T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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995.1 | further elaboration and questions | NOSNOW::CARNELL | DTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALF | Wed Jan 03 1990 08:45 | 30 |
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Ref: .0
The story in the base note raises further questions:
Do the 125,000 employees of the Digital community truly work together
in harmony?
What "barns" did we collectively, together, raise in FY89 for which we
let out a loud cheer in unison, "Yeah! We together built this!"
What "barns" are we together raising in FY90?
What "barns" are we together planning on raising in FY91?
Is there a TRUE sense of community where we are building something
together as a linked collective effort?
When talking with our kids and neighbors, what "barn raising" Digital
stories are we telling that make each of us swell with pride?
How many of our 125,000 Digital family members cannot relate to any of
the above? If so, is this a symptom of a lack of true teamwork
actually existing among all family members?
Is there a sense of collective accomplishment, meaning something great
achieved that required EVERYONE's contribution, where all felt they had
contributed and were recognized as an equal contributor?
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995.2 | Car Plan a *big* barn... | AUNTB::WARNOCK | Todd Warnock @CBO | Wed Jan 03 1990 09:25 | 1 |
| I think the reinstated car plan was a collective "barn."
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995.3 | DECWORLD | CVG::THOMPSON | My friends call me Alfred | Wed Jan 03 1990 09:54 | 5 |
| I see the DECWORLD events as "barn raising" type events. The team
work and group efforts to pull them off are amazing. We didn't
have a US one last year but one is planned for 1990.
Alfred
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995.4 | | TIXEL::ARNOLD | From purple graphic majesties... | Wed Jan 03 1990 16:45 | 10 |
| Another rousing cheer for the barn-raising of DECworld/ville. The
teamwork, long hours, & general Digital comradery in the few days or
weeks prior to the opening day of the event is unbelievable, a certain
"must-do" if you've never done it.
re .-1, yes I also heard there is one planned for summer 1990 in
Boston, and Europe is also planning one in Sept 1990. But let us not
get into a rathole, check out (I think) KACIE::DECWORLD for info.
Jon
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995.5 | a feeling of TOTAL community achievement? | ODIXIE::CARNELL | DTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALF | Thu Jan 04 1990 08:59 | 11 |
|
DECworld seems to be the best example of our "barn" but it only
directly involves, what, 30,000 employees, and most certainly does not
represent a collective involvement and achievement of virtually all
125,000 employees. I do not sense a feeling of TOTAL community
achievement, demonstrated and proven, say where on January 1 of this
year, where each and every employee looked back on the calendar year
and beamed with pride, saying, "I and every employee achieved and
accomplished, working in unison as a total Digital family, this...(fill
in the "barn raising" blank).
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995.6 | another "barn" | DNEAST::SHEEHAN_TOM | | Thu Jan 04 1990 09:27 | 5 |
| Another example of a DEC "barn" is the support DEC folks give to the
UNITED WAY campaign. I believe that without this kind of support and
caring many of the folks UNITED WAY helps, with the contributions/time
and love supplied by DEC supporters, would find this country to be very
callous and uncaring.
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995.7 | My Barn Was An ACT | ZILPHA::EARLY | Actions speak louder than words. | Thu Jan 04 1990 22:00 | 39 |
| My own most significant "barn raising" was building an ACT from
scratch. We had no building, practically no people, very little
equipment ... only a concept/dream of what we needed.
We jumped through major hurdles to get the building approvals and
required funds, hired the people, ordered the equipment, and drew the
plans. The two most emotional days I have ever had in my business career
were:
1) The day I walked into the building that we FINALLY got
approvals to lease and saw the paint marks on the
cement floor of where the walls were supposed to go.
2) The day the facility finally opened.
Both occasions caused me to get "a little choked up". The team effort
that it took to get this thing off the ground was incredible. People
came to work in blue jeans and moved equipment, mopped floors, swept up
trash, and did "whatever it took". I've never witnessed as much
teamwork before, and haven't seen it again since.
Although I think that we still have a "good team" and that we are
always available to one another for help when it's needed, in the two
years since the "grand opening" we've been unable to duplicate the same
sense of purpose that we had in those early days.
Our goals are convoluted ... we serve many masters and have many
"objectives". We're measured on stuff that doesn't make sense
sometimes, and what DOES make sense is often overlooked.
We had a lot more fun when we had only one goal in mind ... build an
ACT and get it opened. The goal was so clear. It was so easy to
visualize. It was so easy to get creative and crazy about how to get it
done. It was fun.
Sigh ...
/se
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995.8 | now about this fog that seems to be present | ATLACT::GIBSON_D | | Fri Jan 05 1990 00:01 | 9 |
| re .7
Ahhh Steve, you hit the nail on the head ->
> The goal was so clear. It was so easy to
> visualize. It was so easy to get creative and crazy about how to get it
> done. It was fun.
It couldn't be simplier, and yet .....
