T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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432.1 | !??!??!?!??!*&^%!??!?!?? | ULYSSE::WADE | | Tue Dec 29 1987 03:24 | 9 |
|
I have NEVER heard of such a thing! It has to be wrong.
Ask your personnel rep or manager to clarify what policy
or common practise is being quoted here.
Are there any special circumstances, such as an interview
being held hundreds of miles away?
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432.2 | Practice is to Pay for DEC Interviews! | SAFETY::SEGAL | Len Segal, 223-7687 | Tue Dec 29 1987 08:52 | 27 |
| RE: .0
There was a previous discussion about this, probably in DIGITAL
Conference (~2 years ago or so).
I do not believe that there is any "formal" DEC policy about this,
thus leaving it up to the descretion of your management. However,
in each group that I have worked in it has been an (unwritten)
policy and practice to allow the time off required to interview
within DEC, and to pay mileage for interplant interviews. [BTW:
This included Manufacturing and Engineering organizations, and was
true for WC1, 2, and 4's (we had no WC3's).]
My Wife was a DEC-TAG (WC2) for 2+ years and was allowed time off
for DEC interviews (for permanent positions).
If someone is telling you that you must take vacation time or lose
pay in order for you to take interviews, I would discuss it with
them. If this fails, use the "open door" policy and talk with your
Supervisor's Manager and Personnel, if necessary. In the past few
years we have hired a lot of management personnel from outside DEC
and many have not assimilated the "DEC culture", thus they may try
to invoke policies that reflect the way things were done in their
previous companies, not necessarily the way DEC tries to "do the
right thing" for its employees.
Good luck.
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432.3 | the relevant passages from the P&P | REGENT::EPSTEIN | Bruce Epstein | Tue Dec 29 1987 08:59 | 14 |
| The Internal Transfer Policy is Section 2.05 of the P&P. It states,
among other things, that the employee is responsible for notifying
"his/her current manager prior to beginning a formal interview process
with another group", and that the Manager/Supervisor is responsible
to "encourage [the] employee to do research and informational
interviewing around career goals."
As I have applied this in the past, interviewing is part of career
development, which should be the goal of every manager-employee
relationship, and therefore is on company time.
However, I suggest you talk to your manager, if you haven't already.
Bruce
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432.4 | Thanks | BRUTWO::MTHOMSON | Why re-invent the wheel | Tue Dec 29 1987 09:01 | 6 |
| Thanks all for the notes. I quess the special circumstances are
that I have had a chronic illness and have had absenses because
of it. My management feel then need me working not out ill or
interviewing and that the needs of the business come first...
MaggieT
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432.5 | WHERE IS THE DEC OF YESTERYEAR? | CAPVAX::HOWARD | | Tue Dec 29 1987 09:36 | 8 |
| Maggie, illness and sick time "should" be a separate issue, unless
you have used ALL your sick time. If you have not, your manager
should be letting you interview during company time. I would go
to Personnel and complain. Sounds like a bit of management harrassment
to me. Stick up for your rights and good luck.
Marilyn
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432.6 | | KLAATU::THIBAULT | Storybook ending in progress | Tue Dec 29 1987 09:54 | 6 |
| When I was a WC 2 I never had to use vacation time for interviews. Not
even when I had to travel and stay over night. They paid for the car
rental, the motel and the whole works. Sounds pretty odd to me that you
would have to use vacation time.
Jenna
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432.7 | Practice and theory (in that order) | BUBBLY::LEIGH | Boxes, boxes everywhere! | Tue Dec 29 1987 10:14 | 25 |
| In the course of 6 months, I had at least 6 interviews. Of these,
4 involved overnight travel. My management required the interviewer's
cost center to pay for the travel, and wanted me to keep the interviews
from interfering with customer requirements. There was no question
that interviewing was considered company business to be done on
company time, though.
The first paragraph of the Internal Transfer Policy seems to agree
that interviewing and transferring is business:
Digital's greatest asset is our employees and our success depends totally on
them. As Digital grows, our employees grow. As we accommodate our expanding
business needs, we will strive to accommodate the career needs of our
employees through internal transfer. It is the responsibility of both
employees and management to assure that these needs are met.
>> My management feel then need me working not out ill or
>> interviewing and that the needs of the business come first...
It sounds like Digital needs you to be growing, too. Your management
may not understand that their need for your immediate efforts must
be balanced against this.
