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To: Brian Malloy who wrote (115)6/6/1998 7:01:00 PM
From: Sonki  Respond to of 395
 
iBM to sell servers direct
By Brooke Crothers
Staff Writer, CNET NEWS.COM
June 5, 1998, 1:20 p.m. PT

update NEW YORK--IBM said today it would sell
its servers directly to customers as part of a new
marketing effort aimed at competing with direct
vendors such as Dell Computer.

The server market is expected to become much
more competitive when Intel announces the
powerful Xeon Pentium II processor later this
month. The Xeon architecture will allow direct
vendors such as Dell and Gateway to offer
high-performance systems which rival Unix servers.
Xeon systems from direct vendors will also present
more of a competitive challenge to veteran server
vendors such as IBM.

IBM said today that customers may now qualify to
purchase Netfinity servers directly and receive
support directly. IBM sells its Intel-based servers
under the brand name Netfinity.

Though IBM will still work through its resellers, "We
are also determined to satisfy the needs of those
customers who consider a direct relationship with
their server vendor to be critical to their enterprise
computing needs," said David Thomas, senior vice
president and group executive, IBM Personal
Systems Group.

IBM may face problems with its resellers, however,
since this potentially takes business away from them.

But this program applies to less than five percent of
its business, according to Dave Boucher, general
manager of the Advancement Fulfillment Initiative
operations at IBM. He added that these are large
accounts with more than $5 million in server
business with IBM.

The Intel-based server
segment is one that
Chairman Louis Gerstner
had targeted for special
attention during his annual
meeting with Wall Street
analysts in May and one in
which Compaq Computer
is currently the market share leader.

Under the two-phase program, corporate customers
will contact IBM directly to order servers and obtain
services. IBM will ask its sales partners to configure
and assemble the computers.

IBM expects that the program, when completed,
should close the price and feature gap currently
enjoyed by direct marketers such as Dell and
Gateway, William McCracken, general manager of
sales and services for IBM's Personal Systems
Group, said in an interview.

IBM will achieve that goal by shrinking inventories
of finished systems, he said. In turn, IBM should be
able to trim system prices because delaying system
assembly means the company can take advantage of
falling component costs, he added.

The first part of the program, called Netfinity Direct,
will be launched over the coming months.

The Netfinity Direct program will eventually include
an Internet based service for ordering servers,
Boucher said, similar to what Dell and Gateway
provide. This should be ready by the third quarter, he
said.

While the change in some ways mirrors the methods
of direct marketers like Dell and Gateway, the
program aims beyond that, McCracken said.

IBM, which has one of the largest computer
services businesses in the world, is hoping to draw
on that advantage in its competition with direct
marketers.

"This is not to be confused with Dell or Gateway or
those kinds of folks," McCracken said. "This is not
just hardware. We're also giving customers the
opportunity to decide how they want software,
product service, and support to come to them."

Rather than build a large services organization itself,
Dell has forged partnerships with companies like
Wang Laboratories and Unisys. Dell is also
beginning to offer services where it configures
computers for customers in their factory on a
customized basis. Customers provide a so-called
"image" of what their particular software
configuration is and Dell configures the computer
with this image. IBM does this also.

IBM is not retreating from its relationship with
resellers, which are a key element in its sales
strategy, McCracken said.

Instead, the second prong of the program will focus
on completing a shift in how IBM handles sales and
manages inventory sold through partners.

IBM plans to expand its practice of having its sales
partners configure and assemble computers to order
under the new program, in part by implementing
processor and component-level assembly on IBM
systems.

IBM said four distributors--Ingram Micro,
MicroAge's Pinacor, Tech Data, and Inacom--would
play key roles in providing supply for resellers under
the second part of the program.

Because delaying system assembly means the
company can take advantage of falling component
costs, IBM also should be able to trim its system
prices, McCracken said.

news.com



To: Brian Malloy who wrote (115)3/18/1999 9:04:00 PM
From: Brian Malloy  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 395
 
More on high dividend stocks as surrogate super bonds from motley fool
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