T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
516.1 | Response to take a few days | 11SRUS::SCONCE | Bill Sconce | Wed Apr 01 1992 18:47 | 18 |
| <<< HUMANE::HUMANE$DUA1:[NOTES$LIBRARY]DIGITAL.NOTE;1 >>>
-< The DEC way of working >-
================================================================================
Note 1831.1 DCU campaign, Digital, management & morale 1 of 1
11SRUS::SCONCE "Bill Sconce" 11 lines 1-APR-1992 17:45
-< Response to take a few days >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Several people have asked me by mail if my letter has elicited any response
from Ron Glover.
Ron called me at lunchtime today. He said he wanted to confirm receipt of
my letter, and to let me know that he expected preparation of a response
to take a day or two.
The conversation was friendly, if a little fast-paced (it's clear Ron's a
pretty busy fellow), and he expressed gratitude that I'd taken time to write.
I'll post an update as soon as I hear further.
|
516.2 | A kind of an answer to Tom Krupinski | 11SRUS::SCONCE | Bill Sconce | Tue Apr 07 1992 19:30 | 26 |
| <<< HUMANE::HUMANE$DUA1:[NOTES$LIBRARY]DIGITAL.NOTE;1 >>>
-< The DEC way of working >-
================================================================================
Note 1831.3 DCU campaign, Digital, management & morale 3 of 4
TOMK::KRUPINSKI "I'm voting for 'REAL CHOICES' cand" 20 lines 3-APR-1992 22:02
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Well, Bill, I think I have Ron's answer. Not directly, but in
the form of a mail message from someone lower in the chain, which
I of course can't post here, but would be happy to forward to you
or anyone else that cares to see it.
It is, to my eyes, an odd message. It states that Ron, the author,
and another person have determined that the only places in the Spit
Brook facility that are not work areas are the cafeteria and attached
smoking room, and that any other area in the facility is a work area.
Which means then, that the lavatories, wellness center, DEFCU ATM,
etc are all work areas. Which seems very strange to me because
I often see folks working in the cafe, but can't remember
ever seeing anyone working in the john.
Why Ron would assist in such a determination, and what end is served
by such an unlikely application of logic I cannot fathom. But then,
ketchup *is* a vegetable.
Tom_K
|
516.3 | My Open Door letter to Jack Smith | 11SRUS::SCONCE | Bill Sconce | Tue Apr 07 1992 19:31 | 140 |
| <<< HUMANE::HUMANE$DUA1:[NOTES$LIBRARY]DIGITAL.NOTE;1 >>>
-< The DEC way of working >-
================================================================================
Note 1831.5 DCU campaign, Digital, management & morale 5 of 5
11SRUS::SCONCE "Bill Sconce" 133 lines 7-APR-1992 18:17
-< Open Door letter to Jack Smith >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
From: SCONCE "Bill Sconce" Date: 07-Apr-92 06:11 PM
To: MYTVAX::MRGATE::"MLOMTS::CORA::A1::SMITH.JACK"
cc: MYTVAX::MRGATE::"MLOMTS::CORA::A1::OLSEN.KEN",CORA::SIMS,ICS::GLOVER,::KRUPINSKI,WECARE::FITZPATRICK,VIA::REALMUTO
Subject: Digital, management, and employee morale
Dear Jack--
On 31 March I wrote to Ron Glover concerning certain questions employees
"out in the trenches" have been asking about relationships between the
Digital Employees' Federal Credit Union and Digital management, and about
puzzling management actions with respect to P&P which in my opinion have
been leading to corrosion of faith in management. I was deeply disturbed
that management would apparently be willing to squander its prestige in
service of narrow ends; I ended my letter to Ron with "Please stop the
destruction".
In that memo (of which I will attach a copy) I asked Ron Glover to clarify
management's positions, and most importantly, to reaffirm that P&P mean what
they say, for everyone at Digital.
Ron phoned me on 1 April, said that he'd received my letter, and indicated
that it would be a few days before he would be able to prepare a response.
That sounded reasonable to me, since I'd asked him to be clear about difficult
issues, and to publish the official Digital posture on them to put the ongoing
speculation to rest.
Developments
------------
Unfortunately, other actions have overtaken Ron's reply to my letter, and
I now find it necessary to write to you.
