T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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120.1 | <...easy-does-it....> | CRETE::GORDON | | Tue May 13 1986 17:58 | 8 |
| In 12+ years of working at DIGITAL I would cast all my votes for:
2. Ignore it, because the "system will take care of itself"?
Perhaps getting older aand grayer I have mellowed. I cannot think of a
situation that has remained awful forever. Do yourself and Digital a
big favor by being the best for your own career (and be glad you are
clear of that particular situation). Bill G....
|
120.3 | so far so good, but.... | BOOLE::ARNOLD | | Tue May 13 1986 20:46 | 16 |
| re .-1: but wouldn't the hypothetical Bill Ferry look at the letter
(or rather, "novel" if all were told that is to be told) about this
hypothetical sws district and think "what does this guy have to
gain by doing this?" Any group, sws or not, that has around for
awhile probably has a few pieces of dirty laundry to air. It might
almost take a complete novel (which could be done in this hypothetical
case) to point out that this district in particular does obviously
not believe in laudrymats.
FACTS are easy, even verification of those facts would be fairly
easy, assuming that the "verifier" would not be overly paranoid
about retribution in some fashion; ie, it is not as easy for some
to relocate within Digital as it is for others due to family
considerations, etc.
Jon
|
120.5 | Caution. | NIPPER::HAGARTY | Australia, nowhere near Switzerland | Tue May 13 1986 23:03 | 9 |
| Ahhh Gi'day...
I would watch out for the "If you don't like the message, kill the
messenger" syndrome. As people have said to me in the past, pick the
political battles that you can win, and I don't think you can win this
one, unless you can find someone to have an informal chat to.
Unfortunately, this means it won't attract the attention it deserves.
{dennis{{{ -- Messenger.
|
120.6 | At most, be a Supporting Actor.. | MILDEW::DEROSA | John DeRosa | Wed May 14 1986 01:35 | 20 |
| The most effective thing you could do would be to back up & support the
people *still in that organization* who decide to speak up. If people
still in that hypothetical organization don't see anything wrong (= the
problems in their group aren't important enough for them to protest),
then I would hypothetically not say anything.
If you can convince people still in that group to work to change
it, fine, but otherwise, you hypothetically have left so it isn't
any of you hypothetical business anymore.
(I don't know anything about how sws operates, but I have to admit
that the story skeleton sounds fishy to me. Do you really think
that the anger of >=3 Fortune 100 companies has been covered up?
Or that the employee turnover, if as serious as you intimate, is
somehow being glossed over by some internal conspiracy?)
I love windmill battles more than more people, and I disagree
completely with an earlier reply which advocated never ever rocking the
boat. But given this scenario, a "supporting actor" is how I'd play
it.
|
120.7 | My Approach | DSSDEV::SAUTER | John Sauter | Wed May 14 1986 08:11 | 7 |
| I became involved in a similar situation, though not involving SWS
or customers, a few years ago. I marshalled my concerns and started
running them up the management chain until I was assured that the
manager common to my group and the group I was unhappy with was
aware of the problem. It may have been coincidence, but the problem
was fixed within a few months.
John Sauter
|
120.8 | more comments | CURIE::ARNOLD | | Wed May 14 1986 12:42 | 33 |
| re .4: a "dump job" or "genuine corporate concern"? Based on the
facts in this hypothetical case and what the listener/reader wants
to hear (or doesn't want to hear, as mentioned in .5), this could
probably be construed either way, which is one of my reasons for
being somewhat unwilling to even bring up the hypothetical case.
Yea, it might look like a "dump job" on the surface, but on the
other hand, the facts will stand for themselves, and if the shoe
fits...
re .7: the unfortunate part in this hypothetical case is that many
of the persons involved are no longer with the company, having taken
the brunt of much hypothetical abuse & deciding that "if this is
DEC, I want no part of it". Would hypothetical testimony from *former*
employees be considered as valid, or would it be looked upon as
input from people with an ax to grind? (Keeping in mind that in
real life, *sometimes* ax's are in need of being ground.)
re .6: Fishy? I could say more. Has the ire of 3+ Fortune 100
companies been successfully covered up? Depends on how you define
"coverup" I suppose. The mgmt in this hypothetical district is
well aware of the attitude of those companies; what reason would
they have to advertise that fact to greater Maynard mgmt? An "internal
conspiracy"? No comment on that, but the black-balling of a good
employee after he has turned in his resignation certainly smells
at least of gross unprofessionalism.
re: "the system will take care of itself". Are there any kind of
"checks & balances" in place that would point out things like high
turnover or some of the points outlined in 117?
