T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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440.1 | Not for me... | ENUF::GASSMAN | | Thu Jan 14 1988 08:32 | 22 |
| Thre are some cases where it might work, but my initial reaction
would be to avoid it. Take the case where you are doing a week
long show. Staying in the hotel at the show is the best way to
be productive. One can burn out doing booth duty, and having that
room 5 minutes away for a 20 minute nap can keep you going. The
other thing that would worry me is reliability. Many times,
I arrive in a city very late at night. Hotels always have someone
at the desk, no matter what the hour. Since there are many cases
where you fly in, have an early presentation, and fly out, it's
worth a good bit of money to have the 'travel' portion hassle free.
I feel that traveling puts personal burdens on me which should be
compensated by allowing me to use the travel and hotel industry that
is built up and tuned for business trips.
When I travel on personal business, I'm as cheap as can be, and
using a CISS idea would appeal to me, but it will never fly as a
corporate policy.
bill
|
440.2 | no thanks! | AUNTB::SOEHL | To use this space, call 1-800-YUR-MONY | Thu Jan 14 1988 10:20 | 8 |
| If something like that became mandatory, I'd either refuse to travel
or I'd leave. If optional, there is already something like that
in the "staying with family or friends"; which could be expanded
to be what .0 is talking about. But if it became optional; who
would choose to do it?
Why would I not participate? Staying with other people, even friends
can be stressful; when traveling, I don't need any more stress.
|
440.3 | NO WAY! | BUNYIP::QUODLING | Trying to think, Nothing happens! | Sun Jan 17 1988 04:42 | 65 |
|
As someone who travels extensively on the company's behalf,
I too, think it is silly idea,
some reasons.
1. In a number of countries, the extra income that a "host"
would receive would cause a variety of taxation problems.
2. In those places where this wasn't a concern, the would be
concern that "hosts" were "special employees who got their
salaries subsidized for post-working hours activities"
3. Often when I travel, I would till the wee hours of the morning,
eat`at odd hours and rely on the facilities of a hotel. i.e.
Room Service at 3am, fast laundry, they ability to check out
in a hurry etc.
4. I think that the practice would be seen in some places as
a psuedo-hotel setup, and people woulkd find their home activities
coming under hotel rules.
5. Often I arrive at a hotel at very odd hours, I could imagine
a fellow digit getting peeved about having to wait for my delayed
plain at an airport for three or four hours, organizing a rush
baby sitter while he/she attends to my business/travel needs.
6. Children, much as I love them in the right circumstances.
I do not relish arriving at someone's place and having their
squawling brats crawling all over me.
7. Most people's house are based on the family requirements.
YOu have a wife and two kids - you tend to have a 3 Bedroom
house, So will digital subsidize your selling and buying a
4-5 bedroom house so that you can take visitors. I am sure
that if I stay at someones place, on this sort of basis, I
would like a proper king size bed, an ensuite bathroom, air
conditioning, and all the sorts of things I find in a hotel.
Your wife will of course press my suits and provide me with
6AM breakfasts and fresh towels daily. You do have a suana
and swimming pool where I can relax after a very hard day's
work.
8. Transport. Rather than me catching a cab or hiring a car,
would you pull a Software Specialist or Field Service Engineer
out of their job to play taxi driver, when they could be making
$200/hr for the corporation.
lastly. So we can cut $10M off the corporations expenses. As
an organization that makes over $1,000,000,000 per month, this
is an acceptable drop in the bucket. It is also a legitimate
expense of doing business and is (in most countries) tax
deductible. What do we gain,
... an increased bureacracy to manage it.
... Professional People staying in makeshift accomodation.
(pull out sofa-bads and the like.)
... Professional People acting as taxi drivers and maids...
Let's not be penny wise and pound foolish. You have to spend
money to make money, and this scheme is certainly not the way...
q
|
440.4 | Why stop at $18M? More $$ Saving Ideas! | HJUXB::JUDICE | I'd tax all foreigners living abroad! | Sun Jan 17 1988 13:52 | 26 |
|
Ok, here are some real money saving ideas:
o There are probably 5000 salesmen. If they take customers to lunch
2 twice a week, or 100 times a year, at say, $100 a pop, this
is 5000*100*100 or $50M per year. Now, with a rule ordering the
sales force to let customers pay for their own lunch, and
recommending that they accept if the customer volunteers to pay
for his/her lunch, we could save from $25M-$50 per year!
o Why do sales/sws need Taurus/Celebrities, when a Yugo would provide
acceptable transportation? At least several million in savings
here! By the same token, Field Service could buy used trucks from
the telephone company.
o And come to think of it, why should we pay millions for a
20,000 node computer network and VAXnotes!
DEC is a $10 Billion company, attempting to attract and retain
professionals. The CISS proposal sounds like a reasonable idea for
a religious organization, but it's pretty ridiculous for any
company, much less one of the world's biggest and most profitable!
