T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
9.1 | | VAXWRK::MAXSON | | Sun Mar 03 1985 05:46 | 9 |
|
I think that's folklore. There is a reserved parking place in the
Mill Yard that I think belongs to KO. I think Security insisted on
it, since there are crazy people here with long range rifles, who
..., well, best left unsaid, but they've arrested some idiot who
planted bombs near his home.
If you have Red Brigades over there (and I think you do), don't
argue about the reserved parking spot.
|
9.2 | | PRSIS4::DTL | | Sun Mar 03 1985 20:15 | 3 |
| I will try to find who is the guy who told me this story and will post here
more about it. I was visiting the Mill last June and didn't see any sign for
a specific president's car place.
|
9.3 | | FRSBEE::KLEINBERGER | | Sun Mar 03 1985 20:49 | 7 |
| I work at the MIll, and I have never seen a reserved place except for
handicapped parking, and van pools!
In my orientation into DEC last year, I was told the Mr. Olsen does not
have a private parking spot.
Gale
|
9.4 | | NANOOK::ALPERT | | Sun Mar 03 1985 22:04 | 1 |
| Possibly he flies in by helicopter? :-)
|
9.5 | | PRSIS4::DTL | | Sun Mar 03 1985 23:03 | 4 |
| But?... Mr Alpert is the same gentleman that I just answered to in LIFE.NOT !...
Hello! did you post your entry in human::sys$notes:whoareyou ?
Didier_#24_there
|
9.6 | | FRSBEE::KLEINBERGER | | Sun Mar 03 1985 23:52 | 7 |
| Give me a break... Mr. Olsen only lives three blocks from the mill. He
could walk to work.
Mr. Olsen has decided not to take a private parking space to maintain the
image that all people in his company are equal.
Gale
|
9.7 | | FRGATE::DTL | | Mon Mar 04 1985 17:19 | 4 |
| Mr Olsen doesn't live "three blocks from the Mill" as far as I know, but in
Lincoln, 15 miles away.
Didier_who_was_staying_in_Lincoln_last_June
|
9.8 | | FRSBEE::KLEINBERGER | | Tue Mar 05 1985 14:34 | 11 |
| Dider,
During my introduction to DEC last summer, we had a volleyball game
with our new managers. When we drove to the DEC field, we were pointed out
that a house we passed was Ken Olsen's house. Maybe it wasn't exactly three
blocks (I guess-ta-mated) It was not 15 miles.
Anyway... the issue is..he does not have a resevered parking spot. I asked
at work yesterday.
Gale
|
9.9 | | BZERKR::THOMPSON | | Tue Mar 05 1985 17:28 | 22 |
| I think that more important then the reserved parking stop
KO doesn't have are the privileges that we 'little people'
do have.
For example, helicopters. Anyone in the company who needs to
take a helicopter between plants may. You just call up Aviation
give your badge and cost center and off you go. In most companies
you have to be (or have permission from) a major big wig to do
anything resembling that.
Also I have arranged plant tours for school groups on short notice
with no work needed by my managers. I have gotten conference rooms
booked in plants other then my own. Again with out the need to
involve a manager. I have arranged aid to many customers over the years
that would have taken higher (sometimes much higher) approval at other
companies. I am sure that the last few lines do not impress some of you.
I worked for another computer company for over two years. Believe me
the average DEC employee has more authority and resources then the
average first line manager does at some other companies. And most of
us take our resources for granted.
Alfred
|
9.10 | | GVASA::CASELLINI | | Tue Mar 05 1985 17:49 | 22 |
| Alfred, you pointed out something which surprises me a little..
You said, that "the avarege DEC employee, has more privilege than a first
line manager in other companies..." (sorry if it is not exactly the same
you said)...
Now, I read or heard somewhere (can't remember) that the big difference
inbetween DIGITAL and IBM, is that at IBM, managers take decisions,
and at DIGITAL, they agree....meaning that at IBM a manager can take a
decision, which he thinks is good for the company, while we (our managers)
have first to go through the whole tree of managers, to have a decision
accepted...
Forget IBM, and forget that they certainly also have to go through a
certain management tree...remains the fact, that it seems to me, that the
routing for a new and good idea is much too long. And the day it is
accepted, other companies will already have it on the market...
Couldn't this be a sign of "lack of trust" ? Or is it just a wrong
organisation of the whole?
