T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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574.1 | I read you... | HOCUS::KOZAKIEWICZ | Shoes for industry | Sun Jul 17 1988 19:54 | 67 |
| Hmmm, sounds like you've described the job to a tee!
It's a real catch-22. If you want to work in software engineering
in the Field, just about the only place to do it is on a Project
(note the capitalization!) or a residency (sometimes known as a
project...). Unfortunately, unless you are blessed with an
above-average UM, that means virtual banishment.
When I first started with the company 5+ years ago, my first assignment
was an out-of-town residency. Didn't even report to my home office
the first day of work, just drove the 250 miles to the remote site.
I met the UM there (for the first and only time), we had lunch,
and I was delivered to the customer site by 2:00 PM. That was the
last time I saw or heard from a unit manager for 6 months. Oh,
except for the second week on the job when my UM called to say that
DEC was not going to pay for my meals while I was living out of
town...
Towards the end of my residency, the customer told me that my boss
was taking another job. Nice way to find out, huh? I got back home,
met my new manager, and went off on some random assignments. Six
months went by, and it was review time. My review consisted of
opening my paycheck one day and discovering that it had gone up. A
query to my UM revealed that I had been "reviewed". He admitted that
since I was away on an out-of-town residency for so long, he didn't
really know much about my performance. That didn't stop him from
doing a performance appraisal with no input from me, however!
About that time I was ready to leave the company. I think all
residents go through this. Since I didn't really want to do that,
I decided that in order to suceed in this organization, you have
to be aggressive and willing to call attention to what you do.
I spent the next 3.5 years building a single residency into a
significant project (note the lowercase! means not a Project, but
a bunch of residents...), with about $4.5MM in combined hardware
and consulting sales.
Meanwhile, I got a few more managers. I discovered that they are
not all alike. The one I work for now was a resident during his
previous job at DEC. He's really sensitive to the needs of
consultants, and takes positive steps to see what you are doing
and make informed performance appraisals.
Unfortunately, as I found out, there is only so much you can do
for your career while on a residency. I recently went before the
Area MDC (Management Development Committee), which is what you do
when you are ready to start pursuing a career in management. They
make recomendations as to your suitability as a manager, as well
as a development plan. One of the comments that came out of it
was that I had been at the same site too long! Although I "passed",
the residency and all of my success there was not really viewed
on a positive note by upper management!
In summary, you need to make your manager get involved with what
you are doing. Otherwise, you will be entirely at the mercy of
your customer, your manager's perceptions, and chance. My own opinion
is that the Field is *not* a good place to work if you want to pursue
a technical career. It may be someday if we ever get our act together
with Projects, but not at the rate we're going. If your definition
of success has, as significant components, recognition and advancement,
be prepared to rule out residencies and seek out a career in Sales
Support, the SIC's, ACT, or anything else!
/Al
|
574.2 | Here's a suggestion | TIXEL::ARNOLD | Clever, possibly amusing statement | Mon Jul 18 1988 10:29 | 45 |
| I did many residencies when I was in SWS (I've since escaped), but
I understand exactly what you're going through. There seemed to
be two primary indicators of performance:
1. No problem-related phone calls from the customer to your boss.
2. Did the residency get renewed for another one when it expired?
Fortunately, the last residency I was on (for 19 months) was a very
good customer. They gave *unsolicited* comments to my boss
periodically. But that still seemed to be not good enough, because
my boss was only at that customer site ONCE in those 19 months.
So starting on week 3 of the 19 months, I did two things, which
helped immensely:
1. I sat down with my manager and we outlined a list of things
that needed to be done during the residency period. (And it was
quite a bit more specific than just "keep the customer happy" which
would've been the ONLY criteria if I hadn't done this).
2. Every other week, I would send my boss a detailed status report
consisting of several sections; ie:
1.0 Activities & Accomplishments
2.0 Problems Resolved
3.0 Unresolved Problems
4.0 Billable Time For This Two-Week Period
5.0 Plans For Next Period
It showed my boss what I was doing (1.0), what kinds of problems
were being encountered that were not a "planned activity" (2.0),
problems that had come up which I had either not resolved so far,
or were not within my capacity to resolve (ie, hardware) (3.0),
of course the billable time, which I suspect was the FIRST thing
he looked at when he read the report, and to let him know that I
had the infamous *plan* for what was going to be done next (5.0).
I also sent a copy of it to the sales rep, which he greatly
appreciated.
