's average selling price for the same year was $1,009, or $75 lower. The average for all manufacturers was $1,030, $54 less than Dell. In the first three quarters of 2005, Dell's average selling price for U.S. consumer PCs was $854, more than $200 above HP's $651 average. It was the same in 1998.

Dell never has gone out of its way to advertise this data, but it has worked to its advantage. Unfortunately, PC prices have declined while capabilities improved. "Now, even low-end PCs are able to deliver the performance customers need," said Charles Smulders at Gartner. "The Achilles' heel has been the precipitous fall of average selling prices in the last few years."

Fourth, call it revenge. I can't prove this empirically, but customers flocked to Dell in the 1990s because the company seemed to embody an American ideal. It was a young company fulfilling a need in a clever way, and many of its employees were becoming millionaires. And every bump in the stock meant a bump in your 401K. Even during the tech implosion Dell managed to maintain its footing.

By 2004, it was just tough to look at them anymore as an underdog eager to do the right thing. It had become the Man.

Biography
Michael Kanellos is editor at large at CNET News.com, where he covers hardware, research and development, start-ups and the tech industry overseas. He has worked as an attorney, travel writer and sidewalk hawker for a time share resort, among other occupations.

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Add a Comment (Log in or register) 65 comments (Page 1 of 4)
Arrogance
by jimothyGator February 1, 2007 4:18 AM PST
Other example of Dell's arrogance can be seen on their web site. Depending on where you happen to click (home, small business, big business), you can get the same equipment for vastly different prices. This is not a way to gain customer confidence and loyalty. "You mean I paid an extra $200 because just because I said I was a home user?" Should Dell be surprised that years of tricking customers into paying a higher price so they subsidize another class of customers buying the same equipment has caught up to them? Now that he's back at the helm, Dell should sell the company and return the money to shareholders.
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Dell's Service Shocker
by mampoerdrinker February 1, 2007 4:22 AM PST
I just ordered a Dell laptop this past week. What a nightmare! The reason I ordered a Dell laptop is because I wanted a Turion 64bit CPU. I can't get them anywhere else, and so I went with Dell. From my order being cancelled to their attempt to force Vista on me (I ordered the laptop on Sunday) to their rude sales staff in India (who could not undestand me) to problems with their finance department (I bought on credit for a particular reason). I can only say that Dell is getting what they deserve!
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Entertaining...
by billmosby February 1, 2007 4:36 AM PST
Liked the description of management consultants. Was Apple No. 1 in 1990, or was it 1980? And those price comparisons last year between Macs and Dells, which showed comparable Dell models to be equally or slightly higher priced, now ring a bit hollow. Still like Macs better than Dells, though, and I've used both.
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Great article
by adlyb1 February 1, 2007 4:51 AM PST
Very insightful. As both a consumer and business customer of Dell, I can agree with every component of this article. For years, I kept our company away from Dell because they just didn't get business needs and tried to hock consumer equipment in a large business environment. But, they finally figured it out and we have embraced them all the way to the Data Center. But, it has come at a price, which is a disconnect from their consumer roots. They have got to find their way back there without disconnecting from business to be able to continue to grow. HP rediscovered their consumer roots, but have damaged their business side in the process ((hence my company's move to Dell). It's all about agility and they both are struggling which is creating opportunity for Apple, which isn't necessarily a bad thing, but good price points have never been Apple's forte, so I'm hoping they regain their footing to keep a strong price pressure on the market.
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That and Rollins sucked
by Dachi February 1, 2007 5:12 AM PST
I could tell from the first interview he gave (here) after accepting his job as CEO that he was the wrong guy for the job. I am pretty sure I commented on it in that article too.
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It's the customer, Stupid!
by dcvchigago February 1, 2007 5:22 AM PST
I bought my last Dell in 1997. It came loaded with crapware, and it was buggy and unstable. I finally wiped the entire hard drive and reinstalled from a Windows OEM disk. The sleep and hibernate features never did work correctly. Customers have long memories. Inexpensive is good, but cheap is bad.
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Credibility and Facts...
by winstein2000 February 1, 2007 5:43 AM PST
The author would get more credibility if he get the facts straight with better research... Apple was only "number one" in the 1990's as a personal computer brand and unit sales, it never has large business market share in the 1990's. IBM beat Apple in the 1980's Compaq did not beat IBM with Taiwanese contract manufacturers, Compaq beat IBM by using generic parts and teaming up with Microsoft. Plus, Compaq did not spend a dime on developing operating system like IBM's OS/2. But I do agree with the author: Consultants have their place, but they are not good at taking over and running a company in the long term.
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Terrible support
by y2lprawn February 1, 2007 5:56 AM PST
The reasons I left dell for my purchasing needs are the bloated windows installs , the sporadic bad drivers, terrible support. I am still waiting on a replacement battery for the Inspiron 9100 and they ring me every day demanding the old one back. The upgrade paths to the GPU i was promised were unavailable when I tried to get them. i keep getting sent from department to department for an answer. All in all a very poor experience for me. I got a HP laptop recently, business machine, much better. Poor website design on HP behalf is my only complaint. So there is no way I can recommend dell. So they are getting what they deserve. I do think though they are big enough and bold enough to re-invent themselves. So best of luck to them there.
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Yep
by y2lprawn February 1, 2007 5:58 AM PST
Exactly the same issue I had with mine, I was very annoyed, driver updated made no difference.
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Dell's neglect
by wmanning February 1, 2007 6:17 AM PST
I was with a large school system outside of Atlanta and Dell was our major source of equipment. About 6 years ago I moved to Tennessee and ordered a high-end Axim, a $4,000.00 desktop and accessories ? the Axim went to the wrong address three times and then my new desk top didn't last but about 3 years ? the article is correct ? they "don't care" anymore; so making new technical contacts in Tennessee ? Dell is now out of the picture ? for me and any of my clients.
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