Title: DELL: Potential for New Advertising Agency
1 DELL Potential for New Advertising
Agency Executive Briefing Report
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2Table of Contents
Serial Number Topic Page Number
1 OVERVIEW ADVERTISING FACTS 3
2 SCOPE FOR NEW AGENCY CUSTOMER SERVICE TROUBLES 5
3 SCOPE EXPANDING PRODUCT LINE 7
4 SCOPE GEOGRAPHIES 10
5 SCOPE DELLS CONCERNS 11
6 SCOPE CHIPS, SERVERS AND LAPTOPS 12
7 SCOPE EMERGING COMPETITION 13
8 CMO-SPEAK 14
9 EFFECTIVENESS OF ADVERTISEMENTS 16
10 PC SEGMENT UPDATE 17
11 SERVER SEGMENT UPDATE 18
12 ORGANISATION STRUCTURE 19
13 SWOT ANALYSIS 20
14 MANAGEMENT PROFILE 21
15 FINANCIALS 23
16 PRODUCT AND SERVICES SEGMENTS 29
17 GOALS AND BUSINESS MODEL 35
18 ONLINE MARKET SEGMENTATION 37
19 BUSINESS STRATEGY 39
20 MARKETING 41
21 INTERNET ADVERTISEMENTS 44
22 MANAGEMENT THINKING 48
3Overview
- Dell, Inc., formerly known as Dell Computer
Corporation, designs, develops, manufactures,
markets, services and supports a range of
computer systems, including enterprise systems
(servers, storage and networking products and
workstations), notebook computer systems,
desktop computer systems and software and
peripherals. - Became a Fortune 200 company in 14 years.
- Second largest and fastest growing PC company in
the world. - The worlds largest Direct PC company.
- Manufactures most of the products it sells.
- Has six manufacturing locations worldwide to
service its global customer base. The company is
managed on a geographic basis the Americas,
Europe and Asia Pacific-Japan. - Manufacturing process consists of assembly,
functional testing and quality control. Testing
and quality control processes are also applied to
components, parts and subassemblies obtained from
suppliers. Quality control is maintained through
the testing of components, parts and
subassemblies at various stages in the
manufacturing process. - Is certified worldwide by the International
Standards Organization to the requirements of ISO
9001 2000. This includes the design, manufacture
and service of computer products in all Dell
regions.
Source Nexis - Datamonitor
4Dells Advertising Key Facts
- Agencies
- Critical Mass Inc. - Calgary, AB, T2G OY4 Canada
- DDB Chicago - 200 E Randolph St, Chicago,
Illinois, 60601-6436 United States
AD BUDGET Adv. Expenditures FY 2004 473,000,000
- Vehicles Used
- Business Publications
- Consumer Magazines
- Direct Mail to Business Establishments
- Direct Mail to Consumers
- Internet Adv.
- Network Television
Source
5Scope for New Advertising Agency Customer
Service Troubles - 1
- Absence of middlemen, a key ingredient of Dells
sales strategy, means that Dell takes all the
kudos as well as the brickbats for its customer
service standards. - John Dickinson, an industry veteran and
columnist, in an open letter to M. Dell on Dec
23, 2003 complained about how service levels have
deteriorated. His registration system broke down.
It turned out that Dells database had no record
of his computer's existence. None in Dell could
figure out what to do to get his computer
properly registered. - In early 2004, in two surveys that rate the
satisfaction of PC buyers, Dell's scores
declined. - The March issue of Consumer Reports, in a survey
of 4100 consumers, gave Dell 62 points out of a
possible 100 for its support on desktop PCs. In
June 2003, Dell had scored 64. The slippage has
been steady over the last 3 years. Dell had a
score of 74 in Dec 2001. - In another survey done by Technology Business
Research (TBR), in the fourth quarter of 2003,
Dells satisfaction rating among corporate buyers
slipped to 80.98, down from 83.4 in the third
quarter of 2003. TBR's survey polls buyers on
eight aspects of support, including their overall
satisfaction with a company's support service.
However, in TBRs third quarter report for 2004,
Dell scored 83.61, marginally up from 82.27 in
the second quarter. - Dells images deterioration was exacerbated by
occurrences such as computer worms and shortages
of replacement parts. - Dell was forced to relocate some part of its
support service center in India back to the US
after escalations in complaints. Calls from US
purchasers of Dell's OptiPlex desktop and
Latitude notebook personal computers will be
handled from existing facilities in the United
States brand PCs. Some experts argue why should
Dell seek to cut costs of support service when it
is making handsome profits? -
Source Nexis search, cnet.com, news.com
6Scope for New Advertising Agency Customer
Service Troubles - 2
- Dell's goal is to solve each problem within a
12-hour period. Right now it meets that goal only
about 96 of the time, globally, for its server
and storage products. - Dell could face more problems with customer
service in future. Its focus on growth naturally
means that it will attract more consumers who are
less skilled in operating PCs and thus need more
assistance. As the proportion of the consumers
in the mix rises, there is going to be an
increase in complaints, even if Dell isn't doing
anything differently," says Roger Kay, an analyst
at IDC. That's because increasing market share
requires a "devil's bargain. Dell has to support
inexperienced buyers in order to get their
business. - Apart from increasing the size of its support
service staff, Dell has shifted its priorities to
resolving problems on the first call. The company
is also examining how its customer care
organization can resolve order-related problems
more quickly. - Some customers have said that while dealing with
Dells support staff, they felt they were being
talked down to, as if they have never experienced
technology. They compared this to rival HPs
friendly neighborhood personnel for support
service. - Dell plans to offer a free security software
bundle that will combine a firewall, antivirus
and antispyware software. Spyware problems
account for 20 of the company's support calls
now. And each spyware call takes about 20 minutes
on an average. Given the no charge nature of
this segment, Dell will have to seek ways to
limit the pressure of spyware issues on support
staffs time. - Experts feel that Dell's rapid unit shipment
growth in recent years and the resulting rapid
influx of new business customers, are the root
cause of its customer relations problems.
