Tell me about how HP deal registrations work
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OK, so if you don't get advice of a VAR, what do you get from them? Where is the "Value Added" bit?
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@Carnival-Boy said:
OK, so if you don't get advice of a VAR, what do you get from them? Where is the "Value Added" bit?
Advice and confirmation that the parts you asked for all all correct for the need is the point of a VAR.
If oyu are not doing that, then you are just wasting everyone's time and money. Just guy buy your shit from random Ebay seller 42.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
Adding a MSP or ITSP to the pile - how does this not add even more cost? I suppose you could say that because the MSP brings so much volume to the VAR, the VAR gives better pricing to the MSP than I could get direct.. and that savings is what pays the MSP. I suppose that could be true with an MSP, because they are selling you the hardware themselves. But the ITSP, the customer is paying you to manage that, at your hourly rate, which seems so more likely to be more than the savings difference between what I can get for a product and what the MSP can get it at. Granted I'm getting the MSP rate directly, but I'm paying you to manage that relationship/quote building, etc - that requires a fair amount of time, aka costs in billable hours, no?
Correct, but someone has to do that. Whether you or the MSP.... the difference is if you are using an ITSP/MSP as I recommend in a small environment, none of that comes up because it is far less work to have them do everything than to have any handoffs back and forth. Assuming that the MSP has to determine what to buy, how to get it, install it, etc. the cost of them doing the VAR management is offset by the savings in the efficiency of the entire system end to end - it would easily reduce the total time spent by the MSP. Plus, larger MSPs would have lower cost staff to do that, not engineers.
You're assuming the MSP's rates would be lower for this type of work because they hand it off to a lower paid employee? I've never seen that happen before. Granted, I have seen tiered support, Fake numbers ahead Windows desktop = $125/hr Windows servers = $150/hr Linux servers = $200/hr Exchange = $250/hr Firewall 1 = $500/hr, etc
So the question is, will it cost less paying the MSP $125/hr to do your VAR management than what you can do it for in-house?
Now remember, we're talking about SMBs here. Average pay is $40-80K On the low end that's about two hours of the internal employee's time, high end, just over an hour.
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@JaredBusch said:
@Carnival-Boy said:
OK, so if you don't get advice of a VAR, what do you get from them? Where is the "Value Added" bit?
Advice and confirmation that the parts you asked for all all correct for the need is the point of a VAR.
If oyu are not doing that, then you are just wasting everyone's time and money. Just guy buy your shit from random Ebay seller 42.
Advice? I Thought Scott's being saying for years that the advice should come from paid professionals? Now if you're talking about advice within say the RAID controllers themselves on a specific server chassis, well maybe, but even then, other than compatibility within the parts list, I don't expect to much if any advice.
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@Carnival-Boy said:
OK, so if you don't get advice of a VAR, what do you get from them? Where is the "Value Added" bit?
I don't get advice on what to buy. I never go to my VAR and say "what do I do?" It's micro advice, not macro advice. All within the scope of the sale.
VARs help us to decide which options go together or might offer a sale item that we didn't know would have a lower price or help us figure out if something will ship earlier than something else. Advice "within the scope of the sale." Never advice outside of the scope.
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@Dashrender said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
Adding a MSP or ITSP to the pile - how does this not add even more cost? I suppose you could say that because the MSP brings so much volume to the VAR, the VAR gives better pricing to the MSP than I could get direct.. and that savings is what pays the MSP. I suppose that could be true with an MSP, because they are selling you the hardware themselves. But the ITSP, the customer is paying you to manage that, at your hourly rate, which seems so more likely to be more than the savings difference between what I can get for a product and what the MSP can get it at. Granted I'm getting the MSP rate directly, but I'm paying you to manage that relationship/quote building, etc - that requires a fair amount of time, aka costs in billable hours, no?
Correct, but someone has to do that. Whether you or the MSP.... the difference is if you are using an ITSP/MSP as I recommend in a small environment, none of that comes up because it is far less work to have them do everything than to have any handoffs back and forth. Assuming that the MSP has to determine what to buy, how to get it, install it, etc. the cost of them doing the VAR management is offset by the savings in the efficiency of the entire system end to end - it would easily reduce the total time spent by the MSP. Plus, larger MSPs would have lower cost staff to do that, not engineers.
You're assuming the MSP's rates would be lower for this type of work because they hand it off to a lower paid employee? I've never seen that happen before. Granted, I have seen tiered support, Fake numbers ahead Windows desktop = $125/hr Windows servers = $150/hr Linux servers = $200/hr Exchange = $250/hr Firewall 1 = $500/hr, etc
So the question is, will it cost less paying the MSP $125/hr to do your VAR management than what you can do it for in-house?
