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Technology Stocks : Siebel Systems (SEBL) - strong buy? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: chojiro who wrote (6424)10/16/2002 3:56:26 AM
From: chojiro  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 6974
 
(COMTEX) Siebel Satisfying? Depends On Who's Asking

Oct 15, 2002 (Internet.com via COMTEX) -- Siebel Systems' assertions that it
enjoys an unprecedented 90-plus percent customer satisfaction rating came under
fire recently in a report from Nucleus Research that questioned not just
Siebel's customer satisfaction rating but its return on investment claims.

Within a week, Siebel released its most recent customer satisfaction survey
(conducted by Satmetrix, a research firm in which Siebel is a minority owner and
strategic partner) that reiterated Siebel's past claims of near universal
satisfaction.

Then the real fun began. First there was the verbal sparring. Siebel claimed the
Nucleus survey was a "random" survey that wasn't representative of its 3,500
customers. Nucleus stood by its research, with one of its researchers stating
that "If you have three best friends and two say you're a jerk, what does that
tell you?" Meanwhile, the question of Siebel's invincibility or lack thereof
became the talk of the enterprise applications industry.

Unfortunately for Siebel, a look at the methodology and the questions used to
come up with Siebel's customer satisfaction ratings make it much easier to
believe Nucleus than Satmetrix.

Siebel, to its credit, sent me copies of the Satmetrix surveys, and I have to
admit on paper they look pretty straightforward. By all appearances, Satmetrix
is accurately reporting how customers fill out their surveys.

Enterprise Advisor Archives Will Plattner Ever Leave SAP?

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SCM is Dead, Long Live SCM

They Jail CEOs, Don't They?

Tom Siebel Hates Me (And Anyone Else Asking The Tough Questions)

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Microsoft's New CRM Software Just The Beginning

The Price of Software Happiness

JDE: Back to the Present?

But that doesn't mean Siebel can claim that these results are unimpeachable. On
the contrary, there are three good reasons why the Satmetrix surveys are skewed
in Siebel's favor:

The lack of anonymity of the survey. The Siebel customers are sent a URL that
links them to a survey that matches the status of their implementation. The
survey is filled out at a web site, which means that Satmetrix knows exactly who
is answering what question in what way. Anything less than total anonymity
brings into question whether the respondent is being completely candid. (This,
by the way, is how Siebel's employee surveys are done. Tom Siebel also claims
near 100 percent employee satisfaction, despite much anecdotal evidence to the
contrary. Without anonymity, would you tell your employer what you really
think?)

The survey question which leads Siebel to claim 100 percent loyalty has a tricky
internal logic. Customers are asked, "Based on your experience with Siebel and
its products, are you most likely to continue purchasing or using their
products?" The response can only be a simple "yes" or "no." The problem is the
"or" in the question. If you plan to never buy software from Siebel again but
will continue to use the product you've installed, you have to answer "yes."
Unless you're tearing the system out, you have to answer "yes" and join the rest
of the "loyal" customers. Siebel's customer loyalty figure really measures who
is planning to throw out an existing implementation and who isn't.

Satmetrix's results don't match the realities of the software market. If
Satmetrix is to be believed, then out of the 3,500 Siebel customers, 140 are
dissatisfied. If Nucleus is to be believed, 14 out of 23 marquee customers,
gleaned from Siebel's web site, have no positive ROI and are, most likely,
unhappy as well.

The problem with the Siebel numbers is that they are simply too high: you're
asked to believe, despite serious questions about the objectivity of the survey,
that Siebel's customer satisfaction is not only through the roof, but it's
better than any enterprise software company in the history of the industry. No
software company has ever enjoyed the level of customer satisfaction that Siebel
claims, and based on a close look at their survey, those claims are simply
unwarranted.

In the end, I think Nucleus has the better handle on Siebel's customer
satisfaction. Nucleus did in-depth interviews in person, is able to promise
anonymity, conducted the survey without any input or funding from any vendor,
and came up with a result that is in line with what we know about the entire
software industry: Users of all enterprise software products, including Siebel
and its rivals, are just never that satisfied.


By Joshua Greenbaum
URL: internet.com

Copyright 2001 INT Media Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
Republication and redistribution of INT Media Group content is
Expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of INT Media
Group, Inc.. INT Media Group, Inc., shall not be liable for any errors
or delays in the Content, or for any actions taken in reliance thereon.

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SUBJECT CODE: Enterprise
ROI
Research
Siebel
web

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