Jon
|
120.9 | | MILDEW::DEROSA | John DeRosa | Wed May 14 1986 19:41 | 16 |
| CURIE::ARNOLD,
There are no safe answers. Even in the best of organizations, danger
exists anytime you complain about something. We can talk for hours
about how such danger is less in DEC than in most other companies, but
it is still there nonetheless. The only 100% safe course for you would
be to shut up and sit back. If you believe that you are right, then
marshalling FACTS and gathering statements from others (whether still
employees or not) is the only sensible way to proceed while limiting
the danger to your job security. But while you limit danger to
1% or 2%, you cannot make it zero.
I think alot of people in large organizations tend to overestimate how
bad things might get, while they underestimate their job security. If
you are a "good guy" in your group, your management should support you.
If not...
|
120.10 | The system WILL take care of itself | ODIXIE::JENNINGS | Dave Jennings, 351-2919 @ATO | Wed May 14 1986 23:27 | 24 |
| Whether by design or by accident, the system *will* take care of
itself.
Obviously, in the situation you describe, the managers are all
short-term goal oriented (the heck with next quarter, we need that
revenue THIS quarter). That only works so long.
After awhile, someone will figure out that the numbers will take
care of themselves if the customers (and maybe more importantly,
the specialists) are taken care of first.
I work for a district that (a few years ago) had a reputation for
being somewhat short-term oriented (no repeat business, high turnover,
low morale). Somewhere along the line managers (and specialists)
started to realize that customer satisfaction meant repeat business.
In other words, doing The Right Thing meant Making Budget:
a) If the customer is satisfied, he comes back.
b) If customers keep coming back, budgets are met.
Treating the specialists right usually helped a) and b) above.
It doesn't take a Havard MBA to figure these things out.
|
120.11 | Awareness or Action? | NY1MM::SWEENEY | Pat Sweeney | Wed May 14 1986 23:33 | 30 |
| I think you should do nothing. Not because you should fear the
consequences, but because your analysis adds nothing to things that
are already known. When it comes to acting on the problems, frankly,
you shouldn't expect them to come to you for advice.
Let's look at the problems:
(1) Turnover: District/Area/Country/Corporate staff people get the
numbers and look at them.
(2) Customers' Declaration: There _must_ have been some spectacular
incidents or series of incidents to reach this point. Surely the
exact nature and what conclusions the customers have come to regarding
{Professional Software Services, Application Products, Software
Product Services, Computer Services, ...} are known to at least
the responsible District Team.
(3) Customer Satisfaction Survey: District/Area/Country/Corporate staff
people get the numbers and look at them. This also is part of the
managers job performance goals.
(4) Improper Employee Reference: This is something that the former
employee can take to a District/Area personnel manager to for
resolution. Besides being unethical, it is potentially legally
actionable slander.
The person you bring this platter to won't thank you. After all, you've
assumed that the chain of managers on up are asleep at the wheel. Most
likely you'll bear the mark of the complainer or malcontent. It's
a label I've lived with for years.
|
120.12 | Complainers Beware | DSSDEV::SAUTER | John Sauter | Thu May 15 1986 08:35 | 4 |
| "Most likely you'll bear the mark of the complainer or malcontent.
It's a label I've lived with for years." So have I. I sometimes
wonder if it's worth it. Beware.
John Sauter
|
120.13 | No answers here... | JOET::JOET | Just like a penguin in bondage... | Thu May 15 1986 15:40 | 9 |
| In less drastic, yet similar deals in the past I have done nothing. In
future situations I will probably do nothing, also. As has been stated
before, things have a way of working themselves out over time.
I do, however, have to live with the knowledge that I might have
allowed a lot of human suffering come to pass because I didn't "do the
(morally) right thing".
-joet
|
120.14 | you're right, I think | CURIE::ARNOLD | | Thu May 15 1986 17:08 | 14 |
| Thanks for the replies. I think the guts of the problem is stated
in .-1 in trying to determine "what is the right thing". "Right"
is this case is subjective. Although I am no longer working in
that hypothetical sws district, I am no longer affected by what
happens there except in a "corporate Digital" sense. And if things
continue to go the way they are headed there, they will indeed "work
themselves out", out of necessity if nothing else, without me bringing
it to the attention of higher powers. On the other hand, I no longer
have the fear or retribution for "tattling" since I no longer work
in that area. But then again, if it continues to go downhill, why
should I fight the battle for the folks still there....