Norbert
|
9.11 | | BZERKR::THOMPSON | | Tue Mar 05 1985 19:32 | 62 |
| RE: 10
There are several levels and types of privilege. All companies
handle them differently.
For example, in sales the level that is required to give a special
discount varies. At Prime (in the US anyway) the district manager,
who is the next level up from the salesman, can give huge (by DEC
standards) discounts on HIS OWN authority. At Perkin-Elmer, the
district manager can give small discounts and his boss can give
big ones. At DEC it takes some one at or around the VP level to
give special discounts. In this case, other companies 'trust' more.
On the other hand, a software specialist at DEC can contact a
developer directly. This was not always true but is now. Even
VMS will talk these days. At other companies, as it used to be
at DEC, you have to go through channels.
The level required to obtain hardware for home use is lower here
then at other companies. At DEC most any cost center manager can
(will is another issue) authorise you to take home equipment. I
know companies where it takes a VPs signature.
The helicopter ride (see .9) is another 'little' authority that
is restricted at other companies but not at DEC.
The ability to use DEC resources (mostly computer time) for midnight
projects is unheard of at some companies. In fact, the ease of getting
computer resources for company projects is amazing to people from
some companies I have heard of. Outside of DIS, how many people at
DEC wait more then a few minutes to get additional privileges on
systems here? A person goes to the system manager, says I need foo
privilege to test this new program, system manager says ok. Or ok
but when you are done it goes away. At other companies it's ok fill
out this paper in triplicate, get 5 signatures and we'll review your
request.
Consider also interNET usage. No DEC employee has to ask permission
to access the ARPA or UUCP networks through our gateways. At other
companies and schools it requires special permission and is closely
watched.
IBM managers often have vast power by DEC standards. They seldom
require sign off from great numbers of people to get started on a
project. DEC manager usually do need lots of sign off to get started.
However, once the project is started they can usually get vast
resources VERY quickly.
A big problem with a customer can also get someone low in the chain
of command big authority very fast at DEC. It does happen.
I know a software specialist who was once told, in effect, "anything
you need and can't get let me know and I'll get it for you" by someone
representing KO. You better believe he got everyone and everything
he needed to fix the customers problem.
In general, at DEC, the little authorities are available at lower
levels then else where. The big authorities are, perhaps too often,
available only at higher levels then say IBM. All companies are not
IBM nor are they all DEC. As they say on the advertisements, your
authority may vary, use this information for comparison only.
Alfred _getting_long_winded_
|
9.12 | | LEZAH::HAKKARAINEN | | Sat Mar 23 1985 14:32 | 12 |
| re .0
Sounds like one of those stories that, true or not, tells a good deal about
the working atmosphere at Digital. It goes along with first names, simple
dining facilities (some places having vending machines for everyone), and no
titles on office doors. One can meet with someone and no idea about that
person's title or rank. It's a good style and important to the way that we
work.
kh_who_gets_a_good_parking_spot_by_getting_to_work_early
-30-
|
9.13 | | RAJA::SEGAL | | Tue Mar 26 1985 06:09 | 26 |
| I hate to shatter peoples' image of DEC as a People Company, but recently
there have been some changes.
KO DOES indeed have a personal parking space outside the door to MLO10. Within
the past few weeks, a number of new parking spaces have been created in that
same vicinity and Ken's secretary has been parking there.
5 years ago, Ken used to park up the hill by MLO1 and walk down to his office.
A number of times we used to pass each other (I started out working 3rd
shift. aarrrgggghhhhh!) on the hill by the former, infamous "three deep"
parking lot.
About 3 years ago they created "COMPANY VEHICLES ONLY" spaces across from
MLO12 (MLO22?), where the VP's secretaries used to park their Personal vehicles.
BJ (Bill Johnson and other VP's) park in front of MLO12, in the "VISITORS
ONLY" parking area. I once parked there to off-load a rainbow to my office
on MLO12-1, and promptly got a DEC Parking ticket (so I left the vehicle
there for the rest of the day!). I assure you that BJ, KO, the secretaries,
et al do NOT get parking tickets!
To cover up these parking privilige changes, they post the spaces as "COMPANY
VEHICLES ONLY" (neither KO, BJ, et al have DEC Company vehicles, to the best
of my knowledge).
Len
|
9.14 | | HARE::COWAN | | Sun Apr 07 1985 02:10 | 10 |
| I have to agree that people (me) take their privileges for granted. I've
wandered all over ZK to get an answer to a question or help with some problem.
