Re. Getting new toys

Subject: Re. Getting new toys
From: Geoff Hart <geoff-h -at- MTL -dot- FERIC -dot- CA>
Date: Wed, 2 Aug 1995 14:55:14 LCL

Chris Hester asked for tips on how to persuade Management to upgrade
the publications group's computers. Here are a few ideas that worked
for me:

1. Think laterally: I got my state of the art <grin> 386-40 by showing
how upgrading a colleague's computer would save her time and money.
When she got the new computer, I inherited her old one. In your case,
can you justify getting any of your colleagues a P6 (due imminently)
so you can inherit their Pentium systems?

2. Demonstrate a cost savings. We got new Pentiums for two group
members by taking on a job that we formerly contracted out, and thus
saving enough money to pay for the new computers in a year. What does
your company contract out? Can you do it? Would you be willing to do
it?

3. "Fix" a broken part instead of upgrading the entire computer. I'm
not advocating pouring a cup of coffee down the back of your PC, but
sometimes it's cheaper to upgrade an entire PC and use the old one for
parts than it is to fix something that's broken. (Of course, if a cup
of coffee did happen to fall down the back of your PC due to seismic
instabilities, or if you happened to be working overtime during a
thunderstorm... <grin>)

4. Demonstrate a productivity gain. Do you do overtime because you're
waiting for your PC to compile an index, format a page, generate color
separations etc.? If so, figure out how many hours this takes. Walk
down the hall and borrow a programmer's Pentium over lunch, and time
the same task. Add up the numbers and see how many hours of overtime
you'd save, then convert this into salary dollars. Does this buy a new
computer? I got an upgrade once by launching an application while my
boss was in the room asking for some data stored in a file created by
that application; when he experienced how long it took to open the
file, he immediately approved my upgrade. (Of course, if you're not
suffering now, and everything runs adequately fast, why not wait a
little? See point 1 above: get P6's for your programmers!)

5. Propose a pilot project. I got my first Mac by bringing one in on
lease to demonstrate how it could do exactly the same job as a $10K
UNIX workstation; this moved us from Interleaf on a Sun to PageMaker
on a Mac, with no perceptible change in productivity. We ditched the
Sun and got everyone Macs. (Oh yeah... you can also do this as a
"lease to own", and hope that nobody notices until you've spent so
much on leasing that it would be embarrassing to send it back to the
lessor. But that would be unethical... <grin> Yes, for the curious, I
did do this once. I saved my employer much more money in one year than
I wasted in leasing, with better savings in subsequent years, all of
this money that couldn't have been saved otherwise, so it worked out
pretty well for both of us in the end.)

6. Wait for Windows 96. Rumor hath it that this beast won't run on
anything less than a Pentium anyway, so you'll have to upgrade! <grin
again, for the irony-impaired>

--Geoff Hart @8^{)}
geoff-h -at- mtl -dot- feric -dot- ca

Disclaimer: If I didn't commit it in print in one of
our reports, it don't represent FERIC's opinion.


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