As (.-1) noted, you have to spend money to make money. Though
reasonable controls on expense are just plain common sense, this
idea is nonsense.
|
440.5 | | GOOGLY::KERRELL | | Mon Jan 18 1988 04:03 | 5 |
| I think .0 is a good idea in the wrong place and I would agree with some of
the points in the previous replies but was there any need to say it was
silly or nonsense?
Dave.
|
440.6 | yes, but | HJUXB::JUDICE | I'd tax all foreigners living abroad! | Mon Jan 18 1988 09:08 | 7 |
| In retrospect, I agree with -.1 -> my reaction was harsh.
Since the orginal note came from Europe, perhaps this idea would
be more culturally acceptable outside the US? I just feel that
travel for business is usually tiresome and stressful, and though
I doubt this idea would ever be seriously entertained, my reactions
to it were very strongly negative.
|
440.7 | it exists? | VAXRT::WILLIAMS | | Mon Jan 18 1988 09:21 | 14 |
| I think the "staying with friends / relatives / fellow employees"
is more interesting that being stuck in a hotel. I've done both
and would certainly want the choice.
The US policy states: "Employees who stay with friends or relatives
on a business trip are authorized a reimbursement of $20.00 per
day or the local currency equivalent to provide the host with
assistance in defraying the additional expenses of meals and lodging
for the employee."
The only additional I see suggested is a referral service.
/s/ Jim Williams
|
440.8 | You can only spend your $ once | JGO::EVANS | | Mon Jan 18 1988 09:55 | 24 |
| I think that Piet's idea was not intended to make it compulsory
to stay with friends or DEC colleagues but to set the possibility
on a clearer basis i.e.
Here in Nijmegen Digital "will reimburse the expense of a reasonable
gift for the host in lieu of hotel costs, e.g. flowers or a bottle
of wine. In no case may this expense exceed 50% of the hotel costs
avoided."
I am sure that most hosts would rather have $20 (as in .7) or some
such amount rather than a bunch of flowers for max 50% of a $100 hotel bill
avoided.
I think that relatively few people here make use of the policy
(because either they are not aware of the possibility and/or they
do not have any family/friends/etc).
I make no comments on those people who do not consider it necessary
to look at the possibilities of saving DEC money.
John Evans
European Coordinator PIP (Productivity Improvement Program)
|
440.9 | No Thanks! I'd Rather Stay in a Hotel! | SAFETY::SEGAL | Len Segal, MLO6-1/U30, 223-7687 | Mon Jan 18 1988 14:38 | 44 |
| This concept is not a new one! In December 1973, when I moved back
to MA from CT to work for Raytheon Co. (changing jobs from General
Dynamics), Raytheon was paying my relocation to MA. The RayCo
Personnel Rep had the audacity to ask me if I could stay with my
Parents for the month before my Apt would be available (my Wife
joined me in MA ~2 weeks after I moved)! Of course they would have
paid some $10-20./day as a token to my Parents! I wanted my freedom
to come and go as I pleased and it was unfair to inconvenience my
Folks for 4 weeks, etc. Of course, this would mean that I got no
reimbursement for eating out at restaurants either! Great deal for
RayCo!
Until recently, I pinched my pennies pretty tight (except for
vacations and eating out in restaurants), but even when we go to CT
for the Mystic Arts Festival every August (and visit friends/former
neighbors) we stay in a local hotel/motel. Oftentimes we go out
nightclubbing until 1-2AM and it is an imposition to anyone we might
stay with. Twice in the past 12 times (when we went to Mystic) we
stayed with friends, but we found ourselves bending our
schedules/activities so as not to inconvenience our host/hostess!
Now we go out to dinner with our friends or visit them when we go to
Mystic but stay at a hotel/motel.
NO way can I see staying with friends/relatives when traveling on
business! I want to enjoy the pool/sauna, etc. and none of my
friends have these amenities at their houses! I have only traveled
twice for DEC in 8 years (other than training seminars) and the trip
to PNO was supposed to arrive at ~8:30-9PM, but due to storms in CO
area I got to hotel at 12:30AM! I certainly wouldn't want anyone
having to stay up for me that late waiting for a plane that may not
arrive!
Also, the $20.00 cap on US policy is ridiculously low, have you ever
tried taking a couple out for dinner for $20.00? MacDonalds
(Barf!!) here we come!! Pardon me, but when I go out to dinner
(when I am paying) I usually spend $20-30/person, I'm not going to
eat cheaply just because DEC is paying! I would never inconvenience
a friend/relative for such a paltry sum in return (remember your
staying with them incurs real expenses for them, the $20.00 is not
all gravy!). If I were to travel to an area with friends/relatives,
I would try to go out to dinner with them, and visit them, but not
stay with them. [In defense of .0, I believe the European cap on
reimbursement is more credible.]
|
440.10 | think again | AUNTB::SOEHL | Where IS the peanut gallery??!! | Tue Jan 19 1988 08:43 | 35 |
| John Evans, .8
> I make no comments on those people who do not consider it necessary
> to look at the possibilities of saving DEC money.