Source Nexis search, cnet.com, news.com,
asia.cnet.com
7Scope for New Advertising Agency New Product
Lines - 1
- Printers
- Currently, Dell is in Phase 2. Phase 1 of rolling
out the product has already happened. - In Phase 2, Dell aims to boost printer sales
significantly by expanding the number of models
it offers and the numbers of countries in which
it markets. Dell will take most of the profits it
makes on printers and reinvest them in the
business by offering lower prices or bundling
printers with its PCs, all with the idea of
pumping up unit shipments. - Phase 3 will arrive once Dell builds a large
customer base, which would increase its sales of
supplies such as ink, toner and paper. - According to Tim Peters, head of printing and
imaging, the company is also nearly ready to
enter the Chinese market. - In Nov 2004, Dell launched Wireless Printer
Adapter 3300 that allows users to print, scan or
fax without being connected to their printers.
The computer needs a wireless card and must be
connected to a wireless network. - TVs
- The main customer for Dell TVs may be consumers,
but Dell sees a potential among its business
customers as well. A number of hotels, financial
institutions, restaurant chains and retailers are
known to have expressed interest in Dell TVs. - Business customers with chains of outlets (like
McDonalds) could offer huge business. - Dell recently announced plans to add two new
42-inch plasma-screen TV models to its TV line
up. It is likely to add a few more TV models over
time. - Dells high-definition plasma TV will sell for
US3,499, a relatively modest price that Dell
believes will help boost demand.
Source Nexis search, cnet.com, news.com,
asia.cnet.com
8Scope for New Advertising Agency New Product
Lines - 2
- Smart Phones
- Smart phones, which combine the attributes of a
cellular phone and a PDA like Dell's Axim,
represent a potential opportunity for Dell,
executives say. But Dell will carefully examine
what it can do to differentiate its products from
those of incumbents such as Nokia. - Media Center PCs
- In Oct 2004, Dell rolled out a new line of Media
Center desktops, wrapped around Microsoft's
Windows XP Media Center 2005 operating system.
The PCs will function more like entertainment
devices that can record, show TV programs, and
play DVD movies or music CDs. - It follows a good, better, best model strategy
to sell Media Center PCs. Basic utilities come
with the cheap good bundle. It won't include a
remote control or tuner for watching and
recording television, as in full-fledged Media
Center PCs. However, it will let people view
photos, home videos and other media content using
the Media Center interface, designed for viewing
while sitting back in a couch or chair. The
upgrade from a traditional Windows operating
system costs only 39. - The best offers the entire package for a higher
price. The aim is to offer the product across
price segments.
Source Nexis search, cnet.com, news.com,
asia.cnet.com
9Scope for New Advertising Agency New Product
Lines - 3
- Others
- Dell recently introduced Inspiron 9200, a new
notebook for consumers that offers a 17-inch
display, with a list price that starts at
US1,699. Dell aims to attract buyers interested
in using a notebook to watch movies or to
manipulate multimedia files. The machine also
comes with Wi-Fi, allowing it to connect to home
networks and share files. - Dell wants to provide its consumers with a menu
of in-home services. It plans to offer to do jobs
such as installing home networks for consumers in
conjunction with a new suite of services that
will allow customers to pay a set price for a
certain job. Under the program, a Dell
representative will pull up in the van and take
care of the problem. - Dell also offers discretionary services -
professional consulting, SAN (storage area
network) design and deployment, application
development, managed services. It's about a 2.6
billion business and growing at roughly double
the rate of Dells product business. - Dell is also eyeing a movie download service. It
has been exploring partnerships that would offer
its customers access to movie downloads, similar
to how it provides music downloads through a
partnership. - Dell recently launched the Axim X50 handheld and
refreshed its Dell DJ music line with two models,
including the miniature Pocket DJ 5. The DJ 5,
about the size of a deck of cards, will sell for
US199 and come with 5GB of storage. - What Dell will not get into
- Utility computing. While other competitors are
embracing the trend, Dell has decided not to. - Dell is not interested in lower-priced standalone
devices like DVD players. - Digital cameras. While Dell will have alliances
to bundle digital cameras with its products, it
will not go into it alone.
Source Nexis search, cnet.com, news.com,
asia.cnet.com
10Scope for New Advertising Agency Geographies
- In China, already the worlds second-largest
market, Dell is the largest non-domestic company,
after Legend. - In September 2004, Dell opened a command center
to offer improved services to its business
customers in China. The new facility, located at
Xiamen, is the second Enterprise Command Center
(ECC) that Dell has set up besides the one at
Round Rock, Texas. The centers provide
around-the-clock spares and service support to
server and storage customers. - More centers will be opened in Europe and Japan.