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995.9 | | WMOIS::FULTI | | Fri Jan 05 1990 08:30 | 6 |
| I have a question; Why must we have something that 120,000 employees can look
back on with pride? Why shouldn't each of the 120,000 do something individually
that they can look back on with pride, I think this is a more realistic and
reachable goal and would have the same desirable effect.
- George
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995.10 | Bravo | SERENA::DONM | | Fri Jan 05 1990 08:42 | 10 |
| re: .7 (a slight diversion, but...)
I've toured Steve's ACT, and I must say that it is _very_ impressive.
If this is what clear objectives and a "barn-raising" attitude can
accomplish (and I believe it very definitely is), then it is clearly
a vision of what the whole corporation can accomplish.
Vision, Determination, Priorities, Accountability.
-DM-
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995.11 | Anarchy | ISLNDS::BAHLIN | | Fri Jan 05 1990 09:23 | 8 |
| re: .9
This is the commonly accepted definition of anarchy and while I
think your heart is in the right place, I also think you should
think this through a bit more.
Actually it's a lot like what is actually going on right now in
Digital.
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995.12 | | WMOIS::FULTI | | Fri Jan 05 1990 13:33 | 15 |
| > This is the commonly accepted definition of anarchy and while I
> think your heart is in the right place, I also think you should
> think this through a bit more.
Anarchy? You call doing your job in such a manner that you can justifiably
look back on it with pride, anarchy? Let me tell you that I have done just
that, as an individual, as a team member, as part of DECWorld (20,000 as
estimated here) and I do not consider it anarchy. I don't feel that its
realistic to expect that 120,000 employees will be given a common task
at any time, unless its to stay employed, so we must be happy with what
opportunities we are given.
maybe we ought to attempt "doghouse raising" before we attempt "barns".
- George
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995.13 | Reads like anarchy anyway | ISLNDS::BAHLIN | | Fri Jan 05 1990 14:27 | 17 |
| re: .12
I don't think anything is wrong with looking back at your work with
pride. I was commenting on the picture you painted (at least in
my mind) of 120,000 people going off and doing their own thing
as 120,000 individuals each seeking their own goal.
That is anarchy and that's how I took your reply, sorry if I read
it wrong.
I do think there should be one goal though for the corporate entity.
It could be as simple as 'make xx% profit' or 'xx% growth'. Every
one needs goals that tie together and aggregate as they get to this
single top end goal. I don't think we have that today.
We have [arguably] 120,000 individual cowboys/girls doing their
absolute best, but damn few of them know if it's the right thing
that they do and that's a problem.
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995.14 | | REGENT::POWERS | | Fri Jan 05 1990 14:29 | 21 |
| Re: .7, .9 anarchy vs. total team-ship
There's clearly a lot of room in the middle.
I too wonder why we have to a a single corporate dream that everybody
participates in directly. We can raise hundreds of barns (or everything
from doghouses to sports areana, if you prefer).
They aren't all the same, they aren't even all in the same city, yet
each success can enrich the whole community and beyond without
everybody being part of each effort.
And the efforts don't even have to be part of the same vision.
As someone stated in another topic (albeit somewhat facetiously, I believe),
"we aren't a team, we're a league." And at that, not all our games go on
at the same time, or at the same place, and they don't even all
affect one another, so we're not even necessarily self-competing.
We don't all have to share a vision to be or feel productive. Let's
accept that small successes are successes, and appreciate them singly.
- tom]
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995.15 | Barn Raisings Need A Plan | ZILPHA::EARLY | Actions speak louder than words. | Fri Jan 05 1990 20:12 | 28 |
| re .14
Tom - you're quite right. The only thing I'd add is that these
individual "barn raisings" (or doghouse buildings or skyscraper
placements, or whatever) need to have a place in the scheme of
corporate goals. (I believe the theoreticians call this "Alignment")
I think this is where some of the previous "anarchy" comments are
directed. If everybody "did their own thing" because it seemed like the
right thing to do at the time, developed teamwork, and felt good, we
could be in REAL trouble if these individual efforts weren't in
alignment with corporate goals.
In my own case, as good as it felt to finally achieve that goal of
having designed, built, and opened a facility like this, it could have
been a "zero value proposition" had it not been in alignment with a
corporate goal "Thou shalt establish 16 ACTs in the United States."
I sense what's broken is a lack of understanding on most of our parts
today of what the Corporate goals are, and how they affect the
operating units that we currently manage.
If we understood that, we could, as managers, raise more freaking
barns in a fiscal year than there are Billy Bob's in Texas.
/se
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995.16 | Like wars? | ALOS01::MULLER | Fred Muller | Fri Jan 05 1990 23:37 | 8 |
| Shouldn't forget though that extraordinary accomplishments like barn
raisings are a little like wars. The "right" side gets a lot of good
things done and there is a celebration. Then everyone needs a rest.
KO's decision on DECworlds could be a good example. No one or no
organization can stay on top all the time. I think we are in a respite
right now and another upturn in Digital is just beginning.
FWIW, Fred
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995.17 | | POCUS::KOZAKIEWICZ | Shoes for industry | Sat Jan 06 1990 12:32 | 64 |
| This topic reminded me of a story involving one of our customers.
