T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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837.1 | | SCARY::M_DAVIS | nested disclaimers | Wed Jun 14 1989 11:57 | 15 |
| In our group, standby pay is paid to individuals who are on salary
(exempt employees) but who must be available after hours for specific
customer situations. Standby has to be arranged in advance, not after
the fact. The definition of available varies all the way from, "I got
paid standby for getting a full night's sleep" to "I got out of bed and
answered the phone at 2 a.m. and had to come into the office to dial
into the customer's database and analyze a bugcheck dump and get him a
workaround." Supposedly, the two balance one another. In theory.
As per policy 3.13 in the orange book, "Employees are paid an amount
equal to one hour of straight time for each eight (8) hours or fraction
thereof, that they are on standby." There is other "fine print" about
when it applies in the policy.
Marge
|
837.2 | | RBW::WICKERT | MAA DIS Consultant | Wed Jun 14 1989 16:20 | 16 |
|
In our group (a field IS datacenter) we follow exactly what .0 stated. You
get paid 1 hour in 8 and only if you have to come into the office do you
get call-in pay ($100). It doesn't require management approval to
come in but it's watch as to avoid abuse.
I have problems with this policy since it favors those who live closer
to the office. If I'm working on a problem that requires interaction
every 1/2 hour I might as well come in but if I live an hour away I'll
think twice...
If I, or any of my people, got called everynight and several times a night
I'd feel compelled to do something about it. It isn't right, to say the least,
to get standby pay for a full nights work.
Ray
|
837.3 | Some reasonable ideas | SMOOT::ROTH | The Jive Five:My True Story | Wed Jun 14 1989 17:06 | 63 |
|
[I deleted a lot of long-winded flaming and just included some
helpful suggestions...]
In a time long, long ago a similar situation was resolved in the
following satisfactory fashion:
Institute the following:
Scenario #1:
Rotating 2nd shift -or- permanent (if volunteer avail.) 2nd shift
Rotating 3rd shift standby (this person covers weekends too).
Scenario #2:
Rotating 2nd shift -or- permanent (if volunteer avail.) 2nd shift
Rotating 3rd shift
Volunteer to be on standby weekends only
--- Current way costs company 16 extra pay hours per week-
1st shift person does standby all week & weekend = 56hrs pay (40+16)
--- Scenario #1 costs company 15 extra pay hours per week-
Rotating 2nd shift person = 10% uplift for shift = 44 hrs pay (40*1.1)
3rd shift standby /weekend standby = 51hrs pay (40+11)
--- Scenario #2 costs company 16 extra pay hours per week-
Rotating 2nd shift person = 10% uplift for shift = 44 hrs pay (40*1.1)
Rotating 3rd shift person = 15% uplift for shift = 46 hrs pay (40*1.15)
Weekend standby = 46 hrs pay (40+6)
----------------
*If* you have enough people you can implement scenario #1 or
#2. It costs the company about the same but the burnout factor
of the staff is a lot lower. Using the shift method guarantees
(more or less) that the person on duty is fresh, and since they
are in the office they have more resources (manuals, faster
terminal access, etc.) And management cannot say that there is
not a need for after-hours coverage; you have the call load
to prove that it *is* needed.
As an added plus the person on shift can schedule some of those
daytime tasks (doctor, dentist, shopping, etc.) for their week
on 2nd shift.
These are just some ideas. I would strongly suggest that this
issue be worked through the management/personnel (or is it now 'Human
Resources'?!?) chain as a group rather than on an individual
basis since this affects everyone on standby. The suggestions
contained here are reasonable and I think that most managers
would want to 'do the right thing' and keep the employees happy.
Lee (An old hand at standby/shift work.)
p.s. I (and probably others) would appreciate on hearing how
this turns out... would you (the secret author of .0) be
so kind as to forward your feedback and/or results so that
they may be posted here.
|
837.4 | From personal experience | CSC32::J_OPPELT | Change is the only constant. | Wed Jun 14 1989 19:27 | 41 |
| Here in the VIA group at the Colorado CSC we have 24 hr coverage
7 days a week through the use of beeper coverage and standby pay
for those taking the beeper.
