T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
975.1 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Wed Nov 29 1989 16:23 | 1 |
| I brought this up in 942.88.
|
975.2 | never got to .88 of any note! | KYOA::SCHULZ | george schulz dtn:323-4074 | Wed Nov 29 1989 16:36 | 5 |
| Sorry for trunpeting "old news" but it was new news to me. I also think
that the 88th reply to a note isn't going to be seen quite as often as
a new note might be.
GS
|
975.3 | | DEC25::BRUNO | It will HURT if I swallow! | Wed Nov 29 1989 16:38 | 6 |
| RE: .2
Now come on. Most people DO know about NEXT UNSEEN. That kind of
philosophy just leads to cluttered conferences.
|
975.4 | NEXT UNSEEN not equal to SEE ALL! | SICML::LEVIN | My kind of town, Chicago is | Thu Nov 30 1989 16:10 | 16 |
| Re: .3 (re: .2)
<< Now come on. Most people DO know about NEXT UNSEEN. That kind of
<< philosophy just leads to cluttered conferences.
Well I for one frequently do NEXT UNSEEN, but when I see reply 67 of 99 on a
topic I've grown tired of, I do another NEXT UNSEEN and never read replies
68-99, since NEXT UNSEEN has a feature of marking them all seen.
I like that feature and use it often at the calculated risk of missing some
"vital" information. Yes, it's nice to keep the conference uncluttered, but I
think there are times to post a new note instead of reopening an old one by
posting a reply. [And notice I'm not making any judgement as to whether or not
this was an appropriate time.]
/Marvin
|
975.5 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Fri Dec 01 1989 23:41 | 6 |
| Re: .4
Well, clearly you weren't tired of the topic if you chose to start
a new note for it!
Steve
|
975.6 | Author (.0) .NEQ. Author(.4) | SICML::LEVIN | My kind of town, Chicago is | Mon Dec 04 1989 10:03 | 0 |
975.7 | | SCCAT::BOUCHARD | | Mon Dec 04 1989 18:13 | 5 |
| .0> Appraisals. There are other things too, such as only 80% of you will
.0> get a raise at all (mandated). This is supposed to ensure that only
Thanks,for that info.Where did you get it? That's the first I've
heard of that 80% stuff.
|
975.8 | | POCUS::KOZAKIEWICZ | Shoes for industry | Mon Dec 04 1989 20:31 | 21 |
| I suppose it depends upon local interpretation, but I don't believe
that the participation rate and spend number are supposed to be
public knowledge.
That being said, it could be that the participation rate is a derivative
of the average salary action interval. I mean, with the average
for CY90 at 21 months, it's obvious to me that some people won't
get planned for increases next year, making it equally obvious that
the participation rate will not be 100%.
I can't see how you manage a participation rate AND an average interval
unless they equate to the same bottom line. Otherwise, one takes
preference over the other.
As for the base note topic, the *average* review interval has been
15 months for some while (your results may vary). Add six months
to that and you get a new average of 21 months for next year. The
nine month freeze BS is just hot air.
Al
|
975.9 | 'corporate''guidelines' | MPGS::MCCLURE | Why Me??? | Wed Dec 06 1989 08:08 | 25 |
| re .0 &.7
Well, .8 did a pretty good job of explaining the 80% participation.
If you wonder why its 'mandatory', that's to ensure that the manager
doesn't try something strange.
What .8 might not be aware of (I wasn't until I mentioned it to my
landlord who works under a different VP), is that all organizations
haven't been implementing the 'corporate' salary planning guidelines.
In SIMG, we started with a 13 month interval for '88. In '89 we went
to 15 months and were very happy to hear that '90 didn't get any
longer, then came the freeze. This is why yearly performance reviews
became very important, effectively seperating salary and performance
reviews. The 13 month interval was a pain! You do an annual performance
review and have to update it a month later for the salary review (at
least in our reporting structure).
By the way, IMHO any manager/supervisor that doesn't communicate
the changes in the salary planning rules to their people, is just
looking for trouble by keeping them in the dark. Understanding that
some managers try to keep these things a deep dark secret, you should
not be surprised when a notesfile like this one comes under fire for
'leaking' information to 'the workers'.