Noone, absolutely noone, has told me to see their manager to get approval to
get help. Likewise, I've had people come from very random places, walk into
my office and ask for help. I may not know the answer, but I'm always
happy to give it my best effort.
Doing this just seems like the DEC way.
KC
|
9.15 | | PRSIS3::TREGER | | Thu Apr 18 1985 13:40 | 29 |
| I'm pretty sure Norbert is right (remember, I'm Olivier, we had New Year's
night together with Didier).
I really think that when you see market situations such as looking at every
other manufacturer doing business with IBM-PC compatible hardware, and, us,
trying to sell a magnificent Rainbow, I become much more confident in saying
that we've adopted a "conservationist" (don't know the right term in English)
position that's not the one that a MARKETING people would have adopted.
Sorry for such a long sentence, but this comes directly from heart : I've been
teached Computers through Micros and I can't bear to see so much money wasted,
trying to make people sure that technology is the best, even better than
money.
I've been told in a Salesmen Seminar (I was working at Tandy - Radio Shack
before, that's not the best company to work but is the best one to sell
anything, even SIDA - bad joke !!!), well then in this seminar, we were told
that the good product wasn't the one that's perfect nd that you're to sell,
but the one people com to buy.
If anyone has another version of "How to sell anything to anyone", I'm really
interested in.
I'm happy to communicate (Just ask PRSIS4::DTL or PRSIS3::DTL if I'm not !!!)
Bye, and read you later on PRSFSA::IPS, PRSIS4::TREGER, PRSIS3::TREGER
Olivier
|
9.16 | | PRSIS3::DTL | | Fri Apr 19 1985 10:22 | 3 |
| Olivier, could you introduce yourself in PRSIS3""::SYS$NOTES:WHOAREYOU.NOT
please?
|
9.17 | | NY1MM::MUSLIN | | Sat Aug 03 1985 11:42 | 7 |
| So, suppose Ken Olsen really does not have his own parking spot. Why does
everyone immediately assume that that is GOOD (conversely, why do those who
say that he does not have one assume that that's BAD)? Personally, I would
prefer to see KO spend his time thinking about marketing rather than looking
for a parking space.
- Victor -
|
9.18 | | LEROUF::BREICHNER | | Tue Oct 15 1985 11:22 | 6 |
| re.17
KO might be thinking about marketing while he looks for a parking lot, as
well as an engineer might think about his project while he is doing the
same.
Fred_who_does_not_care_about_KO's_privileges_but_likes_to_argue.
|
9.19 | | MILES::CHABOT | | Mon Oct 21 1985 14:34 | 20 |
| If KO has a discreet parking place close to ML010, this doesn't really bother
me, but what does bother me is the fiction that he doesn't! We've got enough
good things, like Alfred said, and I think they're good enough alone to be
examples of our privileges without having to make up myths about a president
who hikes through the parking lot. And maybe the original (apocryphal) story
doesn't mean that KO doesn't have a reserved parking place, but that he doesn't
have a labelled reserved parking place. The country manager in the story
could have the same thing, by having spaces marked "Foo Parking Only" or
"Security Parking Only", and then making sure security knows his or her car.
Of course, maybe the story that KO parks in the regular lots is a ploy to
dissuade mad bombers--rather than try to determine which ford out of twenty
or so in the central area is KOs, they've got to figure out which one out of
hundreds is his.
Most people I know are certain that KO lives in Lincoln, and I think I remember
from the news stories about the bomb threats years ago that this was the
case.
Heck, if you got to choose between Lincoln and Maynard, what would you choose?
|
9.20 | | SYBIL::STANSBURY | | Tue Oct 29 1985 12:11 | 9 |
| Yes, Ken does in Lincoln - on the intersection of some of the busier streets
in Lincoln (not that there are very many busy streets in Lincoln).
An Wang lives about 2 miles (still in Lincoln) from Ken. An has a full-time
guard in his driveway, while Ken's house is about 30 feet from the street
and fully visible (although I've never seen anyone in his house when I went
by).
Jack
|
9.21 | Ken says "Do what is right..." | DELNI::PERKINS | | Sat Feb 22 1986 19:26 | 41 |
| Wow! This note sure did get a lot of interest.
It also made a point that seems to have been overlooked
in the fervor over whether or not KO has a "private"
parking space.
Ken (who does indeed live in Lincoln) does not have an
assigned space, but he does typically arrive at work
early enough to see some of the 3rd shift (Yawn_n_n!)
going home. At that time in the morning he has the ability
to choose almost *ANY* parking space he wants!
