back to article Dell parks itself in PC superstores across Europe

DSGi has inked a fat pan-European deal with Dell to punt the firm's notebooks and desktops in stores across 12 countries including the UK. Under the agreement UK customers will be able to buy Dell goods in Dixons, Currys, PC World and online from January next year. Elsewhere in Europe the products will be sold through DSGi …

COMMENTS

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  1. Duncan Hothersall
    Unhappy

    DSGi's support service eh...

    Oh well, never mind.

  2. Anonymous Coward
    Thumb Down

    Well they have blown that then..

    Oh dear - of all the retail outlets they had to choose the biggest muppets of them all.

    "DSGi's IT support service, TechGuys, also forms part of the deal."

    lol WHAT IT support service? They have one?!

    I think this is incredibly short sighted on Dells part which will hurt them even more in the long run. Can you really imagine walking into PC World and asking for a Dell box with linux?

    I leave the reader to the outcome of that scenario....

  3. Anonymous Coward
    Joke

    Adverts

    It will be interesting to hear the ads on the TV 'we don't sell in shops' has been changed. eg, we sell in some stores that people will only visit if they are really desperate / bored / warmest place on a cold and rainy day.

    Still, I must not grumble, the more they sell, the more break fix work we get LOL

  4. Anonymous Coward
    Stop

    15 years ago...

    Dell UK sold through PC World back in 1992/1993, though not many folk ever noticed.

    I was at Dell at the time in a junior IT role, supporting warranty systems. I had to look through the complicated warranty forms filled out by PC World staff. Most were illegible or incomplete, meaning that customers calling Dell for service found there was no record of them or their purchase.

    So, let's review:

    - Dell selling through PC World

    - Poorly designed systems

    - Bad communications between companies

    - Poor service from PC World & Dell

    So much has changed in 15 years. But not here apparently...

  5. Shane McCarrick

    How is this supposed to be progressive on the part of Dell?

    How is this supposed to be progressive on the part of Dell?

    Admittedly they had already outsourced the bulk of their technical support elsewhere- but if they really expect customers to receive a satisfactory service from DSGI's team, they have another thing coming. Perhaps they should visit some of the user forums for Toshiba and other vendors who sell their wares and services via DSGI to get a picture of what the public think of their dealings with the company.......

  6. mark carlisle
    Dead Vulture

    nice business plan

    not.

    packard bell and emachines became as 'matsui' in the minds of the public after takeup with dsg.

    selling more machines might happen in the short term, but how much more damage to the name of 'dell' after DSG store staff(not their fault they don't get the necessary training) try to deal with the (user) problems?

    mental image>> woman saying to friend "we got little johnny one of those dell laptops from pc world for xmas.. great job until it broke(not our fault-honestly..) and no one wanted to know us on boxing morning! never again!!" <<

    going down...

  7. Chad H.

    decisions decisions....

    DSGs tech guys, or Dell's clueless offshore "reboot fixes everything" morons....

    I'll pass

  8. Anonymous Coward
    Stop

    why have they blown that then??

    I reckon Dell will do well out of this, after all its just consumer/retail computers they will be selling in the stores so more exposure for them. Lets face it, IT angle aside, if you are joe public looking for a new PC, where do you go? Tesco? Nah, most go to PC World.......

  9. Sam

    HAHAHHHAAA!

    "..Dell vice president and EMEA general manager Mark Ormerod.."

    For how long?

  10. Charlie MItchell
    Stop

    What's worse?

    The currently terrible Indian tech support line, or the even worse tech support from DSG?

    I think I'd rather risk it with the Indians than let any of the DSG muppets give me any advice, having had a laptop from DSG recently and needing support, it was far worse than any support I had from dell when my desktop died.

    Another nail in the coffin really.

  11. Danny Thompson
    IT Angle

    Another fine mess ......

    DSG's stores were once marques in their own right. Not perfect, but nonetheless they had a certain appeal. Now they are all cookie cuts from a master plan. The name on the front is different but the stock, the staff and the culture are all the same.

    It may be a coup for DSG to get their hands on Dell kit - but as others have already said here, the opportunity to snatch failure from the hands of success is very real. I'll be none of the deal-makers at Dell have ever shopped at DSG. Perhaps if they had then they'd have run a mile.

    DSG? So what exactly is the IT angle to this story?

  12. Adam Szostak

    If only you shopped in Pc World

    I read your comments with a wry smile on my face. I am the General Manager of one of Pc Worlds flagship stores. You seem to be complaining about our colleagues, however i wonder how many of you run a 15million pound retail store with an FTE of 34.5. Unfortunately in a world of low margins we no longer have the personnel to be able to train train train. All our budgets are tied up with higher rental costs and ever increasing labour costs. Believe me if me and my management team could train our colleagues to be Pc geeks then we would, the fact is time does not allow.

    Our stores have come on leaps and bounds over the last two years since we stopped paying commision to make sure that we offer impartial advice to customers, if we don't know the answer we will go find it for you. I quite often shop Pc World stores looking at the customer expereince and more often than not it is excellent. We don't set our stall at being IT specialsists but we will sell you the right product at the right price.

    The Tech Guys will always receive bad press as when they get it right no-one bothers to say so. We fix 75% of our customers problems over the phone and have recently introduced remote IT management for our Pc Performance customers so when they don't understand how to resolve their issue we simply take over their machine and do it for them. Who else offers that ?? We talk to 2.5 million customers a year through the tech guys, compared to the few thousand moans on the net i think you'll find our job completeion rate is high.

