Problem Solving Case Study
Merging Information Technology and Cultures at Compaq-Digital (B):
Becoming a Single Firm
The many challenges and opportunities evident for Compaq and Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC) illustrated in the case study Merging Information Technology and Cultures at Compaq-Digital (B): Becoming a Single Firm are analyzed and evaluated from a strategic perspective in this analysis. Both companies have drastically different cultures, which made the challenges, opportunities and threats of the merger not being optimal between both at a cultural and IT level evident . Compaq is a very centralized organizational culture that values and believes in a centralized IT system architecture and reporting system strategy. It is common for Compaq to rely on single-instance ERP systems throughout multiple regions of the world and seek out cost and time efficiencies based on the benefits of consolidated, highly controlled and centralized IT enterprise systems. Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC) is diametrically the opposite, with a very open and nearly egalitarian mindset to managing and implementing new enterprise systems. Not surprisingly DEC attracts those professionals who thrive in a diverse and highly distributed organizational culture, with many of them working remotely. Given the timeframes of this case study, the concept of virtual teams and telecommuting was ground-breaking at the time. DEC's senior management believes that a decentralized IT architecture is essential for innovation and creativity to flourish, while Compaq believed that IT needed to be managed as a centralized resource. Studies of enterprise systems in general and ERP systems specifically show that the greater the agility and speed of response the more effective a given technology manufacturer is in meeting rapidly changing needs in the market. This is especially the case in how Compaq was quick to standardized on mass production and driving inventory turns through price, all strategies reliant on their Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) systems being able to keep up with increasingly agile competitors. It is no surprise that Compaq had a very difficult time competing with Dell, who had adopted a decentralized IT architecture while also pursuing aggressive configure-to-order and mass customization product strategies as DEC had also experimented with on specific product lines during the same period (Vijayan, Collett, 1999). Compaq attempted to replicate these strategies in configure-to-order yet found their IT staff too inflexible and lacking in agility, specifically in the pricing area, to challenge Dell's growing and formidable lead at the time (Zarley, 1997). As Compaq continued to lose competitive selling deals to Dell they also had to contend with the acquisition and assimilation of DEC which had a markedly different IT structure and corresponding company culture. The structural, cultural and strategic differences and their implications are analyzed in this case analysis.,
Mergers Often Fail Due to Cultural And Structural Differences
The architectural differences from an IT standpoint and the resulting impact one ach company's respective culture became one of the most difficult hurdles for the merger of Compaq and DEC to clear. Systematic and IT structural differences continued to fuel a highly regimented and centralized culture in Compaq while the structure of DEC was more open, in smaller virtual teams that allowed for flexibility. Not surprisingly each of these companies over time developed completely different perspectives as to what was excellence and best practices in manufacturing and production. Both also had significantly different perspectives of what excellence of execution looked like as well. Compaq's focus in its manufacturing strategies had been extremely successful in meeting the expectations, needs and wants of enterprise-class IT buyers globally yet they struggled with the home market that required greater flexibility and customization fo systems. Compaq also standardized their entire go-to-market strategy around these manufacturing efficiencies and as a result sold literally hundreds of millions of dollars in laptops, PCs, servers and high-end graphics workstations globally. Compaq also architected is entire service strategy around low-variation products to ensure cost variations were minimized. Walking through a Compaq manufacturing anywhere in the world would appear identical as the company strove to reduce and eliminate any and all variation from the manufacturing process. DEC took a different strategy, using lean manufacturing and high volume production to meet their cost and pricing targets on their highest-volume products while also using mass customization on their higher-end, higher margin servers and systems. In order to accomplish these product strategies, DEC had to create a highly decentralized structure that concentrated on the immediate needs and expectations of customers in each segment. This decision had an immediate effect on not only...
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