Before I wrote to Ron, an engineer here at Spit Brook had become involved in a
specific question about how P&P should be applied to the Employees' Credit
Union election. The engineer, Tom Krupinski, had been active in distributing
election literature. Tom has stated that he felt employee activity had been
specifically encouraged by John Sims's letter. (You are probably aware of
this letter, in which John Sims urges members of the credit union to
familiarize themselves with the credentials of those standing for elections,
and recommending thoughtful and responsible participation in the election.
He specifically refers to the credit union as an important employee benefit.
Tom has stated that he felt the Sims letter specifically encouraged employee
activity such as the literature distribution he undertook.)
Tom's Experience
----------------
What happened to Tom should have been comical. He discovered that election
literature was being removed and destroyed by Security. Because Tom had been
conscientious from the start about following P&P and getting every appropriate
approval, he went to talk with the ZKO Security people, who told him that
Ron Glover claimed that "Real Choices" material violates P&P.
Ultimately, Tom received a memo from ZKO Security which stated that after
verbal consultation with Ron Glover, they were identifying the ZKO Cafeteria
and the adjacent smoking room as non-working areas, and that all other areas
throughout Spit Brook were to be considered working areas. Therefore, under
P&P 6.19, election material could not be displayed anywhere other than the
cafeteria and smoking room -- specifically, not on the many bulletin boards
which commonly contain solicitations for all kinds of things employees might
be interested in, from babysitting to roof repair.
This seemed ludicrous to Tom (as it does to me). Tom agreed to comply, of
course, but wrote a note to let others know of the ruling. He observed,
perhaps a little irreverently, that Security had in effect ruled that rest
rooms are working areas at Spit Brook.
Admittedly, this is not really funny. On the contrary, it's a manifestation
of the problem that I wrote to Ron about: that P&P is being distorted by
chains of verbal re-interpretation, that the stature of Policy is eroding
under pursuit of ad-hoc expediency, and that management is destroying itself
in the eyes of employees. It's not about restrooms, or even about the
Employees' Credit Union election. Management is presenting an appearance
of being out of touch.
Harrassment
-----------
But the real problem is that this morning, Tom's cost center manager received
a memo from Ron Glover accusing Tom of posting a note which violated P&P.
Although it may have contained a questionable word, this note, posted almost
a month ago, had caused no comment (to my knowledge) from anyone -- until now.
And Ron went directly to Tom's boss's boss's boss, requesting appropriate
actions under Digital's Personnel Policy. This is pretty severe, considering
that no mention is made of what in the note violated P&P. (And in fact,
the conference moderators have, after initially hiding Tom's note, re-posted
it, saying
"I have read and reread note 501.4, and I can't find anything wrong
with it either. It is absolutely clear it is a hypothetical statement
that a hypothetical candidate might write, and it is part of a
discussion of what motives the DCU nominating committee might
reasonably approve of."
Tom feels that such a request to his manager is a result of his questioning
earlier interpretations of P&P, that he is being harrassed. He has gotten
a number of mail messages from other employees who see this request as
intimidation. (I will make the ones I've seen available to you upon request,
although I cannot reproduce them here in an open letter because of P&P.)
There's a lot of this going on
------------------------------
And that's why I'm writing to you: because I continue to see and hear
employees who increasingly feel that management is out of touch and
damaging the spirit of the Company. Every new effort seems to be making
matters worse -- and this at THE time when management and employees need
to be pulling together.
I'm strongly loyal to Digital, and believe in the esprit de corps which
we've always had, and which we need now more than ever. Even (or especially)
at a time when something seems to be going wrong, a strong statement of
leadership can pull people back together. Everyone out here wants to
believe in Digital. Even a messy situation like this one presents an
opportunity! If Digital management can step forward, proclaim that the
old values still obtain, and that we still believe in "do the right thing",
the Company will reap a groundswell of renewed enthusiasm.
I have made today a vacation day to put this letter together, and I'd like to
call your office early next week to see if you'll meet with me. I want you to
know the kind of things that are being said out in the employee community, and
to see how widespread they are. What's going on out here isn't Digital.
Sincerely,
Bill Sconce
ZKO
(attachment to follow)
|
516.4 | footnote | 11SRUS::SCONCE | Bill Sconce | Tue Apr 07 1992 19:33 | 4 |
| The "attachment to follow" refers, of course, to my original letter to
Ron Glover.
BTW, permission to extract or forward according to P&P is granted.
|
516.5 | DEC's policy regarding solicitation | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Wed Apr 15 1992 12:15 | 36 |
| I came across this in VTX LIVEWIRE this morning:
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+TM -----------
|d|i|g|i|t|a|l| U.S. News LIVE WIRE
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ -----------
Digital's policy regarding solicitation
Over the last several weeks Corporate Personnel has received a number of
requests for clarification or interpretations of Personnel Policy 6.19,
Solicitations, in connection with the DCU election. While it is impossible
to cover all of the issues that have arisen, the following information may
be helpful.