Yes, it's easy to become a "forgotten soul" on a residency, but
it's up to you to make yourself more visible, and this might be
one of the ways to do it. Of course, much of it also depends on
your manager, and there are some very poor ones out there.
fwiw
Jon
|
574.3 | Here are some more suggestions | AUSTIN::BOGGESS | | Mon Jul 18 1988 16:45 | 41 |
|
Yes, I too have been left out in the bowels of customers' sites
for many years of abuse and neglect. A resident is somewhat of
an "orphan child". They don't belong in the the office, and they
aren't part of the customer's "family". You work to please the
customer and your manager rates you on things he knows nothing about.
Here are some ideas that have helped me.
- Make your manager have status meetings with you, the customer
and preferably the account manager. The frequency can be whatever
you desire. IF HE WON'T DO IT INVITE HIS BOSS!!! District
Managers want to know what's going on in the field. They won't
approach you but you can sure approach them. (See the open
door policy.)
- If you have regular unit meetings, GO TO THEM. It's easy to
put the customer's priorities over yours, but don't let that
happen here. You need to be visable as much as possible. If
you don't have regular unit meetings, START THEM. Just because you
may have a bad manager doesn't mean you have to have a bad unit.
You need to get to know you collegues and they need to get to know
you. You don't have to be alone.
- Go to the office regularly. Get to know your secretary. Stop
in and have a "chat" with your boss. The more he knows about
the "little things" you have encountered, the more information
he has in order to rate you.
The idea here is to communicate and be visable so you won't feel so
alone. Let people know you are a "real" person with goals,
accomplishments, and problems; not just a name with a profit margin by
it.
Also, thank you for posting this note. There are MANY of us who
feel the way you do. There aren't any good answers but maybe with
this note we can come up with more ideas to choose from that will
allow us to get the support we need.
Jean Boggess
|
574.4 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Mon Jul 18 1988 17:13 | 35 |
| Back in '75, when I was a resident, things were a little different. There were
only about 15 specialists in the entire district, and only about five residents
in the whole region -- and the region was everything south of New York City.
We were bringing in big bucks with low overhead, so management was interested
in what we were doing.
I was more concerned about feeling orphaned, not really a part of DEC, and I
solved that by keeping in touch by phone with various friends in larger SWS
offices and in Engineering in the Mill. I managed to get the field service
manager to let me have a table in a corner of the office, even though as a
resident I wasn't really supposed to have one. The (yes, I mean "the") local
salesman also helped me feel a part of DEC -- mainly because I was supporting
his biggest local customer and because he wanted me to be off the residency
soon and helping him on sales calls.
To get my manager's attention (there was no such thing as a Unit Software
Manager then, we all reported to David Creed, the District Manager), I at
first had to call him up and tell him I'd meet him in Atlanta on Saturdays
if I drove the 200 miles to Atlanta to visit friends.
Later on, I got a lot of attention, because we got a second resident who
did not get along with the customer at all. So I had the advantage of the
customer constantly calling up and complaining about the other guy and
praising me.
But like .0, my first raise simply showed up in my paycheck one day. My
third manager in less than a year apologized for not telling me. Since it
was somewhat more than the high Ford/Carter inflation rates I wasn't
complaining.
If you want to be treated right on a residency, you have to be creative
and make the best of it for yourself.
/john
|
574.5 | Thanks for the feedback | CANYON::ADKINS | Yes, 116 is *HOT*! | Mon Jul 18 1988 23:04 | 72 |
| It's good to find out it's not just me.
Re: .1:
Al, I'm not sure that I agree with you about the Field not being the
place to pursue a techincal career. Before doing residencies, I
was in the Installation Unit. I saw lots of configurations and went
to a lot of neat customer sites. My big complaint was lack of depth.
I'd come to DEC from a signal processing R&D company. I was an
internals code-slinger. In Installation, it was always "get them
up ASAP and get out the door cause you're booked solid for the next
5 weeks."
With a residency, you have time to get more depth. And being
in the field you get massive exposure to real world problems. You
develop a pretty broad grab bag of problem solving. It's the next
best thing to running your own facility without having to pay for
it. ;-)
I forgot who made the comment about residency renewals, but I've
found that kind of difficult. It's been my experience that the customer
*really* prefered that you weren't there. You're costing them a
hefty chunk of change and the only reason that you're there is that
they have realized that they can't handle it on their own right
now. They'd much prefer to hire your expertise base than rent it
ala a residency. The groups that are footing your bill often have
had to jump to major hoops to justify you in the first place. They
really don't like going back to the VP and saying "Ahem, well, we're
still not up to speed. We need more money." I was involved in
justifying an extension on my last residency (their system manager
quit on them out of the blue). They were *very* nervous about it.