Hang in there!
Bob
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432.8 | a sign of something bigger ! | CSSE32::APRIL | Snowmobilers .... UNITE ! | Tue Dec 29 1987 11:48 | 20 |
|
> Thanks all for the notes. I quess the special circumstances are
> that I have had a chronic illness and have had absenses because
> of it. My management feel then need me working not out ill or
> interviewing and that the needs of the business come first...
MaggieT,
I don't want to sound critical or anything .... but ... is your
cronical illness documented by a doctor ? I mean when your sick your
sick but when someone is out of work consistently 1 or two days a
week for an extended period of time it's a subject that can be
questionable. Sometimes it is an indication of someone's dissatis-
faction with one's job or environment. Again, though it IS a
managememnt problem as it should be corrected in an appropriate
manner (denying you common courtesy is NOT the proper method).
CHA
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432.9 | More information | BRUTWO::MTHOMSON | Why re-invent the wheel | Tue Dec 29 1987 14:35 | 13 |
| More information -1>
I have used up all my sicktime to date. My illness is documented
and I have been to several specialists and the company doctor.
They all agree that I have a chronic illness and that I may or may
not be disabled according to company criteria, not medical criteria.
All doctors agree that there will be times when I am ill. But somehow
my illness and status have to "be resolved"..before I can interview.
I can use my vacation time to interview as it is considered "my
time".
MaggieT
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432.10 | Am I being over sensitive...? | ODIXIE::CARNELL | DTN 351-2901 David Carnell @ATO | Mon May 23 1988 09:42 | 32 |
|
My "eight" manager in 14 months just sent me a memo containing the
following paragraph:
"It is important that you understand that before you make arrangements
for any interview you will need to notify me of the job that you
are interested in. I will then contact the hiring manager to find
out more about the job and confirm my approval for you to interview
for the job. This is to be followed without exception, even if
I am not readily available."
It should be noted that I am definitely NOT under any time obligation
regarding my present position, group and department.
This manager's memo seems incorrect to me and has a tone of
intimidation, which does not seem the Digital "right thing" to do,
especially if one has been seriously derailed in their chosen career
after extensive management reorganization over a 14 month period.
As I interpret personnel policy, I only have to notify my manager
that I have posted for a Digital position, and that the manager
should NOT be contacting the hiring manager prior to my interviewing
nor should I require any approval to interview for any position
that I desire to explore.
Opinions?
Official policy? (yes, I will be contacting my local personnel rep).
Am I being over sensitive or am I being intimidated?
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432.11 | maybe it's your boss that's over-sensitive ! | SPGOPS::MAURER | We come in peace; Shoot to kill | Mon May 23 1988 10:34 | 17 |
| re .10
Personnel policy #2.05 (Internal Transfer Policy) dated August 26 1985
states, in the section headed Employee Responsibilities, that "It is
expected that an employee will inform his/her current manager prior to
beginning a formal interview process with another group".
Having said that, the tone of the note from your manager is more than a
little intimidatory.
Are there any reasons why your manager may be feeling paranoic ?
i.e. has he/she had half of his/her staff leave recently and therefore
feeling under some pressure or something similarly disturbing ?
good luck.
Jon
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432.12 | One vote for 'unreasonable' | SPGOGO::LEBLANC | Ruth E. LeBlanc | Mon May 23 1988 16:09 | 8 |
| Re: .10
Sounds to me like your manager has a hair up part of his/her anatomy,
if you catch my drift.
Good luck with Personnel.
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432.13 | Another vote for paranoia | TIXEL::ARNOLD | I understand Jiminy now too | Mon May 23 1988 16:32 | 10 |
| I agree with .12, except that I was thinking a banana or corn cob
instead of a hair.
I've interviewed many times. Your obligation is to inform your
manager that you are seeking a position elsewhere within the company.
His/Her obligation is to help you. Based on the tone of that memo,
I think I might opt to decline such "help".
Good luck
Jon
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432.14 | | HACKIN::MACKIN | Jim Mackin, VAX PROLOG | Mon May 23 1988 16:58 | 13 |
| Some additiona information/help:
1) Get everything in writing, including a statement that both you and
your manager sign (and date) that indicates that s/he knows that
you are looking for another position within Digital.
