T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
95.1 | I recommend the booklet! | CAMLOT::DAVIS | Grins | Thu Mar 27 1986 08:48 | 32 |
| There's a fine booklet which Personnel released a year or
so ago called "You, your career, and Digital" ...
It explains the 70/30 principle of career planning:
"Basically, the '70-30 Principle' means that 70 percent
of the responsibility for analyzing, deciding, planning,
and acting belongs to you. Thirty percent belongs to
the manager for information, guidance, training and
encouragement..."
What follows is the Table of Contents:
What is Career Development?
What is Creative Self Management?
Why is a Job Plan Needed?
Why Do You Need Feedback On Your Performance?
What is the "70-30 Principle" of Career Planning?
What is "Networking" In Career Planning?
How Can Your Manager Act As a Resource Person?
How Does Digital Support Your Career Growth?
Education and Training Courses
Internal Transfer Policy
Appendices
Self-assessment Questions for Designing a
Career Plan
What Makes a "Development Goal"?
How to Identify Developmental Objectives
Formal and Informal Development Alternatives
Regards,
Marge
|
95.2 | I got the text | PRSIS3::DTL | Paris, France | Thu Mar 27 1986 09:36 | 17 |
| yep. We have it. It is called here "How to prepare your JP&R"
This is not what I was thinking about. I just found the thing. It is
in the Engineering (engineering? who said engineering?) Guide:
"Self-direction
The opportunity for self-direction and self-determination is always
present at Digital. This allows employees to use their abilities and
expertise to determine their career paths. Although Digital does stress
self-improvement and professional growth, decisions concerning career
paths are considered the responsibility of the employee. Digital gives
encouragement and support in the form of tuition refunds. Job mobility
does exist, and employees are free to seek new challenges as part as
their professional growth" [page 9, 1984 edition]
Any volunteer for a Non-Engineering Guide, just to know where we
may go? :-)
|
95.3 | Everyone is responsible for their own future | LSTARK::THOMPSON | Alfred C. Thompson, II | Thu Mar 27 1986 10:23 | 22 |
| It is always a managers job to help you prepare for the job you
are doing now. It would be nice if they felt the need to help you
prepare for your next job too. Sometimes that is the case. In general
though, it is best if each employee plans his/her own plan.
In the past I have mostly always had managers who would help me
prepare for 'the next job'. Even to the extent of funding training
that was not 100% applicable to me current job. I normally try
to find justification for classes with my current job. I could
do my current job quite well with out several classes that I have
or am schedualed for. I convinced my manager that I could do better
still with them. For my self, I believe that the classes will help
me get and do other jobs later that I could not otherwise. This
is the plan which I feel is in both my and the companies best interest.
If one has a manager who is content with what his workers know now,
then his management should probibly have a problem with him. This
may mean that a worker can not get funded for in-house training
but outside training with tuition refund is still open to them.
No one should let management place limits on their growth.
Alfred
|
95.4 | move on | TLE::WINALSKI | Paul S. Winalski | Sun Mar 30 1986 16:57 | 8 |
| RE: .0
If your manager is blocking your career development, find another manager.
Transfer at the first available opportunity. When interviewing for new
prospective jobs, ask your potential new manager what his views are on
employee career development, taking courses, etc.
--PSW
|
95.5 | Can't find "You..." booklet | EXIT26::STRATTON | Jim Stratton | Tue Apr 08 1986 09:55 | 9 |
| Re .1 and Personnel's booklet called "You, Your Career,
and Digital" - our secretary contacted our Personnel
department (in Ed Services, Bedford, MA) and was told not
only didn't they have any, they'd never heard of it.
Is there a part number for this thing?
Jim Stratton
|
95.6 | Will contact author of "You..." booklet | EXIT26::STRATTON | Jim Stratton | Tue Apr 08 1986 22:21 | 14 |
| Matt Johnson sent me his copy. (Thanks, Matt!) However,
there isn't any part number on it. The "acknowledgements"
page includes:
Sheila A. Pidgeon
Manager, Employee Development
Manufacturing & Engineering
June, 1984
I'll drop her a note and see if there's a way that random
employees can get this booklet.
Jim Stratton
|
95.7 | How to order "You..." booklet | EXIT26::STRATTON | Jim Stratton | Tue Apr 22 1986 21:59 | 13 |
| Re .6 - here's an extract from Sheila Pidgeon's reply to
me, reprinted with her permission.
From: HUBIE::PIDGEON 14-APR-1986 12:02
Subj: YOU, YOUR CAREER AND DIGITAL BOOKLET
Copies are stocked in Northboro. Write a hardcopy memo to the
Northboro Literature Order Fulfillment Group (NRO3/W01). Include
your badge number and cost center (there's no charge but they neede
it for tracking purposes). The part # for the booklet is
EZCO48162.
Regards.
|
95.8 | Yes or no? Refer to 117.* | CURIE::ARNOLD | | Mon May 12 1986 17:26 | 1 |
| See note 117.*
|
95.9 | | MAAFA1::WYOUNG | Yow! Lemme outta here! | Thu Oct 27 1988 14:21 | 14 |
|
Re: .4
Easier said than done in my case. My background is in programming,
but I took a job in operations to get into the company. Now, my
year's up, I have skills in programming (but no degree), and my
knowledge set that I've acquired at DEC seems to be only valid in
operations. Since my current manager won't send me to class at all,
I seem to be stuck for the moment.
But not for long...
Warren Young
|
95.10 | So apply already | DWOVAX::YOUNG | Et tu, klaatu? | Fri Oct 28 1988 00:48 | 1 |
| We have openings here in Deleware...
|
95.11 | ok, I'll bite... | MAAFA1::WYOUNG | Yow! Lemme outta here! | Mon Oct 31 1988 09:34 | 11 |
|
Thanks! I will, and I'll let y'all know how it goes.
Warren Young
P.S. - Are we related?
;^)
|