Many things have changed over the years, not the least
of which is the fact that Ken finally gave up on his
old brown Pinto -- and accepted a company car (not
a limo, that's not his style,) but (I think) an Escort
which he parks with in the area reserved for company
cars near building 12.
All the rest of us have the same privilege. If we want
to arrive at work early, we can park almost anywhere.
If we have a company car, we can park it in any available
company car space.
=-=-=-= =-=-=-= =-=-=-= =-=-=-=
I think the fact that individual workers have the authority
to "do what is right" is the best example of the fact
that (for the most part) DEC applies the principles
expressed earlier (putting the customer first) to the
way we do business. The worker is the one closest to
the customer (be he internal or external) and the rest
of the company is structured to support that worker's
ability to help the customer.
True, this is an imperfect world, and DEC is no exception,
but the majority of the people I have worked with (both
in the field and internally) have understood and supported
that founding principle: (paraphrased)
'We will do what is right, for our customers and our employees.'
|
9.22 | Where do I get my company car? | BEECH::ECKERT | Jerry Eckert | Sat Feb 22 1986 22:04 | 5 |
| re: .21
Have I missed something? Where do I pick up my company car??
- Jerry
|
9.23 | Auto aside | SWORD::WELLS | Phil Wells | Sun Feb 23 1986 15:19 | 11 |
| > ... is the fact that Ken finally gave up on his old brown Pinto -- and
> accepted a company car (not a limo, that's not his style,) but (I
> think) an Escort ...
I heard that this was done when Ken joined the Ford Motor Company
Board of Directors. It was felt that a Pinto did not meet the image
that these people had. I understand that they offered Lincolns
and Mecuries, but Ken would not accept them. After more discussion,
he accepted (or bought) an Escort.
Now there's a *real* man.
|
9.24 | Ken; and company cars | HUMAN::CONKLIN | Peter Conklin | Mon Feb 24 1986 00:09 | 9 |
| Ken does have a reserved space in the Mill. It is located behind
building 10. It is frequently used by his secretary!
Ken does not have a Digital company car. As a director of Ford,
he gets the use of two new cars each six mnths. The first time,
he blew their mind by taking a Pinto (his wife, however, did choose
a Continental).
You sign up for a Digital company car by moving to the field.
|
9.25 | More ways than one... | BUNYIP::QUODLING | Known to most as Q. | Mon Feb 24 1986 02:22 | 5 |
| >> You sign up for a Digital company car by moving to the field.
Or you can become a Vice President :-)
q
|
9.26 | 4 wheel drive | CRETE::SHAMEL | Marsha Shamel | Tue Feb 25 1986 11:35 | 5 |
| Ken pulled up to the Valet Parking at the Westin Hotel for DECworld
in some type of 4 wheel drive (Blazer type - I could not see the
make)
|
9.27 | | XANADU::DICKSON | | Tue Feb 25 1986 11:38 | 1 |
| I believe it is a Ford Aerostar.
|
9.28 | Bronco | CRETE::SHAMEL | Marsha Shamel | Wed Feb 26 1986 12:58 | 5 |
| Found out (fromt he sales manager where he got it) that it is a
Bronco. Not that it is important but at least the fact is straight
now.
|
9.29 | | STAR::SZETO | Simon Szeto | Thu Mar 27 1986 11:21 | 13 |
| < Note 96.0 by CRETE::EDMONDS >
-< }- Responsibility -{ >-
At the MicroVAX II Pre-Announcement for Consultants, KO cleaned
up his own and others' juice and coffee cups, left on the conference
table while attendees were getting their lunch.
Everyone in the room was wearing a two (women) or three-piece dark
suit, pin stripped. Bally or similar wing-tips and white shirts
with silk ties (or bows).
Ruth
|
9.30 | another story on Ken. | HUMAN::DTL | have a look at RAINBW::ASKENET daily | Tue Apr 22 1986 18:45 | 8 |
| A couple of weeks ago someone knocked at Ken's door at 2 in the
morning in his Lincoln home. He personaly went to the entrance and
saw a joungster with long dirty hair, badly dressed, curious looking,
etc... He opened the door and asked the guy about what he wanted.
The guy asked for a phone to give a call. Ken replied "Of course!
come in and use that phone..."