The European center will be at Limearick,
Ireland the location of the Japanese center is
yet to be announced. - One more ECC is slated to be established in the
Asia-Pacific region in early 2005. - The idea behind the ECCs across geographies is to
help Dell take better and quicker care of
problems for its high-value customers. Its
American ECC has seen a 25 improvement in
resolving initial customer problems since it was
set up in November 2003. - In Japan, with 50 of consumers using their PC as
a television, Dells TV and Media Center software
could have a big market potential. - Printers and enhanced services are showing
particularly strong growth in Europe, Middle East
and Africa region. These services include backup
services, Windows migration services Active
Directory services and the like. In the third
quarter of 2004, Dell saw a 72 growth in this
segment in EMEA region. Taken together with the
core PC, server and laptop segments, maintaining
the absolute, year-on-year revenue growth rate in
EMEA is likely to get harder because it will be
growing from a larger base. - A more immediate concern In EMEA, in the third
quarter of 2004, Dells PC shipments growth was
below Gartner's expectations. Gartner expected a
14 growth. Dell clocked 12.6 translating to
14.3 million units.
Source Nexis search, cnet.com, news.com,
asia.cnet.com
11Scope for a New Advertising Agency Dells
concerns
- Dell is accused of neglecting independent
research. As of August 2003, in 19 years, Dell
had only been awarded 867 patents -- less than
the total many of its closest competitors receive
in a year. In response, Dell says it doesn't need
to take that route. Since it relies on
standardized components, it doesn't need to spend
money on research and development. Dell also
claims that it manages higher return on RD than
any rival, about 5 times the profit for every RD
dollar spent. - According to a HP representative, despite the
hype surrounding cost-efficient direct selling
strategy, PCs from Dell cost more than those from
HP - sometimes as much as 250 or more for
equally configured machines. - In UK, in June 2004, Dell was ordered to change
its advertising following an objection to an
Internet promotion and three national press
advertisements for its computer systems. Retail
chain DSG Retail Ltd challenged the availability
of a free gift that was promoted on Dell's web
site, and whether the free upgrades and savings
advertised in the press were only available
online as the ads implied. The UK's Advertising
Standards Authority upheld both complaints after
Dell acknowledged that the free gift was not
available with the Dimension 2400 system and that
in some cases telephone customers also received
the upgrades and savings offered only for online
customers. - Peter Shankman, president-CEO of marketing agency
the Geek Factory, sees inconsistency in Dell's
approach to branding over the last several years.
Steven, the Dell Dude, did well, till Dell was
told that it was pushing away adults. So Dell
turned its efforts to small businesses and
succeeded again until someone suggested Dell was
losing kids and college students. Now Dell is
trying to balance both. - Dell comes a relatively lowly 25th in terms of
brand value. Its closes competitors in the PC
market fare much better. IBM is third with a
brand value of 53.7 bn. HP comes at 12th
position with a value pegged at 21 bn. Dell
comes 25th with 11.5 bn. - Dell has consistently lost market share in the
fourth quarter over past years due to lower
levels of sales outside the consumer market.
Source Nexis search, Factiva, cnet.com,
news.com, asia.cnet.com http//www.businessweek.co
m/magazine/content/04_51/b3913048_mz011.htm
12Scope for a New Advertising Agency Chip, Servers
and Laptops
- According to analysts, one of the chief questions
in the PC market for the next couple of years
will be whether Dell will incorporate Opteron or
Athlon chips from Advanced Micro Devices (AMD)
into its systems. AMD is gaining customers in the
corporate world--20 of the Fortune 100 have
installed Opteron servers. Intel's release of
chips that can provide a similar 32-bit/64-bit
functionality--one of the key factors of
Opteron's popularity--has likely tabled the issue
for now. Whichever way Dell goes, it may have to
announce its enhanced prowess effectively through
advertisements. - Although Dell sells directly to customers, retail
market data offers some indication of how
consumers are reacting to its new 17-inch
notebooks. The average price of about 2000 has
limited sales to 6 of total US retail notebook
sales in the past 15 months, according to data
from market researcher NPD. The average selling
price for all notebooks sold at retail stores is
much lower, hovering around 1350 during the
last few months.The price differential is
substantial and if it is not narrowed, it may
need advertisement support to sustain growth. - Dell has entered the blade server segment with
its PowerEdge 1855. But it is not the most dense
of the blade servers available on the market.
While blade servers are by no means a high volume
part of the server market, they are an important
sector for the high performance computing market
(where density and management are increasingly
important) and for the more sophisticated data
centers who are struggling with server sprawl and
are trying to consolidate their machines down to
the fewest number of CPUs. With up to 60 blades
per standard 42U rack, Dell says that the
PowerEdge 1855s will save customers as much as
25 on blades compared to buying a similar number
of 1U, two-way Xeon servers. Dell also says that
the blades can cut down on power consumption
compared to an equal number of Xeon processors in
regular servers by 13.