1. Employees may make literature available to their fellow employees,
as long as they limit their distribution activity to non-working
time (i.e. lunch and break periods) and non-working areas; in this
case cafeterias, smoking rooms, and other break rooms.
2. This distribution can not be disruptive, threatening, or annoying
to other employees. For example, employees may set up a table in
the cafeteria to provide printed material to employees who are
interested in receiving it. They may not block an entrance to a
building, cafeteria, or smoking room, or otherwise impede the
ability of other employees to enter or exit those facilities.
3. The distributed material may not be defamatory or otherwise
illegal and may not be abusive or derogatory.
4. With the exception of Employee Interest Notes Files, no other
company resources, computer systems, copying machines, electronic
or intra-company mail can be used to create, communicate, or
distribute this material.
Further questions about this policy can be directed to your local
supervisor or local Personnel representatives.
|
516.6 | As usual, somebody didn't think this thru... | SCAACT::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow | Wed Apr 15 1992 12:40 | 10 |
| > 4. With the exception of Employee Interest Notes Files, no other
> company resources, computer systems, copying machines, electronic
> or intra-company mail can be used to create, communicate, or
> distribute this material.
Now how do they expect us to get the material out of the Notes File to
distribute it if we can't use company resources? I can think of other problems
with this statement, but they start getting into the splitting-hairs variety.
Bob
|
516.7 | Just don't solicit anything and there is no problem | GUFFAW::GRANSEWICZ | REAL CHOICES for a real CU! | Wed Apr 15 1992 13:11 | 17 |
|
RE: .5
Just gotta love the timing. Two days before the end of the election.
Guess if they would have issued this before the election Mr. Sims
couldn't have spend over $20K of CORPORATE RESOURCES on a direct mailing
dealing with the election. But upon closer examination, it only
appears that communications vehicles open to the unwashed masses are
restricted. Oh well, DCU members really don't need or require information
when DCU (a division of DEC?) has already hand-picked the board. Yes,
no need to think or know, just do as we're expected. Why do I feel
like I'm in eastern Europe in 1950?
But Digital envelopes and Digital sheets of paper seem to be OK to use.
Had we known we could have ordered up 88,000 of each to help mitigate
the cost of a mailing. Live and learn.
|
516.8 | Check my Mail! | XCUSME::LEVY | | Wed Apr 15 1992 14:37 | 10 |
| I suppose someone will come to read my VAXmail account, now, to
make sure my mail is clean. I guess they "have a need to know".
You know, they've made a mistake here. People do communicate......
online, onsystem, verbally, or in a notesfile.
Just MHO,
Janet
|
516.9 | Oh NOOOOOoooooo... | MLTVAX::SCONCE | Bill Sconce | Wed Apr 15 1992 15:03 | 20 |
| > 1. Employees may make literature available to their fellow employees,
> as long as they limit their distribution activity to non-working
> time (i.e. lunch and break periods) and non-working areas; in this
> case cafeterias, smoking rooms, and other break rooms.
Oh, no... he did JUST the wrong thing. After all the writing, he goes
and makes a policy of making special cases. "In this case...". Leave
aside that it appears silly to imply that restrooms or the Wellness
Center are working areas. The problem is that the next "case" will presumably
have different rules. This doesn't fix the problem, it perpetuates it.
I am very disappointed.
Following this I'll bring this thread up to date with DIGITAL 1831.*, where
my original letter to Ron Glover was posted. I generally don't like cross-
posting, but this topic is some kind of exception.