Some personal thoughts on standby pay here at the CSC:
It is on a volunteer basis. No one is required to take the
beeper, and to the best of my knowledge nobody's performance
evaluation is negatively impacted by an unwillingness to take
the beeper. If you don't like the pay, or if you don't think
it is worth it, leave the beeper to others. In terms of the
economic principles of supply and demand, if it is really too
demanding for the pay, management will have a hard time filling
the coverage and will have to do something about the pay to
entice specialists to be willing to take the beeper again.
If I needed extra money and wanted to work a second job, there
are very few legitimate jobs where I can get that kind of money
moonlighting. There was one holiday weekend that I was paid
for 10 hours standby, and probably worked 20. I couldn't find
a second job that paid me as much as I made for 20 hours work,
even if I only considered my take-home pay from the beeper.
The other side to the previous point -- I have had the beeper
for weekends where I got few if any calls. It all evens out in
the end.
Still, who doesn't want to see a bigger paycheck? I would like
to see additional pay if the amount you actually worked was
more than the number of hours you were paid for standby. For
example, in my previous example I would have collected an
additional 10 hours pay for the extra load that weekend. On
weekends where we work actual hours less than what we are
paid for, we would still keep the money simply for being
responsible and available. All in all it is still cheaper to
the company than hiring full-time on-site staffing for 24 by 7
coverage. Of course I do not have to balance a cost center or
district budget, but from my point of view, that is what I would
like to see.
Joe Oppelt
|
837.5 | Add more beepers... | CSCMA::TURNQUIST | Greg Turnquist | Fri Jun 16 1989 22:47 | 32 |
| In the Massachusetts CSC, we have a beeper that generates 5-10 calls
every night after hours, and probably the same number each weekend day.
It goes off between midnight and 4 AM about every third night, so if
you carry it for a week you'll get 2 or 3 late night calls. The last
time I had it, I got beeped 55 times, and ended up working pretty much
around the clock for a week.
It wasn't always that busy, and the number of volunteers has dropped
as the workload has risen. The approach we are taking is to add
more beepers, and dividing the workload, so that we have several
beepers that are moderately busy rather than 1 insanely busy beeper.
We have to come up with a way to break down the products supported
by each beeper so that we balance the load, but it looks like we'll
be able to do a reasonable job of that.
It will cost a little more to add more beepers, but it reflects the
fact that we are supporting more customers who are paying for the 24
hour support.
It seems reasonable to me that standby pay is what you get for being
available. I would expect to do a reasonable amount of extra work
to earn the extra pay, but 55 calls is too much. By keeping the
beeper voluntary, and adjusting the beeper workload (by splitting
the work over an appropriate number of beepers) so that enough people
think it's worth the extra pay, I think we have a decent mechanism
for keeping the beeper workload within reasonable limits.
I hope. If that doesn't work, we'll have to make it mandatory.....
Greg
|
837.6 | Still burnout | SMOOT::ROTH | The Jive Five:My True Story | Mon Jun 19 1989 11:19 | 11 |
| Re: .5
Just how many hours out of a day can someone be expected to
reliably function? And by doubling the number of people on
standby will halve the standby frequency which will bring about
additional grumbles.
I'd certainly encourage someone to check into the rotating shift
scheme that I outlined a few notes back...
Lee
|
837.7 | oops | SMOOT::ROTH | The Jive Five:My True Story | Mon Jun 19 1989 12:26 | 5 |
| Before someone points it out...
In .6 I meant to say "double the frequency", not "halve".