Source Nexis search, Factiva, cnet.com,
news.com, asia.cnet.com
13Scope for New Advertising Agency Emerging
Competition Concerns
- In the past couple of years, the increasing
sophistication of search technology and
comparison-shopping sites have allowed online
businesses cheaply and effectively to market
their products to millions of potential
customers. Dell has thrived on this strategy so
far. Now, this strategy could be under attack
from both growing internet usage, search options
and smaller players. - Lenovos purchase of IBM's PC division, expected
to be completed during the second quarter of 2005
poses both a threat and an opportunity to Dell.
IBM has taken measures to ensure that the
transition is as painless as possible Several
customers have said they expect no reason to
change brands. But the deal could still help Dell
or HP gain if Lenovo and IBM drop the ball during
the hand-over. - Dells competitive edge of direct selling appears
to be getting blunted. Dells direct selling,
online-dependent selling strategy can be easily
emulated. Lenovo has restructured its sales
divisions and begun direct sales to large
companies and institutions in February 2004 to
blunt Dells competitive edge. In consumer
electronics area, where Dell is taking on the
likes of Sony and Samsung, rivals have adopted
Dells online sale strategy. - In Music, Apple manages to stay ahead of Dell. In
Oct 2004, Apple Computer's iTunes Music Store
sold its 150 millionth song. Dell introduced a
200 Pocket DJ digital music player that stores
about 2,500 songs on a 5GB hard drive. But
Apple's iPod Mini line which costs 250 and has
4GB of storage is ahead in the race. - Dells revealed reluctance to go whole hog on
consumer electronics because, taken all together,
the business generates only about 15, could
hamper growth in the segment.
Source Nexis search, cnet.com, news.com,
asia.cnet.com
14Michael (Mike) George - CMO Important Quotes -
1
- Mike George is an ex-McKinsey consultant. Joined
Dell four years ago. - Ken Rollins and Michael Dell, the two CEOs work
closely with him on major initiatives to ensure
the integrity of the brand -- for example, its
ability to tap into consumer emotions. The
following quotes were attributed to him in 2004. - On peripherals built around PC We are really
focused on the top three or four usage models
around the PC, trying to make sure we
have--either through Dell directly or through our
partners--the right products and services. - On Dell decides what to get into We look at
every category in the digital home and ask a
series of questions. Can we add a lot of value to
that marketplace, or do we think there is a big
price umbrella to go after? Or do we think we've
got some unique supply partnerships or advantages
in the market? We rank order the priorities. - On why Dell goes for partnerships in some
peripherals and not in others We also sell a
lot of digital cameras. That business has really
grown. Today, that is all through partners like
Canon and Kodak. I don't anticipate at this point
a change because I think those companies have
great camera lineups. - On TVs The reason I put the focus on big-screen
digital TVs is, that's where they're getting all
of their gross margins. That spells opportunity.
Our plasma launch was a great example. We came in
with an absolutely awesome quality 42-inch plasma
TV for US3,499. Sony's product is US7,999, and
the other guys are in the US5,000 to US6,000
range. - On brand strategy The vast majority of
customers that spend more than US2,000 on a PC
come to Dell. I don't think you'll see us pushing
any radical new solution. It's not how we think
our brand adds value to customers. We will stay
away from most first-generation usage ideas
because it's highly unpredictable what will
happen. If the usage model isn't exactly right,
it will end up in someone's closet, and people
would say, "Why the hell did I spend 1,000
bucks?" - On Dell entering videos We're not ready to
announce anything yet, but we are kind of talking
to a bunch of folks, and I think we will have
some video partnerships in the near to medium
time frame. - On the ad focus in 2004 This year we focused on
giving all Dell ads-Web, TV, print and catalog-a
uniform look and feel to drive the Dell brand
across all areas of our business. Whether we're
talking corporate systems and servers or consumer
products, Dell's approach is simple Everything
begins and ends with the customer.'
Source Nexis search, cnet.com, news.com
15Michael (Mike) George - CMO Important Quotes -
2
- Reacting to Sony and Samsung adopting the Dell
strategy of selling over Internet But they
haven't faced the years of competition in the PC
market. PC makers have learned to interact with
customers on a personal basis and establish
strong customer service support for questions.
The great advantage we have is that we don't have
to deal with the retail channel, so we are not
busy trying to satisfying them. - On marketing campaign types in 2003Over the
last year, we launched two different marketing
campaigns one focused on enterprise server and
storage products and the other on our growing
line of consumer products. - On Dell not having a track record of designing a
lot of products for the home and making emotional
connection with consumers We are not overly
concerned. We think this market will mature like
most other markets are maturing.I honestly think
that 10 years ago, when you were looking at
buying a US3,000 to US4,000 PC, some people
said direct sales wouldn't work. We've seen a
high level of interest in our products. - On consolidation and price declines in consumer
electronics We will absolutely see it in this
market. This is the only prediction I'll make
today. A margin decline is a good thing because
we have structurally the lowest costs. - On Dells overall strategy I would view (our
strategy as, first and foremost, win the business
customer, and win the enterprise customer. Second
is, win the consumer of PCs. Third would be to
win the consumer with consumer electronics. In
some of our more mature international markets
with the most developed consumer businesses--like
the United Kingdom, Japan, Canada and
Australia--we definitely see a big opportunity in
those markets for consumer electronics. - On music Music players are not in the Dell
scale. They're not a particularly large market.
