T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1084.1 | | BARTLE::STRIFE | | Mon Apr 09 1990 19:07 | 25 |
| I think that, if you are talking about men and women without college
educations, then the man's entry point tends to be direct labor, ie
shipping dock worker. I also believe that it is every bit as hard for
a man to work his way off that dock as it is for a woman to get out of
the clerical role. In fact, I think that it has become harder for them
than it used to be.
If you're talking college degrees, particularly the liberal arts type
of degree that doesn't prepare you for a particular career or a degree
which prepares you for a non-business career, your observations, at
least as they pertain to women, are probably pretty true. (I'd like to
believe that college educated women having to take clerical jobs in order
to gain entree into the business world is a less common phenomenon than
it was 18 years ago when I started out.) However, I'm not sure that
men with like qualifications get hired into management positions very
often. I'm not saying that they don't, just that it hasn't been my
experience here at Digital. I'm wondering if, with the occaisional
exception, they just don't get hired at all.
I also firmly believe that what many, if not most, women lack when it
comes to career advancement is the necessary network.
Polly
|
1084.2 | | SA1794::CHARBONND | if you just open _all_ the doors | Tue Apr 10 1990 10:12 | 10 |
| re .1 Polly, pour yourself a hug for your first paragraph.
Dana- who's been a dockworker *forever*
PS I remember you from a Hazardous materials course about 9 years
ago, back when I was a
dockworker :-)
PPS I'm tunneling out under the walls !
|
1084.3 | off the cuff thoughts | LEZAH::BOBBITT | festina lente - hasten slowly | Tue Apr 10 1990 11:14 | 57 |
|
> Why is it that many women work their way up from the secretarial pool
> to management, and men seem to begin at entry level management?
I think for many women, the option of beginning at entry level
management is closed to them. Either they do not have the skills, or
the training, or the credentials, or their skills and training and
credentials are not valued by the potential employer to the point where
they would give them the chance.
Or the potential employer may hear the woman say "I want to start
*here*", and says, "okay, but you have to prove yourself and start
*there* first". Either they really feel the need to see a woman prove
themselves, or they need another secretary and this looks like a good
way to get one (if a woman starts as a secretary, there are many
businesses which will probably guarantee that even if she DOES rise to
lower management her pay will be scaled BASED on the fact that she was
a secretary to begin with, which saves the company money). I have
heard of women who tried to jump through the secretarial hoop placed
before them (be a secretary and prove yourself, or get famliar with the
department or whatever and then we'll see about promoting you), and
they take the job, and are NEVER promoted, and wind up leaving the
company frustrated and angry and disillusioned....
> I've worked my way up from temp. to admin. sec. to project specialist,
> and many times I saw a gaping void between men's and women's entry
> positions.
This seems kind of like the bottom-end version of the glass ceiling (or
is the glass ceiling fluid throughout the ranks, only solidifying hard
enough to hit your head on at the top). THIS is where the glass
ceiling begins, with incredulity even towards excellent credentials
(where women often must have better credentials to enter the arena
where men of lesser credentials are often welcome - as I read recently
in the book "Unnecessary Choices", about the lives of upper-level
business women and their experiences in business).
> this overlooks ability and the reality that women's
> roles today aren't what they used to be (i.e., regarding single
> mothers, men who choose to stay home to take care of the family, etc.).
Yes. Not only that, but it slows the change and progress that could
come from more women in the workplace (more new thoughts, more new
perspectives). I think another reason that women are not welcomed with
open arms into the workplace is that people (often men, but sometimes
women too) do not TRUST women entering the workplace. Even with the
reassurance the woman is career-oriented, and has earned credentials X,
Y, and Z. For some reason there is disbelief in a woman's ability to
perform in today's business world. She may not be given the chance
she would have had were she born male. She may be made to earn the
chance that a man seems to come by with less work.
No it's not fair.
