|
Generally I don't like the rebranding. I believe it dilutes a
product's significance in the marketplace and, in the case of tech
products at least, decreases mind share among those who aren't
intimately familiar with the products.
That said, I work in IT. Which used to be MIS. Which was IS before
that and Data Processing before that.
So maybe IBM's rebranding efforts are just keeping pace with the rest
of the tech sector.
On Tue, Dec 11, 2012 at 8:44 PM, Trevor Perry <trevor@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Robert,
You seem to have fallen prey to some weird sense of time. It has been
(next month), FIVE years since the name change. In I.T., that is an
eternity - and way longer than a week.
And, we have seen charts supporting that through 2025:
http://ibmsystemsmag.blogs.com/you_and_i/2012/12/future-of-ibm-i-caac-
buz
z.
html
It's probably time to pack up that old and tired myth and send it to
the
AS/400 cave. While your clients use old branding, you don't need to.
If you say "IBM i" like it is the current branding, they will get
used to it.
If not, don't argue, just persist with the correct branding. You can
support the platform, even if they don't care to.
On 12/11/12 9:31 PM, "Robert Munday" <rwmunday@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
But with IBM changing the name as often as they have and do, how ishave
an independent rent-a-programmer like me supposed to keep up? I
still
clients who call it "the 400". They pay the bills so they are freethe
to call it anything they desire. I personally use "iSeries". My
most recent client uses the term "iSeries". If I were selling
software in
example you site, then I would need to know and use the "IBM Name OfThe
Week"... whatever that is this week. I personally don't know.including
Robert Munday
Munday Software Consultants
Montgomery, AL
-----Original Message-----
From: DrFranken <midrange@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Dec 11, 2012 6:29 PM
To: Midrange Systems Technical Discussion <midrange-l@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: Re: Software Vendors (And US too) - A small rant
I know of a company including several persons there personally
customerthe person who made the mistake. They were asked by a huge
potential customer what their systems ran on. The response:
"AS/400". The
toimmediately and finally closed discussions with: "Yeah well IBM
quit making those over a decade ago so you clearly don't have the
ability
backpedaling,support our needs with that." Game over. No explanations,
Oops.clarification, could help. The potential customer believed it was a
mindset. What does the company really use? IBM i 7.1 on POWER7.
for
Names matter.
- Larry "DrFranken" Bolhuis
On 12/11/2012 5:06 PM, Jim Oberholtzer wrote:
Note to software vendors: If you want me to consider your
software
notthe IBM i operating environment running on Power Systems, please
do
System/38.call it, iSeries, AS/400, System i, or my personal favorite
andClearly if you don't know the name of the system your working on
I cannot trust your software. Most of the vendors monitor this
list
if Idon't hand me the line: "That's what our customers call it....."
Don't
correct the customer but always use the correct terminology when
you are speaking and guess what, they will start using it too....
What brought this rant on? Three calls today from vendors asking
Geesh..would like to talk about their iSeries or AS/400 products.....
Now I'm starting to sound a bit like Trevor without the accent.....
I'll be quiet now.
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