T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
348.1 | trend? maybe | TIXEL::ARNOLD | Are we having fun yet? | Mon Jul 20 1987 14:42 | 7 |
| I don't know about Crimson or Tobins, but I *am* concerned about
Digital contracting with outside consultants to do software programming
for DECworld; specifically, with ALL-IN-1. Digital is not into
the food catering business, but I thought we were into software??
If my family name was "Nike", would I wear "Keds"?
Jon
|
348.2 | Don't let THAT slip into the literature! | YUPPIE::COLE | I survived B$ST, I think..... | Mon Jul 20 1987 17:30 | 7 |
| RE: .-1
Now THAT is REAL hoot! I guess the DECworld planners found it was
cheaper to go outside rather than pay some delivery unit people $89 or $115
per hour, which is what customers are paying. And I guess that says there
aren't many Sales Supporters conversant in ALL-IN-1 programming, or else their
expense transfer costs were more than the outside vendors' profit price!
|
348.3 | | CSSE::MDAVIS | Grins | Mon Jul 20 1987 17:49 | 10 |
| If all you want is a one-shot use-it-and-throw-it-away piece of
code which requires no further support or enhancements, then a job
shop will probably serve the purpose. If you're looking for a
corporate partnership with long-term implications, then DIGITAL
Software Services is the better solution.
Whoever chose to hire the outside contractors probably don't care
whether or not they are in business after September!
Marge
|
348.4 | the American Way? | MORMPS::WINSTON | Jeff Winston (Hudson, MA) | Mon Jul 20 1987 19:12 | 8 |
| Capitalism suggests that one way to keep your vendors delivering their
best is to occasionally put their contracts out for bid. An
interesting side effect of this is that you might find someone who
appears better. Sometimes they may really BE better, but the only way
to find out is to give it them a try.
What would happen if that office down the street kept its computer
business with 'small' vendors instead of giving 'big' Digital a shot :-)
|
348.5 | Big Digital wasn't always big | MAY20::MINOW | Je suis Marxist, tendance Groucho | Tue Jul 21 1987 10:03 | 20 |
| re: .4
>What would happen if that office down the street kept its computer
>business with 'small' vendors instead of giving 'big' Digital a shot :-)
We wouldn't be here. The offices down the street were doing business
with a much larger vendor, and gave small Digital a shot.
This has been going on for a long time now: we changed *to* Crimson
from a smaller agency (and a general use of even smaller local agents
such as Glennon in Maynard). We also changed to Metropolitan from
Liberty Mutual for insurance, because Liberty wasn't big enough.
Some competition is good, though. I read somewhere ("Soul of a New
Machine?") that DG has two cafeterias in one of its plants, each
run by different vendors.
M.
|
348.6 | Marriott caf in DEC? | ANGORA::MORRISON | Bob M. LMO2/P41 296-5357 | Tue Jul 21 1987 17:38 | 6 |
| Are there any DEC plants within 20 miles of Maynard that have
Marriott as the caf vendor? I knew Marriott was in the food service
business but this is the first I heard of a Marriott caf at DEC.
For the last 10 years or so Tobin's has had a virtual monopoly on
DEC cafs in greater Maynard. That's a great story about DG; can
anyone confirm it?
|
348.7 | Marriott in LTN and BXB - worse than Tobin | HYDRA::ECKERT | Jerry Eckert | Tue Jul 21 1987 18:32 | 9 |
| re: .6
LTN dumped Tobin for Marriott a month or two ago; Marriott also
handles BXB (Boxboro).
As bad as Tobin was, Marriott is even worse (in terms of both quality
and price). The only improvement I've seen is the vending machines,
and even that is marginal given that they're not fully stocked a
fair portion of the time.
|
348.8 | RE: .6 | GNERIC::FARRELL | Thirty Six Bit Paleontologist.. | Wed Jul 22 1987 10:39 | 14 |
| RE: Data Genral
Last thing I heard, the Southboro,Mass DG sites have a
collection of fast food outlets (Papa Gino's,Mcd's,Burger King)
in plant. The idea was put into place as part of DG's "cost cutting"
philosophy.