It's not quite like a barn-raising, but I was quite moved by
the scope and magnitude of the event, and visibly impressed with
the effects on the people involved. I've often wished we had the
opportunity to use a similar technique in DEC:
GE Plastics, a $3.5MM, value-added manufacturer of high-end
engineering materials, recently acquired the chemical manufacturing
division of Borg-Warner. This acquisition gave GE a better rounded
suite of products for their customers and just about doubled their
manufacturing staff and capacity.
Borg, however, was not like GE. The manufacturing plants had ways
of doing things which were not up to the high standards of GE, and
the culture was, of course, very different. During the course of
absorbing the various plants and colsolidating the operations, it
became clear that a vast team-building exercise would be necessary
in order to accelerate the merger on a human level.
GE Plastics manufacturing exempts meet once a year to discuss common
issues and work on common problems. This is an expensive meeting,
since it involves sending ALL of their manufacturing staff (about
500 people) off to a resort for a week, but it is well worth the
expense. After the Borg-Warner acquisition, that group was doubled.
Although the meeting agenda itself would allow many of the
consolidation issues to be addressed and worked on, it was decided
that something that would help to get people to know one another
and learn to work together was also in order. The meeting was to
be held in San Diego.
What was decided was that the entire group (some 1,000 people) would
work over the course of 2 days on completely refurbishing a building
for use by a local Boy's club. This would involve everyone in
manufacturing from the VP down to the engineers and production
supervisors.
Many tasks needed to be done. The inside of the building needed
to be demolished, walls needed erecting, finishing and painting,
floors needed to be layed, stairwells painted, rubble carted away,
the outside needed to be completely landscaped, windows replaced,
etc. GE would provide the materials and the manpower.
Now, although 2000 person-days was more than enough effort to pull
this project off, you don't usually see this sort of effort expended
all within 2 days! Obviously, a major coordination and cooperative
effort would be required.
The group was divided into teams, each charged with a single function,
i.e. demolition, painting, plastering, glazing, etc. Each team
chose a leader(s) and the leaders of all the teams got together
ahead of time to devise a work plan. Once the overall coordination
was agreed upon, the individual teams met to decide how their
individual tasks would be performed.
To make a long story short, the project was successful. A local
charity received a gift they could not have afforded otherwise.
The GE people got to know one another and learned how to work together
as a team instead of as individual fiefdoms. It was truly amazing
to see these people come back from this meeting. They behaved almost
as though they had been through a religious experience. The
transformation from an "us/them" to a "we" attitude was impressive.
Al
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995.18 | DECBARN | PHAROS::DMCLURE | Your favorite Martian | Tue Jan 23 1990 10:25 | 48 |
| Having myself been "raised" in the midwest, I was also lucky enough
that even though I was somewhat of a city kid, my father used to take me
out to see the various Amish and Mennonite towns nearby on occasion just
to get a feel for what simple living and community is all about. On one
such occasion, we took part in a real barn raising where the whole
community pitched in and helped build a barn - then later we were treated
to an good big wholesome meal at one of the nearby farms. I must agree
that there was a certain sense of accomplishment felt by all there that
doesn't compare to anything found in the city.
Keep in mind however, that this barn was a real barn that was going
to be put to use the following day in a real family farming operation.
In other words, while the event was a good team building exercise and was
good for the community, the primary goal of the event was the very practical
goal of building a barn which was neccessary for the family farm involved.
I doubt whether I, nor anyone else, would have felt the same sort of sense
of accomplishment if the purpose of the barn was nothing more than just an
exercise in team building. I'm not saying that team building exercises
aren't worthwhile, just that they don't always provide the same sense of
accomplishment as one gets from building something that will really be used.
Another point is this: how many people does it take to raise a barn?
50 - maybe more, but certainly not 125,000. The notion of everyone at DEC
physically gathering together to build a single barn or whatever is not
only logistically unfeasable, but impractical as well. Even if we were
to collect in one big gigantic woods meeting which included every DECcie,
the most that could be accomplished would be a warm and fuzzy sense of
community, but it is unlikely that much of anything practical or useful
would be accomplished. On top of that, if the goal of such an exercise
was to improve DEC's stance in the industry, then the cost of such an
exercise would be prohibitive.
Even DECWORLD/VILLEs, while they are extremely good examples of barn
raisings at DEC, they still only include a subset of DECcies as someone has
already pointed out. Woods meetings build teams within organizations,
and there are probably other examples of barn raising within Digital as
well, but none of them physically include all DEC employees.
So, how can 125,000 build a barn? Well, look at the notesfiles!
All 125,000 of us are able to pitch in and build distributed barns using
the various networking tools we create and support. We are building barns
right here! I bet that if we continue to put our heads together, that
we will continue to come up with really neat new kinds of distributed
barns as well. Maybe this idea could be carried a step further and a
distributed application might fall out of it (DECBARN - which could stand
for DEC - Business Application Raising Network, or some such thing)?
-davo
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