I also forgot who brought up the part about keeping in touch with
folks back East. I do. I'm a moderately active noter and I know
a lot of real neat folks over the E-net. In fact, it was the E-net
folks who talked me out of quitting as opposed to taking the transfer
back when I was such a happy camper. I see this networking as a
way to do my job, but I don't see how that has to do with career
advancement. I guess it would mean something if I wanted to move
to the Boston area, but I really don't. Back when I was interviewing
Boston fell off the list of options pretty quickly. (The major part
being that I'm allergic to snow. But then, again, I still haven't
spotted a lobster farm out here in the desert).
Likewise, I've forgotten the person who suggested asking my DM to
come to my site if my UM won't. Oy! 1) Take gun out of desk,
2) point at foot, 3) pull trigger. If my boss doesn't like waves
coming from my customers, how's he going to take waves from his
boss? Have you really done this before? If so, do you still work
for any of these people?
I'm starting to think that's what managers like so much about selling
residencies. Once the person is in place, they sort of go on
auto-pilot. Very minimal care and feeding required. (or so they
seem to think) And it's a very stable source of revenue.
Re: .4:
John, I think you made a good point about getting Sales involved.
My last residency was very visable (DEC's foot in the door of Arizona
banking - that reads, you blow it, you're in trouble). The Sales
Rep was very involved and was at the meetings I attended and copied
my boss on a lot of memos, etc. The Sales Rep on the new account
seems to be extremely disinterested. He cut the PO for the residency
and one's out there. End of story. He has other fish to fry.
I appreciate the input that's come up. My UM (the one in the review)
is taking a new job. I've got a new UM coming up. I'm going to try
to break him in right.
Jim
|
574.6 | Another idea | TIXEL::ARNOLD | Clever, possibly amusing statement | Tue Jul 19 1988 10:05 | 27 |
| Another thought, which is more or less case-dependant, but may be
able to be worked out for you. In terms of creating visibility,
why not have your customer featured in InterOffice magazine (or
a similar publication)? When I was a resident, I had completed
alot of major applications for the customer, so one day, I called
the people listed in the front of InterOffice. I asked them how
they decided what customer sites to feature for their publication.
They told me that they waited until some person from the field called
them and says "we've got this really neat customer who's doing some
really nifty things with Digital computers". I got the sales rep
involved, and my customer was featured in InterOffice magazine a
few months later. (January 86 issue, I believe, Ford Motor Credit).
A lot of visibility for me and for the sales rep, the customer was
very happy about being featured that way (they wanted 200 copies
of the magazine), and my boss got alot of favorable feedback from
people (both in and out of our district) about the way the customer
was being kept happy via DEC systems and their software resident.
I don't know what industry your current customer is involved with,
but there's probably an industry marketing person out here who is
responsible for that industry. Talk it over with the sales rep,
find out who that is, talk it over with the customer, and see if
you can get your customer's name in lights.
Just an idea
Jon
|
574.7 | I wish it had been that easy... | CANYON::ADKINS | Yes, 116 is *HOT*! | Thu Jul 21 1988 01:35 | 23 |
| Re: .6:
Well, Jon,
Sorry, no credence on that one. (Op. Cit. InterOffice Vol 6. No. 2
US Dept. of Agriculture article). I was System Manager on that system
for the first year of it's existance. Can you say 160+ DECServer
100's and 135 LAN-based printers plus 1000+ ALL-IN-1 users in less
than 6 months? (We replaced about 7 Wang VS-100s with an 8650
3-node cluster) You could type $SHOW QUEUE/ALL and go to lunch.
About all I have to show for that is the article and a lot of
over-time. And I'm still a Senior Software Specialist. :-(
Jim
Imagine a building 2 blocks by 3 blocks that has 6 floors and 2
basements. If nothing else, I got my exercise. :-)
PS - I went to Personnel months after the fact, and not one mention
of the USDA time was listed in my file. That's when I demanded a PA
and started looking for the job I have now.
|
574.8 | A caution and a suggestion | OZZAIB::IOMERSO | | Fri Jul 22 1988 16:18 | 11 |
| After reading all the replies so far, it seems that a popular idea
is to get your manager more involved and visit you on-site. A word
of warning (I pray my manager doesn't read this)... you may do such
a good job getting your manager involved that s/he's visiting you
too much. They can really get in the way sometimes.
