October 2003
HPs sales of 3000 wind down
Customers reach for new systems, but not at last-minute
or on HPs advice
HP
is putting on a sales drive to produce a strong final month of its
fiscal year but much of the HP 3000 community did its shopping
for new systems well before this months end of HP sales
deadline.
HPs notices about the end of new system sales have
not been a significant factor, according to reports from customers
and resellers, reflecting a community that continues to keep to its
own path, even as HP exits server sales for the 3000. Some sites are
still learning that HP is leaving.
Weve still finding people who do not know
its end-of-life yet, said Jack Harbaugh, who manages new
system sales for authorized reseller Pivital Solutions. The reseller
that just joined the HP 3000 sales ranks this spring found a customer
who wanted to add 200 to 300 new users, according to
Pivitals president Steve Suraci. They said, What do
you mean we cant get the system after Oct. 31?
The resellers field sales report echoed a pattern
from other channel members and HP 3000 sites: HPs
communications about the systems end of life, as
the vendor has been calling its march to the date when HP stops
selling new systems, havent motivated much last-minute buying.
Customers have kept to their own schedules, and many have stocked up
long before the final month.
Pivitals surprised customer already has an existing
N-Class server, a more common pattern among those buying HPs
last generation of HP 3000s. A lot of the last-minute customers
that we are getting are not 9x7 and 9x8 customers. Theyre
N-Class and A-Class customers, people that are somewhat progressive
and taking one last crack at it.
A deadline with flex
HP
has advised its channel the system will not be on any HP price list
for Nov. 1, but the vendor has also told customers and resellers that
orders placed by Oct. 31 will be honored. Several resellers added
that North Americas 3000 distributor Client Systems was going
even further to flex the sales deadline. The distributor has told two
resellers that if a firm quote was extended on a deal by Oct. 31, the
3000 will be delivered to the customer.
The speed of that delivery seemed to be slipping during
the last quarter of HPs 3000 sales. Cognos Director of Customer
Operations Bob Berry said that hes heard reports of 3000s
taking longer to arrive than ever before. And Pivitals
officials said an order placed in the early part of August did not
arrive until a month later for an A-Class HP 3000. Those used
to be off-the-shelf systems, Harbaugh said.
Pivitals Suraci has been telling the customer base
the N-Class systems are likely to be a rare item in the used
marketplace, too. At most its in about 5 percent of
sites, he said of the N-Class.
Kirk Olson of reseller Cerius said the company is offering
customers last-minute promotions. But the reseller said that late
sales traffic hasnt been overwhelming.
We have not seen a large number of last-minute
orders for the e3000, nor have we seen any close-out promotions from
HP, Olson said. The HP e3000 marketing team is basically
down to one person Alvina Nishimoto and she is very
busy just trying to keep up with all the e3000 issues.
Business at Cerius is leading away from the 3000.
Our largest e3000 customers have either transitioned or are
very close to final conversion to new platforms, Olson said,
with three out of four applications moving to Unix and the rest going
to Windows platforms.
Single-system 3000 customers at Cerius are homesteading,
but looking for new applications. Only 25 percent of these
sites have moved to new platforms. Many of these users are going to
move toward their application vendors new platform.
Customers make plans
Whether they are staying on the 3000 or leaving, customers
who responded to our September survey were putting 3000s online this
year for the first time. Since we decided at the end of 2002 to
homestead, we upgraded our hardware at the beginning of 2003,
said Ken Cook at Progressive Stamping in Royal Oak, Mich. Our
main concern now is hardware support for the future, but as the
third-party support companies come online I think well be okay.
For right now the plan is to hang on to the 3000 for as long as
possible.
Technical Services Manager John Bawden at QualChoice said
the company wanted to upgrade next year to a used system, even though
it has already planned to migrate. But the economy and the high
cost of software license upgrades makes the likelihood of that
happening very doubtful, Bawden said. Odds are we will
still be running our current systems into 2006 and maybe
longer.
Concern over the total cost of any upgrade, including
software fees, is looming over sites. John Pickering, a consultant at
a North American wood product manufacturer, said negotiations with
software companies may block any last-minute sale.
We're currently busy putting a quick proposal
together to buy a new 3000, he said. Were looking
at replacing our Series 969 with a new N-Class before they go off the
price list. The PowerHouse upgrade fee threatens to kill the whole
N-Class deal. We will attempt to negotiate with Cognos.
