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Technology Stocks : Dell Technologies Inc. -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: PAL who wrote (55146)7/29/1998 9:21:00 PM
From: Dell-icious  Respond to of 176387
 
That is not really an indication of anything. A lot of trades posted are out of sequence trades from during the day. Also if you notice other trades, they are all mostly around 107. Besides, it depends on how Wall Street views the Ingram Micro data: if it is viewed as a competitor to DELL then DELL might not do so well. And finally given the overall bearishness of the market right now, it might all be irrelevant short term.
Dell-icious



To: PAL who wrote (55146)7/29/1998 9:26:00 PM
From: stephen wall  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 176387
 
Pal,

4 part article from Upside on Internet branding:

upside.com

Interesting comments from Bill Morris, Dell Online marketing manager:

For its part, Dell was the fifth-largest spender in tech trade magazines last year, at $53 million, according to Eugene, Ore.-based ad-tracking firm Adscope Inc. And Dell broke a $100 million-plus branding campaign this summer--almost entirely on TV. The Austin, Texas-based company hopes to conduct 50 percent of all transactions online in the next couple of years, but contends that that kind of volume won't come from Web advertising. Bill Morris, senior marketing manager at Dell Online, emphasizes that it's extremely important to point to www.dell.com in all corporate communication. Yet he remains skeptical of online advertising.

"We're not doing a lot of it. We haven't found a model that works," Morris says. "Look at what's being done on the Internet. It's all commerce. This is not the place to do branding."

Morris says that despite an implied promise of accountability, the Web doesn't offer proof-of-concept--meaning that anyone who wants to believe has to work hard at it. "We're not looking to drive traffic to our site, and that's what Web advertising is good at," he adds. "We're finding that the ROI [return on investment] is low, and it's difficult to measure. When we do a print piece, we know precisely how many computers we need to build based on our ad plan. It's that scientific. The Internet breaks up that entire process."



To: PAL who wrote (55146)7/30/1998 12:03:00 AM
From: SouthFloridaGuy  Respond to of 176387
 
Good news...I think the buy signals on DELL are coming and are ever apparent. GO DELL!!! With the upcoming split and blowout earnings announcement, this stock is a no-brainer. Look how strong this stock is compared to the rest of the market.

Although I can't say the stock will be up 5 points everyday until earnings, I can say that we have definitely seen the bottom and it's all uphill from here. The Nasdaq is way oversold and won't fall any further. IMHO.