-Jody
|
1084.4 | Bring me the broom! | FRECKL::HUTCHINS | Wheeere's that Smith Corona? | Tue Apr 10 1990 12:50 | 27 |
| How does one define entry level management position?
For example, if a person with a liberal arts degree applied for an
entry level position in management, what would be available?
I have worked for several large corporations both in Massachusetts and
California, and I have found similar challenges and frustrations. it's
almost like the teaparty in "Alice in Wonderland". The entry level
jobs do exist, but the qualifications and credentials are illusive.
In the course of an interview with a major healthcare provider in
California, I asked about the availability of in-house courses which
were available for employees to develop skills and advance. The answer
was "Yes, there is a wide range of courses available, but the phones
must be covered." I was applying for a support position where I would
be the only group secretary. Arrrrrrrrrrrrrrgh! No, I didn't accept
the offer of a position! (The company also frowned on employees dating
other employees and the women could not wear slacks. This was in 1982
in San Francisco.)
At times, I feel that advancement through the ranks is a combination of
the "Wizard of Oz" and "Alice in Wonderland". The potential is there,
but it just feels like the rules keep changing!
Judi
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1084.5 | The different entry points pay differently, too. | COGITO::SULLIVAN | Singing for our lives | Tue Apr 10 1990 14:22 | 14 |
|
I think another difference exists, too. I think that entry level jobs
in areas like facilities, shipping, and some technician jobs that
might be considered entry level are more likely to be offered to entry
level men than to entry level women. The woman is more likely to be
offered a clerical or receptionist job, and guess what -- those jobs
often pay less than the other jobs I mentioned. Maybe JEC has helped
with that in this company, and I should mention that I'm stating an
opinion that I have formed only through anecdotal evidence -- not
through statistical survey.
Justine
|
1084.6 | No easy answer | FRECKL::HUTCHINS | Wheeere's that Smith Corona? | Tue Apr 10 1990 16:01 | 28 |
| re .5
To keep it simple, I'm postulating on the management path.
There are many who rise up through the technical and service ranks to
management. In this case I'm looking at those who choose management for
a career and the discrepancy of the entry points that men and women
experience.
Does anyone have info on companies which have (or had) management
training programs? I remember that one company I worked for had one,
but phased it out. Unfortunately, I don't know why. I've seen
recommended management courses at Digital, but those are for people who
are already in management positions. (Please correct me if I'm wrong
here.)
Would a cohesive in-house management training program address the
inequities, or would it become another system to work around, rather
than through? And yes, who would pay for it?
No, the issue isn't as simple as providing education. It also lies in
the issues of pay equity, career tracks, attitudes towards women who
choose professional career paths, and a myriad of social issues. The
good news is that there is acknowledgement that the inequity exists.
The tough part will be to come up with an equitable solution.
Judi
|
1084.7 | This isn't a clear cut case | ASDS::RSMITH | | Wed Apr 11 1990 09:29 | 26 |
|
I think that beinge hired into an entry level management position is
difficult for any gender and it seems to me that this is the way it
should be. I wouldn't want a manager who had never done my job. A
college education in business or liberal arts doesn't teach you a
sepcific job skill. Lets say you major in business, you learn about
economics and how to, theoretically, handle people. That doesn't teach
you to be a product manager, cafeteria manager, shipyard manager or
secretarial manager. On the other hand, if while you were in school
you worked in a shipyard, then you might be qualified to be a shipyard
manager.
If someone wants to get into management, then I propose that they do
what my fiance did. Get a dual degree in business and something which
is easily measured. (like computer science or engineering.) Another
option is to get alot of internship experience while in school. That
way they can start out as and engineer or salesperson or whatever.
There is the other case of people who don't have the advantage of a
college education. If they find that prohibitive, why not join the
army? (If they have families, then I realize that the army is not an
option.) In this kind of case, then I would agree that men and women
probably start out in different areas. I don't know any male
secretaries! But I'm not sure that that isn't a self imposed
restriction. Personally, I'd rather start out as an admin than working
in a steel factory.
