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To: The Duke of URL© who wrote (89335)1/30/2001 6:23:24 AM
From: Steven N  Respond to of 97611
 
(CBS) 60 Minutes II airs regularly on Tuesdays at 9 p.m. ET/PT.

Up Next: Tuesday, Jan. 30, 9 p.m.

Wall Street Prophets: Industry insiders tell Correspondent Scott Pelley that one reason why investors lost so much money on Wall Street after the recent dot-com craze is because high-profile analysts were giving exaggerated and false information to investors to make millions of dollars for their own brokerage firms.
cbsnews.com
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To: The Duke of URL© who wrote (89335)1/30/2001 7:47:23 AM
From: hlpinout  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 97611
 
January 29, 2001 12:04am

Compaq arms itself for CRM, B2B
battles

By Paula Musich eWEEK


Compaq global services is set to announce this week a
worldwide consulting and systems integration
partnership with Cap Gemini Ernst & Young LLP to
focus on CRM and e-procurement engagements.

If successful, such arrangements could alter the
competitive landscape, making it more difficult for niche
vendors to compete for large contracts.

Using Oracle Corp. software and based on Compaq
platforms and services and Cap Gemini Ernst & Young
business consulting, the deal represents a major image
boost for the computer maker's services arm. Built to
join strengths and create targeted offerings rather than
to serve a single engagement, it could also be an
example of the kinds of consulting and services pacts
that enterprise customers will be looking for.

The alliance, which is not an exclusive arrangement,
will pull together Cap Gemini Ernst & Young's expertise
in business process engineering, business process
transformation and application consulting with
Compaq's "architectural systems integration and
outsourcing capabilities," said Jeff Lynn, vice president
and general manager of Compaq Global Services, in
Stow, Mass.

Both organizations have a strong presence in the
financial services and telecommunications markets,
where they will focus their efforts.

The scope of the alliance is a departure from past Cap
Gemini Ernst & Young arrangements, which were
"opportunistic and transaction- focused," said Chell
Smith, global leader for advanced development and
integration at Cap Gemini Ernst & Young, in Chicago.
"Every time someone had a lead, they'd want to
structure an alliance. But we weren't getting the benefit
out of them. Now we are much more focused and
demanding in the level of accountability we hold our
alliance managers to."

Jennifer Beck, an analyst at Gartner Dataquest, in
Lowell, Mass., said the deal is different "because it's an
agreement to do joint account planning, joint marketing
and joint selling.

"This is more of an industry consortium—an agreement
between some of the market leaders to create a
best-in-class solution around enterprise-class CRM
[customer relationship management]. We'll see more of
these agreements, where some of the market leaders
come together and say, 'We'll benchmark some of
these hot initiatives for very specific kinds of companies
and put together the best components for the
initiatives.'"

Smith said that although the alliance is new, both
organizations are already working jointly on several
deals.

In addition to pursuing engagements that call for
enhancing or installing new CRM applications, the
Compaq and Cap Gemini Ernst & Young partnership
intends to pursue new Oracle e-procurement
engagements, "where companies want to pull together
in a cross-platform way all the data and applications
available in the enterprise," Compaq's Lynn said.

Beck pointed to the 5-year-old Pinnacle Alliance as
another example of a consortium of market leaders.
That outsourcing alliance includes Accenture, formerly
Andersen Consulting; Computer Sciences Corp.; AT&T
Solutions; and Verizon Network Integration Corp.

"This is the kind of agreement that can really have an
impact on competitors doing it piecemeal," Beck said.
"When you get companies in recognized leadership
positions making an agreement on something as
generic as CRM, then you have some of the specialists
and niche players in a very defensive mode."