2) Normally, the manager is not supposed to contact the hiring group
until *after* you have accepted the position (although the hiring
group obviously can call your manager up to get an opinion - why I
always have several other references to be contacted first). I
don't think that you are obligated to tell your manager specifically
who you are interviewing with, just that you are interviewing
*somewhere*.
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432.15 | Question .. | OCTAVE::VIGNEAULT | The Central Scrutinizer | Mon May 23 1988 17:15 | 7 |
|
Please correct me if I'm wrong, however I thought that you could
go on as many informal interviews as you desired, only when you
were going to apply for a position formally you are required to
notify your manager. Is this the case ?
Lv
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432.16 | Sounds out of line to me, too | DR::BLINN | Bill & Opus in '88 (Penguin Lust!) | Mon May 23 1988 17:16 | 11 |
| You're not on written warning or anything, are you? Although
I don't know you personally, I've always had the sense that
you're a good employee with a fairly level head, and motivated
to do what's good for Digital and its customers.
The statement from your manager, if you've quoted it correctly,
seems a bit out of line to me. I'd want to make sure that my
local personnel representative agreed with it before I took the
open-door approach to escalate the matter.
Tom
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432.17 | More input | TIXEL::ARNOLD | Support Gen'l Aviation, Kiss a Pilot | Mon May 23 1988 17:25 | 12 |
|
re .15, no Larry, that's not true. All you need to tell your current
manager, as mentioned earlier, is that you're looking/interviewing
*somewhere*. It's up to you whether you want to tell him/her where,
what group, or even what city or country. And a good interviewing
manager will not even conduct a formal interview unless you have
already told your current manager that you're looking. How much
you tell your current manager (outside of the fact that you are
looking/interviewing) is entirely up to you and the kind of
relationship that you have with your current manager.
Jon
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432.18 | | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | | Mon May 23 1988 18:00 | 24 |
| In recent memory, I changed jobs under extremely difficult cir-
cumstances. Contrary to the counsel of friends, coworkers, and
relatives, I did not escalate anything and instead, decided to
grit my teeth and bear it. In retrospect, I would say that this
was the wrong decision (although a few good bits of luck caused
the result to work out okay in the long run).
If you and your manager are both being reasonable, things won't become
nasty. If things *HAVE* become nasty, it's probably evidence that
either you or your manager is *NOT* being reasonable. If it's your
manager not being reasonable, then your being nice won't help -- It
will just leave you feeling cheated and bitter, and leaves a bad man-
ager loose in the DEC system, with their behavior reinforced by another
"success". If I were back in *MY* old position faced with the same
problem again, I'd "open door" it for sure. I'd also have my attorney
do some of my talking for me.
From other replies, you (now) know the policy. Confirm it with
Personnel. Then, with Personnel present (!), inform your manager
via a written memo that s/he is incorrect and that you will do what
is required by the Orange book. If the manager comes around, fine,
immediately forgive and forget. Otherwise, immediately escalate!
Atlant
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432.19 | informational interviews? | HJUXB::LEGA | Bug Busters Incorporated | Mon May 23 1988 22:25 | 15 |
|
Could someone clarify something for me. I recently talked to someone
who took the Dec Skills assesment/career management class, and I
vaguely recall them saying that an employee is entitled to take
"informational interviews" for other jobs, without notifying
their manager. The context was for someone who was interested
in getting information on a new geographic or career area, but not
applying for a specific job. Then, if they were interested at a
later time, they could notify their manager and do a formal
transfer process. The informational interviewer was obliged by policy
not to disclose anything to the employees manager
Anyone heard of this? Im curious, just curious.
|
432.20 | informational interviews are just that! | SYSENG::COULSON | Roger Coulson DTN 223-6158 | Tue May 24 1988 08:52 | 15 |
| RE:.19
"Informational interviews" are just that. If you go to another
department and ask them what they do and what skills are needed
that is an informational interview. I did one a few years ago where
there was a group doing a project that I thought I might have some
interest in. After talking with the manager/supervisor I found
out that it was not something I would be interested in.
If you answer an open req or send someone a current resume for a
particular position that is NOT an "informational interview" which
follows since you were looking for a particular JOB not information.
/s/ Roger
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432.21 | Why such a policy exists | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney DTN 352.2157 | Tue May 24 1988 09:16 | 12 |
| It's not been mentioned _why_ this policy which appears to limit the
authority of one's manager exists:
It's needed to establish some sort of equity between interviewing
internally and interviewing externally (ie resigning from Digital).