Thanks,
Jon
|
120.15 | | PSW::WINALSKI | Paul S. Winalski | Thu May 15 1986 19:40 | 10 |
| RE: .8
If you do take the hypothetical concerns to hypothetical upper management,
the hypothetical response is more likely to be positive if the concerns are
presented along with suggested, positive solutions. If the concerns are
presented in a way that says clearly "we have a problem here--let's all work
to fix it", as truly constructive criticism and not a "dump job", it is
likely to be received well by management.
--PSW
|
120.16 | Complain to the boss | TORCH::BUTLER | Cathy Jo "CJ" Butler | Mon May 19 1986 22:56 | 5 |
| My only thoughts on the subject are to wonder why the 3 companies
couldn't be encouraged to write nasty letter to Ken Olsen, stating
that they'll never buy DEC again. That's about the only way you
will see a quick response. Otherwise, the *system* will work it
out, to the detriment of Digital's reputation.
|
120.17 | | SMAUG::THOMPSON | | Tue May 20 1986 20:24 | 14 |
|
My experience has been that high turnover never sorts itself out,
the management concerned usually adapts to the situation
and starts compensating recruitment campaigns.
Unfortunately, I think this situation is rather common in DEC. At
least this is what a friend of mine tells me. He runs a small
software consultancy (~20 engineers) and provides support services
to customers who find DEC just too much to deal with. One of
his services is purchasing DEC equipment!
Getting the customers to write to Ken is a very good idea.
Mark
|
120.18 | Our Experience | NY1MM::SWEENEY | Pat Sweeney | Wed May 21 1986 00:37 | 8 |
| In markets where we have to compete for software consulting, our
average software specialist has far less experience that the
competition's consultant.
When we talk of "experience" in Software Services, we talk of
organizational experience, of projects initiated and completed by
software specialists who are now software engineers or managers
elsewhere within Digital or those who have left DEC.
|
120.19 | Concrete examples of winning or losing via experience | ENGGSG::GROLLMAN | GSG Systems Engineering | Wed May 21 1986 11:36 | 16 |
| It is not hypothetical to assume less experience on the part of Digital
employees. It is very rare (although not as bad as two years ago) to find
someone that is in the same job for three years. Being in the same
applications' field for three years was a sign of inability to grasp new
concepts and grow.
It seems that now, even more so than 4 years ago, the career path is into
management, not technical depth. I realize this topic has been covered in
other times and places.
We need concrete examples of technical tenure (length of time in
applications or product area) winning the business for DEC or losing it to
a more savvy competitor. The bottom line of higher paid employees evaluated
as a Return On Investment is the only way to convince our management.
Regards, Ira Grollman (GSG Systems Engineering)
|
120.20 | You serious? | NIPPER::HAGARTY | Australia, nowhere near Switzerland | Thu May 22 1986 04:28 | 14 |
| Ahh Gi'day...
.19> It is very rare (although not as bad as two years ago) to find
.19> someone that is in the same job for three years. Being in the same
.19> applications' field for three years was a sign of inability to grasp new
.19> concepts and grow.
You still believe this? Where I am, it's a sign of lack of other areas
into which to migrate.
{dennis{{{ -- Been here nearly 4 years.
|
120.21 | Flame... | POTARU::QUODLING | It works for me.... | Fri May 23 1986 00:06 | 12 |
| Hear, hear. Dennis. In remote areas like Australia, people that
want to move are considered rebels. I have a Unique Background
here, in that I have worked for Field Service, Software
Services, and Marketing/Business Management. I am, as is
Dennis, at a Dead-end in terms of Career advancement short of
relocating to the U.S. and that is treated around here like a
threat that you will go work for IBM. The half dozen people
that have managed transfers to the U.S. have found it so
traumatic that they don't particularly want to come back.
q
|
120.22 | Traumatic? | FURILO::BLINN | Dr. Tom @MRO | Fri May 23 1986 19:39 | 3 |
| Maybe they just like it here..
