T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1065.1 | The WHY is important... | CSC32::S_HALL | Digital Employment Corporation | Thu Mar 29 1990 13:34 | 43 |
|
re: What would YOU do if you were the clerk?
I'd weigh the relative risks / benefits %^) .
Actually this whole problem is symptomatic of Digital's
stultifying pay system. under this system, salaries
aren't negotiated with new employees or transferees,
it's a case of : "The job pays this...take it or leave it."
Managers can't compensate employees for moving to
New York or San Francisco, for leaving a job where a car
is supplied, or moving to a high-tax area. The employee's
pay plan moves with him.
I'm STILL not compensated for the money I left in Field
Service ( 2.5 years ago ) with car, overtime, no state
income tax, lower overall tax climate. I left the Field
thinking that a salaried position was going to be a long-term
"smart move." Cash-money-dollars-wise, I'm not so sure now.
It was macaroni and beans for about a year and a half there
after moving to my current position.
To become more competitive, Digital needs to dynamite some
of these hidebound regulations about pay. To start with,
managers should be able to compensate someone for losses
like I detailed above, and also ought to be able to
advertise high wages for high-cost areas, in the hope of
attracting folks to these currently hard-to-fill jobs (I've
heard that Hardware Service folks in New York City are
often trying to hire ).
Until this changes, the results will be either the clerk in .0
quitting (and an expensive replacement hired), or the same
clerk knuckling under, and getting "used", and knowing it.
The other effect is that you wind up with pools of folks idle
in some areas, while there is serious understaffing in others.
All because there's no "Free Market" of jobs in the company....
Steve h
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1065.2 | | THEWAV::MIKKELSON | Mom, the toaster won't boot! | Thu Mar 29 1990 14:01 | 15 |
|
> Management says no, you FIRST have to prove yourself, then your salary
> and "promotion" have to be planned, and all this takes time, so
> somewhere in the next 24 months,...we'll just have to see.
For an employer to say, "We have enough confidence in your ability that
we want you to take this job, but we don't have enough confidence in
your ability that we want to *pay* you for it," is ridiculous.
Why don't they give the person a raise *now*, and if he doesn't prove
himself, he can pay them back later. ;-)
- snopes
|
1065.3 | | WMOIS::FULTI | | Thu Mar 29 1990 14:44 | 17 |
| What would I do?
Well first of all, if I'm doing such a bang up job at being a clerk that
they would make me this offer, then I must be happy at my work.
So, I'd have to ask myself if I'd be happy continuing to be a clerk and
getting compensated accordingly. Then I'd ask myself if I'd be willing
to take on the new job and its associated risks, forgeting the pay issue.
If I'd be unhappy at the new job a pay raise aint gonna make it any better.
Now then, if I'm willing to take on the new job I'd ask for at least 5.00
per hour, if refused and I still want the experience I'd take the job, stick
it out for about a year and then shop myself around.
Now for those of you who would call me an ungrateful, money grabbing, ingrate
whos only looking out for myself! I'd first agree that I'm looking out for
me first and then ask what DEC was doing when they wanted me to "prove myself"
before planning a promotion or at least a raise when I first took the job?
- George
|
1065.4 | How many ways... | LABC::MCCLUSKY | | Thu Mar 29 1990 22:16 | 21 |
| re:.0
I don't believe there is anything ethical or unethical about the
scenarios you paint, unless some one does not fulfill a commitment.
If the raise comes as promised, the employee leaves because he has
a better opportunity, etc. , it is unethical only if either side or
both are not honest(in my book, there is no "grey" in honesty).
re:.3
This answer is about right. I'd go or stay based on my evaluation.
"No harm, No foul".
re: general
There are too many variables in this equation to get anything but a
unique answer for each situation. What are my needs for more money?
My future goals, my education, my age,etc. It goes the same for the
company - lots of variables. I may give the clerk the new
responsibility because I have the time to closely supervise the task
and if the clerk is successful, I'll give the raise and give less
direct attention to the task.
Daryl
|
1065.5 | policy???? | NYEM1::MILBERG | I was a DCC - 3 jobs ago! | Thu Mar 29 1990 23:11 | 13 |
| set mode=sarcastic/with_voice="naive"
If I was the clerk, I'd ask the manager:
"I thought Digital had the following policies:
1. Pay for Performance
2. JEC to set job levels based on job
responsibility"
-Barry-
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1065.6 | Reality is in the eye of the beholder | TIXEL::ARNOLD | Real men don't set for stun | Thu Mar 29 1990 23:14 | 8 |
| The "hypothetical" situation raised in the base note is alarmingly
similar (read "identical") to the way things really work within
Digital, at least what I have seen in 8+ years, and you can replace
"clerk" with "software specialist", "sales rep", "sales support", etc.
Can VAXnotes handle 125,000 replies to this topic?
