Lot of opportunities in smaller cities, says Client Solutions Group President
Dell
has been going through a transformational journey ever since its
founder Michael Dell delisted the company and took it private. The
company has undertaken a number of big moves primarily aimed at
strengthening its presence in the enterprise technology space. This
includes a merger with EMC and acquisition of VMware. However, major
part of its revenues still comes from the client solutions business
which includes PCs, thin clients, workstations and monitors. BusinessLine
recently met Sam Burd, President, Client Solutions Group, Dell, to
understand how the company is shaping up to address the growing
computing needs of consumers. Excerpts.
How
important is the client solution business for Dell given that recent
big moves by the company have been on the enterprise side?
The
client businesses are really important to Dell. I think Michael Dell’s
vision, as he laid out, was how we become an end-to-end solutions
provider to our customers to be able to offer the whole portfolio,
understanding customers and delivering what they need. So now we got
great client business, great server business, great storage business. It
allows us to leverage strengths across businesses and look for
synergies across the customer base.
Recent quarters have been good for the PC market. Do You see that continuing going forward?
I
am not a good fortune teller but we will see more growth in the PC
space. I also think it’s a great opportunity when you look at countries
like India, just as an example, with household penetration of PCs less
than 10 per cent. We’re doing a great stuff with schools, with parents..
I see the same thing on the business side. You look at GST and other
tax changes going on which has got business to think about going from
paperwork accounting to automated processes. So that what give
additional flip to the growth in the PC segment in the commercial side.
There’s a lot of pent up demand. That is why I am optimistic about the
growth in PC market.
Are there any projects you are doing to reach to the next billion users ?
When
we started out our primary objective was to go deeper into smaller
cities so we built our stores focussing mainly on the tier 3-5 cities to
give people opportunity to touch and feel our products . We realised
that the children are the ones who need PCs but they get influenced by
teachers and mothers who may have never used a PC themselves. So we
launched the programme called Aarambh. We put a programme aimed at
training teachers on how to use the PC. This is our second year now so
we have gone back to the school teachers again to train them because we
realised that one time training is not good enough. Now, we are clearly
seeing that in these Tier 3, Tier 5 cities, we are getting an uplift in
term of sales that is happening in these markets. We are also working
with the government on Atal Tinkering Labs.
Is India already among the top 5 market for you globally?
Yes, India is in the top 5. There is tremendous potential inside India
and I see India becoming even more important for our business. We also
have development team here doing some of our most cutting edge software
across all our products. We are totally committed to India and we see
lots of opportunity here in the future.
New
technologies such as robotics, blockchain and AI also require engineers
equipped with new skills and knowledge. What can engineering graduates,
who may have expertise in older platforms, do to be employable?
They
should come to Dell. We have such-better technologies they will have an
awesome experience. I do think having a technical background itself is a
huge asset. I also think that people will have to build soft skills so
that they have the ability to collaborate effectively. The ability to
focus on teamwork and tap into the expertise and knowledge of others is
very important.
There
is lot of bad stuff in the tech world so that can always bother you.
But in terms of our business, I worry about whether we are listening to
customers enough and are we leaning forward to take the opportunities
that’s out there.
03 Mar 2018, 01:14 PM