In Connecticut, we too had the problem with a manager writing reviews
for employees when they know squats about what the employee does.
We solved the problem in a fairly unique (from talking with specialists
in other districts) manner...WE WRITE OUR OWN REVIEWS. Believe
it or not, the managers' don't even change them much.
|
574.9 | Like they said... | THEBAY::VASKAS | Mary Vaskas | Fri Jul 22 1988 20:23 | 33 |
| Hi, Jim --
The invisible resident has certainly been common around here,
especially in the past. As we're moving towards the project business
and away from the resident business, I think it's changing.
If you are on a project, it helps because there's more visibility,
and a project manager/leader who knows your performance. If you're
not on one, I always recommending getting on one -- let your UM
know you'd like to -- both for the visibility and the career growth
opportunities. It's too easy to get stuck on a 27-year residence
and be the most senior All-in-1 System Manager in the world.
When you're not on a project, I second alot of what people have
already been doing. Always write a status report (weekly to the
customer, possibly less often to your UM), with accomplishments
and goals for the next period. This gives you and them a record
of accomplishments when review time comes, plus keeps reminding
your management you exist and do alot of stuff. Also, get the UM
to visit you and the customer occassionally -- it's good for both
you and the account. Also, see what you can do about expanding
business there -- not just extending your contract, but maybe ideas
for a project, or for selling more bodies. And, like someone said,
if you don't have unit meetings, get your UM to start them (like
quarterly). The network of other specialists you make is as important
there as reminding people you exist (and reminding yourself of the
way to the office). And recommend that everyone give a short report
on what they're doing these days in the meetings.
Just some thoughts --
MKV
|
574.10 | I've been there before.... | GLASS::HULL | 20 minutes into the Future | Fri Jul 22 1988 23:10 | 58 |
|
I can certainly sympathize with the author of this note. I've
been on 3 residencies back-to-back now over the past 4 years (one
was 25 months!). While I feel that the positive aspects of this
type of assignment are rewarding (prime chance to build very good
customer relation skills, usually less hectic, change of scenery,
ability to work as your own boss in lots of cases, customer
satisfaction), they don't outweigh the negative aspects (just a
face among the crowd - low visibility, if any; lack of contact
with Digital peers, slower promotions, etc).
I found out a long time ago during the first 1-year residency that
you have to make yourself visible in any way possible.
I might add my first residency wasn't renewed after 12 months
because the customer thought I should have been "evesdropping"
(literally) more on their workers' phone calls to Atlanta so that
my "inside" channel to Atlanta support could improve the abysmal
response time (this was 3+ yrs ago). Fortunately DEC mgmt
poo-poo'd that whole line of thought and said don't fret about it
- unrealistic expectations on the part of the customer.
I pushed to get lots of publicity for a big customer VTX project
that I was the sole technical resource for. Management loved it.
The customer hyped in the national trade mags for a month or two.
I put in a site VTX server with color lobby terminal at our office
and was the sole maintainer of it for over 2 years. I was the
sole ALL-IN-1 manager at our office in its early days, way before
ALL-IN-1 gained respectibility (at one point it seemed to be the
kiss of death as a technical specialty).
I have made it known to all my local network of people that if
they need help in some area that I'm well-versed in, they can
always feel free to call with a question. Make yourself
well-known in any Notes files which support your real work. I've
submitted quite a few different solution tools to Office ASSETS,
and have had Digits as far away as Europe send me mail for
assistance on some things.
I'm not trying to toot my own horn here - just to show some
examples of what you CAN do to make yourself more visible in this
situation. While my attempts to do so have not all paid off as I'd
have liked them to, I can't help but feel that I'd be a lot worse
off if I hadn't done them!
When I see people get promptions for what seems to be the most
arbitrary or political reasons - and it's very aggravating, but I
guess that's the luck of the draw. One of my pet peeves is the
Excellence awards - residents sure seem to be forgotten there!
It's a double-edged sword. I love the work - but hate the
ramifications.