Jon
|
1065.7 | | ESCROW::KILGORE | Wild Bill | Fri Mar 30 1990 09:59 | 14 |
|
There's nothing unethical in .0 (no matter how slanted the author's
presentation). There's nothing unethical in honestly trying to get the
biggest bang for the bucks. Wasteful? Perhaps. Discouraging? Likely.
But _not_ unethical.
If you want to change current practice, you must show that its
drawbacks (discouraging talented people from taking on more
responsibility, paying more than necessary to attract outside help
rather than an internal transfer) outweigh its benefits (preventing
internal raiding, discouraging indiscriminate job hopping to increase
salary). But _don't_ try to convince managers that they're committing
a sin by supporting level transfers.
|
1065.8 | all jobs are not equal | XCUSME::KOSKI | This NOTE's for you | Fri Mar 30 1990 12:32 | 5 |
| > 2. JEC to set job levels based on job
> responsibility"
in our hypothetical example, JEC does not effect the clerks postion
as JEC was only on Exempt position. (ie tough cookies)
|
1065.9 | where is the line drawn? | ODIXIE::CARNELL | DTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALF | Fri Mar 30 1990 12:39 | 16 |
| REF: <<< Note 1065.7 by ESCROW::KILGORE "Wild Bill" >>>
>><<There's nothing unethical in .0 (no matter how slanted the author's
presentation). There's nothing unethical in honestly trying to get the
biggest bang for the bucks>>
So, according to your opinion, if a manager can get workers, by
whatever means, to work 80 hours for the same pay as 40, then that
manager is a GOOD manager and is definitely not unethical.
How does this manager differ from "sweatshop" managers of 50 years ago,
or still prevalent in other parts of the world, or even in the U.S.
where illegal alien labor is employed who are desparate for work? Is
this manager also to be called a GOOD manager?
Where is the line drawn?
|
1065.10 | | ESCROW::KILGORE | Wild Bill | Fri Mar 30 1990 13:01 | 7 |
|
Let us try to remember that this is not a master/slave relationship. Last
time I checked, I was free to walk away from this job at any time I
felt I was not being sufficiently compensated. When this company calls
in Pinkerton to put down an uprising of rebellious software engineers,
I'll be happy to seriously entertain the "sweatshop" theory.
|
1065.11 | WHAT HAPPENED TO EMPOWERMENT??? | DNEAST::MARSHALL_GEN | | Fri Mar 30 1990 20:40 | 13 |
| What happened to empowerment???...If she/he feels they are not getting
a fair shake TALK ABOUT IT...Tell your manger how you feel and why you
feel that way..You can't talk about what if they had to hire someone
outside...If you want something, ask for it.If the answer isn't a fair
one than elevate it...Simple as that!!!...Be straight with your boss,
but remember there is no magic $ amount for any particular job. It's
called a range, and the entire range is considered competitive..
Almost everyone thinks they are worth more than they are...My advice
is,if you think your not getting a fair shake and are not willing
to talk to your manager or elevate then you should look for another
place to work.
|
1065.12 | It all evens out... | DNEAST::SIMON_ANDY | He who dies with most toys wins | Fri Mar 30 1990 20:48 | 8 |
| Re .0,
Heck, they have to do it that way to make up for the times they
almost double a persons salary for a 1 year temporary job ( lets say
Sales Rep ) and then expect them to go back to their old job ( lets
say clerk ) after the 1 year is up, but keeping their doubled salary.
As Ripley said - Beleave It Or Not !
|
1065.13 | If the clerk stays where he is, he has no brain | FNYTC6::HOUZE | Je dirais meme plus: Pas d'affolement | Fri Apr 06 1990 07:29 | 20 |
| I would go away, if I was the clerk.
The situation you described is quite common. Many people won't fight with
their company's administration and/or managers to get the dollars they're
either too shy or not combative enough to ask for (and they really worth it,
though).
So, in the market-driven environment where we are (at least for software jobs)
if you don't mind to move, for better salary and/or better working conditions
you move.
That 's what I did previously when working with BURROUGHS (long time ago !) and
then with INDOSUEZ (french bank). And I'am not married with DEC either.
A manager offering a job to an employee and not the corresponding salary, to
an employee who accepts the deal, is NOT a good manager.
I think the attitude of both the manager and the employees is the result of
MONEY driving our society, instead of ethics.
Christian-Luc
|
1065.14 | | STRATA::RUDMAN | Always the Black Knight. | Fri Apr 06 1990 14:12 | 20 |
| Nothing wrong with .0 as far as it goes. It is now up to you to
protect yourself. This move is obviously a Career Move, therefore
You should ask for a Career Development Plan, in which an agreement
is put on paper that lists the job requirements you must learn/
accomplish for/by X amount of time to satisfy the needs of the
position (and, more importantly, what your boss expects of you),
which would result in a money/promotion review. This would have to
be OKayed by his boss (at least) , so you have (at least) two
managers' signatures on paper.