(from a secure source)
|
9.31 | reply to .8 | ARGUS::COOK | Let there be Metal | Sun Jun 15 1986 18:54 | 6 |
|
re .8 The house that you passed by (near PKO) is used as a second
home or meeting place by Mr. Olsen. However, don't go near it,
it has a vast security system.
PRC
|
9.32 | The Little Brown House | HUMAN::CONKLIN | Peter Conklin | Sun Jun 15 1986 22:58 | 18 |
| re .31:
The house next to PKO1 is "the little brown house". It is a conference
center reserved to Ken. It contains a living room style conference
room. It has a kitchenette. And a small back room that Ken sometimes
uses to get away from his office.
The security systems is similar to the other buildings in PKO.
The house was owned by "a little old lady" when DEC bought the PKO
site. She would not sell. But DEC took an option on the house for
when she died. When she did, DEC renovated the house to its current
configuration.
The house is not Ken's. Anymore than the other houses DEC has picked
up and uses as conference centers. Like the "Headmaster's House"
at Boylston. Or the Lancaster House. Or the house on the LKG site
that is being renovated for the same purpose.
|
9.33 | Parking Meter | CURIE::DIMAN | | Sat Aug 02 1986 12:59 | 11 |
| A number of years back - when Digital was substantially smaller.
I ran into Ken's secretary putting money into a parking meter
on the street in Maynard near the Bldg. 12 where Ken's office
was located. I said, "is that Ken's car?" and she answered, "yes,
he arrived at work late, and there were no more spaces in the
parking lot."
I believe that says a lot for a man, who founded this company,
yet who believes in a democratic workplace.
|
9.34 | Nice, but he could have been nicer | ODIXIE::VICKERS | Don Vickers, Notes DIG member | Sat Aug 02 1986 18:31 | 8 |
| re 33:
It would have been even more democratic if Ken himself had been
feeding the meter.
Does that really come under a secretary's job description? (`;
Don
|
9.35 | | COVERT::COVERT | John Covert | Sat Aug 02 1986 20:08 | 4 |
| He can't do that any more. Meter feeding is now illegal in Maynard. When
your two hours is up, you have to move.
/john
|
9.36 | How does that work? | MTV::HENDRICKS | Holly Hendricks | Thu Sep 18 1986 14:38 | 4 |
| I always wondered...how can they tell if you fed your meter, or
are there for the first round?
Or are parkers on the "honor system"?
|
9.37 | | CSSE32::PHILPOTT | CSSE/Lang. & Tools, ZK02-1/N71 | Thu Sep 18 1986 16:37 | 4 |
| well... the "meter maid" walks past the car, and notes the time
and the registration number... if it is still there 2 hours later
and the meter hasn't got a penalty flag or whatever showing then
by definition you fed the meter.
|
9.38 | take a close look at your tires... | VAXWRK::SKALTSIS | Deb | Fri Sep 19 1986 00:54 | 4 |
| ever notice little chalk "X"es on your tires?
Deb
|
9.39 | Alignment marks | SKYLAB::FISHER | Burns Fisher 381-1466, ZKO1-1/D42 | Fri Sep 19 1986 11:29 | 6 |
| I've seen (elsewhere) meter enforcements officers go so far as to
make an alignment mark on the tire and on the ground. If the two
marks are still lined up after the appropriate interval, then clearly
the car has not moved.
Burns
|
9.40 | | NAC::SEGER | | Mon Sep 22 1986 09:36 | 5 |
| I was in Carmel and recall that you were not allowed to feed the meters (they
chaulked your tiers) AND if you tried to move you car within the same
parking space you received even a stiffer fine than for just overparking!
-mark
|
9.41 | Chalking == Vandalism | COOKIE::WITHERS | Reality is for those who can't cope with Science Fiction | Wed Sep 24 1986 20:04 | 16 |
| I'd heard that there were some places (Washington, D.C. comes to
mind) where the police WERE NOT permitted to chalk tires because
of a severe law suit.
The story went something like this:
A police Officer chalked the tires of a gentleman's mazeratti.
The Gentleman cought the officer in the act and charged the officer
with vandalism. The gentleman placed the police officer under
"citizen's arrest". The case went to trial. The judge in the case
decided that it was indeed vandalism to deface an individual's car
by chalking the tires. A lawsuit followed. The District paid a
large sum of money. Police in Washington no longer chalk tires.
