What Happened To Dell? - YouTube

Channel: CNBC

[1]
Dell turns 35 this year and the company is bigger than ever.
[5]
Throughout its long history, Dell has transformed from a PC maker to a technology
[9]
conglomerate that brings in revenue of over $90 billion dollars a year.
[14]
But Dell's reputation may be stuck in the past.
[17]
The first thing I think of when I hear Dell is my old purple computer that I used to have.
[22]
That was a Dell.
[24]
I knew about Dell computers phone from when I was younger.
[27]
So, they are like the first brand of computers that I found out about.
[32]
A lot of friends used Dell computers.
[35]
I'm thinking quite reliable computers.
[37]
What do you think that Dell is up to today?
[39]
Do you know anything about what they're doing currently
[42]
I have no idea what Dell is currently doing with their life.
[45]
I don't think I know about any other stuff.
[48]
They don't only make computers, but they make other stuff.
[53]
Probably like, huh.
[55]
Like tablets.
[57]
Maybe one or two phones that I don't really know about.
[60]
Maybe vacuums?
[63]
When customers first hear the word Dell, they probably think PCs.
[67]
And it's a very interesting question because we actually believe branding and technology
[71]
is very important and that the best technology companies own a word in the customer's
[75]
mind. Google owns search, Intel owns microprocessor.
[78]
The fact that Dell was founded as a PC company means that that's probably still the first
[83]
thing that people think of.
[85]
Now, the company is not called Dell PCs, it's called Dell Technologies and Michael's
[89]
emphasize that it's a much different, much broader company today than it's been.
[94]
We want to introduce you tonight to the whiz kid.
[101]
A special young man in a hurry.
[104]
His name is Michael Dell and he is so smart and so energetic that he's done more in a
[109]
couple of years than most of us could even dream of doing in a lifetime.
[114]
The story of Dell begins in the dorm room of a 19-year-old premed freshman at the
[121]
University of Texas.
[123]
The year is 1984 and Michael Dell is working out of his dorm room making and selling
[128]
customized personal computers.
[130]
He has called his company PC's Limited.
[133]
That same year, Apple released the first Macintosh personal computer.
[137]
One of the things that set Dell apart originally was their ability to play with other big
[144]
companies in the tech world.
[146]
So Dell was, sort of, a more, I guess you could say, open source company in that it came
[151]
with sort of a Microsoft operating system and then various different semiconductor
[155]
companies inside.
[157]
So you could customize and personalize your PC in ways that you could not do, with say,
[163]
Apple's hardware, which has always been a more closed-source system.
[168]
Another thing that set PC's Limited Computers apart is that you could order them over the
[172]
phone. This allowed the company to keep inventory low and offer competitive prices.
[178]
Michael Dell never became a doctor.
[180]
He dropped out of college at the end of his freshman year to devote time to his growing
[184]
business. By 1985, PC's Limited came out with its first computer, the Turbo PC, which
[191]
sold for just under $800.
[192]
By comparison, the first personal Macintosh cost close to $2,500.
[199]
Three years later, PC's Limited changed its name to Dell Computer Corp and went public at
[204]
$8.50 per share.
[206]
At the time, Dell had a market capitalization of $85 millon.
[211]
Dell's stock price kept growing, and by 1992, Michael Dell became the youngest CEO on the
[216]
Fortune 500 list.
[219]
Then in 1996, Dell began selling PCs online.
[223]
The move helped the company overtake Compaq as the largest seller of PCs in the world in
[228]
2001.
[230]
In 2003, the company again changed its name to Dell Inc as it looked to expand beyond PCs
[235]
to a broader consumer electronics market.
[238]
Michael Dell literally made a name for himself with built-to-order personal computers.
[243]
But now, his company has lots of new names.
[245]
Flat panel TV maker, digital music player manufacturer, printer builder, server seller.
[251]
What's next?
[252]
Consumer electronics powerhouse?
[254]
I would buy Dell and I would just hold it.
[257]
They have the most amazing business model I've ever seen.
[261]
But Dell's hot streak didn't last forever.
[264]
By 2013, demand for personal computers was stalling thanks to the rising popularity of
[268]
tablets and smartphones.
[270]
This is a declining business.
[272]
They sell PCs.
[274]
Over 70 percent of their revenue are PCs, notebooks, or PC-related peripherals.
[280]
Over 70 percent?
[281]
Over 70 percent, we estimate.
[283]
In the last decade, Dell stock is down, I believe, something like 80 percent.
[287]
50 percent.
[288]
50 percent.
[289]
S&P is up 80 percent.
[290]
The computer hardware index is up 200 percent.
[292]
If Dell was going to survive, it needed to change up its strategy.
[296]
The company went private in 2013.
[298]
We had started a transformation in 2008 beginning to transition from being a traditional
[305]
hardware provider to being a full-fledged solutions provider.
[309]
And by the time we got to 2013, the market and the perceptions of the tech industry were
[315]
changing. Certainly there was a mantra that the PC was dead and that the cloud was going
[320]
to be where data center workloads were going to be conducted.
[323]
And we're at a point where we needed to transform the company , fix a few things along
[329]
the way, and continue that transformation from being a traditional hardware provider to
[333]
being an end-to-end solutions provider for our customer.
[337]
When Dell went private, they made a few changes.
[340]
They invested more in research and development.
[342]
They invested in sales and service, and they made acquisitions, in particular, the very
[346]
large acquisition of EMC, which brought with it VMware, which is turning out to be very
[351]
important in the new cloud era.
[352]
Basically what VMware does is it's a virtualization company.
