IdeaStorm

  • PartnerStorm: Ideas on how we can improve the channel experience

    Those who were watching closely last week may have noticed the newest category, PartnerStorm. We added it to help support our evolving PartnerDirect program.  After seven months, it's about time we give our partners an opportunity to provide us feedback.  Two key personalities will be joining the PartnerStorm dialogue on IdeaStorm. 

    If you have tuned into the recent PartnerDirect forum or Dell Channel Blog you likely have met Amie and Mike.  Amie Paxton, Channel Community Manager and Mike Bukowski, Channel Liaison, are listening to your ideas in the Channel space... so sound off!  If you want to hear what they are saying, check them out on Twitter include:  @APaxtonatDell, @mbukowskiatdell, and @DellChannel (Blog RSS Feed).

  • Steve Harvey: The Next Big Idea

    When we launched IdeaStorm in January 2007, it was well-received by our customers. Since then, the community has submitted over 9,000 ideas and shared more than 70,000 comments. Up to this point, besides talking about it from a social media perspective, we haven't advertised IdeaStorm to a wide audience.

    Today, we're starting to do that by working with comedian and successful talk show host Steve Harvey. His radio show, The Steve Harvey Morning Show attracts millions of listeners every day. He's someone who built a career on a big idea. Take a look at this video to hear more about that from him.

    You'll be hearing from more people like Steve in the future on this topic. Dell understands the importance of your ideas and want to encourage you to keep sending them to IdeaStorm so we can continue to improve our products and services. There are a lot of you who do that on a regular basis, and we appreciate your participation. If you are new to IdeaStorm, we invite you to spend a few minutes there to share your thoughts on the next big idea.

  • Going ‘Green' In the Connected Era

    Dell's Director of Sustainable Business, Tod Arbogast, spoke to reporters from across Asia yesterday highlighting the company's commitment to be an environmental leader. The meeting was an important step in outlining Dell's successful "green" initiatives across the globe, as well as offering hints at what lies ahead.

    Arbogast began the presentation with a summary of the ecological challenges our planet faces, such as the exponential growth of Earth's human population, and the ever climbing energy demands and greenhouse gas emissions. While many of these alarming trends show little sign of declining, Arbogast outlined Dell's plans to meet these challenges head on through responsible environmental policies and an ever-growing portfolio of energy-efficient products and practices. "'Green' messaging is everywhere," Arbogast said, referencing a reporter's earlier comment that most companies today include claims of a commitment to the environment. "We must demonstrate our commitment through action."

    Among Arbogast's points:

    • Our industry-leading recycling program, which offers customers around the world the chance to recycle their older computers and peripherals at absolutely no cost to themselves. We've challenged the rest of the industry to match this commitment for the betterment of our planet.
    • Dell's distinction of being the only major computer manufacturer to commit to being carbon neutral this year. The company's carbon intensity is already among the lowest of the Fortune 50 and approximately half that of HP. This drive to sustainability and energy-efficiency has already saved $3 million and avoided 19,200 tons of CO2 emissions. This sort of energy-efficiency helps save both Dell and our customers a bundle.
    • The first in the world to partner with its customers to offset their carbon impact with the "Plant a Tree for Me" and "Plant a Forest for Me" programs. Approximately 100,000 trees have already been planted as a result of these programs, which will offset 225 million pounds of CO2 through sequestration over the lifetime of the trees.
    • Our commitment to drive customer savings through the world's most energy-efficient computers.
    • Our willingness to listen to our customers through IdeaStorm, Direct2Dell, Dell Earth, the Dell Community Forums, and ReGeneration. Our environmental programs go well beyond a transaction or purchase, and we have our customers to thank for this. They are letting us know what they expect out of us, and we are listening.

    In the din of excitement over Dell's ‘green' moves in the United States, such as our global headquarters campus in Round Rock being completely powered with ‘green' energy, it's easy to forget that we have made the same environmental commitments worldwide. Our programs addressing recycling and energy efficiency are available everywhere our products are sold. Arbogast's conversation with APJ (Asia Pacific/Japan) reporters serves as a reminder that our commitment to the environment does not end at the borders of the United States. Our environmental challenges as residents of the planet Earth do not recognize different languages, cultures, or political borders. It is therefore our responsibility to deal with it together as a global community.

  • Weekly Recap 5-7-08

    It has been a busy week for us around Ideastorm!  Here are a couple of the "usual" updates and a couple of new components thanks to Jervis' wonderful suggestions.

    The Usual- The happenings of the week.