Now remember, we're talking about SMBs here. Average pay is $40-80K On the low end that's about two hours of the internal employee's time, high end, just over an hour.
You are looking at it from a "pay by the hour" perspective rather than a full support agreement. Pricing gets complex but granular when you leverage the whole MSP rather than just hiring a tech by the hour for you to direct.
You can absolutely be taking advantage of those pricing advantages.
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@Dashrender said:
@JaredBusch said:
@Carnival-Boy said:
OK, so if you don't get advice of a VAR, what do you get from them? Where is the "Value Added" bit?
Advice and confirmation that the parts you asked for all all correct for the need is the point of a VAR.
If oyu are not doing that, then you are just wasting everyone's time and money. Just guy buy your shit from random Ebay seller 42.
Advice? I Thought Scott's being saying for years that the advice should come from paid professionals? Now if you're talking about advice within say the RAID controllers themselves on a specific server chassis, well maybe, but even then, other than compatibility within the parts list, I don't expect to much if any advice.
No, you missed the point here. When you send a VAR a list of hardware, the need for advice on what you need for project X is already over.
You are getting advice that the parts you are asking for are all correct and that you did not make a mistake by buying the wrong HP iLO license.
Thew VAR should know this information because you have always worked with them as a partner. So they should know when you send in the RFQ with the wrong shit that it will be a phone call back to you to confirm instead of just dumping out a quote.
This is why you had the wrong thing like 2-3 times. You treat the VAR as a reseller and only ever tell them what to order. So the VAR never bothers to care about your stuff and did not check that you ordered the wrong thing.
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@JaredBusch said:
@Dashrender said:
@JaredBusch said:
@Carnival-Boy said:
OK, so if you don't get advice of a VAR, what do you get from them? Where is the "Value Added" bit?
Advice and confirmation that the parts you asked for all all correct for the need is the point of a VAR.
If oyu are not doing that, then you are just wasting everyone's time and money. Just guy buy your shit from random Ebay seller 42.
Advice? I Thought Scott's being saying for years that the advice should come from paid professionals? Now if you're talking about advice within say the RAID controllers themselves on a specific server chassis, well maybe, but even then, other than compatibility within the parts list, I don't expect to much if any advice.
No, you missed the point here. When you send a VAR a list of hardware, the need for advice on what you need for project X is already over.
You are getting advice that the parts you are asking for are all correct and that you did not make a mistake by buying the wrong HP iLO license.
Thew VAR should know this information because you have always worked with them as a partner. So they should know when you send in the RFQ with the wrong shit that it will be a phone call back to you to confirm instead of just dumping out a quote.
This is why you had the wrong thing like 2-3 times. You treat the VAR as a reseller and only ever tell them what to order. So the VAR never bothers to care about your stuff and did not check that you ordered the wrong thing.
This^^^^
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@JaredBusch said:
You are getting advice that the parts you are asking for are all correct and that you did not make a mistake by buying the wrong HP iLO license.
And also advice on things only a VAR would know...
A common example is "that desktop is $500 and available normally. But we see this other one in a warehouse around the corner for $550, you could have it today." That's valuable info. We can decide it $50 to get something slightly better sooner makes sense.
Or they might know that the drive we want it a month out, but this other drive that is a little smaller is available now.
Logistics are a huge part of VAR value.
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@JaredBusch said:
@Dashrender said:
@JaredBusch said:
@Carnival-Boy said:
OK, so if you don't get advice of a VAR, what do you get from them? Where is the "Value Added" bit?
Advice and confirmation that the parts you asked for all all correct for the need is the point of a VAR.
If oyu are not doing that, then you are just wasting everyone's time and money. Just guy buy your shit from random Ebay seller 42.
Advice? I Thought Scott's being saying for years that the advice should come from paid professionals? Now if you're talking about advice within say the RAID controllers themselves on a specific server chassis, well maybe, but even then, other than compatibility within the parts list, I don't expect to much if any advice.
No, you missed the point here. When you send a VAR a list of hardware, the need for advice on what you need for project X is already over.
You are getting advice that the parts you are asking for are all correct and that you did not make a mistake by buying the wrong HP iLO license.
Thew VAR should know this information because you have always worked with them as a partner. So they should know when you send in the RFQ with the wrong shit that it will be a phone call back to you to confirm instead of just dumping out a quote.
