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Casual Articles - Channeling HP - Hewlett Packard Bests Dell in Retail
Marketing - Unbeatable Tips For Creating A Powerful Brochure urred, HP installed Todd Bradley at the helm of their Personal Systems Group, that included oversight of PCs. Todd came from Palm, an outfit that had both good direct sales and retail sales of consumer products. Todd understood that PCs were now over configured for the average user, meaning that most users didn't require customization or many feature tradeoffs. Consumers needed competitive prices and instant gratification, which can only be had at a retail outlet. Soon thereafter the shelTo create a powerful brochure, you need to think about your potential clients. How can you compose the brochure to attract your targeted market in the best way possible?1. PersonalizeColors, fonts, tones and pictures will all affect how well your brochure catches the readers' attention. Even if we don't think or want to admit it, the look is important and you want to give a good first impression. This doesn't mean you should put together a brochur CEO's Role in Family Business I like to pick on HP more than most people, so it is odd I now must praise them.I first met Roland (not his real name) in 1972. He was a high school student working a summer job in his father’s business.“We’re teaching him the business from the ground up,” his father told me proudly as he introduced me to the tall good looking kid. We shook hands, exchanged a few words, then Roland jumped on a fork lift and was off to stage another delivery.The next time I saw Roland, he was approaching 40 years of age and had served four y Back when I was on the other side of the B2B technology exchange, I was primarily an HP customer. I ran shops with multiple minis of varying HP operating system flavors (RTE, MPE, HPUX) and thus had a deep love/hate relationship with the company. To this day I keep a number of HP executives in my virtual Rolodex and hound them when necessary or advantageous. For a long time it appeared that HP's PC business was going to go the way of IBM's, namely "out the door." Sales were weak, and the fatter margins promised by the Compaq merger were not evident. HP went toe-to-toe with Dell, attempting to clone their success without ever coming close. Mass customization was not something HP was going to be good at, and like all things Carley inspired, was heading for the technology sewer. Two things happened at about the same time that changed HP's PC fortunes. First the market changed. Dell was the PC king when mass customization was demanded by the market. Keep in mind that Dell grew during the period when PCs were fragile, components were expensive, and building system to order allowed consumers to get what they wanted without overspending. Michael Dell saw the weakness in the market (incompatible system, limited store selection, and high prices) and made a business out of eliminating those problems for the consumer. But the market changed, to which HP responded and Dell did not. First, components became more standardized and the price of components fell through the floor. My bookkeeping system reports that I gave Dell $3,500 back in 1998 for well loaded desktop. Today a server grade desktop with a quad processor costs around $2,000 at CompUSA. This is due primarily to standardization, which kicked a key differentiator out from under Dell. Take away the need for mass customization, and you remove mass sales. About the time this market shift occurred, HP installed Todd Bradley at the helm of their Personal Systems Group, that included oversight of PCs. Todd came from Palm, an outfit that had both good direct sales and retail sales of consumer products. Todd understood that PCs were now over configured for the average user, meaning that most users didn't require customization or many feature tradeoffs. Consumers needed competitive prices and instant gratification, which can only be had at a retail outlet. Soon thereafter the shelv Five Facts You Must Know When Changing Careers business was going to go the way of IBM's, namely "out the door." Sales were weak, and the fatter margins promised by the Compaq merger were not evident. HP went toe-to-toe with Dell, attempting to clone their success without ever coming close. Mass customization was not something HP was going to be good at, and like all things Carley inspired, was heading for the technology sewer.Too often in life, we fail. We fail not because we set our goals to high and miss achieving our aspirations. Instead, we fail because we set our dreams too low and we achieve them. If we achieve what we set out to do then how is this considered to be a failure? Failure occurs when we are not fulfilling our highest aspirations. Theresa Castro, executive career coach and author of The Dark Before the Dawn: 70 Secrets to Self-discovery, provides insight on wh Two things happened at about the same time that changed HP's PC fortunes. First the market changed. Dell was the PC king when mass customization was demanded by the market. Keep in mind that Dell grew during the period when PCs were fragile, components were expensive, and building system to order allowed consumers to get what they wanted without overspending. Michael Dell saw the weakness in the market (incompatible system, limited store selection, and high prices) and made a business out of eliminating those problems for the consumer. But the market changed, to which HP responded and Dell did not. First, components became more standardized and the price of components fell through the floor. My bookkeeping system reports that I gave Dell $3,500 back in 1998 for well loaded desktop. Today a server grade desktop with a quad processor costs around $2,000 at CompUSA. This is due primarily to standardization, which kicked a key differentiator out from under Dell. Take away the need for mass customization, and you remove mass sales. About the time this market shift occurred, HP installed Todd Bradley