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- From: linstee@dutecaj.et.tudelft.nl (Erik van Linstee)
- Newsgroups: comp.os.os2.advocacy
- Subject: Re: Is Microsoft the next Standard Oil?
- Message-ID: <1992Dec31.085253.24882@donau.et.tudelft.nl>
- Date: 31 Dec 92 08:52:53 GMT
- References: <1992Dec23.030133.75057@ns1.cc.lehigh.edu> <1992Dec28.233306.1746@noose.ecn.purdue.edu> <1992Dec29.124550.10847@donau.et.tudelft.nl> <1992Dec31.035311.3542@microsoft.com>
- Sender: news@donau.et.tudelft.nl (UseNet News System)
- Organization: Delft University of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering
- Lines: 74
- Nntp-Posting-Host: dutecaj.et.tudelft.nl
-
- philipla@microsoft.com (Phil Lafornara) writes:
-
- >In article <1992Dec29.124550.10847@donau.et.tudelft.nl> linstee@dutecaj.et.tudelft.nl (Erik van Linstee) writes:
- >>helz@ecn.purdue.edu (Randall A Helzerman) writes:
- >>
- >>>A companies _customers_ calls the shots no matter how big the company is.
- >>>Its the customers who give it the market share that it has.
- >>
- >>Hmm, so if I contact such a company, tell them what I want of them
- >>and tell them I am a customer, they'll tell me, Yes sir, it'll
- >>be there first thing? Nah, doesn't even look worth trying. To
- >>simple a view maybe.
-
- > Read it again - it's customers, not customer. If you and
- >a couple hundred thousand of your friends all called and told that
- >company what you wanted, you can bet they'd get right on it.
-
- The point is, THE customers do not exist. They do not get together
- in such amounts that they can change the world. It appears that the
- vast majority is influenced by marketting, and thos that aren't
- do not have the leverage to convince the others.
- You can't change the world, but you can change the facts. And when
- you change the facts, you change points of view. If you change
- points of view, you may change a vote. And when you change a vote,
- you may change the world. But this might take to long for many of
- us, if it works at all in the consumer industry.
-
- >>>Look at it this way. The only way a "big company" can put a "little company"
- >>>out of business is for the customers of the little company to _voluntarily_
- >>>of their _own_free_will_ to _choose_ to buy from the big company instead.
- >>>In other words, it is the freewill choice of the customers which puts _any_
- >>>company, big or little out of business.
- >>
- >>And not the potential of a big company to produce at lower costs and
- >>the consumers wish to get the cheapest product still valuable. Right
- >>you are.
-
- > The lower costs and hence lower prices are a motivating factor
- >towards those customers moving away. So is superior quality.
- >But the ultimate loss in sales comes from the choices of consumers.
-
- True in many cases. But I also see situation where this doesn't go.
- In companies or institutes I see people choose more expensive,
- even less productive stuff over cheaper, faster, maybe better stuff.
- I did some research for an institute once, where they had an AS/400
- and several PS/2. At the time Compaq was building a distribution
- center here, so I suggested they got together with them to make
- a deal for cheaper pc's. It appeared logical to me, since the PS/2's
- were troublesome, IBM has never been a contender in the PC world
- (not in my opinion anyway) and service was still very bureaucr[ai]tical.
- Compaq might have been able to offer lower prices, faster service
- (they are only down the block, so to speak) and better compatibility.
- Yet they seem to be as established (read reliable) as IBM.
- Still it was a no go, because they had been with IBM (for a S/36
- and now the AS/400) and it was to cumbersome to change that.
-
- Since companies and institutes are of much greater influence than
- single consumers, logical and sensible reasoning is not necessarily
- enough to change things.
-
- Erik
-
- > -Phil
-
- >--
- >-------------------------------------------------------------------------
- >Phil Lafornara 1 Microsoft Way
- >philipla@microsoft.com Redmond, WA 98052-6399
- >Note: Microsoft doesn't even _know_ that these are my opinions. So there.
- --
- Erik van Linstee | Delft University of Technology | I'll be back ...
- ----
- We are god, 'cause only we can create the idea of his existence
- in our holy brains... (Yello)
-