    Dell offers us a unique opportunity to provide customers with a brand that is known by most. It will increase footfall in our stores and if sales go up, staff levels go up, meaning we will have more time to train.

    I ask you to drop your prejudice and try one of our store to see the improvement for yoursleves. Pc World is the uk's number 1 Pc supplier and frankly unless you build yourself there is no-one in the retail sector who is better on service or price . . ..

  13. Anonymous Coward
    Stop

    Tech Guys

    The reason DSG's support is so poor is simple, they treat their staff very poorly, and, in the case of telephone support, since they sold off the call centre to Crapita, the level of support has dropped, mainly due to the reliance on script based "problem solving".

    I used to work in the call centre, after 2 years of being fobbed off for promotion/certification ( I didn't generate enough sales leads to warrant any certification/promotion, funny, I thought I was supposed to be helping repair broken laptops, not a bloody salesman) I left and worked in their laptop workshop, this was excellent at first, but soon after gaining A+, the workshop quota of engineers was doubled, and the required output doubled, shift work was introduced whilst the bonus scheme was "adjusted" to make it much harder to earn enough money without doing overtime, sometimes made compulsory.

    Now they're taking on Dell, and if they give any proper training, it'll be to a selected few "specialists", and the rest of the engineers will struggle, because all laptops have indvidual quirks/faults/design "features", which will manifest themselves during the lifetime of the laptop, as they now have roughly 120 engineers, proper training will be virtually impossible during peak, so best of luck if you're foolish enough to be tempted into buying a Dell, either way the support will be poorly trained, poorly paid, and probably looking for another job, with better conditions and prospects...

  14. Daniel Winstone
    Thumb Up

    Dell and PC World

    I bought a Dell PC about three years ago. The support was alright I suppose the problem was fixed. Otherwise I've upgraded and added parts as and when I needed to, had to, or just wanted to.

    PC World stores (sorry Adam Szostak) at least in the Bristol area are no more than warehouses with weird layouts and very few staff manning the aisles/departments. The last piece of hardware I purchased was a hard drive and not having fitted one before, I phoned up the independent store and got walked through the whole set there and then. No call center, no hassle.

    It's not difficult to hire PC hobbyists (not qualified engineers or anything so expensive) that take a passing interest in computer hardware/software, gaming, connectivity and heck why not consoles and of course enjoy the role of customer service, and I'm sure a high percentage of your own staff are in that mould. However if you pay peanuts, you will find more monkeys.

    Being able to buy Dell in a store however kind of defeats the "Taylor made for you" tag line that they sell themselves on, but waiting for 14 days or so to go back to the retail hell of the average UK Mall, isn't so nice at all. Maybe it would be better to order online and then pay and collect in store once the unit is ready and has been delivered to the store most convenient to the person - beats waiting at home for a delivery person that may or may not arrive.

    Yes, I'm sure it will be a good deal for the high street stores and Dell, as long as the customer service levels at both ends of the chain are properly managed. That's all anyone really wants isn't it? A solution when a problem arises.

  15. Dan

    @Adam Szostak

    Right lets break this down :

    First you say that you can't train your staff, then how do you expect to get your customers the right product. It's not at the right price, it's at your prices which most of the time are a rip off, yes even rip off compared to other retailers.

    The tech guys are a joke, they look down on pretty much everyone the other side of that crappy desk, you freely admit that they aren't trained to standard and pretty much you charge highway robbery for a reinstall of windows. Your 75% fix claim is impressive, but I would like to see what percent your staff are telling people to re-build thier PCs to get a fix.

    I've seen your stores recently, the 'tech guy' was talking to a freind of mine who had brought one of your adsl routers, he had asked them if it was wireless before buying it but it needed a adaptor to do that. He was taking it back with me there and god damn if your 'techguy' insisted for a good 5 minutes even after being pointed at the box that it wasn't wireless.

    Thanks for making me laugh before I go off to sleep.

  16. kfkhotdog
    Go

    If only you shopped in Pc World - Nice one Adam...

    Couldn't agree more mate.....

    I have been a reg reader for several years now, and am often left gobsmaked by the coments, that get made about PC World, I am nor ashamed to admit, I aslo work for the company, and I think that the points to make are spot on....

    For example I get realy anoyed by, the way our instore technicians get slated for being rubish, by people who probaly havent even set foot in one of our stores for 5 or 6 years, yet alone had cause to actualy deal with any of them....

    Don't get me wrong, I am sure that from time to time, a situation ariese and we make a mistake, just like anyone else after all our staff are human, but then I have had bad experiances from small indipendant IT sales and support companys, and we at PC world often have to pick up the pices left behind after someone else drops the ball.....

    These however don't make it into the press, or get mentiond on line as no one seems that interested with them....

    The point to remember here is, that PC World and the DSGI group as a whole, wants customers to be happy, with margins the way they are at the moment, they want customers for life, as thats the only way for the company to be sucsesfull....

    So although they do not always get things right, if you are unhappy at any point, ask to speak to the stores general manager, and they will do everthing, in his/hers power to solve your problem for you, if they say no, then theres a good chance that the situation is not as clear cut, as you might think.....

    PC World & the DSGI group as a whole are focused on customer satisfaction, perhaps more than some of you that havent visited our stores for a few years might think, so give us the benifit of the doubt, and give us a chance, who knows we might change your mind.....

  17. Chris Cox
    Alien

    @PC World

    I used to be a Technician in PC World.

