Dell CTO Says Perot Systems Acquisition Shows Dell Strategy
SAN FRANCISCO-Dell Enterprise CTO
Paul Prince told eWEEK Sept. 21 that his company's pending $3.9
billion acquisition of Perot Systems is a clear signal to the world about
Dell's overall strategy of bolstering its services offerings in order to
establish itself as a full-blown enterprise IT supplier.
In other words, Dell wants to follow in the footsteps of IBM
and Hewlett-Packard, and hopefully take away some of their considerable market
share in the process.
Even though Dell ships about 85 percent of the laptops and desktops it makes to enterprises and offers plenty of services to go with them, it still has the reputation of being a consumer-oriented computer maker. That is the impression that Dell's leaders want to change.
"In the last two years, Dell has acquired a total of seven service
suppliers, including SilverBack,
MessageOne and others [such as ASAP Software Express, Everdream and
ProSupport]," Prince said. "They all bring a little bit different
expertise and [approaches] to what we're doing. It's totaling up into a
well-rounded service offering.
"It's our job to make these all work together, so we can move up the food
chain [in enterprise IT support]."
Prince, a former Intel manager and strategist, will be a key decision maker in
helping Dell make that move. Part of his job will be making sure that all these
new services support all the technical work he is overseeing.
Acquisitions like that of Perot Systems are the way Dell plans to move to a
new, all-purpose level in order to challenge IBM
and HP and leave its old image behind.
Dell realizes only too well that as data center hardware-including its
own-becomes increasingly commoditized, software and services become
correspondingly more important in differentiating the leading server, computer
and storage makers.
The Perot Systems acquisition should be a surprise to no one who is following
Dell. Founder
Michael Dell said in March that his company would be using its cash
reserves to make strategic acquisitions in storage, servers and services in
2009. Dell explained that the company would add services that expand its
enterprise capabilities in servers, storage, software and data center
infrastructure.
"If you look in the last few years at the acquisitions we have made, it
really has been focused in those areas," Dell said at the time.
Perot Systems, with 23,000 employees worldwide, has an excellent reputation and
offers several services for enterprise data centers, including project
planning, data center management and software management.
Prince, who will work closely with Perot Systems after the deal is finalized,
will speak Sept. 23 on data center efficiency at the Intel Developer Forum in San
Francisco.
Dell wants to play well with others in the data center in order to make sure its
servers, storage arrays and data center management software work optimally
wherever they are needed.
"We realize that our customers already have significant investment in
their existing management tools," Prince said. "There are people who
are deployed already in [Microsoft] System
Center, BMC,
[IBM] Tivoli
or [HP] OpenView. And you can't throw that away. What we're trying to do is
make sure that everything we do at a management layer plugs in synergistically
to those higher-level tools."
That includes both software and accompanying services.
Dell will combine much of its service effort with partners-Microsoft is a key
example, Prince said-so that "as we release new capabilities, they can
take advantage of it. We've started some very strong partnerships with VMware
in the same vein with Virtual Center,
so you'll see more of that.
"We'll continue to work with partners to push out new features and new
capabilities pretty aggressively. But it will continue to be a 'partnership'
strategy for us. The whole management domain is so distributed that we
recognize we have to be a good provider into any and all of those
infrastructures."
