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


To: Mazman who wrote (59989)8/20/1998 9:06:00 PM
From: Jerry Salem  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 176387
 
Todays Investors Business Daily:Dell Computer Looks To Hit A
Home Run

Date: 8/20/98
Author: Nick Turner

Dell Computer Corp. is a favorite among corporate
buyers. But can it be a household name?

The personal computer maker, which increasingly is
targeting consumers, hopes so. So far, home buyers
only represent about 10% of Dell's sales. But sales
to consumers are rising at an annual clip of 90% -
faster than Dell's current yearly growth rate of 59%.

Round Rock, Texas-based Dell attributes its recent
overall market share gains to increases in consumer
sales. Research firms say Dell is nearly tied with
Compaq as the No. 1 U.S. PC maker.

Results reported on Tuesday showed Dell's income
was $346 million for the second quarter ended Aug.
2, or 50 cents a share, up 72% from $214 million,
or 29 cents, for the same period a year ago.
Revenue was $4.3 billion, up 54% from last year's
$2.8 billion.

Dell uses unorthodox methods to attract home
buyers. It eschews the retail channel and sells
directly to consumers. It also hasn't embraced sub-
$1,000 PCs. It says it gives buyers a better deal on
higher-end systems.

David Hood, general manager of Dell Home
Systems, spoke to IBD about the company's strategy.

IBD:

What kind of consumer is likely to buy a PC from
Dell?

Hood:

We're consciously targeting the experienced users.
We're targeting people who are on their second or
third or greater PC, or have used a PC extensively
at work and are now buying their first PC for the
home. And they're typically people who really value
a higher-performance machine. So they want the
latest technologies and really see the computer as an
integral part of their lives. We're calling them the
''TechKnow'' generation. We found there are 31
million of these people, and they're all basically on
their second, third or fourth PC.

IBD:

How are these buyers shopping for PCs, via the
Internet or over the phone?

Hood:

It's still a combination. We've announced that Dell's
doing about $6 million a day on its Web site. Of
that, about half is for the consumer business. So
we're getting a healthy number of consumers who
are buying online. But we're also getting people
who just call our 800 numbers. We're getting folks
who are responding to print and TV ads.

IBD:

How do you market against retailers, which try to
lure shoppers with sub-$1,000 or even sub-$800
PCs?

Hood:

We customize every PC that we build. We design it
around (consumers') needs. In the retail
environment, you just take what's on the shelf. We
also, as a result of that process, can give the latest
technology. For example, when Pentium II chips hit
the notebook market, we were the first to offer that.

And we offer better prices. We don't have any
inventory, so we're able to pass those cost
reductions immediately on to the end user.

IBD:

What else is helping you make inroads?

Hood:

Something that's really picking up is our consumer
lease. We were the first to offer that last year, but
we've changed the offer based on feedback from
customers. We offer now, in addition to a 24-month
lease, a 36-month lease. And we've changed it so . .
. the whole process takes one phone call for less
than five minutes. . . . Since the spring, we've
doubled the penetration in our business of leasing as
a result of all these changes.

IBD:

How does that compare with Gateway Inc.'s
''Your:)Ware'' plan? Does that compete closely with
what you're trying to do?

Hood:

No, it doesn't. Our customers shop around, but they
find that Your:)Ware doesn't really meet their
needs. It's really a financing plan, not a lease.

IBD:

Are there any plans to reach out to first-time
buyers?

Hood:

Not in the immediate future. We still see very
healthy growth rates of people that are in that
TechKnow generation. People who bought their first
PC are graduating. A lot of the folks who have
bought those sub-$1,000 (PCs) have said that when
they buy their next PC, they're going to buy
something more powerful. So we see a graduation
phenomenon taking place. As people start to
understand what a computer can do, and how
meaningful it is to their everyday lives, they want to
buy up.

(C) Copyright 1998 Investors Business Daily, Inc.
Metadata: DELL GTW I/3572 E/IBD E/SN1 E/TECH