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June 2009 - Dell Channel Blog

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  • After viewing the webinar “How to Generate Mobility Services Opportunities” I thought I’d follow up on some of the questions. One viewer asked if the webinar will be available for replay to partners. The answer is yes, click here to view it. Several wanted more information on Dell Remote Management tools, so the link is here. Another asked of the Dell Desktop Manager and Dell Remote manager tools are available in Europe. Again, the answer is a qualified yes. Find them here. One viewer wanted a link to Dell Managed Services certification training, so here it is.

    And remember that you can still view this webinar on June 7 or June 20. The links are here and here.

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  • About a week ago Dell Channel Group held several webinars where they shared the secrets to selling business laptops in this increasingly mobile and competitive world. While some of it sounded like “selling 101” (know your customer’s needs before you start selling), it did do a nice job of breaking the conversation down to six big ideas which any channel partner can use. It is pretty easy to sell a laptop, but selling the idea and strategy behind mobility is a lot different. Selling laptops lead to sales. Selling mobility leads to deep relationships, sales of hardware, and services. At the risk of oversimplification, here they are:

    1. Find out what your customers are trying to accomplish: If they are battling IT complexity, make sure you sell those laptops with strong & centralized remote management features and security. If they are trying to manage costs, the answer is the same – laptops with embedded remote & centralized management tools lower the total cost of ownership.

    2. Determine how laptops are being used: The usage environment says a lot about the type of laptop needed. A really mobile workforce requires lighter or more rugged laptops with advanced wireless, networking, and remote management capabilities. High performance use requires mobile workstations – not necessarily the lightest but certainly the most powerful. Standard office performance or limited mobility really points to small business laptops.

    3. Assess what their IT environment looks like: High-end applications, centralized management, and flawless reliability & support really point to enterprise-class laptops (Latitude, Precision, and OptiPlex). Simple or non-standard environments call for small business laptops (Vostro), where most management is done at the laptop. And if the customer doesn’t have a centralized security or storage environment, there are great opportunities for partner services to standardize and protect.

    4. Determine their level of understanding about laptops: Some customers will see a laptop as a critical element in a strategy to increase worker productivity. These are the ones that will be willing to pay for the features and support needed to protect and management them. Other customers see laptops as a way to un-tether people from their desks. These are the ones that are looking for more basic wireless and security features that are managed on the laptop (finger print readers, disk encryption, Wi-Fi catcher, etc.).

    5. Assess their level of sophistication: Complex networks and more complex applications require business models like Dell Latitude laptops and Dell Precision Mobile Workstations. These models are specifically made for these types of uses. Simple networks and standard business applications require models like Vostro laptops & desktops or OptiPlex desktops.

    6. Find out what they want to do themselves: This is both a hardware fit and services fit for the channel partner. The more your customers want your assistance – from simple deployment to managed services – the more you have an opportunity to sell services. More importantly, these kinds of services often provide visibility into the customer IT infrastructure, which can lead to even more opportunity.

    Dell laptops come with the kinds of tools and features that allow a channel partner to deliver what their customer’s need, everything from self-managed laptops to enterprise-class ones with embedded remote management features. The replay of the webinar is available here, and it is certainly worth a listen. And Registered channel partners also have access to Dell’s Guide to Selling Laptops, Desktops, and Workstations, which can be found here, or you can look at the Easy Matrix Partner Tool here.

    So in this environment, anyone can sell a laptop. The market wants them. But selling mobility can lead to much deeper relationships with customers that solves bigger issues that just the price of the box. If you want to see more of this kind of thing, let use know.

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  • As IT spending is in turmoil, the customers of our channel partners do strange things – sometimes including stopping IT spending altogether. So when I read this article in Dell’s Power Solutions Magazine, it really resonated. What channel partners should tell their customers is that the wrong decisions today will plague their IT costs for years to come. So here are the five big ideas

    1. Not making the most of what you already have. Transitioning to a virtualized environment using existing systems can be significantly less expensive and more flexible than scaling your hardware infrastructure.

    2. Leaving inefficient equipment in place. A major part of most IT budgets goes toward simply keeping the data center running. That’s why energy-efficient features are designed directly into Dell PowerEdge server and blade solutions. Dell channel partners can also help companies optimize the office IT environment through desktop and mobile client power management and efficient desktop computing.

    3. Skimping on security and disaster recovery. Safeguarding your systems and preparing for the worst isn’t a big deal—until it is. Don’t get caught rolling the dice: calculate your potential downtime losses, define your recovery objectives, pinpoint your primary risks, and then design and size your disaster recovery systems accordingly.

    4. Investing in new projects rather than existing ones. It’s tempting to look at a difficult business climate as a good time to try out completely new strategies. However, continuing to invest in existing projects is more likely to produce long-term gains.

    5. Not establishing a social media strategy. Social media is poised to transform marketing and change how employees relate to each other within your company. Making a small investment now can position your company for benefits down the road.

    These guys are certainly smarter than me, but I would add a couple more:

    6. Maintaining multiple versions of applications, rather than standardizing on just a few.

    7. Adding still more storage on to an already tortured & dispersed & non-standardized storage infrastructure, rather than consolidating.

    What are your ideas? We’d like to hear them.

    Read the full article here.

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  • Today, Dell announced the availability of new servers, storage and virtualization solutions for you to offer your customers.

    Building on our Efficient Enterprise launch back on March 30th, Dell today announced the expansion from those first five server platforms and the PS6000 Series iSCSI storage array with three more server platforms and the introduction of our new PS4000 Series iSCSI storage array.

    Our new Dell EqualLogic PS4000 Series arrays offers all the great features and capabilities of our EqualLogic PS6000 but scaled down so it's in the "sweet-spot" for your small, medium business customer needs or for larger customers looking to compliment their existing PS6000 deployment with a remote, branch office storage array solution.

    Meanwhile, our 11th Generation of PowerEdge servers are joined by the latest additions

    • T410 is designed for robust performance and flexibility for growing businesses and remote sites in a tower form factor.
    • T710 is designed for high performance and capacity for server consolidation and virtualization in a tower or 5U rack mountable form factor.
    • R410 is designed to be the most versatile rack server, with high performance and high value in a compact rack form factor for all business applications.

    All three servers offer the industry’s only “instant-on” embedded systems management that simplifies deployment and management while being powered by the new Intel Xeon 5500 Series processors.

    Finally, Dell announced a variety of virtualization oriented features, capabilities and enablement deliverables including engineering validated reference architectures. To learn more about these new virtualization, server and storage capabilities please register for either this Friday’s PS4000 Webinar or Monday’s Virtualization webinar called “Dell Virtualization: Simplifying the Path to Profit” for PartnerDirect registered and certified partners.

    Update 6-24-08: In this short vlog Sean Phelan of Dell PartnerDirect talks with OuterNet President Dan McDougal about the latest 11G products and services.

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  • Did you miss the June 10 webcast featuring a panel discussion moderated by Joe Panettieri? Representatives from Dell Managed Services and Intel participated in this lively, 60-minute discussion covering the business benefits for Managed Services Providers (MSPs) of the Dell Remote Monitoring platform and Intel® vPro technology.

    The CEO of Utah-based Frontpoint offered a hands-on perspective of the value the combined technology provided to his business to better deliver managed services to end customers. Frontpoint’s long-time end customer, Global Medical Staffing, spoke about how Frontpoint transitioned from an onsite, break/fix model to remote infrastructure monitoring and how his level of service has improved as a result.

    Check out the recording of the webcast by registering here.

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