    I'd agree with Adam. We had a store with £5m turnover, 18 staff, clinic manned primarily by me, dealing with umpteen irate people per day, the VAST majority of whom had caused whatever problem they were whinging about themselves - laptops dropped/lids closed on pens, files deleted etc etc. The actual failure rate of the products was pretty low. The main problem is the average computer literacy of the PC World customer.

    I would agree on training. I am self taught, I was trained nothing in PC World, despite many training initiatives from head office, in reality, non of the stores that I know of have anything like the time to actually do any training.

    What I would say is give the guys in the stores a break. It's crap hours, crap pay, abuse all day from frankly moron customers who are clueless and expect things to be fixed instantly, all for a starting Technician salary of about £5.75 per hour.

    If you take a close look, PC World's PC/Laptop prices are extremely competitive, and not a rip off at all, the rip off comes in inks and software etc, but then there are retail premises to pay for, unlike internet vendors.

    If DSGi put some real effort into training and importantly staff retention, it would actually be ok, but its a stepping stone on the career ladder for too many people and as such customer service will always suffer.

    As a final point, Dell - garbage. We had dozens of customers with Dells each month who came to us because Dell's support was so bad.

    All of you who sit in an office somewhere giving internal support should consider what it is like to spend 10 hours a day giving support at a public desk to people who are clueless before critising people who do the bestthey can given the circumstances.

  18. Ian Bremner
    Boffin

    Dell support

    As someone who works for Dell Tech Support it is amusing to read these comments from bitter know-it-alls. While I can;t speak for my Indian colleagues, here in the Business support section we are currently orunning on a customer satisfaction level of nearly 90%.

    @Dan - "I would like to see what percent your staff are telling people to re-build thier PCs to get a fix."

    It is a fact that a great deal of PC problems are caused by (l)users installing something they shouldn't or spyware infested systems. In my experience more than 50% hardware faults turn out to be misconfigured or incompatible software, corrupt profiles and disk read errors caused by someone improperly shutting a system down. But trying to tell a self described tech-god this can be an exercise in futility.

    The only time I have used DGSI techs is when I had an ID10T moment and bought the wrong motherboard. It was swapped over in minutes and I was on my way wih no fuss.

  19. Nick Miles
    Happy

    The Tech Guys

    For me, PC world splits in two when I think of it. I have always found the stores to be manned by poorly trained people with (I assume) massive sales targets. But the Tech Guys have always been good in my experience. We have a stand alone TG store near us that I've used, both over the phone and in person and I've recommended to people. All of us have had good experiences and cheap too.

    It's alsmost as if they are two completely separate entities with differing corporate paths.

  20. John Chadwick

    @If only you shopped in Pc World

    The one thing Adam & Co need to remember is that it takes effort to build customer confidence and satisfaction, and seconds to loose it.

    Stopped using PC world when one of their store managers was extremely rude to me. I've never had a problem with the stores I used, but then I work in computing, and know what I want, and how most everything works.

    The core problem for DSG is not that the staff are poor, my experience is they mostly try their best, but know less about their products that they should, and sometimes don't even know where they are in the store.

    The problem with DSG is that it doesn't value its staff, it's the same across the whole group. I now buy most of my retail items from John Lewis, whose customer service, warrenty terms and just about everythin else,is in my experiance is a whole lot better.

    Oh and one other thing, PCWorld is used by many of my colleagues, not because it is good, or even cheap, but because it's across the road. They pretty much despise the service, but the I'll bet the Manager of the store has never bothered to check how many major IT companies have offices within 500 meters of his store (4), and upped his game to increase his sales, a rude and disinterested staff member who doesn't know where the components, Blank DVDs etc are.

    I go to Maplin or Rymans by the way, it's a few hundred meters further, but the staff are nicer.

  21. Anonymous Coward
    Gates Horns

    Re: PC World

    I don't work for PC world and haven't dealt with the repair people but the last few times I've visited with friends who have been buying hardware (monitors, pcs and printers) the sales staff have been excellent. Very unbiased and genuinely keen to sell the product that's right for the customer. I've normally kept quiet about my profession (IT bod) unless asked directly so I don't think it's been my presence that has resulted in the lack of bias.

    Before these visits I'd always assumed PC world would be the same as comet, etc, with their wishy-washy sales pitch. But I've been surprised each time. Shame some people slag them off because of a few isolated bad incidents. From my experience they've exceeded my expectations every time.

  22. Anonymous Coward
    Thumb Up

    A good move!

    These comments make me laugh. If you were one of teh biggest IT companies in the world looking for a channel partner for your consumer goods who would you sell through? Like it or not, DSGi own this market space, there really isn't much choice.

    As for this move diluting the Dell brand, it doesn't seem to have done HP, Toshiba or even Apple much harm even with PC World's Tech Guys handling "support". If you want a high-end or specialised Dell product running Linux then buy it online, I hear Dell are quite good at that. However, if you're an average consumer you probably wonder why you cant pick up a cheap Dell laptop in PC World when all of Dell's competitors have one on the shelf.

    This was a logical and inevitable move for Dell who are currently very keen to exploit the channel market.

  23. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Unfashionable praise

    To all the knockers who seem to get a kick out of being superior to the DELL / DSG support staff, if you're all so clever then how do you know what they are like? Don't give me the standard crap about a friend of a friend told me because it won't wash.

    These companies serve the consumer and they must be doing it more than just relatively well. When I need a consumer item that I can't knock together myself such as a printer I will go to PC City. I did the day before yesterday and the price was the same as any found on the internet from a place I would trust plus I didn't have to pay shipping and if anything does go wrong I know I can take it back and get a replacement no questions asked which I did yesterday. I don't blame PC City because I got a duff product, it happens from time to time. This would have been a major inconvenience if buying from other places.