They are huge for smaller companies, but for us,
they will never be a large market. - On share of new and existing customers for Dells
new products We have recently measured a few of
our newer categories, like music players and
TVs--and 52 are going to NEW customers. While
it's too early for this to be really definitive
data, it appears that those customers have a
disproportionately high likelihood of then coming
back to us and buying the PC. It's given us more
confidence to be bolder in how we talk (in
advertising) about our electronics. - On ad inserts One of our most important
advertising vehicles is the Sunday newspaper
insert. By putting a TV on the cover of a Sunday
insert, we sell more PCs than when we have with a
PC on the cover. - On price being Dells main asset Dell's great
secret and success in the PC market is that we
have a fairly low market share among value-price
PCs and an absolutely dominant market share among
high-end PCs.
Source Nexis search, cnet.com, news.com
16Effectiveness of Advertisements
- Total budget for advertisements in 2004 was
pegged at 473 mn. Dell spent 116.7 mn in
direct response ads alone in 2003. - According to a Nielson survey in Sep 2004, based
on data from AdRelevance, Dell ranks second in
terms of impressions (1614351 impressions). - According to a Reputation Quotient Survey
conducted in the US, only Coca-Cola Co. and Dell
Inc. were the only two big firms in the top 10
companies with the most memorable campaigns and
the greatest sincerity in their corporate
communications. - Dell markets via TV, e-mail, online and print. In
2004, it began regularly using free-standing
inserts (FSIs) and radio. The radio ads drive
traffic to an easy-to-remember URL and according
to the company spokesman, the results have
exceeded goals. - Dell discovered that banner ads were actually
cannibalizing business. So it pulled back
investments there. - Dell's television commercials ranked seventh in a
survey of Singapore television viewers' ad recall
levels by market research firm Asia Market
Intelligence released in November 2003. - Memorable television commercials have contributed
to Dell's increasing consumer market share in the
US, which has grown from 16 in 2001 to 23 in
2003. - Steven, the dude in Dell commercials had become
so popular in the US that he has spawned his own
website and even a line of "Dudewear" clothing
and accessories. He was later found to be
involved in a Marijuana incident but by then,
Dell had moved to different advertisement themes
to lure business users and adults. - Dell follows local ethos and considerations while
chalking out advertisement strategy for specific
regions. For example, in Asia Pacific it had not
used Steve the Dude.
Source Nexis search, cnet.com, news.com,
asia.cnet.com
17PC Segment Competition Update
US Market PC Sales Third Quarter 2004
Worldwide PC Sales - Third Quarter 2004
Company Unit sales Market share Growth
Dell 7.8 mn 16.8 20.9
HP 7.1 mn 15.0 9.5
IBM 2.6 mn 5.6 16.6
Company Unit Sales Market Share Growth
Dell 4.9 mn 30.4 14.5
HP 3.1 mn 19.1 1.6
Source Gartner
Source Gartner
Asia Pacific PC Market in Third Quarter 2004
Company Market share
Lenovo 12.1
HP 11.1
IBM 7.8
Dell 7.4
Dell grew by 38.8 in Asia Pacific Market in the
3rd Qtr 2004
Source Gartner
18Server, PDA Segments Competition Update
- Worldwide Server Market in 3rd Quarter 2004
Company Revenue in Revenue Growth Market share
IBM 3.7 bn 6.3 31.7
HP 3.1 bn 2.9 26.8
Sun Micro 1.2 bn 0.1 10.2
Dell 1.2 bn (6 mn behind Sun) 14.1 10.1
Comment Given the growth rates, Dell is likely
to overtake Sun Microsystems in the fourth
quarter of 2004. Dell has been steadily
expanding its share of the server market, with
emphasis on "industry standard components"
Source Gartner
PDA Market Growth in 3rd Quarter 2004
Company Market Share
PalmOne 34.7
HP 30.6
Dell 8.9
Dells PDA shipments grew by 44 during the qtr
Source Gartner
Source Nexis Factiva
19Organization Structure
Dell, Inc. Operations Areas
Products for Home Home Office
Customer Service Support
Products for Small Businesses
Products for Medium Large Businesses
Products for Govt. Education Healthcare
- Low-end products for the entire family.
- Desktops
- Notebooks
- Printers
- Electronics Accessories
- Handheld (PDA)
- Monitors
- LCD TV
- Technology solution for businesses from 1 to 200
employees. - Desktops
- Notebooks
- Workstations
- Printers
- Servers
- Software
- Scalable enterprise solutions for businesses over
200 employees. - Servers
- Storage
- Networking tools
- Desktops
- Notebooks
- Workstations
- Printers
- Software
- Service Training
- Special purchase programs and contracts for
organizations. Includes - State Local Govts.
- Federal Govt.