Cognos Berry said that application providers have
been pushing the urgency to get to A-Class and N-Class systems.
Were still aggressively helping any customer move to A
and N-Class. Our year starts in March, and through August its
been a very good year. Weve seen a lot of people move to these
boxes. He added that September has shown a letdown, though.
Pickering said the price of his upgrade looks more
attractive at the end of sales. In spite of our distaste for
HP's unceremonious dropping of the 3000 line, they have made the
offer just too good to pass up. They really seem to have recognized
that they need to go to extra lengths to buy back some customer
loyalty and good will.
Even those sites whose future application path is already
assured are purchasing N-Class servers. Joe Dolliver at healthcare
consultancy Axiom Systems said the companys clients who use
Amisys/3000 software have moved to more modern hardware, even though
Amisys has the new HP-UX Amisys Advance ready.
I have helped some of my old AMISYS clients leap
forward to purchase HP 3000 N-Class systems while they are waiting to
migrate to Amisys Advance, Dolliver reported.
A
number of upgrades in the double digits at a major North
American client took place over the last year to get N-Class servers
installed, according to a manager who wanted to remain anonymous.
These systems will upgraded as well, even beyond when HP can sell
extra processors. If HP does not have the parts, we will look
in the secondary market, the manager said. I am sick to
see the HP 3000 platform be discontinued.
The option of a used 3000 marketplace was cited often by
those who responded to the survey. For now we're staying
pat, said T. Keith Robertson of Comsonics. Any
improvements to our 3000 will come from the used market. HP's
treatment of the 3000 community has soured me on their products. They
seem more intent on selling printers and notebooks than back-end
servers. Our eventual migration path may or may not include an HP
server.
For some customers, even a move to the more-available 9x9
systems easily purchased on the used market as an
upgrade offers an improvement.
The end of HP 3000 sale date does not affect
us, said Dan Buckland of retailer Hickory Farms. We
upgraded in 2002 from a Series 959-400 to a 989-450. Its a
fantastic difference. Hickory Farms uses the Ecometry
e-commerce application and plans to move to the HP-UX version in 2005
or 2006.
Price, and some return on the investment of a current
system, will motivate customers like Quadax, Inc., a healthcare
billing outsource firm. Even with an intention to migrate, a hardware
purchase could happen there.
We might purchase a new machine if we can swing a
deal with one of our old ones, said VP of Information Systems
Gene Calai. We plan on running our current 3000s for some time.
And we have finally started putting some serious effort into
researching migration.
A speed bump
Resellers were reporting that while the 3000 upgrade
business has been better during 2003 than in prior years, they
dont expect pent-up demand to explode during October. Customers
have been doing their purchasing all year long.
Weve been all about Oct. 31 ever since we got
into the game, Pivitals Suraci. If theres
going to be a wave at the end, its going to be no more than a
speed bump. Its certainly not going to be a big pile of
upgrades that hit before Oct. 31.
Pivitals Harbaugh said that HP continues to lay off
people in its organization that know the 3000 line, making the
upgrading more difficult. The last thing those people care
about is selling an HP 3000 as they go out the door.
HP
hasnt offered last-quarter incentives to resellers of
Pivitals sales volume, Suraci said. Those kinds of
incentives are for the Logicals of the world, he said. But even
at Logical, one of the US nationwide sources for new 3000s, volume
has not been any heavier of late.
Things in the 3000 arena have been slow for us, as
you might expect, said Bill Carter, Logicals HP liaison.
Carter said that Client Systems president Mike Murphy told him
if we got our quotes in to him through October, we could order
beyond that date. Hes expecting things to pick up. The
distributor will be operating its Phoenix 3000 used system operations
beyond Oct. 31.
The used marketplace not only has a longer future, more
certain future, but customers are looking toward better value there.
Steven Waters, the VP of Systems for Cannex Financial Exchanges Ltd.,
said 3000 purchases will sweeten an already attractive ownership
picture.
At Cannex we are still counting on the used market
for our HP 3000, Waters said. In fact, just yesterday we
purchased a 969/120 for disaster recovery purposes. For us it is
business as usual, and we plan to revaluate sometime in 2005. But for
now, we will enjoy rock bottom prices for rock solid
hardware.
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