Tom
|
120.23 | Maybe.... | POTARU::QUODLING | It works for me.... | Fri May 23 1986 21:16 | 8 |
| Possibly, I would be interested in experiencing half the year
with snow on the ground, and a few other of the culture shocks
associated with life in New England. But unless the incentives
and opportunities were appropriate, I would look forward to
coming back to God's Own Country. :-)
q
|
120.24 | Go for a 'brain drain' | CLT::COWAN | Ken Cowan, 381-2198 | Sat May 24 1986 16:51 | 12 |
| If life is that bad for your former colleagues, encourage them to
join you in 'greener pastures'. Most of the hiring I have seen
has been through personal recommendation. If you are a good egg,
talk to your management friends about hiring some of your old
colleagues. Most management types I know are always on the lookout
for good talent.
The best thing I can do for the company is to do my best. That
means I need to be in a place where I can do my job without alot
of distraction. Battling management counts as a distraction.
KC
|
120.25 | but then again | CURIE::ARNOLD | | Sun May 25 1986 21:27 | 35 |
| re .15: it's not that those 3 hypothetical companies won't buy DEC
anymore. They clearly realize that DEC hardware is the best for
their applications, and will continue to buy hardware, which possibly
explains the success of a hypothetical coverup of that situation.
But by the same token, these 3 companies refuse to *EVER* have a
DEC software person on their premises again. The basic scenario
is that they buy a sws person at level 3 or 4 rates, the sws person
assigned to the account is greener than a freshly mowed lawn, after
a few months the sws person becomes somewhat competant, and then
is sent to a "hotter" account, being replaced by someone of the
green variety again.
As far as our competition (not necessarily IBM, DG, etc, but the
software houses like Compuware, RPI, etc), they are having a real
field day with this situation. They send out their high-level top
notch guru sws types at $45-$55/hour, while this hypothetical sws
district (and maybe other hypothetical districts as well?) are charging
$90-$110/hour for Digital "gurus" who can't find the "GOLD" key
on a WPS LK201 keyboard???
Given the idea of suggesting that the customer write a KO letter,
one of the 3 has done this. The resolution: a "one-time fix" of
providing a couple weeks of "free" consulting. For the others,
how can one tactfully suggest to a customer that he write a letter
to KO complaining about the problem? If the hypothetically concerned
DEC employee makes local mgmt aware of the problem, how can DEC
save face when the problem is still not resolved at that level?
Making upper mgmt aware of the problem (factually, not emotionally)
is the easy part. HOW to do that is tough, WHY should one do it
who is no longer working in that organization is tougher. And any
proposed solution (at least from me, hypothetically) is going to
be frowned upon because the very first place to start is to adequately
TRAIN the sws folks BEFORE they're onsite, & that costs $$$.
|
120.26 | what's the hyphothetical problem? | RAJA::MERRILL | Glyph it up! | Tue May 27 1986 11:18 | 19 |
|
Considering this as a "case study" and not as an individual complaint
might be informative too. For example, High Turnover rates of
employees is extreemly expensive (what does it cost DIGITAL to hire
an employee given all overhead expenses and disregarding the hire's
salary? $20,000?). That alone is a problem that needs to be fixed.
Second, notice that the 3 customer threatened to not use SWS. They
would appear to be loyal "DEC Customers" insofar as hardware and
software products. So the problem can be isolated. Maybe they
should write to a VP?
Finally, what's the real problem? Supervisors that try to beat-it
out-of-the-employees or need for more job training or variety
or Better Sources of Information for SWS people?
Rick
Merrill
|
120.27 | correction | CURIE::ARNOLD | | Tue May 27 1986 12:23 | 19 |
| I need to correct your second comment: these 3+ major customers
have not "threatened" not to use Digital sws, they have stated quite
emphatically (ie; almost corporate policy) that they will not use
Digital sws. This can be argued two ways: if that district is still
meeting their budget sws-wise, maybe there's not a problem. But
you could also argue that since these are Fortune 100 (2 of them
are Fortune 50) companies, maybe it's not good for Digital in general
to have them take this attitude.
Why have KO letters or letters to a VP not been written? I got
some more hypothetical info on this last week. Allegedly a bribe
in the sense of "please be happy, feel free to not use Digital sws
again if that's your decision, to make amends [and keep those letters
from being written] we'll give (ie, free) you copies of whatever
software you want". It's no hypothetical secret in this hypothetical
district that this has been happening for a number of years in an
attempt to make amends for unhappy customers.