- K-12 Education
- Higher Education
- Healthcare
- Solves problem by using following online tools
- Online Support
- Troubleshooting
- Service Warranties
- Downloads
- Software Peripherals
- Upgrades
- User Guides
Sources Dell.com
20SWOT Analysis
- STRENGTHS
- Number one direct sale computer vendor
- Strong in enterprise storage and server markets
- Low cost operating model
- ProfitableÂ
- WEAKNESSES
- Low RD spending
- Weak services position
- Small inventoriesÂ
- OPPORTUNITIES
- Target low end and mid range segments
- New markets
- International expansion
- Cyclical demand
- PC upgrades/replacement demandÂ
- THREATS
- Strong competition
- Interest and foreign currency exchange rates
- Slow growth in PC market and IT spending
- environmentÂ
Source Nexis Datamonitor
21Management Profile
Name Designation
Michael S. Dell Chairman CEO
Kevin B. Rollins President COO
James M. Schneider CFO Sr. Vice President
Randall D. Mott CIO Sr. Vice President
Michael A. George Chief Marketing Officer VP-US Consumer Mktg eBusiness
Thurmond B. Woodard Chief Ethics Officer VP-Global Diversity
Thomas B. Green Sr VP-Admin Sec
William J. Amelio Sr. Vice President
Paul D. Bell Sr. Vice President
Jeffrey W. Clarke Sr. Vice President
Martin J. Garvin Sr. Vice President Worldwide Procurement
John S. Hamlin Sr. Vice President
Joseph A. Marengi Sr. Vice President
Paul D. McKinnom Sr. Vice President - HR
John K. Medica Sr. Vice President
Glenn E. Neland Sr. Vice President
Rosendo G. Parra Sr. Vice President
Charles H. Saunders Sr. Vice President Dell International Services.
Source Nexis Standard Directory of Advertisers
22Management Profile
Name Designation
Elizabeth Heller Allen Vice President Corporate Communication
Colin P. Buechler Vice President Corporate Strategy
Robert W. Davis Vice President Corporate Finance
Joan Hooper Vice President - Finance
Mark Vena Dir-Digital Home Marketing
Source Nexis Standard Directory of Advertisers
23Financials
Source Annual Report 2004
24Financials 2
Source Annual Report 2004
25Financials 3
Region-wise Sales Summary FY 2003-2004
Region-wise Contribution FY 2003-2004
Source Hoovers.com
26Financials 4
Product wise Sales Summary FY 2003-2004
Product wise Contribution FY 2003-2004
Source Hoovers.com
27Financials 5
Sales Trend from Jan 95 to Jan 04
Source Hoovers.com
28Financials 6
Source http//www1.us.dell.com/content/topics/glo
bal.aspx/corp/background/en/facts?cuslenscorp
section002
29Desktop Range
INCREASING IMAGE STABILITY
INCREASING TECHNOLOGY REFRESH
- OptiPlex
- Stable PCs for your connected environment
- Easy To Transition To New Technologies
- Maximized Uptime
- Easy to Manage
- Broad portfolio meets wide range of customer needs
- Precision
- Ultimate performance and scalability for
workstation class applications - Performance
- Scalability
- Optimized Solutions
- Application Focus
- Dimension
- Focused for personal and small office use
- Short product, peripheral, and OS lifecycles
driven by rapid advancement of consumer market - Limited support for network peripherals
Source www.its.uq.edu.au/itlo/dell.ppt
30Desktop Range 2
Dimension 2400 Dimension 4600C Dimension 4600 Dimension 8400 Dimension XPS Gen 3
Specification - Intel Pentium 4 Processor (2.66GHz, 533 FSB) Microsoft Windows XP Home Edition 128MB Shared DDR SDRAM at 333MHz (Performs at 266MHz for 400FSB systems) 40GB Ultra ATA/100 7200RPM Hard Drive FREE 3-5 Day Shipping on orders over 649 Online Only! FREE Kodak Digital Camera! FREE CD-Burner Upgrade - Online Only Specification - Intel Pentium 4 Processor (2.80GHz, 533 FSB,1MB Cache) Microsoft Windows XP Home Edition 256MB Dual channel Shared DDR SDRAM at 333MHz (2X128M) 40GB Ultra ATA/100 Hard Drive FREE 3-5 Day Shipping on orders over 649 Online Only! FREE Kodak Digital Camera! FREE CD-Burner Upgrade - Online Only Specification - Intel Pentium 4 Processor (2.80GHz, 533 FSB) Microsoft Windows XP Home Edition 256MB Dual Channel DDR SDRAM at 333MHz 2x128M) FREE 3-5 Day Shipping Online Only! FREE Kodak Digital Camera! FREE 2nd Bay CDBurner - Online Only! Specification - Pentium 4 Processor 530 with HT Technology (3GHz, 800 FSB) Microsoft Windows XP Home Edition 512MB Dual Channel DDR2 SDRAM at 400MHz (2x256M) 80GB Serial ATA Hard Drive (7200RPM) FREE 3-5 Day Shipping - Online Only! FREE Kodak Digital Camera! FREE 2nd Bay DVDBurner - Online Only! Specification - Pentium 4 processor 540 with with HT Technology (3.20GHz, 800 FSB) Microsoft Windows XP Home Edition 512MB Dual Channel DDR2 SDRAM at 533MHz (2x256M) FREE 3-5 Day Shipping - Online Only! FREE Kodak Digital Camera! FREE 2nd Bay DVD-Burner - Online Only!