Rachael
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1084.8 | My observations and experience: | NUTMEG::GODIN | You an' me, we sweat an' strain. | Wed Apr 11 1990 09:55 | 33 |
| FWIW, Judi, my 15+ years of business experience bear out your
observation: college educated men (regardless of the degree) are hired
into "management" (i.e., exempt-level) positions at a far higher rate
than college educated women. This statement is based on my observation
of the several business organizations I've been part of and of the
organizations my brothers and friends have been part of.
Re. formal management training:
One of the companies I worked for had a formal management training
program. Prior to the early '80s the program started with a
supervisory training course offered to employees identified as
potential managers. The course was HEAVILY weighted toward male
participants. Then the enlightened '80s came along and the training
was modified. Now the company offered the supervisory training course
_and_ a management training course. Basic management concepts were
taught in both courses, but the focus of each was different. The focus
of the supervisory training course was on supervising clerical and
blue-collar workers; the focus of the management training course was on
managing white collar workers. Need I add? The supervisory training
course was HEAVILY weighted toward female participants who already were
serving as managers of clerical groups. The management training course
was HEAVILY weighted toward male participants who had been identified
as potential managers. Participants in the latter course generally had
a negative attitude toward the abilities and the potential of the
participants in the former course. How do I know? I was one of three
female participants in the management training course and had several
friends and co-workers who were participants in the supervisory course.
I hope things have balanced out in the intervening years, but wouldn't
bet my coffee money on it.
Karen
|
1084.9 | what pet peave? | XCUSME::KOSKI | This NOTE's for you | Fri Apr 13 1990 17:42 | 41 |
| Employment practices, one of my favorite topics. I started at DEC
as a temp. for 6 month, got hired in, as an Employment Coordinator
(same level as an admin sec). I suffered through that for 2 years
and am now an Assoc. Ops Analyst, hoping to be a Information Systems
Specialist by next year. I've been with DEC for only 2 1/2 years.
I was a bad hire for DEC, not that I'm not a valuable employee but
I was hired into a job I didn't belong. There were two strong reasons
that this happened, DEC needed a person to fill the position, I
was more than qualified. I wanted a job, I wanted a job at DEC. BINGO,
a match. On the contrary.
There are all to many people (not just woman) like myself that hold
college degrees (BS Management, CIS minor, Bentley College) that
are hired in under false pretense. I am referring to the promise
made by recruiters of "once you get into DEC you can get into the
right job". Well any one that has been here for a half a day knows
that this is mega-BS! Once you're in at the wrong job you are all
but stuck, it is a very difficult job to move into the "right job".
The reality of this hit home when I met a class mate of mine at
a site I was working at and he was make almost 10K more than me.
We had the same education. I don't fault him one bit, I fault a
system that continually allows people to wallow in menial position.
It allows secretaries to earn MBA's on DEC dollars yet has no systems
in place to but them into internal training programs for new MBA's.
My opinion of why this seems to happen to a greater percentage of
woman than men is that recruiters are less likely to tell a male to take
a lower job "just to get in". I feel that employment does not hesitate
to tell females this line. In my opinion what should be happening
is that recruiters should be telling them both the same message,
if you don't have the grades, skills, experience to get into DEC
at a level that your experience, education and skills should dictate
than take the skills that you do have and ofer them to a different
company. There are smaller companies that can and do utilize the
skills of their workers. DEC is not always the best place to live
up to your potential especially if you were not in the top percentile
in your class.
Gail
|
1084.10 | me too | SUPER::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Sat Apr 14 1990 21:38 | 64 |
| Gail, we share the same story, I think.
I also took a secretarial job to get into DEC almost 5 years ago - and
that was with 3 bachelor's degrees, a master's degree from Smith, 5
years of teaching experience, and 4 years experience running small
businesses (financial management).