    As you scroll down you will see the more detailed review of the Ideastorm contributions to the newly announced XPS 730.  Man, you guys are great designers!  In the continued pursuit of cleaning up old ideas, we updated webcams and graphics cards.  Robert_P has been joining the discussion for several weeks as the Small Business Liaison and this week he chimed in on the debate about Dell Small Business Vs Dell Home.  The past several weeks have shown us in both Dell sites as well as broadly across the blogosphere that the desire to keep XP is as hot as ever.  Dell has responded with an update on how we will continue to offer XP.  Last but probably most intriguing is the launch of Dell's newest blog last week.  Yourblog is a place where you can drive the agenda and even author blogs for Dell.  We would love to have you contribute! 

    How about some introductions to the Community team at Dell?  This week we launched the beginning phase of a bio page on the all of the usual suspects. 

    In the outside world, we have been watching a growing debate about the uses of Ideastorm like sites for various business uses for several weeks in this update.  Most recently there has been a growing list of companies getting involved in creating new platforms to host these sites and a hot debate about the merit of these companies.  

    Welcome to new users!

    The Ideastorm would like to welcome all of the 200+ new users we saw last week!  We noticed a couple of new users who jumped in head first like sa2008 who had 1 idea, 11 comments, 8 votes and jamesmoroni1 who had 3 ideas, 7 votes!  We had more than 75 new ideas last week and had several ideas that gained much momentum. 

    Gaining Momentum-  Ideas on the up and up

    Did you catch the recent news that Dell is moving away from our build to order infinite configuration model?  Ideastorm users continued to find this idea was of much concern.  I am sure no one missed the patriotic streak we had on Ideastorm last week.  It began and quickly spread to showed that patriotic colors take many forms.  We also saw an idea that shared the need for less gain some speed. 

  • Dell Customers Help Improve Packaging

    It's no secret that Dell aims to be the greenest technology company in the world. But on Earth Day last week, sites like The Consumerist, Gizmodo, and other blogs showed us that there's still more work for us to do.

    Shortly after we read those posts, we had a team on the road to Dallas to meet with the vendor that shipped this flash drive to see how we can improve the process. End result, there's some easy fixes and some longer-term issues for us to address. Here's an outline:

    • Immediate: Directive to use envelopes for small items such as these.
    • Short term: Use of smaller boxes. We have requested an optimization analysis of product volume to box size.
    • Short term: Implementation of Dell-defined volumetric metrics on void space in the package to be incorporated into our periodic vendor business reviews.

    While third party items such as these make up a very small portion of our overall shipping volume, folks here know we need to fix it. Our sincere gratitude goes out to everyone who pointed this irregularity out to us. We hope that all of you will continue to provide feedback like this on any of our green-focused Direct2Dell posts, or if you have ideas about ways we can make improvements, please share them in the Environment section on IdeaStorm.

    To do that:

    1. Go to www.ideastorm.com
    2. Login or Register
    3. Click this button near the top right corner of the site (or click this button to the right)  IdeaStorm Button
    4. Enter your idea, then choose Environment from the category list, plus whatever other categories that apply.

    We still have a lot of work to do, but with your help we can make Dell the greenest technology company in the world.

    Stay tuned for more updates.

  • IdeaStorm Site Maintenance on 5/1

    IdeaStorm will be unavailable starting at 6:30p.m. CST today for maintenance. The site will be offline for approximately 20 minutes. Due to the re-indexing of ideas, users may experience some issues with the search function for a few hours (7-9p.m. CST). Thanks for your patience.

  • The Future of Dell in Social Media

    Those of you who have followed Dell's social media journey know that we started these efforts just about two years ago at this time when Michael Dell himself asked our team to find Dell customers in the blogosphere in need of support so we could provide it to them. We've grown a fair amount since then, and I thought this might be a good time to provide a framework for what's coming next.

    Here are four main areas we will continue to focus on as a team. I'll be blogging about various aspects of each moving forward (along with other Dell bloggers) as we start to make inroads against them.