Ironically, I was putting my response to Ron in the mail just as the VTX
interpretation appeared. *sigh*
|
516.10 | Open letter to Jack Smith, from DIGITAL 1831.5 | MLTVAX::SCONCE | Bill Sconce | Wed Apr 15 1992 15:08 | 140 |
| <<< HUMANE::HUMANE$DUA1:[NOTES$LIBRARY]DIGITAL.NOTE;1 >>>
-< The DEC way of working >-
================================================================================
Note 1831.5 DCU campaign, Digital, management & morale 5 of 17
11SRUS::SCONCE "Bill Sconce" 133 lines 7-APR-1992 18:17
-< Open Door letter to Jack Smith >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
From: SCONCE "Bill Sconce" Date: 07-Apr-92 06:11 PM
To: MYTVAX::MRGATE::"MLOMTS::CORA::A1::SMITH.JACK"
cc: MYTVAX::MRGATE::"MLOMTS::CORA::A1::OLSEN.KEN",CORA::SIMS,ICS::GLOVER,::KRUPINSKI,WECARE::FITZPATRICK,VIA::REALMUTO
Subject: Digital, management, and employee morale
Dear Jack--
On 31 March I wrote to Ron Glover concerning certain questions employees
"out in the trenches" have been asking about relationships between the
Digital Employees' Federal Credit Union and Digital management, and about
puzzling management actions with respect to P&P which in my opinion have
been leading to corrosion of faith in management. I was deeply disturbed
that management would apparently be willing to squander its prestige in
service of narrow ends; I ended my letter to Ron with "Please stop the
destruction".
In that memo (of which I will attach a copy) I asked Ron Glover to clarify
management's positions, and most importantly, to reaffirm that P&P mean what
they say, for everyone at Digital.
Ron phoned me on 1 April, said that he'd received my letter, and indicated
that it would be a few days before he would be able to prepare a response.
That sounded reasonable to me, since I'd asked him to be clear about difficult
issues, and to publish the official Digital posture on them to put the ongoing
speculation to rest.
Developments
------------
Unfortunately, other actions have overtaken Ron's reply to my letter, and
I now find it necessary to write to you.
Before I wrote to Ron, an engineer here at Spit Brook had become involved in a
specific question about how P&P should be applied to the Employees' Credit
Union election. The engineer, Tom Krupinski, had been active in distributing
election literature. Tom has stated that he felt employee activity had been
specifically encouraged by John Sims's letter. (You are probably aware of
this letter, in which John Sims urges members of the credit union to
familiarize themselves with the credentials of those standing for elections,
and recommending thoughtful and responsible participation in the election.
He specifically refers to the credit union as an important employee benefit.
Tom has stated that he felt the Sims letter specifically encouraged employee
activity such as the literature distribution he undertook.)
Tom's Experience
----------------
What happened to Tom should have been comical. He discovered that election
literature was being removed and destroyed by Security. Because Tom had been
conscientious from the start about following P&P and getting every appropriate
approval, he went to talk with the ZKO Security people, who told him that
Ron Glover claimed that "Real Choices" material violates P&P.
Ultimately, Tom received a memo from ZKO Security which stated that after
verbal consultation with Ron Glover, they were identifying the ZKO Cafeteria
and the adjacent smoking room as non-working areas, and that all other areas
throughout Spit Brook were to be considered working areas. Therefore, under
P&P 6.19, election material could not be displayed anywhere other than the
cafeteria and smoking room -- specifically, not on the many bulletin boards
which commonly contain solicitations for all kinds of things employees might
be interested in, from babysitting to roof repair.
This seemed ludicrous to Tom (as it does to me). Tom agreed to comply, of
course, but wrote a note to let others know of the ruling. He observed,
perhaps a little irreverently, that Security had in effect ruled that rest
rooms are working areas at Spit Brook.
Admittedly, this is not really funny. On the contrary, it's a manifestation
of the problem that I wrote to Ron about: that P&P is being distorted by
chains of verbal re-interpretation, that the stature of Policy is eroding
under pursuit of ad-hoc expediency, and that management is destroying itself
in the eyes of employees. It's not about restrooms, or even about the
Employees' Credit Union election. Management is presenting an appearance
of being out of touch.
Harrassment
-----------
But the real problem is that this morning, Tom's cost center manager received
a memo from Ron Glover accusing Tom of posting a note which violated P&P.
Although it may have contained a questionable word, this note, posted almost
a month ago, had caused no comment (to my knowledge) from anyone -- until now.
And Ron went directly to Tom's boss's boss's boss, requesting appropriate
actions under Digital's Personnel Policy. This is pretty severe, considering
that no mention is made of what in the note violated P&P. (And in fact,
the conference moderators have, after initially hiding Tom's note, re-posted
it, saying
"I have read and reread note 501.4, and I can't find anything wrong
with it either. It is absolutely clear it is a hypothetical statement
that a hypothetical candidate might write, and it is part of a
discussion of what motives the DCU nominating committee might
reasonably approve of."
Tom feels that such a request to his manager is a result of his questioning
earlier interpretations of P&P, that he is being harrassed. He has gotten
a number of mail messages from other employees who see this request as
intimidation. (I will make the ones I've seen available to you upon request,
although I cannot reproduce them here in an open letter because of P&P.)