1. I didn't hear any of the previous replies say the above or
anything like it. What we said (perhaps rather strenuously) was
we didn't like THAT idea. Out in the Field, we have many opportunities
and direction on ways to cut expenses. I've even voluntarily driven
somewhere when I had the opportunity to fly, had classes cancelled
that were approved for me to go to because I felt (and my manager
agreed) that our training money would be better spent elsewhere.
2. Some of us directly generate revenue for DEC. Personally, I have
often generated more than 40 hours a week of revenue for DEC. I'm
WC4. I don't get any extra even though I may generate extra for
DEC. That doesn't really bother me except when I hear comments
like the above. My work DIRECTLY goes to the bottom line.
3. Perhaps most importantly, there is the image consideration.
Here at the customer site where I work 40 (or more) hours a week,
there are other contractors who work for a company which asks their
employees to put some of the newly relocated people up in their
homes, to taxi around those who don't have cars, etc....
Granted, it's not an option like .0 was suggesting. But many of
the customers have said, in reference to this company, "Boy, what
a penny-pinching, chickensh*t outfit. DEC isn't like that, they're
a CLASS ACT" Personally, I like working for a company that treats
it's employees like professionals, rather than warm bodies that
they can generate revenue from.
|
440.11 | There are ways and ways of saving money | STOAT::BARKER | Jeremy Barker - NAC Europe - REO2-G/K3 | Tue Jan 19 1988 21:08 | 12 |
| There are sensible ways of saving money and stupid ones.
If I have a choice between a hotel at $80/day and one at $40/day and know
that it isn't worth paying double (have been there before) I will use the
$40 hotel. If I haven't been somewhere I will tend to use a more expensive
hotel as it is less likely to be a lousy place.
I have had friends invite me to stay with them on a future trip. In
general I don't do this because I feel that it is a real nuisance to them
if, for example, I have to work very late in the evening.
jb
|
440.12 | This May Not Belong Here | MOHAWK::CLARK | | Wed Jan 20 1988 11:57 | 11 |
|
Speaking of penny pinching:
Use your car $.21 per mile.
My car cost me $.67 per mile last year.
Reimbursed 1/3 of cost.
Now if I take a Taxi will I be Reimbursed 100%?
|
440.13 | The original author responds | REGENT::EPSTEIN | Bruce Epstein | Fri Jan 22 1988 08:38 | 41 |
| ================================================================================
Note XXX.0 CISS- 2 WEEKS AFTER No replies
JGO::BERKERS 36 lines 22-JAN-1988 04:45
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The CISS-concept, not new as I already stated, was (re)introduced
a few weeks ago. It makes sense to evaluate the reactions; they
appeared to be mostly very emotional (which wasn't my intention)
so I decided to evaluate the concept and its reaction on another
playground (i.e. another note).
Originally the idea was meant on a completely voluntarily basis
just to encourage people who are already staying with collegeas
to keep on doing so (and thus saving money!).
Futhermore I had the intention of making the concept an official and
businesslike policy (on a voluntarily basis), which avoids embarrasing
situations (like what to give to the host?).
I completely agree with some replies in 440.* which indicate that
in several cases the concept will NOT be applicable (visiting shows: 440.1).
But I presume that everyone can think of situations where it is
worthwile: you go to have dinner with collegue, have some drinks
and you get a ride to your hotel. In the morning the same collegea will pick
you up again.
In this situation CISS will save half of the hotel bill and there
is big trouble (hosts with 4 children and a 2 bedroom-house will
not become an official CISS-host: 440.3).
I am sure that you all recognize travels like this.
Some replies showed however that people didn't understand the
CISS-concept (f.i. 440.4 and *.12); what me disappointed me most was the
fact that staying in expensive hotels is considered to be a
prerequisite for a $ 1.000...... company and to be considered as
a professional.
Digital would not be the first company going bankrupt by this kind
of megalomania......
This is my last contribution on CISS.
Piet Berkers
|
440.14 | "Europe is different" | ZURA3::OLLODART | Peter, SWAS CSO NewMarkets, Z�rich | Tue Jan 26 1988 04:15 | 17 |
| After looking through this topic, I have to agree with the
majority. I think the idea is good if you are on personal business
and you don't have to work all day. From the host side, I think
the money would't be worth the hassel and also it is a restriction
of ones personal freedom, which is highly respected in the USA.
I have lived in Europe for many years now, and I understand the
mentality. There is a strong "public" social awareness, stemming
from the last two wars when public services were non-existent for
the most part. The social network is very thick because of this.
Therefore, I think it would be more acceptable in Europe than
in the states, but just the same, most of the people I work
with here would flip if they "had" to travel this way.
Peter
|