Welcome | Sign In
LinuxInsider.com
News

OPINION
Calling All Tech Optimists: Come Out of Your Bunkers

Print Version
E-Mail Article
Reprints
Calling All Tech Optimists: Come Out of Your Bunkers

Earnings reports aren't much help in determining if the turnaround is real. Everyone's careful not to raise expectations too much, and every CEO seems paralyzed by the fear of calling a recovery even one second before it arrives.


As everyone knows well, there was a time when you couldn't swing a hastily written business plan without finding someone so pie-eyed optimistic about the tech sector they'd break open their kid's piggy bank to help fund it.

How things change. Today, you can't toss your underwater stock options out the window without hitting 10 die-hard skeptics square on the noggin. Which is exactly where they should be hit to knock some sense back into them.

It's time to give up the ghost, nay-sayers. The tech sector is back, and it's back in a big way.

Damned Lies and the Truth

Who says? The government, that's who. Yeah, I know, who can trust them, right? In the post-Watergate era, everyone's suspect, and any White House gearing up for a reelection campaign must be capable of manipulating some government data. You don't have to be a UFOs-in-Roswell, moon-landing-in-a-sound-studio, the Mob-killed-Kennedy conspiracy buff to believe that's the case.

Then again, if we don't trust the numbers, where are we? Back in the Stone Age, wondering how to make fire. Sure, statistics lie, but what else have we got?

Who Says?

So-called anecdotal evidence? It's all over the proverbial map. Stop twenty people on the street and five will say buy, the next five sell. The other ten will tell you something that's not fit for publication.

Earnings reports aren't much help, either. Everyone's careful not to raise expectations too much, and every CEO seems paralyzed by the fear of calling a recovery even one second before it comes into his or her office, puts its feet up on the desk and asks for its old job back.

No, reading the tea leaves is for gypsy fortune-tellers. Smart people trust the facts. The Bureau of Economic Affairs says investment in information technology gained 15 percent in the third quarter. Not too shabby. Actually, if you make price adjustments, the real number might be closer to 20 percent.

Twenty Twenty

That's good news, right? But with a skeptic hiding under every rock, cowering in every cave, it's not hard to find someone to poke holes in the balloon of optimism. Sure, the tech sector grew last quarter, they say, but how long will it last? There might be a ton of pent-up demand out there, but then again, that 15 percent quarter might have been all she wrote. What then? We're going to need a bigger cave.

No one can predict the future, not even the tea-leaf readers. So why bother? Why not just be brave enough and honest enough to admit that things are getting better? If it doesn't last -- well, we'll make do somehow.

There's no shame in being an optimist. In fact, it was rather popular not too long ago.


Print Version E-Mail Article Reprints More by Keith Regan


More by Keith Regan

Yahoo Slaps Fresh Coat of Gloss on Microsoft Deal Defense
June 30, 2008
With its shareholders meeting set to take place in less than five weeks, Yahoo has put together a 32-page presentation, emphasizing why the investors should vote to keep the current board in place. The company also reiterated why it chose to partner with Google instead of letting Microsoft buy part of it.
French Court Stings eBay With $63M Judgment Over Knockoff Sales
June 30, 2008
eBay is planning to appeal a ruling by a French court that ordered it to pay $63 million to the luxury goods maker Louis Vuitton Moet Hennessey. The court also barred the online auctioneer from selling four brands of perfume on its Web sites accessible in France.
New Auto Loan Leads Marketplace Shifts Into Drive
June 30, 2008
Reply.com's move into the auto finance market is a logical one the company, as automotive advertising spending is moving online in increasingly greater amounts. The company is partnering with the Detroit Trading Company to create a massive repository of auto finance leads online.
Don't miss a story -- sign up for our FREE e-mail newsletters and view the latest headlines at a glance.
Tech News Flash [ View Sample ]
E-Commerce Minute [ View Sample ]
ECT News Network Weekly Newsletter [ View Sample ]
Shortcuts
ECT News Network Information
Reader Services
Corporate
ECT News Network