    Nice to see Adams reply and a few other pro DSG/Dell comments but I fear they will fall on not so much deaf ears but ears that don't want to listen.

  24. Paul A. Walker

    @ Adam et al

    "Our stores have come on leaps and bounds over the last two years since we stopped paying commision to make sure that we offer impartial advice to customers."

    Bollocks - its more than 2 years since the old commission structure was changed - and it was changed, not scrapped. All that guff about service team bonuses and store bonuses so you have demotivated sales staff who feel they aren't rewarded for their job and service staff who feel pressured to be selling. I know, I was there.

    We weren't called Tech Guys when I worked there but we damn well had sales targets, especially when we were pushed to offer more expensive instant repairs when the shelves were empty of jobs anyway. All the best techs were eventually pushed out and replaced with cheaper part-timers anyway. Compare how many staff in a PCW are over 20 now than a few years ago.

  25. Mike Crawshaw
    Flame

    Mr Szostak...

    Firstly, I appreciate your taking the time to make comments here. That took guts.

    To take your last point....

    "I ask you to drop your prejudice and try one of our store to see the improvement for yoursleves. Pc World is the uk's number 1 Pc supplier and frankly unless you build yourself there is no-one in the retail sector who is better on service or price . . "

    Adam, I have. Over and over, during a period of over a decade. I have been in your shops. I have spoken to your staff. On every occasion, I have been disappointed / frustrated. Every. Single. Time.

    (Except once, when I ran in, grabbed a flash memory stick, went to the counter, clapped my hands over my ears and shouted "LALALALAAAA" while the till-monkey tried to sell me insurance costing more than the stick, paid (£4 more than Maplin for the same item, I found out later that day) and ran out as fast as my legs could carry me.)

    PC World IS the #1 PC supplier in the UK.

    * highest number of dedicated outlets (high visibility)

    * aggressive marketing indicating that prices are lower and support is better than it actually is

    * the British public is woefully ignorant regards pc technology.

    I accept that you have neither the time nor the money to train your staff - but that ain't my problem. I am not going to come to PC World to make my expensive purchases when I can get them cheaper elsewhere, with a better after-sales service. The only time I will set foot in your stores now (aside from hiding from the rain etc!) is if there is a specific item I need right now, and Maplin is shut. Or if I'm particularly bored and want to see staff squirm when I say - "nice laptop. Only £1,500? Yeah OK. But can I get XP with that?"

    ("There is no-one...who is better on service or price." Hehe. Good one.)

  26. paulc
    Linux

    Ubuntu pre-installed?

    so, when the dust settles and the boxes are in the shops (if they ever actually are in the shops), will I be able to walk in and drop my pennies on a laptop with Ubuntu pre-installed and actually walk out with it there and then???

  27. Matthew Macdonald-Wallace
    Stop

    /me works in IT providing support AND shops @ DSGi

    I'm reading this all with interest - I've been doing support jobs both face to face and over the phone for years. I've also been shopping at PC world because it's close and convienient when I need something "NOW".

    I have a real issue with going to PC World and if I could shop elsewhere, I would. About two months ago, I asked one of their staff for a desktop suitable for business use. He tried to sell me a Home Entertainment PC running Windows Vista Media Centre Edition (or what ever it's called).

    When I requested that I needed a Business Desktop running Windows XP Pro, I was led to a gaming machine with 4GB RAM and a Dual-Core 2.6GHz processor with 256MB Graphics card running Vista Ultimate.

    I had stated time and time again that all the Computer needed to do was run a standard office suite and browse the internet and I'm offered a box that has a greater spec than a number of our production servers!

    Sorry Adam et al that are in support of DSGi, the staff are at best amature and at worst incompetent. With pre-tax profits of £52.4m last year [0], isn't some of this money better spent on training staff instead of paying fat-cat's dividends? Surprisingly enough, if DSGi trained their staff, more of us would shop there and the profits would reach £100m in a very short space of time even if DSG reduced the prices of goods.

    DSGi do not provide good service and they are not "competitively priced" - I can get a lot of things that DSGi sell for cheaper at the Tesco Megastore next door, I just can't get a business desktop from there yet.

    /me wanders off to dell.co.uk - I'm going to shop on line to prove that it's the way forward... :oP

    Matt.

  28. Richard Harris
    IT Angle

    Online VS Instore

    How many people will go to PC World, have a look at the PC, and then order it off of the Dell website if they like the look of it? That's generally what I use the PC World showroom for.

  29. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Soapbox Derby

    PC World is just one of those hot topics at El Reg, along with Microsoft, Windows, Apple, Linux etc. Any PC World-related story immediately provokes a storm of comments saying how rubbish/great the store is. Unfortunately only a very few comment authors are really in a position to write authoritatively on the matter.

    The fact is, the sort of people who read tech journal web sites in the middle of the night are probably the sort of people who are far in advance of where PC World are pitching, in skill-level terms. PC World has a place in the market, it's just not for IT professionals, since IT professionals usually know somewhere to get a product that is better and/or cheaper.

    However, there are a lot of people in this world who don't understand how computers work. They want one in the same way they want a microwave: it's a device that fulfils a need. Trying to sell to commodity customers who are under the misapprehension that £500 is a lot to spend on a PC, and then trying to support them because they've done something ridiculous has to be a thankless task, as voiced quite succinctly by previous commenters above.

    My personal experience of the store is not bad. They don't really sell things that I want, or at prices I'm prepared to pay, but their staff have been willing (if not generally that able) to help. I've returned products there and been given refunds without issue.