RE: Tobins
After several survey's in the LTN plants, TOBIN's was booted out and
replaced with Marriot.
|
348.9 | Food is not food | SYSEFS::MCCABE | If Murphy's Law can go wrong .. | Wed Jul 22 1987 17:11 | 6 |
| Yup. BXB is Marriott. Personally prefer the cusine in LKG.
At DG in Westboro we had a pizza shop and a deli.
-k
|
348.10 | Tobin Inc not the same anymore | ATLAST::BOUKNIGHT | Everything has an outline | Thu Jul 23 1987 22:08 | 4 |
| Part of the problem I was told started when Tobin senior died awile
back. Since then, the company has evolved more into just another vendor
with no special history with DEC, and competition is now coming
into play.
|
348.11 | see On_The_Road for Crimson details | EUCLID::PAULHUS | Chris @ MLO 8-3/T13 dtn 223-6871 | Fri Jul 24 1987 12:59 | 4 |
| For info on our problems with Crimson Travel, see note 9. in
DELNI::ON_THE_ROAD. I've had minor problems with Crimson compared
to some of the replys to 9. I have had excellent service from AmEx
Travel agents, especially the one at Epcot. KP 7 to select.
|
348.12 | the logic of contractors vs full-time employees | ODIXIE::CARNELL | DTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALF | Fri Aug 24 1990 09:59 | 35 |
|
In my large field facility, I observe a fair number of employees who
are actually outside contractor personnel.
I also observe where functions are being jobbed out to contract service
vendors, and the internal departments eliminated, as for example in
facilities where a full-time DEC employee who is an architect had her
job eliminated because of this.
I now read in UPI that Jack Smith says Digital must reduce its
headcount by 8,000.
I sense that their are lots of contractor "employees" and more outside
contractor service vendors taking over functions because it's a way
around "headcount" restrictions.
The end consequence seems to be full-time employees who now have no
jobs.
I can understand if available people are in Mass/NH and the jobs are in
the field and the New Englanders won't relocate but my perception is
that there are lots of contractor employees and contract service
vendors doing work formerly done by full-timers within Digital even
within DEC in Mass and NH.
Why can't the full-time 8,000 employees needing jobs be retrained to do
the work of contractor employees and contract service vendors?
Is the problem unwillingness to relocate to the field? Is it
artificial headcount restrictions? Are the 8,000 incapable of being
retrained? Will Digital someday have only one employee and 125,000
contractor employees? Do contractor employees and contractor service
vendors have better loyalty and involvement and commitment to building
a better and more successful Digital than full-time employees?
|
348.14 | | ACOSTA::MIANO | John - NY Retail Banking Resource Cntr | Fri Aug 24 1990 13:49 | 21 |
| RE: .12
Actually it seems to me that using contractors in the field makes a lot of
sense. It is only recently that the margin requirements have been changed
to make using contractors attractive for the numbers making game.
Basically the field is a body shop just like any other. When a job comes in
Digital rushes to scrounge up bodies. The difference is that when the job
is over Digital is stuck with all those bodies.
It makes sense that when a job comes in, Digital goes to a contractor, gets
a body, then resells the body to the customer. The customer is happy, Digital
is happy, and the contractor is happy.
However, when you talk about certain corporate groups then I'd agree with you
100%. There are organizations up-north that have armies contractors who have
worked for years with them.
In the field the contractors are paying for themselves.
John
|
348.15 | same in germany | GYPSC::SCHNEE | | Mon Aug 27 1990 03:07 | 27 |
| re: .14
you're right, John. Some more information on that: it is a trend
to use contractors, not only in 'the field', but also for admin.,
finance, logstics (will be in Germany 100% covered by a general
contractor company), educational services (coverage about 40% by
contractors), EIS: a lot of contractors in the computer centers,
in the project area.
The idea behind: to react flexible to the market, BUT: also to
reduce the headcount (contractors are financially treated as equipment
like a computer or desk), to reduce the personnel costs. The last one
to reduce costs, is always mentioned, but it is not true. We had a
system manager, who got fired, then, after 4 weeks he came back
as a contractor, but his income raised by 300%! That couldn't be
reduction of costs.