    • More Conversations - This is really about expansion, and you can expect it in two ways: more languages and more group blogs. Focusing on Direct2Dell, many of you already know that we have a few Dell blogs in Chinese, Spanish and Norwegian. There will be more languages coming soon—with Japanese most likely coming next. The other type of expansion is with group blogs. You may already be familiar with the Dell Shares Investor Relations group blog and the Cloud Computing group blog we just launched a couple of weeks ago. By the end of this week, we hope to roll out Inside IT, which will be a group blog about all hardware and software for businesses and corporations—everything from laptops to servers and storage, services, systems management and more. Several other group blogs already lined up after that.
    • Ease of Use - This also applies to things on a couple of fronts. First off, we need to make our social media tools easier to navigate and use. Part of the way we hope to get there is to drive more consistency across our social media properties—we're working on that now. The second part: we need make it easier for you to find information you're looking for. Consistency will help, but this really requires innovative thinking. An example is something we've recently introduced on the Dell Community Forum called Accepted Solutions. I'm pumped because it empowers our customers to show other Forum readers what response fixed their issue in a way that's pretty easy to spot. More on that coming soon.
    • Collaboration - This is bigger than the blog. It encompasses all of our social media properties and then some. Over the past two years, we've built some listening posts that open up lines of communication between Dell and our customers. Many times, we get feedback from customers via monitoring conversations in the blogosphere, on Direct2Dell, the Dell Community Forum or IdeaStorm before they show up in our call centers. But a pipeline for customer feedback is useless if we don't act on that information. Internal collaboration is vital to our long-term success. Without it, we simply won't be able to keep up with the volume of feedback we receive through social media every day. Most importantly though, doing it right will mean a quicker response from Dell to customers whether you're trying to fix a technical issue, or waiting for us to implement a great idea that you have shared through IdeaStorm. There's a lot to this topic... for a bit more background, take a look at Shel Israel's recent post about social software in the enterprise, which was prompted by a software-related post from Dennis Howlett.
    • Community Meets e-Commerce - In my view, all of our efforts in the social media space should empower our customers. Speaking of Dell.com specifically, it's clear that we need to do a better job of giving customers a chance to influence content on the website. I think Jeremiah Owyang's concept of the Irrelevant Corporate website is right on target here. In the past, much of Dell.com focused on mainly on e-commerce activities, while community tools resided in an isolated part of the website. In my view, there should be much tighter integration between community and e-commerce. We've taken some small steps in this direction like introducing ratings and reviews functionality in many countries. More on that in the near future.
  • More Visibility for Status Tags

    Tomorrow we will add a new feature to IdeaStorm, status tag boxes. A status tag box will be given to an idea with a status, in addition to the status tag.  The status tag boxes will bring some enhancements to the way you view ideas by: providing a highly-visible indication of the idea status when scrolling through pages and greater visibility of Dell's response, without having to view the entire thread. Below is an example of what a status tag box will look like:

    under review box 

    We also will provide some stability to the community's voting by assuring that the content of the idea you promote or demote will never change (which some users have pointed out as an issue). Yes, this does mean that ideas will no longer be editable, but fear not. If you need to make a change to your idea (such as: spelling, grammar, correcting misinformation), or if you want to delete your idea, you just need to use the Report Abuse function and fill in what you need me to edit or "delete request" (yes, there will no longer be a DELETE REQUESTS category). To be clear, I will not change the concept of the idea or add content to it (the comment boxes below the idea are meant to hold any further discussion).

    If I need more information from you in regards to what you would like to change, I will email you at the email address you have on file on IdeaStorm.  As a reminder, please be sure the email address you have on file for IdeaStorm is one you check fairly often.   

  • A new status: Reviewed

    Over the past year we've had several different status tags; kept most, gotten rid of a few. Back in November, we defined the purpose and meaning behind the tags and cleaned them up. After several months of steadily assigning tags, we've discovered that we need a new one (and a few no longer are necessary). So we discussed our options as a team and asked some of the IdeaStorm community in Storm Room what they thought. Here is what we came up with:

    When an idea is tagged "Under Review" it is sent to the business for evaluation. After that internal discussion, the idea is sometimes "In Progress" or "Implemented". But, more often, the idea does not fit into either of these categories (or any of the other status tags). When this situation happens now, the idea now will be tagged "Reviewed."

    A "Reviewed" status tag means the idea has been tagged "Under Review," sent to the business for evaluation, and reviewed. This status tag will require a response from the business that includes a summary of the review process and any outcomes of the idea discussion.

    In lieu of this new tag, and as an effort to simplify and minimize the number of tags, we will retire the following status tags:

    • COMING SOON
    • NOT NOW
    • NOT LIKELY
    The history of the tags will remain on the ideas and on our tag definition page. If you have any questions, feel free to ask!
  • Site Maintenance 2-28

    This evening at 6:30 p.m. CST IdeaStorm will undergo regularly scheduled site maintenance and should be available by 7:30 p.m. CST. This maintenance will address some database updates and provide some tweaks to current functionality. 

     

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