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Dell boosts Canadian workforce despite falling profits

Dell boosts Canadian workforce despite falling profits

By:  Nestor E Arellano  On: 04 Jun 2006 For: IT World Canada Creator

Slump in profit margins is not keeping Dell Inc. from ramping up hiring at its call centre facilities in Ottawa and Edmonton. But industry analysts say the Round Rock, Texas-based computer company should concentrate on cutting costs and revamping its core offerings.

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Slump in profit margins is not keeping Dell Inc. from ramping up hiring at its call centre facilities in Ottawa and Edmonton.

But industry analysts say the Round Rock, Texas-based computer company should concentrate on cutting costs and revamping its core offerings.

Susan Sheskey, vice-president and chief information officer for Dell, said the company would be recruiting as many as 1,000 new employees for the Ottawa centre and would hire several hundred more workers at the Edmonton facility by fall this year.

Michael Jaillet, the site director for Dell's Ottawa site said the new hires would increase the workforce to about 1,400 employees in the country's capital. The Edmonton site would eventually have about 1,200 employees by the end of 2006, she said.

The new hires would include customer service and sales personnel as well as technical support worker, Jaillet said.

Sheskey said the ramp-up was part of the company's global strategy that also included increased investment in IT services.

"Canada is very important to Dell. That's the location where we innovate and launch products and services," said Sheskey.

IT service is where Dell is able to deliver the "enhanced customer experience" that differentiates the company from other computer makers, said Sheskey.

"It is where we are investing strategically to build for Dell's future in the long term."

The company also recently partnered with Google to embed its software in Dell PCs. Dell also replaced Intel Corp. with Advance Micro Devices (AMD) Inc. as the microchip supplier for its high-end corporate servers.

These initiatives, however, will not mean much if Dell fails to broaden and deepen its core market, said one industry observer.

Simon Yates, an analyst at Forrester Research Inc. of Cambridge, Mass., said Dell should be concentrating instead on improving the products that form its areas of strength.

"They should build products that people will be interested in. These initiatives will come up empty if they fail to broaden and deepen their market core," Yates said.

Another industry analyst thinks the Google and AMD moves were wise decisions but views the recent announcements as a sign of the "pressure" Dell is receiving from investors.

Notwithstanding the fact that Dell's first quarter revenues for 2006 rose six per cent to US $14.2 billion, the company's profits fell six per cent to US $762 million.

"The heat is on. If Dell weren't getting pressure, you wouldn't see this kind of action," said Carmi Levy, a senior research analyst for London, Ont.-based Info-Tech Research Group Inc.

"These are the kind of messages that shareholders are looking for be assured that Dell is willing to do whatever it takes to obtain growth," Levy said.


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Nestor E Arellano Nestor E Arellano Nestor Arellano – Newswire Specialist Nestor edits and posts newswire content for ITWorldCanada’s online publications and e-newsletters. Nestor joined ITWC in 2006 as a senior writer and ... more

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