There's a lot of this going on
------------------------------
And that's why I'm writing to you: because I continue to see and hear
employees who increasingly feel that management is out of touch and
damaging the spirit of the Company. Every new effort seems to be making
matters worse -- and this at THE time when management and employees need
to be pulling together.
I'm strongly loyal to Digital, and believe in the esprit de corps which
we've always had, and which we need now more than ever. Even (or especially)
at a time when something seems to be going wrong, a strong statement of
leadership can pull people back together. Everyone out here wants to
believe in Digital. Even a messy situation like this one presents an
opportunity! If Digital management can step forward, proclaim that the
old values still obtain, and that we still believe in "do the right thing",
the Company will reap a groundswell of renewed enthusiasm.
I have made today a vacation day to put this letter together, and I'd like to
call your office early next week to see if you'll meet with me. I want you to
know the kind of things that are being said out in the employee community, and
to see how widespread they are. What's going on out here isn't Digital.
Sincerely,
Bill Sconce
ZKO
(attachment to follow)
|
516.11 | Does .5 only apply to solicitations? | RGB::SEILER | Larry Seiler | Wed Apr 15 1992 15:09 | 30 |
| re .5:
This is a clearly stated set of guidelines on how "literature" may be
disseminated, but there is one crucial question that it does not address:
WHAT kinds of LITERATURE does it cover?
Presumably, from context, it only covers "solicitation". But what is the
line between making a solicitation and providing information?
If a solicitation is something that contains an action verb, then I think
this is fairly reasonable (with one exception, noted below). In that case,
we can go on discussing the DCU in mail and notes -- we just can't solicit
except in the specified ways.
The one problem that I have with this is that it doesn't allow for sending
an email solicitation to someone who *requests* it, or who expresses
interest in receiving it. I don't feel that is reasonable. Note, though,
that it does apply to email and normal mail equally, since both are use
of company resources.
However, the key question is: is this intended to apply to all statements
of fact or opinion relating to the DCU election, or just to solicitations?
Presumably, the Sims letter didn't violate this policy, and so is an
example of something that is not a solicitation. But that still leaves me
wondering what determines if something will be judged a solicitation.
Enjoy,
Larry
|
516.12 | DIGITAL 1831.6 | MLTVAX::SCONCE | Bill Sconce | Wed Apr 15 1992 15:10 | 11 |
| <<< HUMANE::HUMANE$DUA1:[NOTES$LIBRARY]DIGITAL.NOTE;1 >>>
-< The DEC way of working >-
================================================================================
Note 1831.6 DCU campaign, Digital, management & morale 6 of 17
11SRUS::SCONCE "Bill Sconce" 4 lines 7-APR-1992 18:33
-< footnote >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The "attachment to follow" refers, of course, to my original letter to
Ron Glover.
BTW, permission to extract or forward according to P&P is granted.
|
516.13 | Additional thoughts, from DIGITAL 1831.8 | MLTVAX::SCONCE | Bill Sconce | Wed Apr 15 1992 15:10 | 92 |
| <<< HUMANE::HUMANE$DUA1:[NOTES$LIBRARY]DIGITAL.NOTE;1 >>>
-< The DEC way of working >-
================================================================================
Note 1831.8 DCU campaign, Digital, management & morale 8 of 17
11SRUS::SCONCE "Bill Sconce" 85 lines 8-APR-1992 19:25
-< I see hard work ahead, but I see great hope >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Thanks for your comments, Andy. I'm heartbroken, too, and although I'm not
enthusiastic about such tactics, in the end I just couldn't think of anything
else to do.
There is one point, though: management is management, and is inescapably
responsible for setting direction and creating the tone of leadership in the
Company. IF management isn't aware of what's going on out in the trenches,
they can't do that. Ron Glover has stated to me on the phone, and again in
writing, that management finds parts of what's going really puzzling.
Although I don't fully understand them either, I felt many people would
think it important to know that management has at least been advised that
they ARE going on. (What puzzles me, frankly, is why management hasn't
been proactive in trying to find out.)
I can't tell you how depressing I've found threads such as the "metrics"
discussion in this conference. Negativism builds upon negativism as we
employees complain to one another about management's actions, but for the
most part we confine our complaints to exchanges unavailable to the levels
of management responsible for employee morale. (I'm not for one minute
picking on those who share their feelings here! Genuine feelings are the
truth from which morale is forged.)