    But all consumers have a choice. If you don't like the store, don't go. But you have to hold to your not-going even when your PC blows a power supply at 6pm on a Saturday and you have to work all weekend. What you going to do then without a retail chain?

  30. Mike Roantree

    Support at Dell vs Support at PC World

    As my boss insists on buying Dell machines for the office (Laptops, servers and Desktops) I have to admit the that quality of the machines are solid.

    I have never really had any reason to open up anything other than to add memory upgrades and the occasional wireless card for laptops so I have no reason to complain about the machines that Dell produce in fact I have been impressed by some for the solidity of some of the servers I have,

    PC world, again although its my final port of call if I need something, like if its a Sunday and I need something that cant wait etc they serve a purpose and are a reasonably easy route into computers for the uninitiated.

    My Experience of both PC world and Dell support have been exactly the opposite

    I remember arguing with a support person in my local PC that just because a laptop had built in wireless it wasnt a Centrino Laptop (the one in question was AMD based) to sending a question but the 'technician' was adamant that any laptop with wireless no matter what hardware was centrino based, and overhearing a guy at the helpdesk enquiring about a printer for an apple he had and being asked what version of windows it was running (This was prior to the Intel macs)

    I gave up with Dell support after asking whether the onboard NICs on some of my workstations would support PXE booting and the 'support' person responded with the statement that I didnt actually want PXE I wanted DHCP and had copied and pasted an explanation of what PXE was from whatis.com.

    My point is that until the manufacturers/retailers spend the time and resources to train the best resource they have (their staff) to a level that enables them to provide the service that I am sure they are capable of delivering and not just give em a silly name and hope that solves the image problem then these people are doomed to be looked at this way.

    Its not the support people I am sure its the lack of basic training that makes the customer facing support people a target for such derision.

    Dont even get me started on the asset tag obsessed receptionist at Dell support.

  31. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    @Matt

    Why didn't you go to the business section of the store? If you went in as a consumer and asked the floor staff for recommendations you will get what they are trained to sell at the time. This isn't anything new, all stores do it. WTF do you expect? The only criticsm you could constructively make would be that the floor staff didn't direct you to the business section. Also, along the lines of a previous comment I made, if your so clever as to know what you want then why do you need to ask for advice?

    We've had a few tiresome linux comments. Grow up won't you. Linux is not a consumer product, if you want linux so badly install it yourself, that's part of the fun/satisfaction. If that comment doesn't suit then instead of giving DELL/DSG hassle for not having what you want go somewhere that does but please STFU about linux, nobody has to stock something just because you want it..

  32. Anonymous Coward
    Paris Hilton

    I used to work for DSGi...

    I was one of the 100+ internal IT staff who was outsourced, so I'm very much aware of how much focus is given to profit, and nowt else.

    As a shopper, I've tried to avoid PCW/Currys as much as possible.

    I think Adam has missed the point. You put the customer first. Always. The problem goes far beyond the laughable "tech guys". It extends right down to basic shop management - in my local Currys/PCW it isn't uncommon for there to be no-one on the tills.

    Now come on Adam, are you telling me that your budget is so stretched that it cannot run to having someone at the till to take my money off me?

    You need to go back to running your store as a SHOP and not try to see it as a business. Your first job is to sell things, all else comes secondary, including you having time to post here!

  33. richard tanswell
    Thumb Down

    Sorry PC World employees!

    The whole point of a retail store is for it's associates to be able to provide the correct advice and guidance in order to secure a sale! If they wanted to just get goods in and out as quickly as possible with no fuss then they wouldn't be a retail outlet, they'd be an online store.

    Of course online stores work on even smaller margins, sometimes even 1% profit because they work on volume and have lower overheads.

    In a retail store, one of those "overheads" is staff which should also include training. You wouldn't just plomp someone on a checkout and tell them to get on with it because they are handling cash. So what's the difference with the sales floor staff...they are still handling cash in the form of physical goods so their care, attention and knowledge should be for the benefit of the customer. Not just some random crap made up to get the sale!

    The Tech Guys I would imagine is the most profitable part of the company, simply because most of it is labour based charging. I mean how can you warrant charging £150 for reinstalling Windows on a system which has a simple piece of malware which could easilly be removed by a tool!

    I work in IT and in my previous job supported the public. If I had a pound for every time I heard "PC World reinstalled or told me to reinstall Windows" to fix the simplest or problems (even System Restore would have fixed), I would no longer be working and would have my feet up on a sun lounger in the Caribean!

    Training is the key here. The fact that most PC World associates don't have basic knowledge and understanding of things like networking and the difference between memory (RAM) and disk space (one of their recent ads stated something like "it has a 500GB hard drive which should give you all the memory you need!"). Ok so technically it is a type of memory but it misleads the customer. When I tell someone their computer needs more memory they then ask if they should get an external hard drive or something!!

    Rant over, to summarise, PC World have a duty to provide training for their staff in order for them to be able to give informed and useful advice to their customer! Not spend that money on flashy glass entrances to their stores and decor....people really don't care about that!

  34. Richard Harris
    Coat

    Re Soapbox Derby

    >>However, there are a lot of people in this world who don't understand how computers work.

    Unfortunately, most of them got jobs as the Tech guys.

  35. philip jeffery
    Thumb Up

    I can't see a problem myself

    I can't see this being a problem myself.

    Dell want to sell their PC's in the high street as there is no growth in the online market, if you wanted to do this in the UK who would you make a deal with? Which company in the UK is the biggest high street PC company?