[356]
So say back in the 90s, your desktop was your desktop.
[360]
In other words, you owned a PC, you put things on your desktop, they lived on the hard
[364]
drive on that desktop.
[365]
That's not the case anymore.
[367]
You can log into your desktop on the cloud in a number of different ways.
[371]
Your phone.
[371]
Your computer.
[372]
Well that virtualization, the virtual desktop, that's the type of software that VMware
[377]
makes.
[381]
In 2018, Michael Dell announced his company was considering a number of strategic options
[385]
to give its private shareholders a way to monetize their investment.
[389]
He ultimately decided on becoming a public company through an unusual maneuver:
[392]
exchanging Dell's private shares for a publicly traded tracking stock it owned as a
[397]
result of the EMC deal.
[399]
Dell has become very much a sort of full end-to-end technology company and that was one of
[406]
the reasons that Dell very recently decided they want to get back into the public markets
[412]
because they felt like there was an investor appetite particularly among the large,
[418]
hedge-fundy, institutional investors in owning a really broad-based, large , technology
[424]
company. Because frankly, there just aren't that many more of those.
[427]
Dell was about a $20-$25 billion dollar company until it made a huge transaction buying
[433]
EMC. That deal was about a $60 billion deal, still the largest tech transaction to date.
[440]
And it made Dell a much larger company.
[443]
Today Dell has revenue of more than $90 billion per year.
[449]
But along with this injection of new revenue, came debt.
[452]
Around the time that Dell announced it was going public again, the company had over $50
[456]
billion in debt, in large part thanks to its pricey acquisition of EMC.
[462]
And despite all of its investments in data storage, Dell's latest SEC filing shows thst
[467]
the largest chunk of its revenue, about 47.7
[470]
percent, came from the Client Solutions Group.
[473]
This includes things like desktop PCs, notebooks, monitors, and some software products.
[477]
About 40.5
[478]
percent, the second largest revenue, came from Dell's Infrastructure Solutions Group,
[484]
which includes storage, servers, data protection, and networking.
[488]
VMware made up about 10 percent of revenue, and the rest, 1.8
[492]
percent, was from Dell's other businesses.
[494]
Dell's biggest earner today is definitely hardware.
[497]
Now VM ware they own 80 percent of and that's a very significant earner today.
[501]
It's the highest margin business.
[503]
But in terms of dollars, it would be the hardware businesses.
[505]
Dell's main focus really isn't the consumer anymore.
[508]
It's very much enterprise software and hardware.
[512]
In other words, Dell is selling to businesses so they're selling not only PCs to
[516]
businesses and monitors and printers on the hardware side, but they're also selling
[520]
software packages, and they're selling servers, and they're selling networking, and
[524]
they're selling storage for data centers.
[527]
Last year, we added more than $11 billion in revenue.
[530]
So that was some additional industry consolidation there for you.
[535]
Look, I think, customers have told us very clearly they don't want to be systems
[541]
integrators anymore and they're looking for fewer partners and bringing together a broad
[548]
set of capabilities across the infrastructure.
[551]
Security, client devices, the cloud, digital transformation, enabling all
[559]
those capabilities for customers.
[561]
They'd much rather work with one leading company than 20 or 30 smaller ones.
[566]
In 2018, Dell EMC tied with HP as the top server manufacturer in the United States.
[572]
Each held 16 percent of a cloud server market that was estimated to be worth $86 billion
[578]
dollars.
[579]
From a cloud services standpoint, their main competitors in the VM ware world are gonna be
[585]
companies like Microsoft, and Salesforce, and Workday, and other large cloud software
[591]
companies. From the enterprise hardware standpoint, it's going to be Cisco, and Juniper,
[596]
and Ericsson, and Oracle.
[597]
And from the consumer PC and printers standpoint, it will be HP, and Lenovo, and Apple.
[603]
But it's hard for me to come up with a company these days that really competes against
[608]
Dell on all cylinders because Dell is such a diversified tech company.
[613]
Some of the challenges Dell has going forward include size of the company.
[616]
Just managing a company of that size is very difficult.
[620]
The company aside from VMware is largely an on-premise company, meaning they're selling
[625]
to traditional data centers.
[626]
They are not selling to Amazon and Microsoft Azure in the cloud.
[630]
That business over time potentially could decline.
[633]
A third risk would be the debt load.
[635]
You generally don't like to see a lot of debt on technology companies because there's a
[638]
lot of operating risk so you don't want to layer on too much financial risk.
[642]
I think it's very manageable under normal circumstances but if the economy goes into
[646]
recession and they start to have some trouble paying back the debt investors are going to
[650]
be concerned.
[653]
But through its ups and downs, there's always been one investor that's been willing to
[657]
back Dell.
[658]
I think having a long-term perspective and long-term time horizon with which no one
[665]
approaches the development of a company could be very helpful.
[669]
And, you know, last year we had over $91 billion dollars in revenues.
[673]
I started the company with $1,000 in my dorm room and it's worked out pretty well.
[679]
So, I'm you know, the ultimate long-term investor.
[682]
As we think about the competitive landscape going forward, we think we have a very
[686]
differentiated set of assets in the marketplace.
[689]
We have the largest direct sales force in the marketplace.
[692]
We have a unmatched global services organization.
[694]
We have an at-scale advantage supply chain.
[698]
We have a global financing arm to help our customers.
[701]
We think this seven strategically-aligned businesses, the distinct collection of assets
[706]
that the company has puts, us in a very unique position to help our customers with
[710]
digital transformation from the edge, to the core, to the cloud in a very, very different
[716]
way.