Jon
|
120.28 | A Different Side of the Problem... | NCCSB::SPS | | Tue May 27 1986 20:41 | 10 |
| If this hypothetical district is now giving away software
that other customers (mainly the Federal Government) has to buy,
they could possibly be subjecting Digital to big lawsuits. It's
my understanding that we must give the Government our "best pric".
If they could show that we were giving software away to some and
making the Gov't pay, couldn't they sue? That would mean *real*
big bucks...
Billie (no lawyer by any means!)
|
120.29 | copyright problem? | CURIE::ARNOLD | | Tue May 27 1986 21:57 | 15 |
| Must give the gov't the best price? Is that true? I've never heard
that one before. I know some of the major companies (ie, GM) get
enough of a price break on certain items that it's better than the
employee purchase price.
Don't know about the lawsuit possibility either, as that could probably
(?) be written off as a "sales good-will gesture" or something like
that (as recalled from Accounting 101 courses). But my understanding
of the problem (besides the hypothetical "bribe" factor) is that
I *think* that giving away software in this manner destroys or at
least violates any copyrights that Digital has on the software.
Any lawyers out there to shed some light?
Jon
|
120.30 | | COVERT::COVERT | John Covert | Tue May 27 1986 23:52 | 20 |
| The law is that the Government must be able to purchase anything we sell
at the lowest possible price for the sames terms and conditions. Thus
we can sell to other customers under a quantity discount agreement with
Ts&Cs negotiated for that QDA at a lower price than we sell to the government.
This used to be extremely hard to make DuPont Savannah River Plant
understand: They wanted DuPont's QDA price and the Government's Ts&Cs.
Not possible.
As far as giving software away invalidating our copyright (licensing
capability, actually) this is not the case unless we give the software
away without getting the customer to sign a license. If you give a
copy of VMS away for free with no license, you have just put it into
the public domain.
This effectively means that when you give something away, the normal
order processing paperwork still has to be signed so that the customer
obtains the software under the normal license.
/john
|
120.31 | Wanna Buy Some Free Software? | NCCSB::SPS | | Wed May 28 1986 19:16 | 9 |
| Thanks for clarifying that, John.
As far as putting the software in the public domain.... If this
"hypothetical" district is giving away the software to begin with,
I seriously doubt that anyone is going to the trouble of issuing
software license. Wouldn't you agree? I don't know about y'all,
but that sorta frightens me.
Billie
|
120.32 | exactly! | CURIE::ARNOLD | | Thu May 29 1986 14:58 | 8 |
| re .31: yea, it kinda frightens me also, and because of that reason
and the others mentioned in this note, this is the reason that I
bring up this whole hypothetical situation. Something is rotten
there, and because of the hypothetical success of the hypothetical
coverup of what's really going on, I'm concerned about the hypothetical
potential for tarnish on the whole company.
Jon
|
120.33 | The Software Services Crisis | NY1MM::SWEENEY | Pat Sweeney | Thu May 29 1986 22:09 | 18 |
| The "crisis" in Software Services is that all is well except the
quality of the people we put in front of the customer.
Software per se, Software Product Services per se, Software Specialists
acting as the technical sidekicks to Sales Reps, for the most part
are all performing to the satisfaction of the customer.
But these are all discrete products or narrow areas where the customer
is only the "customer" indirectly.
When we put our $115.00 per hour person directly in front of the
customer, is that person better in the eyes of the customer than their
own in-house software people or consultants that are as near as your
telephone directory?
No. But the customer doesn't care why. What matters to the customer is
Digital can't provide the experience, competence, and depth that's
needed to do the job. There's nothing personal about it.
|
120.34 | now hold on a minute... | CURIE::ARNOLD | | Fri May 30 1986 17:52 | 60 |
| re .33
> The "crisis" in Software Services is that all is well except the
> quality of the people we put in front of the customer.
Sorry, have to disagree from personal experience. All is *not* well
within sws. We do indeed have some good sws folks to put in front
of customers, but all too often the "rookie" is thrown into a
situation where he is *expected* to perform like a heavyweight.
I've seen it happen too many times. Is it the green sws's fault?
Or is it the fault of sws mgmt who take a highly visible project,
sell that customer a sws "guru" on product xxx, then assigns the
green sws to that project, who can't even spell the name of
product xxx? Draw your own conclusions here, but please don't
try to tell me there isn't a problem.