Lee
|
837.8 | beep! | REGENT::LEVINE | | Mon Jun 19 1989 14:24 | 35 |
| STANDBY PAY: aside from employee burnout and the other stress
related costs, the biggest cost can be in the career paths of those
on standby...
the real danger of standby pay is that employees who are on it longterm
become accustomed to the higer income, some even take on debts (mortgages)
with the assumption that they will be able to meet the payments.
These individuals were under the impression (after 5 or 8 years
of it) that standby/beeper pay would be a permanent part of the
job. Management did not correct this misaprehension.
People in this situation can make from 30 to 50% over their salary,
and this causes them to turn down other oppportunities on their
career path....
I worked in an organization with the above symptoms. Many people
in that group NEEDED the standby pay, they had built their lives
around it. Some individuals in supervisory positions carried the
beeper to be available to THEIR support people who were also
on standby. Everyone got the standby pay. This became VERY expensive...
New management was called in to fix the problem, and
fix it they did....they restructured the work shifts and reduced
the several standby people to one person. This was an absolutely
necessary act, but the mistakes made by prior managers wound up
biting the long-term support professionals (the kind that can make
a heck of a lot more money working elsewhere) Needless to say, this caused
economic hardship for the long-timers. Some left the company, some
took 2nd and 3rd shift jobs for the needed differential pay...
IN SHORT:
standby pay and beeper coverage are an effective band-aid but probably
NOT a healthy way to run a business.
|
837.9 | I've done it | BISTRO::BREICHNER | | Wed Jun 21 1989 13:20 | 10 |
| RE: .8
A strong vote for your view.
I have experienced that very same phenoma 22 years ago as (by that
time) young FS engineer (not with DEC). It didn't take long to
find out that I couldn't make a decent living without the
overtime pay. That's when I decided to join DEC.
By that time with 0 unemployed one might have said that there where
sound economical reasons to work overtime on a regular basis.
Today I believe that those reasons do not exist anymore...
Fred
|
837.10 | another vote for .8 | ASABET::EHNSTROM | | Wed Jun 21 1989 15:19 | 31 |
|
RE: .8
Another vote for you. I was THE telecom person for a small
site in DEC (around 300 persons) and I was constantly on call.
A lot of things happened during that time; I found out that my free
time wasn't really mine or my family's real fast. Management, when
I approached them, said that what "I signed on for". In Essence
came with the turf. After a while I started comming and going as
I pleased and really didn't care about the tennancy of the building.
That was ok because the net ALWAYS ran fine. Eventually I left
that job and went to a new on. I was asked by my new manager how
I felt about carrying a beeper and I almost took him out right there.
I quickly realized that my feeling was not at him so I told him
that this was one of my major reasons for leaving the old job, which
he knew from the interview process. He hasn't brought up the subject
again. The money part was great but I didn't get used to living
on it, that is , figuring it into my budget cause I knew it was
going to go away some day and I didn't want to get caught in what
were talking about here. When it did stop it did not impact me
like some of the responses here. I'm not over the "phsych" impact
of the beeper issue yet, I get tired and irritated just thinking
about it. That's not the way it should be. If Standby is to be
effective then the people in charge have to run it in a manner that
will not "burn" you out, mentally or financially.
Thom Terriffic
I acquired that name from my old job and it still hasn't gone
away!
|
837.11 | No Win Situation | CADSYS::PAPA | | Wed Jun 21 1989 19:02 | 20 |
| When I worked at CXO, I was asked if I would carry a beeper with me
over Thanksgiving weekend even if I wasn't officially on standby (The
customers I happened to be supporting at the time asked my management
to put me on standby that weekend). I made the mistake of saying yes.
Management then told me, "good, then you are not officially on standby".
I had been unofficially on standby every weekend for the previous 2 mos.
I have a couple of comments for this type of scenario:
1) Management was well aware of the fact that I was 'unofficially' on
standby the previous months, but never told me that there was such
a thing as standby compensation. They were getting free labor.