Bob Mc
|
975.10 | This place is turning into a mushroom farm | ESCROW::KILGORE | Wild Bill | Wed Dec 06 1989 10:46 | 15 |
|
Variable intervals...
80% participation...
6-month freeze...
Keep it all under wraps...
Throw in enough variables, and people won't quite know when, how and by
whom they're being shafted.
Is it just me, or is this starting to sound like the machinations of a
belly-crawlwing, bottom-feeding, scum-sucking auto dealer?
|
975.11 | If you're being shafted, fight back! | VMSDEV::HALLYB | The Smart Money was on Goliath | Wed Dec 06 1989 14:15 | 4 |
| > Is it just me, or is this starting to sound like the machinations of a
> belly-crawlwing, bottom-feeding, scum-sucking auto dealer?
And, of course, you can always walk out the nearest exit.
|
975.12 | Separating "Pay" from "Performance" | AUSTIN::UNLAND | Sic Biscuitus Disintegratum | Wed Dec 06 1989 15:39 | 19 |
| re: the 21-month cycle
I view that whole issue as a marketing ploy: Just like manufacturers
who raise prices and then pitch "rebates" as a cost savings. The net
result is the same no matter what you call it; it will be close to
two years between salary increases.
This in turn has another effect on many of us in the field - it totally
disconnects salary increases from performance reviews. In many cases
(including my own) salary planning and promotion forecasting ends up
being done by one manager, the employee gets assigned to another group/
project/unit, and the manager who ends up doing the performance review
has to live with the original forecasted percentages. So you go in
at review time and hear the story that they'll fix it "next time", but
"next time" the process is repeated all over again. At this point,
the "pay for performance" slogan becomes bitingly sarcastic.
Geoff
|
975.13 | attack the messenger.. | KYOA::SCHULZ | george schulz dtn:323-4074 | Thu Dec 07 1989 12:09 | 17 |
| Having written .0, and being attacked for not reading all previous
replies to all previous notes, it's nice to see some others have
something germane to add. It's amazing how conferences stray from the
point. Anyway..
I got the 80% info from someone who outa know...but, hey, it could be
wrong. I didn't think it was a secret since managers tend to justify
their actions by quoting the directives from above that left them no
choice. This means most of us will be told something. It's kinda
idiotic to claim that this information is then to be kept under wraps.
Thats like saying that noone at Digital Review should have known about
the 9000 until we 'officially' announced it.
Anyway, Digital will make a ton a money after the recession and we will
all be arguing about whether 10 or 15% is the average raise!!!
George
|
975.14 | Comments on the 80% rule | SICML::LEVIN | My kind of town, Chicago is | Thu Dec 07 1989 15:26 | 13 |
| As with ANY policy, pieces taken out of context don't always make sense.
If the average time between raises is 15 months, then statistically it's true
that 80% of the organization will get raises in a given year. But if my group
has 5 employees whose salary review dates all were in the first half of the year
(and that's certainly possible with a small group size), then the time gap could
even be as large as 18 months and we'd all get raises this year. Now next year,
of course, is another story.
I haven't seen any rules, or even talked to someone who has, but I would
certainly hope that 80% is not being taken as a firm directive!
/Marvin
|
975.15 | 10%?...NAH!!! | SCCAT::BOUCHARD | | Thu Dec 07 1989 17:12 | 5 |
| .13> Anyway, Digital will make a ton a money after the recession and we will
.13> all be arguing about whether 10 or 15% is the average raise!!!
That was tongue-in-cheek,wasn't it? I,and numerous others,doubt
that the average raise will ever be anywhere near 10% ever again.
|
975.16 | | BOSHOG::LEWIS | | Fri Dec 08 1989 09:04 | 9 |
| Re: .14
The 80% rule is in effect for 1990....only 80% of the population
will receive salary action. If everyone in your group was scheduled
for salary action in 1990, 20% will be pushed out till 1991 during
this round of salary planning.
Bob
|
975.17 | Who said its 15 months ? | HPSCAD::HENDERSON | I am that man | Fri Dec 08 1989 13:02 | 8 |
| Having read several replies about increasing the average salary action
interval to 15 months, I asked my supervisor about this, and he
says thats its still 13 months for us ( I'm in a US engineering group ).