This is why you had the wrong thing like 2-3 times. You treat the VAR as a reseller and only ever tell them what to order. So the VAR never bothers to care about your stuff and did not check that you ordered the wrong thing.
Two huge problems with this.
- did you see this
other than compatibility within the parts list,
So I covered the call back portion of your argument already.
- in the stated case bout the iLo - I actually put in a RFQ as it were providing my server model and serial number for the first request. Only after that purchase was wrong did I do my own additional research, which also wound up being wrong, finally reaching out to HP directly and after 2+ hours on the phone with them... finding the right part number.
So I did the right thing in the first place - I treated them like a VAR - gave them the scope and they unfortunately came back with the wrong stuff - fine that happens, and it's the first time with this VAR, so I'm not that upset and I will continue to use them..
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@Dashrender said:
@JaredBusch said:
@Dashrender said:
@JaredBusch said:
@Carnival-Boy said:
OK, so if you don't get advice of a VAR, what do you get from them? Where is the "Value Added" bit?
Advice and confirmation that the parts you asked for all all correct for the need is the point of a VAR.
If oyu are not doing that, then you are just wasting everyone's time and money. Just guy buy your shit from random Ebay seller 42.
Advice? I Thought Scott's being saying for years that the advice should come from paid professionals? Now if you're talking about advice within say the RAID controllers themselves on a specific server chassis, well maybe, but even then, other than compatibility within the parts list, I don't expect to much if any advice.
No, you missed the point here. When you send a VAR a list of hardware, the need for advice on what you need for project X is already over.
You are getting advice that the parts you are asking for are all correct and that you did not make a mistake by buying the wrong HP iLO license.
Thew VAR should know this information because you have always worked with them as a partner. So they should know when you send in the RFQ with the wrong shit that it will be a phone call back to you to confirm instead of just dumping out a quote.
This is why you had the wrong thing like 2-3 times. You treat the VAR as a reseller and only ever tell them what to order. So the VAR never bothers to care about your stuff and did not check that you ordered the wrong thing.
Two huge problems with this.
- did you see this
other than compatibility within the parts list,
So I covered the call back portion of your argument already.
- in the stated case bout the iLo - I actually put in a RFQ as it were providing my server model and serial number for the first request. Only after that purchase was wrong did I do my own additional research, which also wound up being wrong, finally reaching out to HP directly and after 2+ hours on the phone with them... finding the right part number.
So I did the right thing in the first place - I treated them like a VAR - gave them the scope and they unfortunately came back with the wrong stuff - fine that happens, and it's the first time with this VAR, so I'm not that upset and I will continue to use them..
But have you traditionally used this VAR as a VAR and not a reseller? From your prior posts, I insinuated that you have not.
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@scottalanmiller said:
And also advice on things only a VAR would know...
A common example is "that desktop is $500 and available normally. But we see this other one in a warehouse around the corner for $550, you could have it today." That's valuable info. We can decide it $50 to get something slightly better sooner makes sense.
Or they might know that the drive we want it a month out, but this other drive that is a little smaller is available now.
Logistics are a huge part of VAR value.
I expect decent VARs to provide that service regardless of whether I buy from them exclusively or use two or three VARs.
I suspect Dashrender's issue to be because he used a crap VAR, not because he wasn't monogamous.
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@Dashrender said:
@JaredBusch said:
@Dashrender said:
@JaredBusch said:
@Carnival-Boy said:
OK, so if you don't get advice of a VAR, what do you get from them? Where is the "Value Added" bit?
Advice and confirmation that the parts you asked for all all correct for the need is the point of a VAR.
If oyu are not doing that, then you are just wasting everyone's time and money. Just guy buy your shit from random Ebay seller 42.
Advice? I Thought Scott's being saying for years that the advice should come from paid professionals? Now if you're talking about advice within say the RAID controllers themselves on a specific server chassis, well maybe, but even then, other than compatibility within the parts list, I don't expect to much if any advice.
No, you missed the point here. When you send a VAR a list of hardware, the need for advice on what you need for project X is already over.
You are getting advice that the parts you are asking for are all correct and that you did not make a mistake by buying the wrong HP iLO license.
Thew VAR should know this information because you have always worked with them as a partner. So they should know when you send in the RFQ with the wrong shit that it will be a phone call back to you to confirm instead of just dumping out a quote.
This is why you had the wrong thing like 2-3 times. You treat the VAR as a reseller and only ever tell them what to order. So the VAR never bothers to care about your stuff and did not check that you ordered the wrong thing.
Two huge problems with this.
