Dell Tries To Thaw Channel Ice
Well,
here he
is again, that smooth-talker wearing an ascot and a smoking jacket and carrying
two champagne flutes. He wants to make up. Really, he does. He wants the channel
to know that it's real this time -- that he won't go behind your back with that
direct-sales model again. He just wants you to listen. He says that he needs
you now more than ever.
Dell has a channel program -- a real one, with logos and levels and everything.
Oh, it's not a surprise or anything; partners have been raking in money for
the direct-sales giant for a while now. But Dell, which has treated the channel
like a jilted girlfriend in the past, wants to get serious about working with
partners now because it has to. So the company is reaching out to partners,
hoping to woo them, promising them that Dell's commitment to them is real.
And it probably is. After all, anybody who follows the technology industry
knows that Dell has struggled financially in recent years and that founder Michael
Dell is back
in the company's driver's seat. Furthermore, it's Dell himself who has his
executives turning on the Texas charm to try to lure partners to work with a
company that was once considered Public Enemy No. 1 in the channel.
Dell's channel program is pretty comprehensive, as Scott
Bekker reports in his story for RCP (which is pretty darn comprehensive,
too.) The question doesn't seem to be so much whether Dell is serious about
recruiting partners, but rather whether partners will trust the company -- which
for so long flaunted its direct-sales model -- enough to work with it. Given
the potential profits involved, they probably will.
But it'll take a while for Dell to build relationships in the channel, and
it'll be interesting to track the new partner program's success. After all,
old wounds don't just heal overnight.
Will you allow Dell to romance you into its partner program? Tell me at [email protected].
Posted by Lee Pender on 12/06/2007 at 1:21 PM