T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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788.1 | Not exactly answering your question, but... | HOCUS::KOZAKIEWICZ | Shoes for industry | Mon Apr 24 1989 10:59 | 32 |
| Hmmm, sounds like product lines to me...
A few thoughts:
When you spin off divisions to develop their own niches, you end
up duplicating all of the administrative and support functions you
used to share as part of a large organization. The end result is
*more* bureaucracy than before (when viewed as the sum of the parts).
Invariably you end up with competing products and services. This
means that substantial investments are made to bring products to
market before survival can be ascertained. We end up competing
with one another in the marketplace rather than in the boardroom.
This is not necessarily a bad thing, but it is significantly less
profitable than bringing only a single message to our customers.
One of the advantages of a large organization is it's tremendous
reserve capacity. As a single company, we can summon *enormous*
amounts of resources (oh-oh, the dreaded 'R' word...) to attack
large segments of markets. By breaking up, we loose the ability
to do that.
Lastly, we are a technology company. We loudly proclaim our ability
to use this technology to bring success to entire enterprises. *Large*
enterprises. If the only way we are able to solve our own problems
is by breaking the enterprise up (instead of the application of
this technology), the veracity of our marketing message becomes
significantly diminished.
Al
|
788.2 | helpful book reference. | MECAD::GONDA | DECelite; Pursuit of Knowledge, Wisdom, and Happiness. | Mon Apr 24 1989 13:40 | 8 |
| Have you checked out the book
``In Search of Excellence'' by
Peter Thomas (?).
It discusses exactly what you are asking about and much more.
I think it must be a must read for managers and for others
strongly recommended reading. It revels startling and eye
opening facts and observations about Corporate Management.
|
788.3 | opens up a market | NYEM1::MILBERG | Barry Milberg | Mon Apr 24 1989 16:35 | 12 |
| One interesting aspect of a service organization spin-off would be that
the spin-off would have it's own set of books that could conform to
government cost accounting standards and could, therefore go after true
government cost type (cost plus, etc.) contracts. As one corporation
today, we are precluded from that business. I*M had a Federal Systems
Division (now part of Systems Integration ?) that was set up that way.
If we are moving toward being a system integrator, that is a huge
marketplace that is not available to us today.
-Barry-
|
788.4 | It's what's up top that counts | CGOO01::DTHOMPSON | | Mon Apr 24 1989 17:15 | 28 |
| re: .2
That's Tom Peters, not Peter Thomas, but what do these people expect
if they refuse to have last names.
My understanding of Tom's ramblings and entertaining examples is
that it all boils down to:
"Behind every successful organization is a monomaniac with a
mission!"
which may not be in the book but certainly was in his follow-on public
appearances.
And, I couldn't agree more. An organization is a reflection of
its leader(s) or lack thereof and nothing more. IBM was wonderful
under the Watsons, but sucks wind managed by a bunch of yuppie MBA's
none of whom has a loyalty past his own physical/financial
gratification. On the other end of the spectrum is Chrysler which
used to be just a haven for car-buyers whose friends already had
Fords and Chevs and they either didn't want to copy or to offend one
friend by copying the other. Chrysler's current monomaniac has, as
his mission, the burning desire to prove Ford was wrong to fire him.
(Amazingly enough, Tom Watson Sr's appetite was for the same sweet
taste of revenge because NCR had fired him.)
Don
|
788.5 | RATHOLE/FLAME Alert | VAXWRK::SKALTSIS | Deb | Mon Apr 24 1989 18:46 | 20 |
| >For the sake of argument, let's say we spin off the PDP division (we might
>find some other areas as well).
.....
> ....Hopefully, during the process
>we'll manage it so what remains of Digital is largely cleared of the deadwood
>people complain about.
I understand the premise of the argument, but considering the number of 60 - 80
hour weeks I put in, I really don't like being lumped into a category called
"DEADWOOD". In reality, the folks in the service organizations that do the
PDP-11 products are often up to their eyeballs in work because there isn't
a lot of expertise left in these areas in the company, yet hw and sw
services are still being sold on them, and they are very profitable areas for
the corporation!
So please, if you want to use charged words like "deadwood", how about making
up the name of a business like "spin off the FOOBAR business" rather than malign
something real?
Deb
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788.6 | is FOOBAR like ACME? | ZPOV02::SIMPSON | Those whom the Gods would destroy... | Mon Apr 24 1989 23:34 | 10 |
| I was afraid this would happen. What I meant was that in the process
of some fairly major surgery, ie spinning off one or more large
divisions, there tends to be a high rate of attrition. During the
process of splitting we also get to give out lots of golden handshakes.
You might also remember I noted that one of the negatives to Digital
was that we would lose more than a few good people.
So, one big company splits to become two or more big(gish) companies.