Just my thoughts,
Al
|
574.11 | I can't write my own review, where would Ken get a job? | CANYON::ADKINS | Yes, 116 is *HOT*! | Mon Jul 25 1988 23:13 | 27 |
| I'm really pleased with the information coming from this topic.
Hi, Mary,
I can see where getting on a project would improve one's visibility,
but I don't find projects as real attractive. I've done code-slinging
in a former life. Residencies are often more eclectic than that
sometimes. It's the ideal job for the Renaisance Man in the 20th
Century.
Plus *somebody's* got to go out and press the flesh and look into
the customer's beady little, er, financially rewarding eyes. Plus
if the residency is more of a long term contract, you develop a
very neat position at the site. There are a lot of people who come
to you for assistance and it's really neat to service so many people.
Like I said before, I get a lot of positive feedback from most of
my customers. I have days where I leave feeling like I've really
helped them out and saved them a lot of time and effort.
I had my first talk with my new UM today. We've agreed that we've
got to talk soon about 'things'. I'm seriously considering extracting
this topic and having him read it to start the conversation. I think
that progress can be accomplished, it's just a matter of how.
Jim
|
574.12 | | THEBAY::VASKAS | Mary Vaskas | Tue Jul 26 1988 13:06 | 17 |
| Actually, Jim, the type of project I'm thinking of generally takes
place on site, sometimes working with customer-programmers as well.
The whole team, then, rubs flesh (so to speak) with the customer
every day, and we really learn their application. And, since we'll
have, say, an ALL-IN-1 expert on our team too, then we can provide
the day to day support as well. Also, often we'll add a system
manager/support type person to the project team, so that we budget
for the time we need to spend on "I have a Digital question" queries
from the customer.
That latter kind of position would provide the "Renaissence-person"
kind of opportunity, instead of the more development-oriented other
slots.
MKV
|
574.13 | No beef here | USHS08::SPARKS | | Wed Jul 27 1988 23:36 | 12 |
| I almost feel bad writing this, but my experiance as a resident
at HSO has been very good. My UM visits at least once a month with
me and sometimes the client. She arranges for all of the residents
in a certain area to meet for lunch, and she usually pays. I get
and give lots of feedback and the UM seems intrested in what is
going on. We have pictures taken and posted in org charts at the
office so at leaste the other workers don't forget what we look
like. I really have no complaints .
No, my UM doesn't read notes!
Sparky
|
574.14 | Sounds like you've got a good manager | DR::BLINN | WMDK-FM Trivia Contest winner | Fri Jul 29 1988 12:37 | 6 |
| If every Unit Manager were as good a manager as yours sounds,
there wouldn't be a problem. The *real* problem is that there's
so much variability in what happens, from the good (what you've
described) to the very bad (what some others have described).
Tom
|
574.15 | Oh, you mean a project at *their* place... | CANYON::ADKINS | Yes, 116 is *HOT*! | Sat Jul 30 1988 16:26 | 8 |
| Re .12:
OK, Mary, I see what you mean. The projects that I've been familiar
with took place on DEC property. A few ccustomers may wind up at
DEC. I haven't seen one the other way.
Jim
|
574.16 | Be thankful! | MERIDN::BAY | You lead people, you manage things | Mon Aug 01 1988 23:41 | 38 |
| re .13
Give thanks for what you've got! As a matter of fact, where are
you located? Got any openings? Have 10+ years in DP, in search
of good management!
re .15 et al
I was surprised to hear that there are places that do projects in
the DEC office. ALL of our projects business goes straight to the
customer site, and the Ts & Cs specify that adequate workspace and
equipment (computers, etc.) will be provided. I am currently on
a project that has lasted for 18 months at the customer site. I
am more at home there, than at the DEC office. In fact, I even
gave up my office at the DEC site - my only contact there now is
my mail box.
Which brings me to the down side. I sympathize with nearly all
the negative comments made so far. "The Action" all occurs at the
home office, and mostly with the sales support specialists. They
get seen, they get heard, they get the benefits.
My frustration has been that, although everyone knows we are a
"field" unit, there seems to be very little done in the way of
compensating us for the additional hardships of being in the field,
like not *REALLY* having a manager, and not experiencing the benefits
of working with your "coworkers" (witness recent cancellation of
the car plan).
We get forgotten. In fact, if you've had a rough time of it, managers
will often send you on a project/residency so that the bad press
blows over during your 1-2 year absence, and you can "start fresh".
I won't go on. A fellow specialist had an expression that conveys my
feelings quite well - "I used to be angry, but now I'm just amused".