    Dells support may have been suitable for them, but don't you find it frustrating if you want it fixed but you have to wait 2 weeks to ship it back to them then get it sent back to you? With a PC World deal you can drop your PC off with them, if its a simple fix you may be able to get it resolved whilst you wait, or pick it up the next day.

    Dell aren't trying to get new customers into PC world, what they are trying to do is get the existing customers that go into PC world to buy Dells, by offering them.

    Don't get me wrong guys I don't like shopping at PC world, I'd probably never purchase a PC from them as I have had bad experiences in the past. But what I will do is drop into my local PC world in January and take a look at the Dell PC's then if I like it I'll buy it online.

  36. James Pickett

    Hmm..

    "For example I get realy anoyed by, the way our instore technicians get slated for being rubish...."

    QED

  37. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    @richard tanswell

    "The whole point of a retail store is for it's associates to be able to provide the correct advice and guidance in order to secure a sale!"

    Next time you're in Tesco's ask what is the sugar content of, for example, a McVitie's Digestive. If the staff don't know you can always go to Asda. Morrisons or wherever and maybe get more informed advice on which bicsuit to buy. You might think this is flippant but not for diabetics. Should the diabetic be self informed enough to make a proper decision or should store staff be sufficiently trained to give him/her advice.

  38. Matthew Macdonald-Wallace

    @ Chris W

    This was someone allegedly from their business department.

    Maybe he was training or something, but the fact is that if I ask for a business desktop, I expect a business desktop not a gaming rig in the same way that if I ask for a Microwave in other DGSi stores, I do not expect a top of the range gas oven with integrated hob and grill.

  39. Mike Crawshaw
    Stop

    @ AC, "Sugar Content of Bisciuts"

    I'm diabetic.

    I go into Tesco and pick up some biscuits, they are clearly and unambiguously labelled with sugar content on the packet. The information is factual. In the same way as, on a desktop pc, the (e.g.) RAM or HDD size is.

    I would not expect a Tesco employee to be able to answer "I am a diabetic, which digestive biscuits do you recommend?" for a number of (I hope) self-evident reasons.

    I would expect someone from whom I am potentially buying a £1,000+ piece of kit to be able to recommend one based on my stated requirements rather than just trying to flog me the one with the best set of flashing lights.

  40. Anonymous Coward
    Paris Hilton

    @Richard Tanswell...

    ....true. But when you are spending considerably more than a pound, you do have reason to believe that the staff are better informed than just shelf stackers.

    It's unfair to compare a medical necessity (as in sugar content, not as in biscuits) with a luxury purchase to justify sales staff not having a clue.

    The only reason why PC World stay in business is that they advertise to people who have even less knowledge than their sales staff. If the world was, as you'd like them to be, better informed, we'd all buy online.

  41. Anonymous Coward
    Stop

    Sexist?

    Slightly off topic, but im amazed to see that no one has complained that there's no tech gals. In the days of PC and sexual equality, how can they blatantly advertise single sex computer repair engineers.

  42. Kenneth

    I am one of the knuckle dragging apes that you talk about

    i think people are being short sighted on the sales people here. I am currently working in currys as a sales person and i hold a degree in computing , and currently working towards my comptia A+ exam. the reason i am working there as a sales person is it the only computing related job i could get into becuase my degree didn't offer enough experiance.

    anyway that aside that not every one in DSGI is trying to sell you more then you need Matthew Macdonald-Wallace many a time i have people walked into my shop and asked for a computer for £800 ish becuase that think that is the running price for them becuase the last one they purchased was pre 2000. But instead of sending them striahgt to the £800 machine me and my colleages will take out time to work out what the customers needs are and 7/10 times most people walk out the door with a 400 machine that is everything they need it for and change in there pocket. Also i spend a lot of my time training new members of staff on computer related issues. I have also answered questions on my days off when a fellow college phoned me at home and asked me a techie question that he had been asked by a customer .

    yes i can see where people's views on staff can come from. but its not as plain cut as people think . And seeing as how all the commision structure has changed and most people aren't getting anything more for their troubles then basic wage and pressure from higher up.

    tbh it swings both ways. customers can be as bad as the sales people selling to them , and the worst bit of my day is when people like most of the people on this board come in and treat me like a idiot before even speaking to me for more then a minute, though it is funny when the "uber" techie people come in ask questions to try and trip me up and i give them the answer and correct them becuase they are wrong.

    saying that i have one bad experiance in pcworld with a sales person telling me that you couldn't buy non wireless routers . to her credit when i told her other wise she appologised and said that she was new and was still getting up to speed.

  43. Anonymous Coward
    Thumb Up

    Great news

    I quite like Dell laptops. This means I can check them out in the stores before I decide to buy one with my exact spec.

  44. Andy

    to kenneth...

    "saying that i have one bad experiance in pcworld with a sales person telling me that you couldn't buy non wireless routers . to her credit when i told her other wise she appologised and said that she was new and was still getting up to speed."

    thats all well and good your quote, but what happens when its a normal punter that doesnt know otherwise. They would be sold something on incorrect details... if she didnt know the answer instead of blagging it find out!!!!

    i love pc world.... their staff give me something to laugh about on a boring day listening to the crap that spills from the "tech guys" mouths

  45. andy gibson
    Thumb Down

    Why I will NEVER trust PC World

    This is a perfect example. A "PC Line" brand USB cable for £14.99

    http://www.pcworld.co.uk/martprd/store/pcw_page.jsp?BV_SessionID=@@@@0443132973.1197636678@@@@&BV_EngineID=ccfgaddmkiemghjcflgceggdhhmdgmk.0&page=Product&fm=null&sm=null&tm=null&sku=451389&category_oid=-10280

    Hope you sleep well at night Adam Szostak knowing you rip off the public in such a disgusting way.