Either he's misinformed, or the interval must vary depending on what
group you're in. Can anyone comment any more on that ?
Steve
|
975.18 | here's what we were told | GLORY::HULL | I've got CD fever | Sat Dec 09 1989 08:18 | 18 |
|
Here's what we were told in a recent meeting by our local
personnel rep (I'm in East Central Area, EIS (formerly SWS)) -
the "old" average salary plan cycle was 12-13 months. Been that
way for a few years now. Add the 6 month freeze. This takes it
out to 18-19 months. And if you're not in the 80% group (this is
a definite corporate guideline now), you'll be pushed out to about
21 months. We spent an hour going over all this.
With only 80% of the population in the salary plan, each person in
that group has the potential for a bigger piece of the pie for
that cycle. They also said they are re-instating the "4" rating
for below-average performers, hopefully who will be councilled by
mgmt and bring themselves up to at least 3 level. 4 is now a
long-term rating. You either improve or get a 5.
Al
|
975.19 | | SCARY::M_DAVIS | Marge Davis Hallyburton | Sun Dec 10 1989 16:11 | 5 |
| re .18:
I believe you meant to say, "4 is not a long-term rating."
Marge
|
975.20 | what story is reaching the field today? | CVG::THOMPSON | My friends call me Alfred | Wed Jan 03 1990 10:24 | 52 |
| Last night I watched a tape of the 12 Dec 89 DVN Quarterly Report.
This was the life call-in show with KO etc. Someone from the field
asked the basic questions that were asked here in .0. Ken and Jack
Smith seemed quite surprised at the question. The claimed, and I
believe them, that they didn't know anything about 21 month reviews
rather than 18. They promised they'd look into it and more of a reply
would be placed in LIVEWIRE (which it was about 10 days later). The
reply in LIVEWIRE (reproduced at the end of this note) doesn't talk
about 15 month averages or 80% coverage or anything like that.
Something appears to be seriously wrong here. Somewhere (perhaps
several somewheres) someone has made a decision about review timing
on their own and are passing it off as Corporate Policy. As I watched
Ken and Jack struggle to understand a question all I could think about
was that if it'd been me in their chairs I'd be royally upset. I hope
someone got straitened out. Are people still hearing 6+15 as the
average review cycle? If so how is it being justified in light of KO's
public statements?
Alfred
Response to salary planning question
from 'Digital Quarterly Report' Telecast
During the recent "Digital Quarterly Report" DVN telecast, an
employee asked if the company has abandoned its traditional
annual review cycles and is "pushing them out" to an average of
15-21 months.
This is what LIVE WIRE learned from Corporate Compensation and
Benefits:
Intervals for employees receiving salary increases in 1990 will average
slightly greater than 18 months during this salary planning period. But
that can be misleading since general explanations may not apply to all
employees.
Current salary planning is being affected by two major changes.
One, which should be clear to everyone, is the six-month salary
delay. In effect, the delay, which ends in January, extends
employees who normally would have been on a 12-month review cycle
to an 18-month cycle.
The other change is not directly related to the salary delay, but it
is equally significant. Managers are placing increased emphasis on
employees' performance and position in salary range in determining both
the frequency and the amount of a salary increase. This will result in
longer than 18-month frequencies for some employees.
- - -
(ed. note: this article was edited after it was originally posted.)
|
975.21 | where is the "gung ho" spirit? | ODIXIE::CARNELL | DTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALF | Wed Jan 03 1990 11:07 | 51 |
|
Ref: 975.20
Our group too heard the same thing from our personnel rep regarding 80%
and 21 months, along with a great deal of "double think" about
personnel policies and compensation planning, all seemingly to justify
why everyone is already paid in line with the competition and that if
you get any raise, you should be glad for it. Having also seen the
last two DVN broadcasts, I too agree that there was a difference of
understanding by Jack Smith and Ken Olsen with what personnel is
communicating.
I would deduce there are two forces at work within Digital: bureaucracy
and those that desire to build something greater than what is, and
accordingly, share in the rewards of such accomplishment.