2) The above obviously led Management to believe (and they were right)
that I held the needs of my customers as a high priority, and therefore
took advantage of the situation to deny standby pay.
What does an employee do in this type of situation, tell the customer,
"I'm sorry, but I don't do windows?" I know this is a cliche', but do
you get my point?
|
837.12 | More historical trivia | PNO::KEMERER | VMS/TOPS10/TOPS20/RSTS/CCDOS-816 | Thu Jun 22 1989 01:56 | 31 |
|
I carried a pager 24x7 for 2 years straight recently but also
went out of my way *NOT* to depend on the standby pay, even when
I re-financed my house and the bank *WANTED* to use the standby
as income (they knew I was getting it because my pay is auto-deposited
every week and the numbers I reported were lower than what they
saw every week). I will admit though, it *WAS* tempting to use it.
(When I finally went off full-time standby my manager even went
out of his way to "warn" me it was coming and to verify it would
not be a problem.)
As for "un-official" standby, there was a time in the past when
I carried a pager 24*7 but only got paid actual standby pay (for
the week) if I received at *LEAST* one call that week. I was
lucky (unlucky?) enough that I never had to give in to the
evil thought of "causing" things to happen to get called. As
is usual with standby it was normally the other way around.
Before that there was even (way back...) when I carried a pager
24*7 "as part of the turf" with *NO PAY*. That was quickly amended
when it was discovered that was not the way things were supposed
to be done. I could probably retire (slight exaggeration) if I
could get back-pay for all the hours I was on standby in those
early years. But, despite all things I *DO* look at pagers as
part of the job I'm doing in a support role. I'm just glad there
is compensation and can *EASILY* see that at times the rate of
compensation should be higher for more "active" times.
Warren
|
837.13 | How about MORE THAN ONE pager at a time? | PNO::KEMERER | VMS/TOPS10/TOPS20/RSTS/CCDOS-816 | Thu Jun 22 1989 02:05 | 16 |
|
Another thing that hasn't been mentioned is that you only get
standby pay for *ONE* pager even if you carry more than that.
Many times I've ended up supporting three different systems
and applications because people we're sick, on vacation, etc.
You end up carrying one pager for each system/application.
Once I even carried *FOUR* pagers at once. You certainly look
"wired" carrying all those pagers on your person.
Now if only you could get multiple pay for multiple pagers. After
all, more pagers mean more work, right?
Warren
|
837.14 | | LESLIE::LESLIE | andy ��� leslie, csse | Thu Jun 22 1989 07:39 | 5 |
| Airing this issues here is one thing - please don't think it'll help discussions
with your management, which is the people you SHOULD be talking these issues
through with.
- ANdy
|
837.15 | just say no | DPDMAI::SWENSON | | Thu Jun 22 1989 16:11 | 13 |
| REP.>.11 Just say no more. I have carried a pager since they hit the
field. If I don't get payed after hours the pager goes off. It is not
a bad attitude, it is business. If your not on standby and they call
you after hours then it is min. 4hrs over time plus the standby pay for
one hour. If your told it is a bad attitude then you have to decide is
it worth betaken advantage of. After a while you will find out the
work is not everything and saying "I am busy to night with personel
thing to do" is a lot easier on the nerves then wondering if the phone
will ring. Management has a bad habit of slapping your back when ever
you do something extra and forgetting everything the first time you say
no.
|
837.16 | another NZ2cents | GIDDAY::SADLER | stranded in paradise | Mon Jun 26 1989 02:14 | 23 |
| I'm a f/s engineer and have the (mis)fortune of gettig to carry a
pager. It's been quite interesting following this discussion so I'd
just like to add the way it works here.
The pager is carried after hours for a 7 day week. For carrying a
pager and making ourselves available after hours we are paid a flat
dollar amount that is approx 35% more over the weekend. If we are
called out we claim a minimum 3 hours overtime, but don't claim standby
for this time. For sometime we've been doing a one week in three roster
which started to get to be burnout material. Recently is been changed
to one in five weeks and that is far better and is about as often as I
would ever like to do it. I get the impression that standby is expected
of us and I've never heard of anyone who's refused to do it.