> Software per se, Software Product Services per se, Software Specialists
> acting as the technical sidekicks to Sales Reps, for the most part
> are all performing to the satisfaction of the customer.
Sorry to disagree again, but I do ... somewhat. By "technical
sidekicks to Sales Reps", can I assume you are referring to the
sws folks acting in a "pre-sales" mode? Generally I think these
folks do a real good job. But when they get in front of a customer
who "knows exactly what he wants" or is himself very technically
competent, these folks fall apart. But: not their fault, since a
pre-sales sws person is not expected to be a technical giant, and
the Sales Rep should have gotten resources accordingly.
> But these are all discrete products or narrow areas where the customer
> is only the "customer" indirectly.
Huh?
Why should a customer spend $115/hr for a green sws person just
because he works for Digital, especially when he can get at least
twice the talent at at least half the price from a software house?
The reason I've heard sws managers & sales people state many times
is "because you're not just buying a person, you're buying the whole
of Digital". Agreed to an extent, but does that justify a customer
paying for training of a specialist because: (1) his/her sws mgmt
didn't have time to train the specialist, or (2) his/her sws mgmt
didn't want to spend the time (read: dollars) to get that specialist
trained properly?
I also think that much of the customer dissatisfaction (refer to
earlier replies to this note) comes from the fact that "somebody"
(sales rep, sws mgmt, project leader?) did not take the time to
correctly set the expectations of the customer. If I were a
customer & was told *up front* that the sws person coming out to
perform miracles on my system was green & would probably be learning
a few things on the way, I could accept it, rather than being told
that I'm getting a guru and later finding out I got a rookie.
But then again, I would then expect that the rate be adjusted back
from that $115/hr figure, which is reserved for "gurus". (And
maybe this last sentence explains why it's not done that way.)
Hypothetically, of course...
Jon
|
120.35 | | NY1MM::SWEENEY | Pat Sweeney | Fri May 30 1986 23:58 | 18 |
| Jon, we appear to be violently agreeing.
Parts of my note were written to explain why, according to traditional
Digital metrics, SWS seems to be A-OK to people looking in from the
outside, like many software engineers who might be reading this.
I'm not arguing that case, I'm explaining it.
To use the language managers use, it when software specialists are
"on site for revenue" that represents the area where customers have
the biggest gripe.
It's a gross oversimplification to say that $115 per hour is too
much for the level of talent we deliver, or that for $115 per hour
we ought to be delivering consultants of such caliber that if they
were not working for DEC they'd be earning six figures.
The problem falls under that complex area called "attracting and
retaining top talent".
|
120.36 | violent agreement | CURIE::ARNOLD | | Sat May 31 1986 13:58 | 17 |
| It must have been a long day yesterday, in re-reading your note
I think we might be in agreement. But we're straying from the topic
of this note, although perhaps another note on what can be done
to retain top talent might be in order here.
Retaining top talent is certainly relevant to the topic of this
note, but more than that I wanted to get input on what other folks
thought of how a phypothetical sws district (and perhaps this is
real, and perhaps more than just one) is handling business. This
clearly reflects on talent retention, but that's another issue.
Are the "standard business practices" hypothetically outlined in
previous replies to this note "right"? Are they isolated or is
this now the way sws normally does business? Or perhaps equally
plausible, am I being paranoid and over-reacting to a situation
that I'm hypothetically aware of?
Jon
|
120.37 | Who's Paranoid? | NCCSB::SPS | | Sun Jun 01 1986 11:10 | 12 |
| Jon,
I can't vouch for other districts, but I assure you that at least
one district *does not* operate the way you've described
(hypothetically :-) ). Also, I don't believe you are over-reacting -
you are showing that you care and I think caring people are what
have made Digital what it is today. Gosh, that certainly sounds
like "Ra Ra Digital"... this company has its faults, but it is
the best place I've ever worked...
BJ
|
120.38 | Simple answers | HITECH::BLOTCKY | | Thu Jun 05 1986 04:27 | 18 |
| WHY should you do anything? You still work for DEC.