I was working for a group of pretty high level staff people. A couple
of the women managers really understood how I felt, and my main boss
said, "Look, just use this as a stepping stone -- give me a year and
I'll help you get anywhere you want." And he did.
But the rest of the men I supported, for the most part, never said
'what's wrong with this picture?'. They loved the fact that I could
make a pc do just about anything they could dream up with spreadsheets
and databases, and create fancy graphics, but when some openings came
up in that group in wage class 4, I was considered 'ineligible' by all
of them. They thought I had an attitude problem because I wouldn't
jump up from my work to go make them 1 copy while they waited at my
desk!
Like Gail said, I just wasn't a very good fit for that job. I am much
better at doing my own projects than in supporting other people on
demand.
When I applied for a training job in that same building, I was told I
would have to do a year of phone support in an admin category first
- no way!
When I got into my job in ed services, I was hired in at a special
'lower' job class than any of the other people here because of where I
was coming from. I knew it was the right job for me, so I bit the
bullet and took it. Within 3 months, they had me working as a project
leader, supervising much more experienced people. Within 6 months I
was doing international travel. Within 9 months they promoted me.
After 2 years, they had managed to double my secretarial starting
salary.
The promotions and money have been coming along very quickly, and I
feel like I'm close to where I should be. I have given work 150% for
the past three years -- in my heart, I still feel like if I don't do
twice as much and come in every review as a 1 performer, I will find
myself answering phones and typing again some day, not a good role
for me.
I think the problem is that there are so many gray areas. When I
wanted a job in the group I was doing secretarial work for, they
invoked all the rules - like you have to have an MBA, and experience in
the field as an analyst. It didn't matter that I was training people
who were coming in to those jobs. And they didn't seem to notice that
the people (males) they hired didn't have MBAs. One was *working on* a
master's degree, I was told -- but I already had one.
It's just easier for many people to *see* men in entry level fast track
positions. I think women do have an easier time where a clear set of
credentials can be earned. But Digital has so many individual
contributor jobs that could be filled with college educated and other
women who are feeling bored and stuck in clerical jobs.
This issue is still close to my heart. The prejudice runs very deep.
Holly
|
1084.11 | | SALEM::KUPTON | | Mon Apr 16 1990 12:21 | 24 |
| I keep hearing that people took jobs that didn't want in order
to get "into" DEC. That's a mistake on the person's part because
they get bored, are unhappy, and believe me, they let everyone know
it one way or another. Then they decide to try for another job,
but unbeknownst to them, they've developed an "attitude" that no
one else wants to deal with. The sad part is that they wanted to
get that foot inside the door and were willing to do anything offered
to get inside. Most people don't realize that they begin to make
noise about how unhappy, unappreciated, unused, underutilized and
misused they are.
As to Management Programs. One of the best I ever saw was the
GE Management Program. If you were accepted, you spent six months
to a year in each of the following disciplines: QC, Production Control,
Shipping/Receiving, Engineering, Planning, Finance, Personnel, and
Manufacturing. Each step gave more experience and responsibility.
You could also be transferred to sites that needed those skills.
It took anywhere from 5-7 years to complete but GE never let go
of anyone who completed the program. By the time you completed it,
you were a pretty advanced manager trainee and very well paid. This
is program that would pay huge dividends to company like DEC and
its diverse departments/skills.
Ken
|
1084.12 | Methinks you'd have an "attitude," too. | FENNEL::GODIN | You an' me, we sweat an' strain. | Mon Apr 16 1990 13:36 | 50 |
| re. -.11 (Ken) - I hear and understand what you're saying about people
who take a job they don't want in order to get into DEC. Yes,
sometimes it is a mistake and sometimes they are so bored and unhappy
that they make life miserable for everyone around them - a habit that
quickly rebounds on them and their career.