There's no reading of the policy quoted earlier that I can interpret to
authorize .10 to make those demands. Obviously, there's an unsaid
agenda item implying the manager has a large role in the career
management of his employees that is neither backed up by custom or
policy at Digital. Is this guy a new manager?
|
432.22 | Time Away? | SPGOGO::LEBLANC | Ruth E. LeBlanc | Tue May 24 1988 13:33 | 22 |
| This topic has reminded me of an item of curiosity that came up
about a year ago. A friend of mine, a secretary, had decided to
look for a new job. Doing the *right* thing, she went to her manager
to inform him that she would like to go out interviewing. His response
to her was something akin to "fine, but don't do it on 'my' time".
His issue was secretarial coverage while she was away.
I can understand this to an extent (i.e., limit the time away from
the office to some reasonable agreed-upon percentage perhaps), but
I can't understand a blanket statement that she COULD NOT interview
between 8:15-5:00. As it was, she ended up doing all her interviews
after 5:00.
My advice to her at the time was to see Personnel. Fortunately,
a job came up before it became an issue. Since she never found
out an answer, I'm curious what others think about it.
By the way, she was looking for a job in a local DEC office.
Any comments?
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432.23 | In a perfect world, things would be perfect | DR::BLINN | Bill & Opus in '88 (Penguin Lust!) | Tue May 24 1988 15:19 | 23 |
| To the best of my knowledge, none of us are slaves to any
particular job in the Corporation. At least, I don't think
that is the intent of any Personnel Policy.
In fact, DEC's personnel policies encourage both personal and
career growth. Each employee should find the job (which may
change over time) where he or she can be most productive and
useful.
Specifically regarding .22, how did this manager address other
"time" requirements, such as training? Was that also "Not on my
time"? There are always local abberations in the system..
A more reasonable response (one that's not likely to drive the
employee away out of spite) would be to ask that some kind of
arrangement be made to provide coverage for the employee's
function while he or she is out of the office. It's not totally
unreasonable to make this the employee's responsibility, as
long as the manager will support the employee in finding backup
resources. (In other words, this should be done to block the
employee from going on interviews.)
Tom
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432.24 | Satisfactory Conclusion to 432.10 | ODIXIE::CARNELL | DTN 351-2901 David Carnell @ATO | Fri May 27 1988 09:18 | 48 |
|
Ref: 432.10
This new manager has been with Digital for over ten years.
I challenged the manager on this, stating I believed it was not
Digital personnel policy nor the right thing to be doing on the
manager's part, namely telephoning a hiring manager to see the
qualifications in order to approve any individual's right to interview
for a new position within Digital.
After meeting with the manager, the manager acknowledged that the memo
was incorrect. The manager acknowledged that I had a right to explore
any new position, and if invited to interview, to do so, without the
manager contacting the hiring manager.
It was apparent that this manager, and many I suspect, do not read
the personnel policy manual, which must be evident by someone at
Corporate since the manual is now available in some places on VTX.
The overall tone of the meeting was positive, with us agreeing to
Digital's stated policies that a manager should assist their employees
in planning their career development within Digital, support that
development, provide continuing feedback on performance, provide
information on future opportunities and access to other groups,
encourage and support research and exploration into other Digital
opportunities, and to provide overall support for personal growth.
In my opinion, written policies, personnel departments and the open
door policy are in existence for a purpose; and in the Digital
tradition, every employee is expected to locate, know about, and
utilize Digital resources as appropriate to a given situation.
I was very satisfied with the outcome of the meeting -- it was
necessary, however, to speak up, and to be willing to face a potential
conflict for what I believed was "right thing" to do.
If one is afraid to speak up, to use personnel and the open door
policy, and written Digital philosophies and personnel policies,
then these things cannot benefit anyone who has a problem.
One must work within the system, using the mechanisms in place;
if one does, I believe the values instilled by KO into Digital will
protect the individual employee from intimidation and abuse.
My apologies if I sound to "preachy" today.
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432.25 | well done | SPGOPS::MAURER | We come in peace; Shoot to kill | Fri May 27 1988 09:22 | 7 |
| re .24
I'm pleased you came to a successful conclusion of this situation.
Good luck for the future,
Jon
|