at the helm of their Personal Systems Group, that included oversight of PCs. Todd came from Palm, an outfit that had both good direct sales and retail sales of consumer products. Todd understood that PCs were now over configured for the average user, meaning that most users didn't require customization or many feature tradeoffs. Consumers needed competitive prices and instant gratification, which can only be had at a retail outlet. Soon thereafter the shel No Longer a Mother in Denial ll was the PC king when mass customization was demanded by the market. Keep in mind that Dell grew during the period when PCs were fragile, components were expensive, and building system to order allowed consumers to get what they wanted without overspending. Michael Dell saw the weakness in the market (incompatible system, limited store selection, and high prices) and made a business out of eliminating those problems for the consumer.I'm ready to come clean. I've been feeling guilty for quite a while, but I'm ready to tell the world. I work from home. And I am a mom. But I am not a work-from-home-mom. My son goes to daycare while I work. There. I said it.In this world of accessibility, a trend has developed of mothers working from home so that the But the market changed, to which HP responded and Dell did not. First, components became more standardized and the price of components fell through the floor. My bookkeeping system reports that I gave Dell $3,500 back in 1998 for well loaded desktop. Today a server grade desktop with a quad processor costs around $2,000 at CompUSA. This is due primarily to standardization, which kicked a key differentiator out from under Dell. Take away the need for mass customization, and you remove mass sales. About the time this market shift occurred, HP installed Todd Bradley at the helm of their Personal Systems Group, that included oversight of PCs. Todd came from Palm, an outfit that had both good direct sales and retail sales of consumer products. Todd understood that PCs were now over configured for the average user, meaning that most users didn't require customization or many feature tradeoffs. Consumers needed competitive prices and instant gratification, which can only be had at a retail outlet. Soon thereafter the shel Promote Workplace Morale, Prevent Surprises, and Get a Nifty Accessory Dell did not. First, components became more standardized and the price of components fell through the floor. My bookkeeping system reports that I gave Dell $3,500 back in 1998 for well loaded desktop. Today a server grade desktop with a quad processor costs around $2,000 at CompUSA. This is due primarily to standardization, which kicked a key differentiator out from under Dell. Take away the need for mass customization, and you remove mass sales.Another day at work, another day of playing solitaire to ease the boredom. You quickly organize the suits with practiced ease. The cards fall obediently into their proper stack as you rapidly create order out of card chaos. You are the master of your domain… You’re so elated at your latest solitaire success that you fail to notice your manager darkening the doorway of your cubicle. The heavy hand of authority falls on your shoulder and you realize that this is About the time this market shift occurred, HP installed Todd Bradley at the helm of their Personal Systems Group, that included oversight of PCs. Todd came from Palm, an outfit that had both good direct sales and retail sales of consumer products. Todd understood that PCs were now over configured for the average user, meaning that most users didn't require customization or many feature tradeoffs. Consumers needed competitive prices and instant gratification, which can only be had at a retail outlet. Soon thereafter the shel Is Your Business Phone Number Honest? urred, HP installed Todd Bradley at the helm of their Personal Systems Group, that included oversight of PCs. Todd came from Palm, an outfit that had both good direct sales and retail sales of consumer products. Todd understood that PCs were now over configured for the average user, meaning that most users didn't require customization or many feature tradeoffs. Consumers needed competitive prices and instant gratification, which can only be had at a retail outlet. Soon thereafter the shelves of every office supply and computer store were filled with HP hardware. The prices were low, the features competitively rich, and you could take it home today.Your business is listed in the Yellow Pages whether you buy an ad or not. Your business is listed in the Yellow Book and the other phone books, too, no purchase necessary. Yup, free listings in the yellow pages. Provided, you have a business line, in the name of your business, at the phone company. Advertising your home number as a "business" can only lead to confusion and a problem when the phone company finds out.It's as bad for your company image as IBM never saw this opportunity because IBM is IBM, and makes it's money selling expensive gear to enterprises. Today HP is happily schizophrenic, selling both enterprise and consumer technology goods. It took time, and it took getting consumer marketers like Bradley into the mix. Recent news shows Dell playing catch-up and elbowing their way onto retail shelves, sadly by fishing on the bottom of the lake by peddling through Wal*Mart ("Hey, honey, fetch me a 12-pack of BVDs, some shotgun shells, and a Dell Core Duo" ). Though not abandoning their direct sales model, they have a bit to learn about resurrecting a brand that suits retail sales, as well as manufacturing to meet the perpetual feature/price crush of the PC market. I would bet they do well, but HP now has the commanding lead and Dell has an uphill battle ahead. The marketing take-away is this: markets change, and complacency kills. Recognizing a shift in your market, and acting on that shift is essential to staying alive. No market is static, and neither are your competitors.
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