If you're not on standby and get called out it's a 4hr min (haven't had
it happen yet).
The money is nice and on a quiet week it reallly is a case of "money
for jam". But to budget around it is a mistake. Any overtime money over
my base income get's but to one side and gets to pay for holidays etc.
It's certainly a mistake to rely on it, especially when I've had a 60-100%
uplift in pay over one month.
jim
|
837.17 | Different countries, different policies | SMOOT::ROTH | The Jive Five:My True Story | Mon Jun 26 1989 10:52 | 9 |
| Note to other readers of this note-
.16 is describing non-US standby policies, which may vary somewhat from what
is practiced in the US. Most of the responses prior to .16 are dealing with
the US.
Just to keeps things straight,
Lee
|
837.18 | Sorry, should have made that clearer | GIDDAY::SADLER | stranded in paradise | Tue Jun 27 1989 02:33 | 1 |
|
|
837.19 | Actually.... | CVG::THOMPSON | Protect the guilty, punish the innocent | Tue Jun 27 1989 09:45 | 5 |
| In a topic like this *everyone* should make it clear what country
they are in. There is a wide range of country spicific differences
in things like this.
Alfred
|
837.20 | no standby | RENIS::HARVEY | | Wed Jul 05 1989 16:52 | 10 |
| In the Western Area, USA they have decided to get rid of all standby
as of July 1, 1989. This move has raised some questions as to how
standby issues will be covered. For those in the wage class 3 or
below ranks, they get overtime for after hours work. For us in WC4
its another story. It looks like for after hour/weekend coverage
they will try calling people to come in.
It looks like its time to get a phone answering machine....
Renis
|
837.21 | | SCARY::M_DAVIS | Happy new year! | Wed Jul 05 1989 17:06 | 3 |
| Will WC4 people receive comp time?
Marge
|
837.22 | | SCCAT::ROCH | | Wed Jul 05 1989 18:11 | 10 |
|
As far as I know, comp time will not be offered.
You know what they say, you get what you pay for!
Does anyone know if the other areas are discontinuing stand-by?
-leslie
|
837.23 | No problem! | SMOOT::ROTH | Have you seen 'Laughing Gravy'? | Thu Jul 06 1989 14:39 | 11 |
| Re: .20
What will customers that have after-hours contracts think? Will the customer
accept this as just another cost-cutting measure that will enable DEC to
give them a better product at a lower price? Customers will be willing to
suffer through an occasional not finding an engineer to respond to a call
within contractual commitments, right?
I hope that reality will set in soon....
Lee
|
837.26 | a possible alternative? | BROKE::LERNER | Cyndi Bliss NUO1-1/B09 264-0583 | Thu Aug 29 1991 14:00 | 44 |
| re .-1, .-2
Although I have never had to deal with the situation you describe, I
can sympathise. I can also offer a possible suggestion that maybe you
could take back to the people who schedule stand-by a week at a time.
My husband is a medical resident at a large urban public hospital.
Here is how they deal with the stand-by issue (although they term it
being "on call" - and when an intern or resident is on-call at night,
they get at most 2-3 hours sleep. They stay in the hospital, and take
care of any incoming admissions or patient emergencies that arise.
Typically there are one intern and one resident per 2 floors at night.
This does not cover the emergency room - that is covered in straight
13-hour shifts (shifts overlap by an hour).
Typically a resident is on call every third or fourth night. When
on-call, they work a normal daytime shift (7:30 am to about 6:30
pm). From 6:30 in the evening to 7:30 the next morning, anytime
they are needed (which is most of the time), they are paged from wherever
they are (if they aren't currently attending to something, they are
trying to catch 40 winks in the on-call room, which contains a bed
and a phone). Depending on the rotation, they either work a full day
the next day, or they go home to sleep after morning rounds (which
usually ends aroune 11 am). When they are on-call on a weekend day,
it is 7:30 one morning until rounds end the following day. BTW there
is no such thing as overtime or stand-by pay.