WHAT should you do? Let what ever level of management you think is unaware of
the problem know about it. From what you seem to be describing, that might be
the area (formerly regional) level. You don't have to go in swinging, just
let them know what the problem is, the extent of it, and any ideas you have to
correct it (I assume you already did this at the district level while in the
district). They may or may not be aware of it, so don't assume it is news to
them; on the other hand, you might have a different perspective on the problem
that is valuable even if the problem is known. Try to be positive, discussing
things in terms of solutions to a situation; don't blame individuals. If you
do it right, you will give the impression "this person is trying to be
helpful", not "this person is out to get someone".
Discuss the situation with your current manager, who might have ideas on who
to direct your concerns to.
Steve
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120.39 | An Epilogue | PYRITE::HAFEZ | Amr A. Hafez 'On the EVE of Destruction' | Sun Jun 15 1986 04:54 | 70 |
| Jon, Jon, Jon,
I come here to give you the epilogue on your hypothetical district
(use shorter adjectives will ya!). First I want to address Pat Sweeny.
Pat,
I have known people from your district and have heard of some
problems. OK, NY has been maligned, but for different reasons. The
company does not like low budget districts, that's not your fault,
if you got more corporate support, you may be able to increase your
market. Face it, NY is IBM country. I think you guys have done{a
terrific job, all things considered. By the by Paul Giardina says
hi to you and carlos (Paul is a ex-DECie who got a good recommendation)
Jon,
The reason cur{tomers were pissed at the hypothetocal district
was because we were trying to do too much. We did multi milion $
fixed price projects without any experience. We were trying to be
a mini-Bechtel, and we blew it.
The 115$/hr guys are senior and principal, and those hypothetical
customers you mentioned can't get enough of them. What pisses off
these hypothetical fortune 500 corps, is our defaulting on a promise.
The F-500 companies are now big SWS customers and past grudegs
are mostly forgotten.
The hypothetical district is not another watergate. For the
last 2 years customer and employee satisfaction has been JOB 1
(to coin a phrase).
The hypothetical guys you mentioned who were balck-balled, always
insulted digital on customer site and would often disappear for
weeks at a time. They were a problem to manage. As a former project
leader, I can tell you that nothing is worse for a SWS team on customer
site than senior guys demoralizing the project.
I dont want to sound like joe-DEC, but the hypothetical management
team was and is working on the problems at hand. We threw away .5
mega $ fixing a problem at a hypothetical f-500 company and the
results were very good.
There were no less than five letters to K.O. from hypothetical
f-500 customers in the hypothetical district. He took action on
at least one occaison. Many DEC VP's have worked on problems at
the hypothetical district and things have improved.
Bottom line is, Sales often sets customer expectations incorrectly,
because they lack the tech-knowledg. SWS is most visible later in
the project and is often the goat. But JON, we ran our own estimating
sessions, we had the power to make an impact. Many of us did.
I did not like being in SWS because of the immense responsibility,
but when customers knew I was involved in the project, we always
beat RPI,Compu{are and all the other body shops.
We had the freedom to fix the the hypothetical problems, and
most of us did. So why bellyache about it now, there are good people
in the hypothetical district, and they are working things out. For
your info the hypothetical customer satisfaction rating was near
the top last year for the hypothetical district.
I think you and I should be proud of the things we did in the
field in the "dawn of computing". We changed an entire smokestack
industry from punched cards to VAXen with the works. You did a good
job there, so did many other people. Most hypothetical complaints
have been answered.
In the early days, we were still learning as we went, so did
{the hypothetical customers. TBU was always a joke, but there were
manuals and notes files to read.
Epilogue not{an Epitaph
Amr HAfez
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120.40 | | NY1MM::SWEENEY | Pat Sweeney | Sun Jun 15 1986 23:31 | 5 |
| Amr,
I found your comments on my district, the New York Financial District,
to be condescending and almost incomprehensible. My district, its
budget, its ability to compete with IBM are irrelevant to this note.
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120.42 | Hypothetical moderator returns | VMSINT::SZETO | Simon Szeto | Mon Jun 16 1986 18:18 | 14 |
| Hi, I'm back from a few days' vacation.
I feel that this discussion is getting personal, and I don't think
that that's constructive. Also I "suspect" that we aren't talking
about hypothetical situations here. If it's not safe to talk about
real situations, then perhaps it's better not to talk about them
at all.
This topic has run free for a while without intervention. Are there
really more points to be made that haven't been made already? (That
is, other than citing "hypothetical" examples?)
--Simon
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