So that's why I wrote.
That leaves the question of making the letters open, of posting them here.
Andy writes that this exposure is damaging to the Company. I respect his
concern for the Company. I share it. It is my hope that making the
communication visible would offer management an opportunity to respond to
important issues clearly, and turn employees' genuine feelings and concerns
into renewed motivation. For I'm confident that every employee who takes
time to worry about the Company is eager to put their energy to work, to
undertake positive efforts to make things better. I believe the kind of
energy made available by employees sharing their thoughts and concern are
a unique resource, a competitive advantage which this Company can enjoy
unmatched in the history of organizations. On the other hand, because of
the pressures associated with these admittedly tough times, it is a human
temptation for anyone in a management position to regard employee concern
as at least a nuisance, perhaps even a threat to survival.
Therefore we all have a unique opportunity, made possible by our unmatched
communications facilities. We can all pull together and solve any of the
problems we've been writing about -- if all such communications are widely
shared.
Finally, I can't see that innocence is lost by trying to tell management
directly about something we have all been telling each other. What has been
made more public by an open letter to those who may be able to do something?
The things I wrote are the things I hear in the hallway every day, in the
lunchroom every noon, in correspondence. It was the Employees' Credit
Union election which triggered my letter to Ron Glover, but it was only
the trigger. A friend whom I've known for fifteen years wrote,
"Great note. I've been thinking for a long time that the DCU flap
is being looked at inside-out. The anger with DCU is being driven
by anger with Digital's clumsy, foundering management, and not the
other way around."
I know, and you know, that this feeling is widespread. Is it a service to
the Company that no one should speak of it? I don't know whether others may
have written private letters to management, but to me it seemed that making
the letter open offers management a ready-made facility with which to move
immediately to make things better. Such was my hope, anyway.
And I do not want a response to me. I'm not writing for any concern which is
uniquely mine. Management's actions, management's perceived motivations,
and management's leadership message are of indispensable interest to us all.
A word about verbal communications. As I wrote to Ron, I believe that verbal
communications are explicitly PART of the problem. They are inevitably
distorted when repeated, and they are inevitably diluted when remembered.
I believe that well-meaning folks at all levels have been compromised and
damaged by (well-meaning) attempts to handle things verbally. It is precisely
because of the unreliability of verbal communications that written Policies
and Procedures exist in the first place, and why they must take precedence
over ad hoc responses to sensitive situations. It's the same with the U.S.
Constitution -- it's indispensable because it's written, and we allow it to
be re-interpreted only pursuant to the gravest deliberations.
Again, thank you, Andy. My feelings are as yours -- I find this situation
very sad. But I also see in this situation the possible seeds of a new
beginning. I want to believe in management, and so does everyone who writes
here. It's hard to imagine a greater resource being placed in any manager's
hands than the spirit and concern for the Company I see employees everywhere
expressing. I hope management can realize their great good fortune, and turn
that resource to good use.
|
516.14 | Ron Glover's reply, from DIGITAL 1831.9 | MLTVAX::SCONCE | Bill Sconce | Wed Apr 15 1992 15:11 | 79 |
| <<< HUMANE::HUMANE$DUA1:[NOTES$LIBRARY]DIGITAL.NOTE;1 >>>
-< The DEC way of working >-
================================================================================
Note 1831.9 DCU campaign, Digital, management & morale 9 of 17
11SRUS::SCONCE "Bill Sconce" 72 lines 8-APR-1992 19:31
-< Ron Glover's reply >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
From: MLTVAX::ICS::ICS::MRGATE::"A1::GLOVER.RON" Date: 08-Apr-92 12:52 PM
To: MLTVAX::SCONCE,CORA::SIMS,KRUPINSKI,WECARE::FITZPATRICK,VIA::REALMUTO
Subject: RE: DCU campaign, Digital, and management 1
From: NAME: RON GLOVER
FUNC: Corporate Employee Relations
TEL: 508-493-9569 <GLOVER.RON AT A1 at ICS at PKO>
To: NAME: VMSMail User SCONCE <SCONCE@MLTVAX@MRGATE>
CC: SIMS@CORA@MRGATE,
KRUPINSKI@@MRGATE,
FITZPATRICK@WECARE@MRGATE,
REALMUTO@VIA@MRGATE
First, I want to thank you for taking the time to write to me. I
found your memo well written and thoughtful.