I'm not sure this kind of schedule would be any better for you from
the point of view of family life. However, if stand-by is once
every six weeks currently, then the alternative would probably
boil down to one weeknight a week plus one full weekend every
6 weeks. It doesn't change the amount of stand-by, it only distributes
it differently. I don't see why Digital should have to make you do
a full day shift the day after either. The reason the hospital does is
money. Residents are cheaper than nurses and other ancillary staff
(both in normal hourly wage, and in the fact that nurses, etc get
overtime pay), and there are a limited number of residents. In a
hospital being shorthanded means putting lives in danger. Offhand,
I can't think of anything here where having something take a little
longer would kill anyone.
I hope this helps.
--Cyndi
|
837.27 | | VMSZOO::ECKERT | My heart is down, my head is turning around | Thu Aug 29 1991 14:46 | 6 |
| re: .26
In addition to the financial considerations, hospitals have residents and
interns on stand-by for training purposes. By caring for patients for
longer consecutive periods of time they have greater exposure to the
course of an illness. This is not a factor when working in the CSC.
|
837.28 | | BROKE::LERNER | Cyndi Bliss NUO1-1/B09 264-0583 | Thu Aug 29 1991 16:47 | 9 |
| Although the hospitals claim it's "training purposes", it's really
cheap labor. Ask any house officers association. Drawing bloods
as 4:30 in the morning is NOT training. (some of the call work is
training, but a lot of it could be accomplished with shorter than
36 hour shifts).
Anyway that's off the
subject. I was trying to offer an alternative way of scheduling
a limited number of resources.
|
837.29 | Modified Standby | NEWVAX::TURRO | Watch the skies | Fri Aug 30 1991 01:23 | 28 |
| RE. .-*
I have heard of different scenarios for "fixing" the standby
dilemma. The best approach Ive seen is what we are about to implement
in the Washington DC area. Everyones on standby and a schedule is
published for the upcoming 12 months. This schedule will be ammended
as needed, this eliminates training/vacation conflicts. Its up to the
standby person to swap his/her week with someone else.
Being WC3 has its advantages as we all know. The newest concept to
this is that the week your on standby you don't come to work. Everyones
shift is considered to be from 1pm-9pm. If your called out during those
hours its considered to be regular shift. If called out any of the
other 16hrs that day its OT(of course with the exception of weekends
where it all OT).
Since this is a new approach and as of yet untested I find it to be
the fairest and hopefully less taxing.
And as far as the CSC goes, you need more people working the 3rd
shift. I work the 3rd shift and have found it most distressing that the
level of expertice is so low at that time.Being an LCG person trying to
get GOOD help is like pulling teeth. LCG customers are still around and
are paying for GOOD coverage at that time and anyother time.
Sorry about getting a little off track !
Mike Turro
|
837.31 | Not the proper use of beeper | CSC32::B_SHAW | | Fri Aug 30 1991 11:14 | 9 |
| I was always under the opinion that the purpose of the beeper shift was
to cover for times when the call volume was not sufficient to justify
having someone on site full time. If the person on beeper is spending
the majority of those hours on calls, then management should be
reassessing the needs for this product group. With the pager in our
group, we generally get a couple calls a week and for this, having a
person onsite would be a poor use of that person's time.
Bob
|
837.32 | The deck is stacked against us..!! | CSC32::R_GROVER | The CIRCUIT_MAN | Fri Aug 30 1991 13:37 | 20 |
| RE: -.1
You are correct.... Your discription of standby is the way it SHOULD
be, but it is not the way it is, for us, at this time.
I gave an example in my entry.. of a typical night... Well, that night
happened again last night... it played out almost exactly the same way.
