OEM Dinosaurs

Curtis Franklin Jr., Executive Editor | 2/16/2013 | 18 comments

Curtis Franklin Jr.
When the Cretaceous climate changed, whole families of dinosaurs went extinct. Cloud computing could have the same effect on OEMs unwilling to shift their thinking.

Scores of OEMs, ranging from rather small to quite large, have lived quite comfortably supplying components, sub-systems, and complete white boxes to vendors with well-known names -- vendors that then sold finished systems with software to the final customer. When cloud computing came along, bringing with it a voracious cloud-provider appetite for new systems, things changed dramatically. Suddenly, large customers were writing detailed specs for their own servers and going directly to previously anonymous OEM suppliers for their hardware fix. Think of it as a market meteor.

Now, it would be a mistake of brontosaurean proportions to think that the large, established vendors would take this sort of change lying down. Major vendors have moved aggressively to launch cloud-hardware offerings as well as cloud services of their own. Still, many traditional OEMs find themselves in an interesting dilemma: refer interested customers to their vendor partners and risk turning away valuable business, or accept what amounts to retail sales orders and take on the integration and support responsibilities those sales bring.

This is the sort of question and decision pair that has an impact on much more than the quarterly sales numbers. To an extraordinary extent, this strikes at a company's understanding of what it is. In recent weeks, I've spoken with several companies faced with the decision, and I've seen answers that fell across a broad spectrum.

On one hand, there are companies forced to offer their products to a general market because of market immaturity -- companies now eagerly awaiting the day when they can revert to selling their technology through nothing but traditional OEM channels once again. On the other hand are companies that have decided to accept the broader sales that can come with a broader market, even though they know that their business model becomes intrinsically more complex because of the shift. The thing that binds both types of companies is that their management has made a decision about their preferred type of customer and market strategy: They have decided not to sit passively and allow a market to happen to them.

It's the companies taking the passive approach that we're likely to find fossilized in the annals of failed OEM organizations. As a CIO with a seat at the executive table, you should bring an understanding of what this kind of decision will do to your systems, and how current systems can be modified or expanded to cope with the new challenges. Have you seriously thought about what it would take to change your sales model? Have you rehearsed a response if asked for an opinion by the CEO? If not, perhaps it's you and your career who will be joining the triceratops in the list of those who didn't respond when the climate changed.

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singlemud   OEM Dinosaurs   2/18/2013 6:07:22 PM
Re: Why only the CIO
Interesting thought, it is a complex system and the company can be lost easily.
LuFu   OEM Dinosaurs   2/18/2013 1:54:22 PM
Re: Why only the CIO
@WaqasAltaf - I follow your thinking that the leadership and decision making force a shift of product and channel directions at a company, whether OEM or not, should be coming from marketing, product research/engineering, and sales.

In Curtis' scenario, I imagine the CEO turning to the CIO and asking, "What's going on?" The CIO explains that there's a shift across a market and technology chasm, leaving the company at risk and causing a loss of customers and market share. The CEO then turns to the CMO and VP of sales and asks what the company needs to do to stay in the game until they can cross the cloud chasm. That includes scrambling for sales while the company develops a redefined business model.
WaqasAltaf   OEM Dinosaurs   2/18/2013 12:29:04 PM
Re: Change management
@ Curtis

True. The company's strategies should be customer-centric rather than traditional and rigid. Also stepping into cloud not always means that you have to scrap your investments. You can devise a strategy where the outcome is based on the mix of both traditional equipment sales and revenue from cloud services.
WaqasAltaf   OEM Dinosaurs   2/18/2013 12:18:34 PM
Re: Change management
@ kicheko
What i ask myself is does being in the business for years not help a little with the transition?
 
Well it definitely helps. But it is not always a positive. One also gets institutionalized  and taking a transformative steps become difficult after following a long routine. However, this cloud services era didn't came overnight. 4-5 years is a lot of time to plan how to tackle the changes and what the future strategy will be.
CurtisFranklin   OEM Dinosaurs   2/18/2013 10:18:32 AM
Re: Change management
@Waqas, I think it's it's important to understand what your previous investments mean: it's also important to not allow them to become an anchor dragging a company under the waves. Radical change is, by definition, disruptive, but watching a market go away and leading a company out of business can be far more disruptive. There are a number of ways in which a company can respond to a change like cloud computing. The important thing is for the company to understand the market and direct their own change, rather than simply sit by and wait for market forces to change them.
kicheko   OEM Dinosaurs   2/17/2013 9:15:15 PM
Re: Change management
What i ask myself is does being in the business for years not help a little with the transition? the fact that you have some old customers that can make the movement with you. in the meantime , they have to upgrade their game also to measure up with the new technologies such as cloud managed supply chain and so on.
WaqasAltaf   OEM Dinosaurs   2/17/2013 4:04:39 AM
Why only the CIO
I am assuming we are talking about CIOs of the OEMs. Why only CIO is responsible for devising a new sales model or thinking of new ways to adopt to customers' demands. Isn't this the primary responsibility of the product research department and sales & marketing departments to outline a strategy to tackle decrease in sales %s every month ?
WaqasAltaf   OEM Dinosaurs   2/17/2013 3:47:59 AM
Change management
Though OEMs are facing a crisis situation because of the alternatives of cloud available to their critical customers, the option to avoid loss by stepping into providing cloud services themselves is not an easy one. How the company has to let go of its expensive manufacturing machinery, their skilled staff on those projects and supply chain relationships is a concern that is extremely frightening which makes it probable that some managements might opt to face consequences as those faced by dinosaurs from not reacting to the changes.
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