Like you I have spent a significant amount of time trying to find
ways to enable all of the candidates to get their information out to
the members of the Digital community in efficient and non-disruptive
ways. My efforts focused on working with some of the candidates from
both slates to develop a mutually agreeable process for distributing
information. It was my hope that we could develop some common ground
between the different slates so that they could learn to speak to,
and work with one another. Unfortunately those efforts were not
successful. Some of the candidates decided that they would prefer
for me to strictly enforce policy on all parties involved.
My second, and equally critical reason for attempting to define a
reasonable information distribution process is my belief that the
language in the current Solicitation Policy (which was written in
1982) does not provide sufficient detail to guide employees and their
managers in conducting this kind of nation wide, "electronic"
campaign. As a consequence I, and my colleagues in Personnel have
been required to provide ongoing and repeated interpretation of the
policy in response to the myriad of questions presented by this
situation. In order to avoid any further confusion about the policy
and what it requires, I will shortly post an interpretation on
LiveWire.
Your memo also indicates that some employees are speculating about
whether the Company is "administering" the DCU or campaigning in the
DCU election. Neither speculation is true. John Sims' memo was not
intended to campaign. I have spoken with John. He tells me that his
purposes in sending the memo were simple.
o To alert DCU members that an important election was about to
take place,
o to urge them to read all of the material (including the report
of the nominating committee, and the statements that the
candidates themselves provided),
o to make a wise choice and
o most importantly to vote.
On its face, the letter neither says, nor does more than that. It is
not clear to me why some employees read more than this into the
letter.
Given the facts that this credit union carries Digital's name, that
it got much of its initial funding from Digital, that it continues to
occupy space at Digital facilities, and most critically provides an
important service to a large number of Digital's U.S. employees, I
can not honestly say that John's decision to notify members of this
unique election was irresponsible or inappropriate.
I hope this is responsive to the concerns raised in your memo.
Please fell free to distribute it as you see fit. The next time I'm
in ZKO I'll stop by for lunch so that we can continue our discussion.
|
516.15 | DIGITAL 1831.10 | MLTVAX::SCONCE | Bill Sconce | Wed Apr 15 1992 15:11 | 14 |
| <<< HUMANE::HUMANE$DUA1:[NOTES$LIBRARY]DIGITAL.NOTE;1 >>>
-< The DEC way of working >-
================================================================================
Note 1831.10 DCU campaign, Digital, management & morale 10 of 17
11SRUS::SCONCE "Bill Sconce" 8 lines 8-APR-1992 19:45
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
I am not happy with Ron's reply. I'll write to him directly.
Comments from others, however, would be welcome and appropriate, especially
from those who may disagree with me.
Also: I forgot again. Permission to forward or re-post anything I've
written in this thread, according to P&P, is granted.
|
516.16 | Noting that I did respond to Ron Glover, from DIGITAL 1831.17 | MLTVAX::SCONCE | Bill Sconce | Wed Apr 15 1992 15:12 | 63 |
| <<< HUMANE::HUMANE$DUA1:[NOTES$LIBRARY]DIGITAL.NOTE;1 >>>
-< The DEC way of working >-
================================================================================
Note 1831.17 DCU campaign, Digital, management & morale 17 of 17
MLTVAX::SCONCE "Bill Sconce" 56 lines 15-APR-1992 12:35
-< My answer to Ron's letter >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
.10> I am not happy with Ron's reply. I'll write to him directly.
It took some time, but I've sent a response to Ron. (To his letter in .9,
which in turn was a response to my .0). I don't want to give the appearance
of desiring a back-and-forth argument with management in NOTES, so I'm not
going to post my letter here, since it tries to respond to Ron Glover's
letter point-by-point. I will forward to a copy to anyone who requests one.
(I will NOT keep names, or any kind of distro list.)
A couple of things, though, not part of my point-by-point, I do think are
worth posting here.
------------------------------------------
[...]
Digital employees care deeply for the Company, and a powerful esprit de corps
waits to be tapped by any gesture of real leadership. It is precisely because
of this deep loyalty that morale suffers so much when management loses touch
with how it's coming across to employees.
Yesterday I received Delta Briefing #12, which John Sims introduces with,
"Our belief in employee involvement is based on respect for the
knowledge and skills our people have and how that knowledge and
those skills translate into Digital's success.
"When we say we're committed to employee involvement, we're not
talking about a program or a department, we're talking about a way
of doing business, about teamwork."
John's introduction, and the Q&A with Jack Smith which followed, are full of
healthy encouragement for Digital as a team.