  46. Anthony Hulse

    How the mighty have fallen...

    So Dell, one time market leader and massive proponent of the direct sales model are now forced to crawl into bed with DSG. I could do the Apple fanboi thing and tell Mikey it's time to close the company etc.., but instead he should just run a mile. Really. A store-within-a-store concept at Tesco, HMV, or even Yo! Sushi would have been a better move.

    Anyone still unlucky enough to hold Dell stock, now is the time to sell. If this is the result of their new direction, it's only going to continue dropping in value.

  47. Richard
    Unhappy

    Heard it all before

    I used to work in the PC Clinic as a lead technician at PC World about 18 months ago - shortly before they moved over to being called the "Tech Guys".

    I can go as saying; there is nothing that my colleagues or I would not do in that place for our customers.

    The amount of hardware which we would be handed over to us for repairs, repairs which are caused by customers (spilling red wine over a laptop keyboard, the pen on the keyboard of a laptop and closing the lid) and not through simple hardware failure was enormous.

    In most cases, the customer expected us to repair their faulty item, at no cost to them, simply because they bought it from us. Technically, we should have simply said we couldn't do anything and turn the customer away, but we would try and see if we could resolve the issue first.

    We would go out of way to help our customers - We might be on a day off and we technicians would call each other up requesting extra information about one of our customers which we had been dealing with, as the customer wanted to ask some questions. The amount of times we would drive to the next store (about 15-20 miles round trip) on our day off or straight after a 10 hour shift to pick up a product because the customers one was faulty (on our day off out of our way). Its amazing how much behind the scenes work your average technician will go through to keep a customer happy.

    As to say that the Tech Guys don't know any thing, I myself have a degree in Computer Science, my colleagues had the same, were A+, MCSE certified......we certainly had the knowledge to resolve the issues handed to us.

    The only thing which did annoy us, were customers who thought they knew everything but knew nothing, trying to dictate to us on how to do our jobs and how to fix an issue, without realising they are not the most important person in the World and that there are other customers which need our time and help.

    So the next time you go into one of the stores and approach one of the tech guys (and gals) make sure you do it with a smile and do not storm up to that counter thinking you are the only person in the World.

  48. Anonymous Coward
    Boffin

    "great value"

    A 1.5 metre USB for £19.99 - with a big sign above it saying "great value"

    I rest my case

  49. richard tanswell
    Stop

    @ AC "Sugar Content of biscuits"

    True! a Tesco's employee wouldn't be trained to know that and they should therefore refuse to answer the question or tell the buyer to read the info on the packet! That is the manufacturer's responsibility (and a legal one I believe).

    My point was that the PC World employees will spout out some bullshit in order to get a sale, no matter if it's what the customer has actually asked. A Tesco's employee would not even entertain this idea!

    However, if the diabetic had suffered a relapse because of wrong information a Tesco's employee had given him, there would be a pending lawsuit and at the very least, he wouldn't go back to the store.

    With PC World, it's almost a monopoly, people are unaware of online options or do not know where to get advice on their PC so PCW is the only alternative! Again because of it's high visibility and misleading marketing claims!! And independent suppliers with the knowledge and ability to give decent advice and assistance firstly get crap margins from their distributors to work on and therefore can't compete and can't expand or go out of business because of companies like PC World telling everyone how cheap their stuff is!

  50. Anonymous Coward
    Heart

    @ Richard

    Sorry but the bulk of the people who staff my local branch really are muppets. I got a cheap Toshiba laptop deal in the summer, came with a memory upgrade, and it took the two blokes half an hour to rip the packaging apart, install the new memory without any static precautions, and then repack the box with the machine loose inside. Meanwhile their female colleague was trying to tell them a) that the packaging was designed to be re-usable (ignored - they ripped it up with a pen instead of folding it out), b) that they needed not to pile stuff up on top of the machine, and c) that she knew the model and could do it in no time if they would let her. She was rebuffed. At one point the younger bloke started trying to "explain" to her and me how the memory upgrade would work and I had to tell him that he was completely wrong on all counts while she just raised her eyebrows in resigned exasperation. This didn't seem to trouble him, he just carried on the conversation with his sidekick, who spent the whole time hovering about doing sod all. I then spent ten minutes going through a completely unnecessary rigmarole at the checkout and being offered a warranty which would already have been voided anyway by the way the upgrade had been done.

    Yes, it's just another piece of anecdotal evidence, but they do pile up you know. Nobody I know has a good word to say about service at our local branch of PC World (Edinburgh, Fort Kinnaird), and that means the problem is you, not your customers.

  51. Anonymous Coward
    Go

    The new Dell-boys

    With Dell sharing the PC sales mat, it will make for some interesting marketing conversations between DSG, OEM partners and their shared vendors i'm sure.

    PCW is what it is - a PC shop for gullible and trusting customers, not into IT, little patience/inclination to shop around. Enough are still prepared to pay through the nose for a poorly-specced PC and the silly service options (Need a ram upgrade fitted? That'll be 30 quid thanks!) to keep it going. It's not full of PC experts, regardless of the TV blurb, so don't expect it to be, especially for typical retail salaries!