The other problem is: we have a lot of people working together with
contractors. These contractors have to have 'training on the job',
so that the employed people will become more ineffective, always doing
training to someone else (in some areas, like admin and finance, people
are changing very often). That will produce costs.
In the last 2 years we (workers council in digital germany) observed
that a lot of jobs are given away to contractors and it's getting more
and more. And a lot of things are not any more done in a quality we
are used to. And I think, that supporting people doing their job to
sell something to the customer need effective, and high quality
supportive work to be done for her/him.
Erika
|
348.16 | Peaks and Valleys | KYOA::LOGRANDE | | Mon Aug 27 1990 13:13 | 27 |
|
Contracting is the only we can afford to be competitive. I agree with
.15 that there are problems with contracting for services when we
should have full time staff to do the job. That is penny wise and pound
foolish which is something that is going on all to often these days.
Where contracting is right is in the solutions delivery space. First of
all this business consists of peaks and valleys. No one in todays
Digital wants to carry the manpower in between projects and sometimes
we get project that require a superhuman effort to staff if you are
looking to staff with permanent employees.
On the other hand there is a plethora of people working out of body
shops. These people are very often excellent programmers (I know I've
used them) and guess what we can't compete with them on price. An
Additional bonus for Digital project managers, if your contract person
is not performing to your expectations send him back. There are dozens
of body shops that will be happy to source that spot for you.
So if we really want the solutions integration business we should be
selling the total solution and delivering the PM and the Architect with
a staff of Temps.
And Don't fool yourself thinking we can do it any other way. As long as
we try to delivery everything with permanent staff we're back to
selling residents.
|
348.17 | Company policy about hiring a contractor? | VISA::CHURCH | Dave Church, CT Eng. Europe/Valbonne | Tue Aug 28 1990 03:36 | 19 |
| RE:.15
>> We had a
>>system manager, who got fired, then, after 4 weeks he came back
>>as a contractor, but his income raised by 300%! That couldn't be
>>reduction of costs.
I thought that this is against company policy, or at least a rule was
put in place in Germany after a fiasco when an employee left Digital
(working in one department) and then came back and worked for another
as a contractor, very soon afterwards.
Mind you nothing surprises me when I can remember someone basically
being kicked out (asked to find another job) and so he left and went to
work at another DEC office in a different country. I can't believe that
checks weren't made to find out reason for move etc. etc. Mind you I'm
moving away from the subject here.
Dave
|
348.18 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Tue Aug 28 1990 09:57 | 9 |
| I think you're right about the policy of not hiring a contractor for some
amount of time after the employee leaves.
However, I think that only applies to someone who contracts directly with
DEC. If DEC has a contract with a service company to provide a service,
and a former employee goes to work for the contracting company, there is
nothing DEC can do about it.
/john
|
348.19 | DEC can and does set rules for contract agencies | CVG::THOMPSON | Aut vincere aut mori | Tue Aug 28 1990 10:12 | 8 |
| My wife works for a temp agency. DEC has very strict rules about
who they take even from a third party. The rules forbid sending
people who took the buy out but not people who were fired with
cause interestingly enough. DEC is also not willing to pay standard
fees (which is a disincentive for the agency to do business with
DEC) but that's a different topic I think.
Alfred
|
348.20 | And _sell_ that which we do _well_ | SVBEV::VECRUMBA | Do the right thing! | Thu Aug 30 1990 11:35 | 21 |
|
re .13
> -< Do only that which we do well. >-
Absolutely. That means whoever does the (quality) job at the least cost
gets the work, inside or outside.
That's half the equation. The other half is to find things which are
traditionally thought of as costs and to make them into profits. For
example, at Digital, real estate is a "cost." That's fine for plants,
but doesn't make sense for office buildings. McDonalds, for example,
runs a real estate division which MAKES money -- millions of dollars
every year. They own and manage their own real estate as a business, to
make money. We need more of that kind of thought around here. What are
the things we do internally that are "costs" that we could make
_profits_ from if we expanded to provided services outside DEC? (Like,
own and manage office buildings _for a profit_ in which we have
offices.)
/petes
|