Source http//www1.us.dell.com/content/products/c
ategory.aspx/desktops?cuscs19lensdhs
31Desktop Range 3
Precision
Optiplex
Source http//www1.us.dell.com/content/products/c
ategory.aspx/desktops?cuscs19lensdhs
32Notebook Range
Inspiron 1000 Inspiron 1500 Inspiron 600m Inspiron 8600 Inspiron XPS
Specification - Mobile Intel Celeron processor,2.20GHz,15 inch XGA Microsoft Windows XP Home 512MB, 2 DIMMS 24X CD-RW/DVD Combo Drive FREE 3-5 Day Shipping on orders over 999 - Online Only! FREE Wireless Card! Specification - Mobile Intel Pentium 4 Processor 2.80GHz, 14.1-inch XGA Microsoft Windows Home Edition 256MB Shared DDR SDRAM, 1 Dimm 24X CD-RW/DVD Combo Drive with Sonic RecordNow FREE 3-5 Day Shipping - Online Only! FREE Wireless Card! Specification - Intel Pentium M Processor 715(1.5GHz) 14.1-in XGA w/32MB Video Microsoft Windows XP Home Edition FREE 3-5 Day Shipping Online Only! FREE Kodak Digital Camera! FREE Combo Drive Upgrade - Online Only! Specification - Intel Pentium M Processor 705(1.5GHz), 15.4 in WXGA Microsoft Windows XP Home Edition FREE 3-5 Day Shipping Online Only! FREE Kodak Digital Camera! FREE Combo Drive Upgrade - Online Only! Specification - Pentium4 w/HT Technology 3.4GHz,15.4 WUXGA Microsoft Windows XP Home Edition FREE 4x CD/DVD burner (DVDRW/R) Upgrade! (from Combo Drive) 60GB Hard Drive 3 Year Limited Warranty plus 3 Year At-Home Service FREE 3-5 Day Shipping -Online Only! FREE Kodak Digital Camera! FREE DVD Burner Upgrade -Online Only!
Source http//www1.us.dell.com/content/products/c
ategory.aspx/notebooks?cuscs19lensdhs
33Services
- The companys services are grouped under four
titles - Dell Managed Services
- IT management services
- Planning, deployment, maintenance, asset
management, on-site field services and other
related services - Dell Professional Services
- Design, development and implementation of
end-to-end technology solutions - Deployment Services
- Factory integration services
- Custom asset management and recovery services
- Custom delivery services
- Installation services
- Managed deployment services
- Image management servicesÂ
Source Nexis Datamonitor
34Goals
- Most efficient path to the customer
- Single point of accountability
- Build-to-order
- Low-cost leader
- Standards-based technology
- Establish relationships with leading technology
providers in education. - Provide the best teaching and learning computing
solutions tailored to needs.
Source www.homepages.wmich.edu/c1yon/dellpresent
ationfinal5B15D.ppt, www.qeddata.com/Presentatio
ns/bruett_02.ppt
35Business Model
- Business to Business (B2B)
- Business to Consumer (B2C)
- Demand-pull company
- Pure play internet company
Source http//www.ism.ws/ConfPastAndOnlineDaily/F
iles/Nov03/TBGray.pdf
36Online Market Segmentation
Dell Homepage
Home Home Office
Small Business
Medium Large Business
Govt. Education Healthcare
Customer Service Support
Personal / End Users
Products Services
Products
Products Services
Government
Special Offers
Dell Deals
Home Home Office
Federal
Business Solution Centre
New at Dell
Shopping Alternatives
State Local
Featured Solutions
Small Business
Education
Business Technology Solutions
Shopping Alternatives
Solution categories
IT Professionals
K-12
Medium Large Business
Service Support
Service Support
Support Information
Business Affiliates Programs
Purchase Information
Government
Higher Education
Consumers options when they go to www.dell.com.
Health Care
Education
Partners and Programs
Health Care
Source www.its.uq.edu.au/itlo/dell.ppt
37Principles of SCM_at_DELL
- Buy to Plan Build to Order
- Forecast Buy Sell
- Reality based conversations Be Direct
- Relentless Demand Supply Balancing
-
- Synchronization between manufacturing and sales
- Meaningful collaboration across the supply chain
Source http//www.ism.ws/ConfPastAndOnlineDaily/F
iles/Nov03/TBGray.pdf
38Business Strategy
- Dell has announced a comprehensive business
strategy to capture a larger portion of the B2B
(Business to Business) internet-related market. - Web Related Capabilities Dells advantage is
based on direct relationships, low cost, speed to
market and e-commerce expertise as much as it is
on Internet hardware, appliances and customers
services and support. Included in this strategy
is "Service Provider Direct," a three tiered
package of - Service
- Support and
- Co-marketing programs for ISPs, ASPs and Web
hosting companies. - Infrastructure Computing Dell has introduced its
Power Application appliance servers designed for
specific Internet infrastructure tasks such as
Web serving, caching and load balancing. This
will provide customers will a full range of
server and storage solutions for building their
Internet infrastructure. - Expert Services A new offering that will help
businesses take advantage of the power of the
Internet. - Universal Access Universal Internet access
through a combination of leading-edge devices,
connectivity offerings and access choices,
encompassing narrow band services, broadband
offerings and wireless products and services. - Dell Ventures Through strategic links to
companies with technologies, products and
services that create breakthroughs related to the
Internet, Dell will provide equity investments
and incubation services for selected early-stage
private companies to accelerate development
Source http//www.internetnews.com/xSP/article.ph
p/3411_336641
39Competitors
- HP
- NEC
- Toshiba
- Fujitsu and
- IBM (now Lenovo).