Unless there is a plant- or company-wide salary freeze, the terms
of the agreement (read "contract") must be kept. (You should at
least get the promotion--if not, you'd better get a bad review.)
If not, it is time to start up the Complaint Ladder until you
reach a rung where power exists to make it right.
Again, it is up to you to protect yourself from being taken advantage
of.
Don
|
1065.15 | decline the job | ODIXIE::CARNELL | DTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALF | Fri Apr 06 1990 18:05 | 36 |
|
REF: .0 and .14
In our hypothetical case, the job was in line with the clerk's desired
and expressed career goal and as it happens, the clerk already had
considerable years of experience in the higher level job functions,
with the clerk perceiving that hiring someone from outside Digital with
the same background would cost $6.00 to $7.50, at a minimum. Thus, the
clerk felt $5.00 was not out of order considering the magnitude of the
job and potentially multi-millions of dollars in DIRECT, NEW revenue
being generated by the clerk.
Thus, in my opinion, the correct ethical action is to decline the
position because the manager shows no confidence and the perception is
that this manager saw this as an opportunity to get big bang for NO
MORE BUCKS, making the offer ethically questionable -- at best. If the
clerk accepted, would the clerk not be unethical supporting this, for
where does it stop? Will the manager then offer someone from Timbuktu
$2.00 to replace the clerk someday, saving even more money? Personnel
creates job codes and salary ranges that are meant to be applied
equitably and fairly.
Ethically, I believe the clerk, if believing that Digital is a good
corporation, and believing there are and will be other opporunities
with managers who recognize and compensate for value, then I argue the
clerk should remain in the current job, continuing to do good work as a
clerk.
And if in refusing, the clerk "ticks off" the manager for not accepting
the offer, then what? I say assertively stand up for one's rights not
to be abused for not being a corporate ladder player -- doing what's
right means to me acting ethically and does NOT mean get results NO
MATTER WHAT OR HOW, at the least possible cost! The clerk should
continue doing the best the clerk can and act ethically -- period, and
wait for a new opportunity to emerge, even if it takes some time.
|
1065.16 | | CALL::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney in New York | Sat Apr 07 1990 14:41 | 25 |
| The problem with this is that Digital expresses itself in one dimension
as a family, a team, "let's all pull together", when it comes to
imposing demands on its employees. Just read any company-written
propaganda, and you'll see what I mean.
With total cynicism, some managers can't or won't balance the demands
of the corporation with their ETHICAL OBLIGATION TO THEIR EMPLOYEES.
In another dimension, it' "looking out for number 1", and asking if you
can bring a tape recorder or a lawyer to a performance review meeting.
What is that ethical obligation? Well, I don't think you'll find it in
the Orange Notebooks "Digital's Policies and Procedures", after all it
was written to protect the immediate interests of the corporation.
If, as .0 indicates, there's a threat associated with the surprise
"offer", then it's time to put away notions that you and manager are
cooperating in career development. (Well... maybe the manager is
developing his advancing his career, or thinks he is.) It's time to
get it down in writing what you gotta do to get what you wanna get, and
hold two or three levels of management to that agreement.
Where there's little flexibility on salaries, understanding what
compensation discretion managers _do_ have, is the key to getting an
career agreement negotiated.
|
1065.18 | Someone Please Tell Me This Is A Dream | ROULET::ROSOSKY | | Fri Apr 13 1990 15:51 | 73 |
|
Typical of what's been happening with me too. You interview for
jobs and they then downgrade to match your level. Think they downgrade
the responsibilities? Yeah, sure ..... and the check is in ...!
I feel this is a big problem forDEC. Don't think the corporation is
interested in fixing it either. Tell me why I'd go through interviews
for four different jobs (since this past January) the same level
as mine! Gee, it must be that I'm not concerned about advancing
my career, and that I'd be happy staying in an entry level job at
the same pay for the rest of my life!
I've gotten offers for lateral moves at the same pay - I consider
that an insult and a slap in the face! The only way I'd take a
lateral move was if I really hated where I am now (not the case
BTW) and the group offering the lateral move could provide me with
spectacular growth opportunities! If a person is qualified to do
the job, then he/she should receive the level and pay that is equated
that position!
DEC always preaches about advancement for its people, and people
are our biggest resource, and that we need to develop our people,
and that .... well I agree with those statements, but how can Digital
expect people to do that? Not on lateral moves for the same pay!
Talking with others in different companies, and knowing what is
being offered to college kids right out of school, I am finding
that DEC is not competitive with others. Someone please rationalize
for me how a recent college graduate with no job experience can
come into a company making more than someone who has three plus
years job experience, plus the education! Not just in DEC, but
in any company!