BobW
|
9.42 | Mayor Harry Callahan | HIGHFI::MICKOL | Videographer | Fri Sep 26 1986 13:52 | 13 |
| > < Note 9.40 by NAC::SEGER >
>
> I was in Carmel and recall that you were not allowed to feed the meters (they
> chaulked your tiers) AND if you tried to move you car within the same
> parking space you received even a stiffer fine than for just overparking!
And if you are a repeat offender, you get to go see the Mayor and his
.44 Magnum, "the most powerful handgun in the world". Do you feel lucky, punk?
:-)
Jim
|
9.43 | REPLY TO 9.17 | XYZZY::BSSST20 | | Thu Sep 24 1987 16:28 | 3 |
| HEAR! HEAR! I COULDN'T AGREE WITH YOU MORE!!! MY GOD, THE MAN'S
WORKED FOR A NUMBER OF YEARS TO BUILD THIS COMPANY UP. GIVE HIM
A BREAK!!
|
9.44 | umm | REGENT::MERRILL | Glyph, and the world glyphs with u,... | Fri Sep 25 1987 14:56 | 9 |
| I agree with the sentiment in .43, but there may also be a security
recommendation in there too: reserved spots tell the crazies who's
in their office.
There are "visitor" slots you'll note, and I would really be surprized
if security ticketed KO's car!
rmm
|
9.45 | Ken lives in Weston... | WR2FOR::BOUCHARD_KE | Ken Bouchard WRO3-2 DTN 521-3018 | Mon Apr 25 1988 22:33 | 5 |
| .21> Ken (who does indeed live in Lincoln) does not have an
I think he lives in Weston...the reference to Lincoln was,I
think,because he was at Lincoln Labs just before he founded DEC.
|
9.46 | Lincoln | HPSCAD::FORTMILLER | Ed Fortmiller, MRO1-1, 297-4160 | Tue Apr 26 1988 09:49 | 5 |
| re .45: KO home town
According to my 1982 phone book:
Olsen Kenneth H, Weston Rd, Lincoln, MA, 259-9083
|
9.47 | telling it the way I see it | SLDA::KIRICHOK | My God, it's full of stars! | Thu Apr 28 1988 13:01 | 11 |
| I'm gonna tell it the way I see it. Ken Olsen parks whatever car
he is driving outside of building 12. Whenever he is not around
(doing whatever else where) I've noticed that his spot is empty
while the other spots outside of building 12 are full. There is
no sign by the spot he parks in. So you can't really say that it's
reserved for him, but like I said when he isn't around no one parks
there.
(I know this because the hall way by my office over looks his parking
spot and I've seen him get into or out of his car when I pass by the
window.)
|
9.48 | re .47 - respect | HJUXB::SCODA | | Fri Apr 29 1988 12:45 | 2 |
| Sounds like a simple example of the respect most DEC employees have
for "Uncle Ken".
|
9.49 | I think there is a sign there | VIDEO::FINGERHUT | | Fri Apr 29 1988 16:28 | 5 |
| > Sounds like a simple example of the respect most DEC employees have
> for "Uncle Ken".
Are you sure it's not because that spot is marked "SECURITY VEHICLE"?
|
9.50 | There is one now, lying down though. | SLDA::KIRICHOK | My God, it's full of stars! | Tue May 03 1988 13:00 | 6 |
| I'm positive that there is no marking there.
But, just after I posted the reply, I did notice a sign lying down
on the ground by the spot. It looks like there's been too much
talk, and security is going to put a sign up. I'll let everyone know
what happens when it happens.
|
9.51 | Just a parking spot, eh? | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney | Mon Aug 08 1988 09:13 | 29 |
| tangent from 583
A reserved parking spot is an assertion that some employees are
given perks not given to other employees, not by virture of business
need, but by rank (or in Digitalese: salary level).
This is the slippery slope.
The next thing will be use of first class travel and accomodations
by one group of employees, and required booking into double rooms
for another group of employees.
Then we'll start to see the flow of information and the ability
to contribute based on what rank in the corporation one has and
not on ability.
Frankly, I agree with Ken Olsen that executive perks are nonsense, but
he's fighting an irresistable tide. Most senior managers think
his ideas are quaint, and the no-perks idea the quaintest.
It's poison to employee morale for managers to "fix" a parking problem
by awarding themselves reserved spaces. It puts the managers out of
touch with real employee concerns.
The overall effect is a corruption of the corporation, when more time
and energy is spent in making sure that perks remain scarce and are
awarded to the brown noses. Career management over customer
satisfaction.
|