If the goals and dreams of the company are "play it safe" and current
growth rates and operating income percentages are fine, then the
bureaucracy to keep the system as is, including compensation, makes a
great deal of sense.
Ken Olsen says, in the DVN Digital Quarterly, that he is committed to
GROWTH, that we have products, services, solutions to offer and just
need to get our messages across more effectively, doing more real
marketing. KO also went on to say that more pay usually goes in hand
with more performance and greater achievement.
The bureaucracy of the current compensation policies and procedures are
not, in my opinion, conducive to nurturing and inspiring outstanding
performance, both individually and in concert with all other Digital
employees, and thus, do not encourage a great deal of stupendous
business development efforts (meaning creativity and change) on the
parts of virtually every employee. Most people in the meeting where we
learned of the latest pay policies did NOT leave that presentation with
any "gung ho" spirit to go out and build something far greater than
what currently is.
Sure, we all do our jobs, and we get paid accordingly. But shouldn't
the compensation system actually nurture greater employee involvement
in building something greater?
The best solution I see is for LARGE and equal profit sharing bonuses
for virtually every employee, contingent on building more operating
income, far far greater than what is, which would mean from new greater
business at larger margins. If the current compensation program
emphasis continues just doling out raises that "just keep us employees
competitive" than where is the incentive to think beyond our jobs, to
create, to incur change, to work together in true harmony and
cooperation, and to build something stupendous, far greater
than what is now?
|
975.22 | Communications breakdown | MANFAC::GREENLAW | Your ASSETS at work | Wed Jan 03 1990 12:57 | 14 |
| RE: the last several
Are we not talking apples and oranges here? My understanding is that you
should have performance reviews on a 12 month schedule but that salary
increases do not have the same schedule. So what KO is saying and what you
are hearing are two different topics. LIVEWIRE article that is quoted also
mixes the two items. That is why KO is suprised when people ask if reviews
are on an 21 month schedule because he (I assume) see the review as a
different topic from any salary increase.
Having said all of the above, have people been getting 12 month reviews?
If the answer is no, then ask your manager why not (:-).
Lee G.
|
975.23 | I think KO and I are both talking about salary reviews | CVG::THOMPSON | My friends call me Alfred | Wed Jan 03 1990 13:05 | 5 |
| RE: .22 Ken was asked about Salary increases not performance reviews.
I read the VTX article as being pretty directly addressing salary
reviews and not performance reviews.
Alfred
|
975.24 | | SCARY::M_DAVIS | Marge Davis Hallyburton | Thu Jan 04 1990 12:55 | 27 |
| Quoting from the handout from Personnel to managers on the 1990 Pay
Program:
o Participation 80%
o Average Frequency 21 Months
Average for those receiving increases 18 months
+ Plus 20% receiving no increase within 1990
= Equals average increase overall 21 months
o ALL EMPLOYEES MUST HAVE A SALARY PLAN WHETHER
OR NOT THEY ARE GETTING A 1990 INCREASE
-------------------------------------------------------
Based on this, the 20% not receiving an increase within CY90 would have
been scheduled out to the next century to bring the overall average up
to 21 months. I seriously doubt that most managers in DEC would allow
that, so you start to hear "18 to 21 months on average" or similar.
Most managers would prefer to spread the pain across the group rather
than have one or a few people unduly burdened with the 21 month average
(for the whole group) requirement.
my .02,
Marge
|
975.25 | doesn't look to good to me | CVG::THOMPSON | My friends call me Alfred | Thu Jan 04 1990 13:32 | 6 |
| RE: .24 I can't seem to fit that in with what Ken said or with
what is in LIVEWIRE. The obvious question is. Was Ken lying (I
doubt it) or is someone below him assuming some authority that
Ken should but doesn't know about?
Alfred
|
975.26 | Perhaps we should let Ken know? | RIPPLE::FARLEE_KE | Insufficient Virtual...um...er... | Thu Jan 04 1990 13:47 | 8 |
| It seems that Ken is either being dishonest (which I choose
not to believe), or someone below him is making fairly major
policy without his knowledge. Assuming the latter is the case,
perhaps someone who has gotten the material from personnel directly
(preferrably someone who saw/was at Ken's talk) could forward
those materials to Ken's attention?
