opened a new market. All other competitors all followed its step to innovate high-density energy-saving server‚ and want to gain some shares in this market. At this time‚ Dell entered to the market with its own low-priced‚ customized servers to compete with SGI. Along with the time passed‚ more and more companies‚ especially Dell‚ targeted SGI’s customer and provided them low-price products that SGI cannot compete with them anymore. In May 2009‚ Rackable Systems that is the former SGI merged with
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Dell SWOT Analysis Strength: one of the best known brands in the world first PC maker to offer next-day‚ on site product service direct to customer business model‚ without distribution retailers uses the latest technology low operating cost because of cutting out retailers and supplies directly to customers each system is built to order to meet each customer’s demands and specifications not a manufacture‚ parts are made by suppliers‚ Dell assembles with relatively cheap
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cooperation among departments becomes crucial and it is necessary to manage processes across the organization to promote cooperation swiftly. Taking Dell as a case study‚ this paper focuses on the operational methods and strategies both inside and outside the corporation and how they are managed under the competitive environment in the IT era. The choice of Dell stems from the fact that it provides an appropriate case of how the management of operational processes across the organization‚ utilizing IT effectively
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Part 4. Is Dell a merchandiser or a manufacturer? Dell Inc. is both‚ a merchandiser and a manufacturer. The company emphasizes its business model on delivering a quality product to fit customers’ needs‚ in the process Dell may create custom-made products from a variety of suppliers and merchandise them as a finished product directly to a customer. On a different scenario Dell may manufacture a product itself and them merchandise or distribute it within its chain of subsidiaries. What information
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Porters Five Forces – Competitor Analysis Michael Porter’s five forces model is used to explore the competitive environment in which a product or company operates. In this case it will explore the competitive environment of Dell and the Tab Streak. The Five Forces Analysis looks at five key areas: | New Entrants | | Suppliers | Industry competitors and extent of rivalry | Buyers | | Substitutes | | Threat of New Entrants The computer industry is a highly competitive one with
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Dell Distribution Network I. Direct sales model Dell current distribution network is direct sales model‚ this online sale refer to the fact that Dell does not use the retails channel‚ but sells its personal computers (PCs) directly to customers through its website www.dell.com. Dell does not make sales through any integrators or resellers‚ nor does it utilize any channel service profit margins. Sales are made by the collaborative efforts of the Dell’s task force and by means of advertisement. Customers
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www.dell.com Dell’s Higher Standard To the Global Dell Team: Dell’s success is built on a foundation of personal and professional integrity. We hold ourselves to standards of ethical behavior that go well beyond legal minimums. We never compromise these standards and we will never ask any member of the Dell team to do so either. We owe this to our customers‚ suppliers‚ shareholders and other stakeholders. And we owe it to ourselves because success without integrity is essentially meaningless
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DELL Company Background DELL is a multinational information technology corporation based in Round Rock‚ Texas‚ United States‚ that develops‚ sells and supports computers and related products and services. Bearing the name of its founder‚ Michael Dell‚ the company is one of the largest technological corporations in the world‚ employing more than 96‚000 people worldwide. Dell had 46‚000 employees as of Jan. 30. About 22‚200 of those‚ or 48.3 percent‚ were in the United States‚ while 23‚800 people
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VALUE ADDED CHAIN IN DELL SUBMITTED BY: SIDDHARTHA DAS ROLL NO: 32 BATCH: PGDM (FM) 2010-12 SUBJECT: Project and Infrastructure Management: Financing‚ Implementation and Control Table of Contents Sl.No. | Description | Page No. | 1 | VALUE CHAIN ANALYSIS | 3 | 2 | VALUE CHAIN IN DELL | 4 | 3 | DIRECT SELLING STRATEGY OF DELL | 5 | 4 | COMPONENTS OF DIRECT SELLING STRATEGY | 6 | 5 | ADVANTAGES OF VALUE CHAIN OF DELL | 8 | 5.1 | CONCLUSION | 9 | CHAPTER-1 What is Value
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Background Dell traces its origins to 1984‚ when Michael Dell created PCs Limited while a student at the University of Texas at Austin. The dorm-room headquartered company sold IBM PC-compatible computers built from stock components. Dell dropped out of school in order to focus full-time on his fledgling business‚ after getting about $300‚000 in expansion-capital from his family. In 1985‚ the company produced the first computer of its own design‚ the "Turbo PC"‚ which sold for $795. PCs Limited
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