Are we better off?
|
788.7 | | SCARY::M_DAVIS | nested disclaimers | Tue Apr 25 1989 08:19 | 6 |
| Whether or not we are better off becomes academic if the "spinoffs"
serve to induce a takeover. These takeover giants look to buy up
profitable companies and sell off sections/divisions/spinoffs to
finance the stock takeover.
Marge
|
788.8 | A long way to grow yet... | BUNYIP::QUODLING | Apologies for what Doug Mulray said... | Tue Apr 25 1989 10:30 | 40 |
| re .0
Firstly, why should the only mechanism for making digital smaller
involve breaking off major components of the company. There is an
underlying result to supposedly making us "smaller" - Improve the
per capita profitablity (which will bring pressure to bear upon
the so called deadwood to shape up or ship out.)
So where do you decide what is to be split out. Let us take your
hypothetical case of the PDP11 business. At about 10% of Digital,
lets take 12,000 people out of Digital. Sure, a lot would resign
because they had been "shuffled". Most of those would be the hard
workers who had lost career paths etc. The deadwood would be happy
to cruise in a generally unchanged job. We would have to run
seperate field offices, for this other company, as they would have
seperate profitability goals ( and we wouldn't want them competing
with mainline Digital). They wouldn't be under the same strict
corporate direction, so they would start looking at alternatives.
What do the PDPites do for disk. Do they just buy from Colo
SPrings with no feedback anymore into product design, or do they
move out and buy from brand X, or do they start their own disk
design facility. What happens with "compatibility". The other
company is no longer privy to the DECnet developments. the PDP
Company is now about the same size as Wang or DG, without the
might of Big Digital behind them. As Marge points out, it makes
the PDP company and Digital Proper both ripe for take over bids.
To my way of thinking, it would be the fastest way of pissing $1
billion plus out of the window.
As is often the case, this would appear to be an attempt to fix a
problem by changing the result rather than the cause. If there is
a problem with the bureaucracy, then fix that problem. Don't try
to find kludges around the problem...
There is no "too big", Surely you, as an employee normally based
in Australia's national capital would know that bureaucracies can
grow to ridiculous extents before they are too big...
q
|
788.9 | You separated me...what'd you expect? | DPDMAI::DAVISGB | Let's get Relational! | Tue Apr 25 1989 11:59 | 8 |
| Spin the PDP-11 business off into a separate company? Hmmm...that now
enables them to compete in the market place, just like everyone else...
If I were in such a position, I'd develop and market a new system based
upon Virtual Addressing, capable of Symmetric Multiprocessing, with a
wide range of processors all running the same O/S or some flavor of Unix.
And then go compete against my 'parent' company...
|
788.10 | wish it were so! | XANADU::FLEISCHER | Bob 381-0895 ZKO3-2/T63 | Tue Apr 25 1989 16:58 | 18 |
| re Note 790.2 by HANNAH::MESSENGER:
> We are *not*
> hiring the best, at least during a hiring freeze; for the most part we only
> hire people fresh out of college.
This is a particularly sore spot for me, because we are not
even allowed to hire an MIT student, graduating this June,
who has been working for us as a temporary employee for a
year and who has been given great recommendations from his
supervisor.
He has been working on an advanced development project that
we want to make into a product. Rule number 1 of technology
transfer says that tech transfer is most effective when the
people are transferred.
Bob
|
788.11 | is it us or is it them? | ZPOV01::SIMPSON | Those whom the Gods would destroy... | Tue Apr 25 1989 23:52 | 21 |
| re .8
> Firstly, why should the only mechanism for making digital smaller
> involve breaking off major components of the company.
It doesn't necessarily have to. It just seemed a suitably vivid
example of how to achieve the apparent goal of dramatically reducing
the size of the company so we could all be marvellous and creative
again. If you think it can be achieved (or even should be achieved,
a separate question) another way then fine. It doesn't affect the
validity of the question.
> There is no "too big", Surely you, as an employee normally based
> in Australia's national capital would know that bureaucracies can
> grow to ridiculous extents before they are too big...
When I first read this I almost thought we were going to agree.
But! No precedent has been set. I thought one of the reasons you
like dumping on Canberra is that the bureaucracies HAVE grown to
ridiculous extents (meaning they are too big)(a not unreasonable
opinion).
|
788.12 | what if??? | PH4VAX::MCBRIDE | Pikes Peak or Bust!!! | Sun May 21 1989 11:47 | 9 |
| Spinning off groups from the parent as separate 'franchises'
is a way to reduce the cost of doing business. You don't have to
pay benefits, retirement plan...none of the goodies wer get with
the parent. These spin-offs then can compete better against certain
types of competitors, say...the PC business.
The DECtop strategy statement that was mailed to our homes in
one of those regular DEC publications stated that we will be doing
something creative to service these customers. Perhaps this is
it?
|