Jim
|
574.17 | What is the role? | GLDOA::SRINIVASAN | | Tue Aug 02 1988 09:27 | 5 |
|
Can any one explain the role of an Unit Manager who manages a group
of software residents ??
|
574.18 | It's pretty simple, really... | YUPPIE::COLE | You have me confused with someone who gives a $%^&! | Tue Aug 02 1988 09:53 | 18 |
| In a phrase:
"MAINTAIN CUSTOMER SATISFACTION"
All his decisions key on that. His budget responsibility lies in
getting the booked business staffed and billing ASAP. Booking the business is
Sales Support and Sales' responsibility. Trouble is, if Sales doesn't sell,
PSS doesn't make budget!
Note that the apparent trend is away from "split" units, and back to
"combined" units - Sales Support and PSS together - to eliminate the p%^^%&$
contests that sometimes went on between an understaffed Sales Support Manager,
and an under-budget PSS manager. Also, the freedom to use Sales Support in
revenue business is returning.
|
574.19 | Very little, actually (re. 17) | MERIDN::BAY | You lead people, you manage things | Wed Aug 03 1988 01:34 | 69 |
| My personal name is a quote from an interview with Admiral Grace
Hopper.
It very succinctly explains the situation with unit MANAGERS.
Very few do anything more than act as business managers. Admittedly,
business management is a vital function, and every member of a unit
would have problems without the unit manager arranging the next
port of call.
However, the unit manager's metrics deal with $$$, not employee
satisfaction, growing unit members, etc. It takes a REAL visionary
to see past the numbers at the end of the quarter, and realize that
s/he has PEOPLE working for him/her that have needs that are just
as real (I would argue MORE real) as the numbers that must be met.
I don't fault unit managers, anymore than I would fault a policeman
for not doing a fireman's job. The unfortunate thing is that higher
management has thrown the additional responsibility of people
management on top of the unit manager's, with no metrics or incentives
to lead them to do a good job at it. In fact, the metrics that
they MUST meet to be successful are usually in conflict with
keeping specialists well-equipped, trained, and generally happy.
That is, training, purchasing equipment, etc. all cut into the almighty
margin. Believe me, if its the difference between making margin
and training a specialist, I KNOW who will lose.
But to get off the soapbox and back to answering your question, the
responsibility lies LOOSELY with the unit manager. However, on almost
any project with more than two people, one will be the project manager
or project LEADER, and that person will have responsibility for running
all aspects of the project except negotiations and controlling money.
In no case will the control of the purse strings be relinquished by the
UM, nor will anything that affects liability, etc.
There is a whole WRITTEN project methodology that explains how DEC
sells, contracts for and delivers project work. It is not a trivial
thing lightly entered in to, and I VERY strongly recommend taking
the project methodology course (Project Manager, Project Leader,
Project Member) before getting involved with a project.
Having learned the hard way, I would liken it to deciding to play
pro football at the age of 31 and having NEVER played organized
sports in your life. Getting the ball across the goal is the barest
fraction of whats involved in the game.
Likewise, being able to deliver a technical solution is only a small
part of delivering a project.
However, I digress. You must forgive me, because this has become
my favorite topic since going on an 18 month project, and learning
all about things like project methodology AFTER the fact, and realizing
how much more painless things could have been, had we followed the
rules.
My unit manager WAS the project manager until he was promoted.
It is now completely impossible for him to do more than touch base
with the project manager to keep a light pulse on what is happening
with the project. He is much more concerned (for reasons stated
above) with where we are all going to be in two months when this
project ends.
Bottom line: Units usually have very little to do with most software
specialist's day-to-day activities, especially so on projects. It is
unfortunate, then, that they are saddled with the responsibility of
doing their reveiws, promotions, excellence award nominations, etc.
Jim
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574.20 | problem statement | PH4VAX::MCBRIDE | do it, ship 100,000, try it, fix it! | Wed Aug 03 1988 12:58 | 14 |
| GIVEN:
customers with irregularly shaped hole and time restraints
management with large money bin and time restraints
specialists of various shapes, sizes
salary continuation plan predicated on performance of management
goals
Problem:
fill money bin by accepting money from customers for the
successful matching specialists of various shapes to different,
irregularly shaped holes in the time specified.
Kicker:
success is rewarded, somehow, maybe
failure is considered contrary to management goals, above.
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