Management has been approached, concerning the problems, but they have
yet to see "the statistics" which would prove we need a full time 2nd
and/or 3rd shift. "The statistics" are very subjective in their
content, in that there is one entire product line which is not even
calculated in that "statistics" gathering matrics. BUT, management will
not even take that into consideration.
So, you see, management is playing the "numbers game" and we (the
worker bee) are seeing the effects of "the real world".
Bob G.
|
837.33 | (Re)Define "TEAM EFFORT" | AKOCOA::HADDAD | | Fri Aug 30 1991 14:22 | 8 |
| Find out what they want for justification and give it to them. Ask them
for clarity via mail messages. They may be telling the truth and their
hands may, in fact, be tied!
The information you give them may work towards a solution that nobody, as
yet, has seen. Work with them - not against them!
Bruce
|
837.34 | Details please | MKFSA::WENTWORTH | | Fri Aug 30 1991 17:13 | 9 |
| I'm curious about the standby you are describing. When a call is given
to you do you have to go on site or can you resolve it from home ?
W/C 3 employees get overtime and W/C 4's get $100/callout for each
callout. If you are taking the number of calls you describe it must
be costing your group a small fortune to service afterhours calls.
Cost per shift= 40 hours + 16 hours standby + (let's say) 20 calls
@ 6 hours pay or $100 = normal weeks pay + either 120 hours pay or
$2000. Doesn't sound too cost efficient. Maybe a headcount issue
is forcing this method.
|
837.35 | encouraging,huh? | CSC32::K_BOUCHARD | Ken Bouchard CXO3-2 | Sat Aug 31 1991 23:10 | 7 |
| Bob,
You work on LCG n'est pas? This is a dying (or it may be long dead)
product line. I doubt if anyone at DEC is going to hire any more people
to help you out. Think about it. In a few years when our commitment to
support KL10's expires,what does DEC do with those extra people?
Ken
|
837.36 | Work = money | HGORS9::MELADAMS | | Sun Sep 01 1991 22:11 | 5 |
|
I know of a person in CXO who made $1,800.00 in US dollars in one
weekend.
I think there is more to this story that we are seeing here.
|
837.38 | Clarification | NEWVAX::TURRO | Watch the skies | Tue Sep 03 1991 02:18 | 36 |
| To clarify my/our standby scenario.
After hours- Customer calls CMC. CMC usually questions customer or
customer relates problem nad says they want service immediately or
schedules the call for the morning or when there account rep is
scheduled to come in next.
If service is scheduled then appropriate person is notified via CHAMPS
message.
If immediate service is requested CMC pages engineer. Engineer calls
CMC to find out whats going on. Engineer calls customer to find out
whats the problem. Sometimes a CS engineer can call from home and login
to site to run some type of error analysis. For the most part if
engineer can't fix problem over the phone then he flies(my scenario) .
The new twist I described a few replies back was if its during the
1pm - 9pm hours you go in straight time. (Youve been off all day)
If other than those hours then your paid OT.. ie (after 9pm - before 1pm)
At present if your on standby you work your 8hrs during your shift. And
of course your not on standby during your work shift.
Also at present thirs shift and early morning shifts (4am - 12noon)
can't work full week standby, only weekend standby (friday - Sunday)
As I previously stated in my original reply I haven't tried it yet
it isn't in effect until 9/6/91.
I hope it works out...
Mike Turro
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837.40 | Bob, don't do it. | RHETT::MACEACHERN | Electic horseman | Fri Sep 06 1991 09:58 | 13 |
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Don't go into READ-ONLY mode. That is one of the problems with not
just Digital, but much of American companies.
I understand your frustration better that you think. And I have also
threatened to do the same, but I soon realize that silence means
acceptance.
If you decide that you cannot continue to say how you feel, I at least
will understand, and will be upset about Digital losing yet another
person willing to at least try to make things better.
dave.
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