- did you see this
other than compatibility within the parts list,
So I covered the call back portion of your argument already.
- in the stated case bout the iLo - I actually put in a RFQ as it were providing my server model and serial number for the first request. Only after that purchase was wrong did I do my own additional research, which also wound up being wrong, finally reaching out to HP directly and after 2+ hours on the phone with them... finding the right part number.
So I did the right thing in the first place - I treated them like a VAR - gave them the scope and they unfortunately came back with the wrong stuff - fine that happens, and it's the first time with this VAR, so I'm not that upset and I will continue to use them..
That's why I mentioned "within reason" in one of the earlier posts. Everyone makes mistakes, that's going to happen. VARs have a tough job, as does all of IT, in that they are constantly facing new products and changes and expect to know everything and if they don't see a certain request often, they might not be that experienced with it. Or they can just make a mistake. How they handle the mistake is, to me, far more important than that they made it.
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@Carnival-Boy said:
@scottalanmiller said:
And also advice on things only a VAR would know...
A common example is "that desktop is $500 and available normally. But we see this other one in a warehouse around the corner for $550, you could have it today." That's valuable info. We can decide it $50 to get something slightly better sooner makes sense.
Or they might know that the drive we want it a month out, but this other drive that is a little smaller is available now.
Logistics are a huge part of VAR value.
I expect decent VARs to provide that service regardless of whether I buy from them exclusively or use two or three VARs.
They might or they might not. If you are looking for the lowest price they are likely to look to get out with doing the least work. Their service level doesn't consistently mean that they will get your business, having a low price does, and their ability to keep the price low requires them to do as little work as possible. Price shopping is how you tell them to skimp on services and research and focus on keeping the price down.
Our VARs know our locations, out affinity for getting things in person, the vendors that we like to work with, that they can have direct conversations with management, engineering, whoever is needed, etc. The relationship and the knowledge that good service will not result in price shopping allow that to happen.
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At which point did I say that service wasn't important? I don't buy on price alone, but neither do I buy on service alone. As I said above, the two aren't mutually exclusive - but you seem to be implying that they are.
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@JaredBusch said:
@Dashrender said:
@JaredBusch said:
@Dashrender said:
@JaredBusch said:
@Carnival-Boy said:
OK, so if you don't get advice of a VAR, what do you get from them? Where is the "Value Added" bit?
Advice and confirmation that the parts you asked for all all correct for the need is the point of a VAR.
If oyu are not doing that, then you are just wasting everyone's time and money. Just guy buy your shit from random Ebay seller 42.
Advice? I Thought Scott's being saying for years that the advice should come from paid professionals? Now if you're talking about advice within say the RAID controllers themselves on a specific server chassis, well maybe, but even then, other than compatibility within the parts list, I don't expect to much if any advice.
No, you missed the point here. When you send a VAR a list of hardware, the need for advice on what you need for project X is already over.
You are getting advice that the parts you are asking for are all correct and that you did not make a mistake by buying the wrong HP iLO license.
Thew VAR should know this information because you have always worked with them as a partner. So they should know when you send in the RFQ with the wrong shit that it will be a phone call back to you to confirm instead of just dumping out a quote.
This is why you had the wrong thing like 2-3 times. You treat the VAR as a reseller and only ever tell them what to order. So the VAR never bothers to care about your stuff and did not check that you ordered the wrong thing.
Two huge problems with this.
- did you see this
other than compatibility within the parts list,
So I covered the call back portion of your argument already.
- in the stated case bout the iLo - I actually put in a RFQ as it were providing my server model and serial number for the first request. Only after that purchase was wrong did I do my own additional research, which also wound up being wrong, finally reaching out to HP directly and after 2+ hours on the phone with them... finding the right part number.
So I did the right thing in the first place - I treated them like a VAR - gave them the scope and they unfortunately came back with the wrong stuff - fine that happens, and it's the first time with this VAR, so I'm not that upset and I will continue to use them..
But have you traditionally used this VAR as a VAR and not a reseller? From your prior posts, I insinuated that you have not.
Let me see - what have I bought from them?
around 30 Laptops in one big purchase 2 years ago (start of relationship)
approx 6 desktops since then
iLo license
and a smallish item every other month or so since then.My additional purchases from others have been, blank DVDs, USB memory sticks and replacement batteries from an ebay seller.
So frankly I'm not sure how to answer your question. I suppose perhaps I treated them as a VAR when I bought the laptops, but beyond that, there really hasn't been a huge need - When I ordered the desktops - it was less a quoting situation and more a ordering one, because I knew what I wanted. The one part they needed to confirm was that that monitors supported DisplayPort natively, so they found suitable monitors.