Kevin
|
975.27 | | ESCROW::KILGORE | Wild Bill | Thu Jan 04 1990 15:30 | 5 |
|
re .24;
Are copies of this handout available? I'd like to get one.
|
975.28 | If there's no carrot or stick, why bother? | FSDB00::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow! | Thu Jan 04 1990 15:53 | 11 |
| re: .22
>Having said all of the above, have people been getting 12 month reviews?
>If the answer is no, then ask your manager why not (:-).
I haven't had a performance review for about 19 months. Why should I
ask for one? If I'm not doing my job, I'm sure my manager will let me
know.
Bob
|
975.29 | | SCARY::M_DAVIS | Marge Davis Hallyburton | Thu Jan 04 1990 16:32 | 6 |
| re .27:
Not likely. They are from a workshop for people who were to submit
salary plans. I quoted the pertinent sections here.
Marge
|
975.30 | Good News Wins Friends | ZILPHA::EARLY | Actions speak louder than words. | Thu Jan 04 1990 22:20 | 52 |
| re: .25 -.26
I think you are right ... Ken's not the culprit. I think the next
couple of levels below the top may be suspect, however.
An example which drives this home:
(Note: I wasn't there ... this is 2nd hand information from a reliable
source. All comments are paraphrased as best I recall from the person
who WAS there.)
At DU:IT training for software people Dave Grainger spoke. At the end
of his opening address at one of the sessions he asked for questions
from the floor. The silence was broken by a lonely voice from the back
of the room:
Voice: Yeah ... When are we going to get our workstations!?
Audience: Nervous chuckles
Dave: Excuse me? What was that?
Voice: (Allegedly standing up now) I said, when're we gonna get
our workstations?
Dave: You've already got them.
Voice: BALONEY! We've got nothing! We're being asked to support
all these new products and we don't have the tools we need
to do our jobs, and WE'RE GETTING SICK OF IT!
Audience: Cheers and applause
Dave: I'll look into that immediately.
I really think Dave thought this was a "done deal". My source said he
looked genuinely surprised by the comments of the field person and
reaction of the audience. Sometimes when you're in a high position,
people feed you only good news. One of the biggest curses of being a
big shot is that your people frequently stop telling you the truth.
They shield you from all the "bad news" that they don't want you to
hear.
Ken has to be the ultimate recipient of "the good news, all
the good news, and nothin' but the good news". If you think this isn't
what happens, picture yourself reporting directly to "the man" and
walking into his office to tell him some bad news. How does it feel ???
/se
|
975.31 | For this pay cycle only! | MAADIS::WICKERT | MAA USIS Consultant | Fri Jan 05 1990 00:55 | 21 |
|
Regarding the 21 month cycle...
Everytime I talk to people and this subject comes up it gets more and
more confused. I still believe it's because we never add "for the year
1990" so people assume it's now the standard. The 21 month cycle only
applies to 1990 and then it goes back to a 15 month cycle. I've been
under the understanding that the 15 month average has been in place for
several years now so the math adds up for me. The math also adds up
in that if you're gonna go on a 21 month cycle (for the 1990 pay
year :) ) then it goes without saying that you can't average that and
still give 100% of your people raisies in a 12 month window, right? So
that's where the 80% number comes from...
Not having seen the DVN broadcast I can't say for sure but I know from
my own experience when discussing this issue that I'd give people the
benefit of the doubt before calling someone a flat out liar since 90%
of the time it turns out to be simply a matter of terminlogy and
misunderstood timeframes rather then lying.
-Ray
|
975.32 | Oh HE was surprised alright! | ZPOV01::HWCHOY | In UNIX, no one can hear you scream. | Sat Jan 06 1990 05:06 | 11 |
| re .30
I think I know which DU:IT session you mean. If it isn't, Dave G's got
to be a damn good actor.
I also remember Dave having said that "Yes, there was a problem in that
area and it's being fixed right now. And the field will soon see the
change. People who need the equipment will be getting them." (or
something to that effect).
HW
|