[...observations that what we're seeing is the opposite of that spirit...]
[I told Ron that I couldn't begin to tell him] how many similar observations
are made in hallways, in lunchrooms, and at coffee stations. But [Ron] should
know about one particular employee who stopped by my office yesterday. So
should John Sims, and so should Jack Smith.
I don't even know this employee's name; although I've seen him around ZKO, I
wouldn't have guessed that he knew mine. Nevertheless, he found my office
to thank me for writing to you. He said that he wanted me to know that "a lot
of people feel the same way, but they're afraid to say anything". The really
poignant thing was that HE WAS WORRIED THAT HIS VOTE IN THE EMPLOYEES' CREDIT
UNION ELECTION WOULD BE USED AGAINST HIM! He had agonized over sending in his
ballot, because he saw that his badge number was printed on it. He said that
he didn't expect an instant reprisal, but he was going to worry that some
future job action, or lack of a job action, might result. He is afraid that
his vote is going to be recorded and tracked!
That such fears can exist at Digital is a sad commentary, and one which would
once have unthinkable.
This morale and management-image problem cannot be adequately addressed by
statements which, in effect, say "trust us". Lack of trust has BECOME the
problem.
|
516.17 | My response to Ron Glover also contained this | MLTVAX::SCONCE | Bill Sconce | Wed Apr 15 1992 15:16 | 14 |
| Because other recent events have appeared to employees to demonstrate that
Policy will be created on the fly, an ad hoc approach will continue to do
damage. Employees are eager to follow reasonable policies; they usually
do a far better job of policing each other than management could ever find
the time for. (Similarly, employees will follow unreasonable policies,
albeit not eagerly. They WILL do what they're told.)
The trouble is, if Policy is seen as an instrument for selective reprisals,
employees will feel their only alternative is to avoid risks -- they'll
try to "keep their heads down". All the benefit of any number of Delta
Briefings encouraging individual spirit and initiative is sabotaged by just
one instance of perceived reprisal. In fact, if management is perceived as
less than genuine in its handling of Policy, even the best possible writing
in Delta Briefings will begin to be seen as cynical and hypocritical.
|
516.18 | | AOSG::GILLETT | Petition candidate for DCU BoD | Wed Apr 15 1992 15:33 | 10 |
| So is it reasonable to assume that folks who solicit for girl
scout cookies, united way contributions, donations for the homeless,
and food for the poor via email will be handled per this
clarified policy?
I'd bet the answer is "no."
Grumble, grumble, grumble....
./chris
|
516.19 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Wed Apr 15 1992 16:34 | 13 |
| �So is it reasonable to assume that folks who solicit for girl
�scout cookies, united way contributions, donations for the homeless,
�and food for the poor via email will be handled per this
�clarified policy?
�
�I'd bet the answer is "no."
Has anyone complained to Personnel about it? Some of these are done
under the sanction of DEC such as United Way so you'r right there; the
answer would be no if someone brought it up. I have noticed that
materials deemed inappropriate per the soliciation policy have been
removed from bulletin boards and notesfiles. These have been primarily
advertisements for services/businesses.
|
516.20 | | GUFFAW::GRANSEWICZ | REAL CHOICES for a real CU! | Wed Apr 15 1992 16:44 | 10 |
|
RE: .18
Rest assured that all of the politically correct causes will be well
protected even if they aren't aren't an "important employee benefit".
Guess DCU is going to have to get rid of the Bylaw section that allows
elections and petition candidates. The annual elections can be
replaced with annual coronations. DCU will save a lot of money too.
Come to think of it, didn't we *almost* just have one of these? ;-)
|
516.21 | Yes, Personnel has been notified ... | NOSNOW::GEORGE | Do as I say do, not as I do do. | Wed Apr 15 1992 16:49 | 10 |
| A retirement party was to be held for an individual. The party was
advertised on a flyer distributed through our mail system. The flyer
solicited $10 donations to defray the cost of the rented ballroom.
An individual here complained to Personnel about: 1. did Digital pay
the cost of copying the flyer (ALF is a large facility), and 2. the P&P
violation. It turns out that two _senior_ managers were involved at
some level. The silence from Personnel is deafening.
Steve
|
516.22 | I won't even put up with sanctioned solicitation... | EDWIN::WAYLAY::GORDON | VP of InfoServer File System | Wed Apr 15 1992 18:45 | 5 |
| I invoke the harassment policies every year at United Way time. It
cuts down significantly on the amount of electronic UW junk mail I receive.
--Doug
|