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@Carnival-Boy said:
At which point did I say that service wasn't important? I don't buy on price alone, but neither do I buy on service alone. As I said above, the two aren't mutually exclusive - but you seem to be implying that they are.
I'm saying that shopping around and good service are exclusive. Not that price and service are not. How are you shopping around if not based on price?
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@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
@JaredBusch said:
@Dashrender said:
@JaredBusch said:
@Carnival-Boy said:
OK, so if you don't get advice of a VAR, what do you get from them? Where is the "Value Added" bit?
Advice and confirmation that the parts you asked for all all correct for the need is the point of a VAR.
If oyu are not doing that, then you are just wasting everyone's time and money. Just guy buy your shit from random Ebay seller 42.
Advice? I Thought Scott's being saying for years that the advice should come from paid professionals? Now if you're talking about advice within say the RAID controllers themselves on a specific server chassis, well maybe, but even then, other than compatibility within the parts list, I don't expect to much if any advice.
No, you missed the point here. When you send a VAR a list of hardware, the need for advice on what you need for project X is already over.
You are getting advice that the parts you are asking for are all correct and that you did not make a mistake by buying the wrong HP iLO license.
Thew VAR should know this information because you have always worked with them as a partner. So they should know when you send in the RFQ with the wrong shit that it will be a phone call back to you to confirm instead of just dumping out a quote.
This is why you had the wrong thing like 2-3 times. You treat the VAR as a reseller and only ever tell them what to order. So the VAR never bothers to care about your stuff and did not check that you ordered the wrong thing.
Two huge problems with this.
- did you see this
other than compatibility within the parts list,
So I covered the call back portion of your argument already.
- in the stated case bout the iLo - I actually put in a RFQ as it were providing my server model and serial number for the first request. Only after that purchase was wrong did I do my own additional research, which also wound up being wrong, finally reaching out to HP directly and after 2+ hours on the phone with them... finding the right part number.
So I did the right thing in the first place - I treated them like a VAR - gave them the scope and they unfortunately came back with the wrong stuff - fine that happens, and it's the first time with this VAR, so I'm not that upset and I will continue to use them..
That's why I mentioned "within reason" in one of the earlier posts. Everyone makes mistakes, that's going to happen. VARs have a tough job, as does all of IT, in that they are constantly facing new products and changes and expect to know everything and if they don't see a certain request often, they might not be that experienced with it. Or they can just make a mistake. How they handle the mistake is, to me, far more important than that they made it.
Yep, in this case, the VAR did manage to RMA one of the incorrect purchase, I'm still waiting to hear about the second one. Because because of the nature of these licenses, I'm guessing the VAR will end up just eating it. If they can't refund the second one, I will not fight it and I will eat it, not happily, but not upset either.
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@Carnival-Boy said:
At which point did I say that service wasn't important? I don't buy on price alone, but neither do I buy on service alone. As I said above, the two aren't mutually exclusive - but you seem to be implying that they are.
Shopping around, the only thing the vendors can compare is the price - they can't realistically compare their services.. so in their mind.. the only thing you appear to care about is price. This point I do understand where Scott and others are coming from.
I don't shop around for the sake of shopping around. I was with CDW for over 6 years. I left them mainly because they moved my sales person to another team and gave me a new one.. I was already not super happy with their pricing, but I stayed for my sales guy. Once he was gone.. so was I.
As you can see from my previous post, I don't buy a lot. So I know my business isn't worth much effort to any VAR.
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@Dashrender said:
@Carnival-Boy said:
At which point did I say that service wasn't important? I don't buy on price alone, but neither do I buy on service alone. As I said above, the two aren't mutually exclusive - but you seem to be implying that they are.
Shopping around, the only thing the vendors can compare is the price - they can't realistically compare their services.. so in their mind.. the only thing you appear to care about is price. This point I do understand where Scott and others are coming from.
I don't shop around for the sake of shopping around. I was with CDW for over 6 years. I left them mainly because they moved my sales person to another team and gave me a new one.. I was already not super happy with their pricing, but I stayed for my sales guy. Once he was gone.. so was I.
As you can see from my previous post, I don't buy a lot. So I know my business isn't worth much effort to any VAR.
Your VAR should care. They should know that you are a decent sized small business with multiple locations and will have an always ongoing need for new desktop computers. Even if you jumped to the VAR mid cycle, they should have learned about you and know that in 3-5 years you will be buying new hardware again.