HOWEVER, what some of the previous notes are saying, and what I can
testify to from my own personal experience, is that WOMEN at least (are
there any men who have been through this with DEC? If so, please speak
up.) are too often encouraged, to the point that it looks like all other
routes are closed, to take a mismatched position (usually secretarial
because there's such a demand for secretaries) and then move into the
career track of their choice from there.
I was one of the fortunate ones who found the move much easier than
others have found it. But the potential difficulties were only apparent
to me once it was too late - I'd already signed on as a secretary.
I can't speak for anyone but myself here. In answer to the unasked
question, "WHY would you do that?" can you say, "to earn a living"? I
had made the "mistake" of leaving gainful employment to try to start my
own business. In addition to a relevant college degree I had 12 years
of directly related business experience with a good record. But I also
had a folder filled with at least 2 1/2 inches of letters of inquiry and
application to Digital _alone_. If you add the equally large folder for
non-Digital inquiries and applications, you can see why my three year job
search had discouraged me to the point of taking a job, any job, just as
long as it would pay the bills. I'd begun to have serious doubts about
my own abilities to perform the tasks in the career of my choice, in
spite of having done it successfully for 12 years. But at least Digital
would pay me enough as a secretary to pay the bills. I'm sure you're
wondering, as I was, whether my credentials or attitude or appearance or
personality or hair color or (heaven forbid) gender had anything to do
with my unsuccessful efforts. All I know is that once the right door
opened, everyone involved seems to be completely satisfied with the
results I'm delivering.
Now you tell me why I had to be INSIDE Digital, in a job I really
didn't want, before the door opened.
(Moderate, non-specifically directed flames)
Why is it that people who have never experienced any difficulty getting
a job of their choice have so little compassion for those who don't fit
the template in some way (i.e., gender, race, religion, age,
nationality, you-name-the-deviation-from-"norm") and must work twice
and three times as hard just to get to the starting gate? And why do
those "chosen" people immediately blame the people who're trying so hard
because of their "attitude"?
Karen
|
1084.13 | 'unemployable' | DECWET::JWHITE | comedy in real life | Mon Apr 16 1990 13:55 | 4 |
|
re:.12
hear! hear!
|
1084.14 | | SALEM::KUPTON | Raphael,Donatello,Michaelangelo,Leonardo | Mon Apr 16 1990 15:09 | 34 |
| re:Karen
I re-read my reply and I guess it could be taken as a bit inflammatory.
I didn't mean it to be.
I understand your frustration. I guess what I'm alluding to is the
people that I've run into in the three sites I've worked at who
tend to keep saying that they just want "in" and will do anything
to get in. The hiring manager brings in that person to do a job
and lo and behold, he/she has a person who spends most of their
time trying to get transferred to XYO or to 1st shift or to Engineering
or something.
I understand the position you were in. There comes a point where
anything is better than nothing, but the anything has to be something
worthwhile.
After reading your reply about your experience, one reason that
you may not have gotten a job is because of your experience. I learned
a long time ago to never over-apply for a job. If you know what
a person is looking for in a new hire, don't be 3 or 4 times better
than the job description. It often will scare an insecure manager.
As my wife keeps telling me. If she did her job as well as the
previous Ass't manager, she'd be an underacheiver. Instead she has
to be better than her boss every day, especially now that she's
covering his job for a month. Why? Because they are both men and
in order to prove that she can do the job equally as well, she has
to do more of it, faster, and better. I guess it never ends....
Ken
|
1084.15 | sigh | WMOIS::B_REINKE | mother, mother ocean | Mon Apr 16 1990 18:44 | 16 |
| Ken,
I'm over qualified for my job. I turned down a chance at a Dec
job as a secretary 8+ years ago but took an entry level wage class
four job as a life line 6 years ago.
We were broke, and I could not find teaching work in our area.
I still have not found a way to move up and out after 6 years and
multiple courses and all kinds of new skills.
Now I have kids in college so I am a further hostige..
'over forty victim of fate'?
Bonnie
|