  52. Anonymous Coward
    Happy

    Hmm

    Personally I rarely shop at PCW but I agree If I need something fast they can be useful, I am savvy enough to know what I need and judge if it’s a reasonable price. I think for hit like hard drives etc they can be very reasonable, for example I picked up a “Tech guys” Hitachi 500gb with no fancy retail box last week at a god price. When it comes to machines I always go Dell, only because they are cheap and easy. I never had an issue with their support, in fact the one time I had a problem the lady calling from India was really helpful and sorted it out dead fast.

    No, I don’t work for Dell or PCW but I think the one thing we can all agree on is we have those **** horrible PCW adverts on TV :p

  53. Beast
    Pirate

    Upgrade costs

    £30 you are behind the times my mate paid £14.99 for his laptop and that invloved remving the keyboard, well worth it in his opinion. Perhaps if you would be so kind when you take your car to the garage next you could tell me which one it is because they must service your car for free, because charging for a service is such a rip off isn't it, it really is criminal, so remember next time any of you are charged for a service call 999 and have the person charging you arrested for theft. PC World are not perfect but are all the companies you work for?

    Your levels of personal insults really are so tacky if you can not make your point without insulting people then please dont bother making your point at all.

    Not denying that the cables are a complete rip off, but so are Alienware PC's,Dells delivery prices, But the people who work for Dell dont deserve to be called all the names under sun just becuase they charge lot for delivery.

    How many of you would say this face to face to a PC World staff member in the street? And how many of you would like to be called the scum of the earth because of who you work for?

  54. Kevin Woodard
    IT Angle

    Ex-Employee Here

    I worked for PC World in 2004/2005 in the PC Clinic before it was rebranded. I found that the level of support given to our customers was excellent, and I always hate to see the PC World employees take so much flack.

    With PC World you have to take it at face value. If you wanted every member of staff to be a fully trained PC Tech with a couple of years experience it would raise the staff costs to such a point that the PCs would have to have a massive price hike. I found that the majority of staff always gave honest, correct advice, and everyone in the PC clinic worked their hardest to resole the problem as quickly as possible.

    I'm not sure about now, but all the computer warrenty repairs weren't actually handled insore, they were handled by another DSG company called PC Service Call. I know several PC Service call employees personally, and all of them are very good at their jobs.

    The main problem here is customers. The kind of person that buys a PC in PC World is the kind of person that turns up in the store 1 week after a purchase with a PC full of spyware and their scanner plugged into the ethernet port. Those customers get angry that their problem wont be solved free of charge, and then tell all their friends PC World is rubbish.

    As far as the stories here about people recommending the wrong PCs and giving bad advice, not all staff members are as good as others, but thats a problem thats assosicated with retail companies everywhere. I've worked in several independant computer shops in the past, and I found that your just as likely to get wrong advice there.

  55. Anonymous Coward
    Stop

    PCW & The Tech Guys

    I'm one of the Tech-Guys at the Nottingham Call Centre, and I'm a Tech-Gal really too

    Also, we do not, and never have used scripts!!

  56. W
    Boffin

    Guys

    "A guy" would infer that an individual is male.

    Like it or otherwise, "guys" is often used to address a grouping of both sexes.

    Especially informally, towards a younger group of people.

    Eg: "Hi guys, what would you like to order" at somewhere like Nando's/TGI Friday.

  57. Available Agent
    Unhappy

    Dell-inquents

    We've still not been briefed that we will support Dell Computers and I work for the Tech Guys in their Nottingham-based call centre. Many thanks to the Register for letting me know, I look forward to the single day of training that we might receive in these products. It will be a day more than we received about peripherals / PDAs / any of the Apple products available from the DSGi chain.

    If you were to call the Tech Guys, it is highly unlikely that the call agent you speak will have even touched a Dell computer. Any experience they have will be from the previous cockups they've made, there is always a first time they'll fix it....

  58. mike
    Thumb Up

    pcworld facts

    Pcworld staff are trained in the very basics as part of the sales team. such as RAM & CPU requirement for different tasks.

    like modern video editing software not being able to run on 64mb RAM and a pentium 1 processor. requiring upto 1024mb ram and pentium 4 processor.

    and having the ability to do maths like adding the ram requirement for the OS along with the always in background antivirus softwares ram requirement and then adding whatever else the customer wants to do.

    matching a computer to a customer is easy. because computers no longer come with lots of software they dont need to sort thought the aisles of computers to find one that has everything. just find one of the 5 pc's with enough ram CPU and HD to do the job.

    the techguys do not have any instore training really. its all based on experience and knowledge. yes the best way to describe them is computer hobbiests and not experts.

    if you want a true expert look in the yellow pages. techguys are pretty much there to book repair jobs for their external engineers. do the antivirus and msconfig checks which they call a healthcheck and then slot in ram and graphics cards.

    i would say unless the staff are paid a day off to train on new technologies everyweek then it is impossible for a retailer to have experts.

    their prices are not that bad tescos charge a £69.99 call out charge to setup a pc. so to many one man band shops.. pcworld charge £49.99. also to note others have a £70 for first hour then £35 for every 30 minutes their after.

    pcworld just have set charges no matter the time limit, a home healthcheck forinstance. i myself got tescos guys to do one at my house.. with the Antivirus software sifting through my 400gb HD of movies, photos and music took about 3 and a half hours. they informed me that it would cost £59.99 for first hour and then £30 for every half hour after that.. £180. pcworld was a fixed £69,99.

    tescos also have a wireless setup including wireless modem for £110. their modem is not the top of the range one but in comparison.

    pcworld have a low end wireless modem for £35 and a setup fee for £69.99 which is £104.99

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