Source Nexis - Datamonitor
40Marketing Internet Strategy
Integrated Customer Experience
Source http//www.ucisa.ac.uk/groups/cisg/ppt/MIS
G00-04.ppt
41Marketing Online Integration Strategy
Dell
Customer
ERP
XML
webMethods B2B for Partners
webMethods B2B
Dell Store
webMethods B2B upgrade from Dell
Source http//www.ucisa.ac.uk/groups/cisg/ppt/MIS
G00-04.ppt
42Marketing Strategy
- A kiosk-concept programme in the US with 21
outlets set up in various shopping malls. This
concept debuted in Asia with Dell setting up a
kiosk in Singapore's Suntec City Shopping Mall.
Since its pilot, the original 21 kiosks in the
programme have expanded to 71. - Dell's kiosk programme in Asia has been more
tentative. Singapore's single kiosk is "part of a
three-month feasibility test in Asia-Pacific".
Jim Skelding, Dell's general manager of home
office and small business products, tells The
Edge Singapore "The kiosk concept in Singapore
right now is an experiment, as well as to meet
the festive shopping season. Company wants to
see what the take-up rate is like, and then
decide if it makes sense in our marketing plans."
Penang-based Skelding oversees Singapore,
Malaysia, and Thailand. - In kiosks, Dell showcases a range of consumer
notebooks, desktops and other computer
peripherals including printers. Skelding doesn't
consider the kiosk concept a diversion from
Dell's philosophy of direct sales over retail
outlets. "Everything Dell do stands behind their
direct-selling model," he says. - Kiosks had worked well in markets where
- Dell has reasonably low brand recognition
- Dell has stopped expanding its market share
- Placing a kiosk in one location has hit a large
portion of the population - Online purchasing habits are not very strong
Source Nexis The Edge
43Internet Advertisements
Dell rely heavily on their Internet
Advertisements.
Source
44Internet Advertisements
Source
45Internet Advertisements
Source
46User Segment
Segment characteristics Site use (work vs. play) Buying Behavior Characteristics
Business buyers Represent large businesses Company-wide or departmental buying responsibility Goal-directed (work) Researching price and volume purchasing options Analyzing department-specific component needs
Small business users Small business owners Work-from-home independents Mix of goal-directed and experiential (work and play) Researching component, price, and shipping options Learning about Dell small business programs
Home users Professionals wanting home PC for secondary or recreational use College students Mix of goal-directed and experiential (work and play) Researching general hardware information Comparing prices Researching company news and info about CEO
Non-buyers Recreational Web surfers Students, children Experiental (play) Following up on word-of-mouth references Researching general computer and company information
Source www.elab.vanderbilt.edu/.../novak/online_c
b2001/Midterm20Presentations/section20120group
20120dell.ppt
47Globally Integrated Communication
Advertising
Sales Promotion
Global Marketing Communication
Direct Selling
Public Relations
Personal Selling
48Management Secrets
- Leave Ego at the Door Dell favors
two-in-a-box management in which two executives
share responsibility for product, a region, or a
company function. - Dell management believes that collective
knowledge is created by working in teams.One has
to be trained to understand the importance of
team dynamics and participate in productive
dialogues and discussion. I am important, or
I am an expert attitude leads to ones ego
preventing team learning and knowledge creation. - No Excuses This is about taking responsibility
and being accountable for ones actions.
Employees are encouraged to admit their
weaknesses and take actions to minimize or
eliminate them. There should be no them
syndrome. - No Easy Targets Employees must contribute to
profit and growth. In practice this means
incorporating stretch objectives in appraisal
plans. S.M.A.R.T objectives in this case should
be translated as Specific and Stretch Measurable
and Meaningful Attainable and Aligned Realistic
and Time and Target-related. - No Victory Laps. The founders mantra
Celebrate for a nanosecond, then move on. A
number of organizations, after winning quality
awards or Best Company to Work For awards,
drift into complacency. Achievements should be
followed by further achievements and this in
practice necessitates implementation of
continuous improvement principle. - Worry about Saving Money, Not Saving Face
Employees should be trained to pull the plug on
disappointing new ventures. This requires a
business mindset and tolerant culture. - Dells management principles are reflection of
the five disciplines of the Learning Organization
presented by Peter Senge in The Fifth Discipline
(1990). These five disciplines are Personal
Mastery (individual growth and learning), Mental
Models (attitude and behavior), Shared Vision
(direct and honest communication) Team Learning
(creating synergy within teams) and System
Thinking (seeing the big picture organizational
core competence).
Source Nexis Business Week
49Some Marketing Questions that Keep Dell Awake at
Night
Do I have the right communication partner? Dells communication is focused more on the Internet users. In order to reach to the masses in the US and to all of their target audience in other parts of the world, Dell should concentrate more on the print and the electronic media.
Do I know enough about my target consumer? Am I reaching them? Dell has focused more on the US market. Dell rely more on their Internet strategy and their campaigns are also net savvy. However, computer literacy in other markets could be much less than in the US market. Dells media plans may not be reaching people across the globe.
Have I invested enough in my brands? Dell believe in customization of products rather than innovating new products based on feedback. There is not much of RD spends in the company.
Are my media agency and creative agency working together to achieve greater overall results? Dells creative outputs have been largely appreciated by analysts. Company grew by about 17 in 2004 because of their effective media plan in the US market.