Now, I've heard the following statement time and time again, and
quite frankly it is boring me:
"Well perhaps you should look outside the company for those
opportunities?"
It's hard for me to even think about that statement! I enjoy Digital
Equipment Corporation and I work hard for it! I want to continue
to advance my career here, but I'm beginning to realize that it's
darn near impossible.
Here are some of my <personal> general statements about what's
happening:
- Downgrading reqs. to match levels is unfair
and discouraging toward career advancement
- If someone qualifies for the job, they should
be given the title, pay, and level equated
- Once you get placed in a salary range, you stay
there with little chance for promotion
- Pay for performance is a myth
- DEC is fast becoming non-competitive in the salary
market
These are all tough situations - the base note and all that follow!
Discouraging for me, and I'm sure discouraging for many, many more
like us. I have tossed and turned a lot at night over it. My question
is this: what is corporate personnel doing to correct these issues?
Or do they not want to? Afterall, the one good thing about making
only lateral moves is that it keeps people from frequent job changing.
But on the other hand, as I stated earlier, it discourages people
from wanting to progress ..... sooner or later something has to
change, or a lot of good people will be gone. Maybe the high
percentage of people in Northboro who accepted the buyout have read
this note?
|
1065.19 | A different perspective | SMAUG::GARROD | An Englishman's mind works best when it is almost too late | Fri Apr 13 1990 17:47 | 82 |
|
Let me address some of your concerns. As an engineering supervisor
who gets to create job reqs I always create them at the Principal
Software Engineer or Senior Software Engineering level. That way
I get a wider pool of people to choose from. I can't use an SE II req
to hire a PSE but I can use a PSE req to hire a SE II. So what I do
is look for candidates who could make a good contribution to my group.
The job that I'd offer would depend on the candidates experience and
talents. If I find a good PSE then he gets a senior level job. On the
other hand if I find a good SE II then I consider moving some of the
responsibilities of the open PSE position to others already in my group
and making an offer to the SE II to backfill the space freed up. I
absolutely am not going to offer that SE II a PSE salary. The reason
being is that the job is no longer a PSE job. What I can offer though
is the promise of advancement if performance warrants it. Where do I
get the money from you ask? Well the the answer is that in a large
group (not in my group of course...) you find people that are overpaid,
especially people that were recently hired from the outside (when you
hire people from the outside you often have to overpay them so what
happens is that they effectively get next years raise at hire time). Well
since they're overpaid their part of the spend number pot comes in very
useful to bring others up to their rightful position. Regarding your
specific points:
> Typical of what's been happening with me too. You interview for
> jobs and they then downgrade to match your level. Think they downgrade
> the responsibilities? Yeah, sure ..... and the check is in ...!
Yes this is exactly what happens, see above.
> as mine! Gee, it must be that I'm not concerned about advancing
> my career, and that I'd be happy staying in an entry level job at
> the same pay for the rest of my life!
At interview time find out what is required of you to get a promotion.
Get it in writing. A decent manager will stick to his promises.
> "Well perhaps you should look outside the company for those
> opportunities?"
Advancement is all about negotiation and doing a job that warrants
a promotion. A successful manager has good people working for him
because he treats them fairly (notice I said fairly not equally).
> - Downgrading reqs. to match levels is unfair
> and discouraging toward career advancement
You need to accept that those are the rules but that you can get
committments from managers. If you're as good as you think you are
you should have no trouble obtaining those committments.
> - If someone qualifies for the job, they should
> be given the title, pay, and level equated
Exactly. But if you find a job that you are fully qualified for that is
at a higher level than your current job then you and your current
manager need to talk. You're obviously in the wrong job code.
> - Once you get placed in a salary range, you stay
> there with little chance for promotion
Bullshit. You only stay there if you are not good enough for the next
higher level job or if you have an ineffective manager. If it is the
latter then find a better manager.
> - Pay for performance is a myth
I can only look at my own greater group and I can tell you that
Performance was the number 1 thing used for salary planning last
year.
> - DEC is fast becoming non-competitive in the salary
> market
In summary don't lose hope. DEC needs good people and it is trying
to nurture good people.
Dave
|
1065.20 | PS | SMAUG::GARROD | An Englishman's mind works best when it is almost too late | Fri Apr 13 1990 17:50 | 9 |
| Re my last reply
The editor cut off a bit. As far as DEC becoming non competitive
in the salary market I don't know about that. All I do know is that
yes you will find higher salaries at more riskier jobs. Just look at
all the engineers that have been laid off from companies such as WANG,
PRIME etc lately.
Dave
|
1065.21 | Truth in advertising, except for Job Reqs ... | AUSTIN::UNLAND | Sic Biscuitus Disintegratum | Mon Apr 16 1990 18:01 | 20 |
| re: .19
I have to wonder at the ethics of opening a job requisition at a higher
level than what is needed. I know that it is a very common practice,
in fact, that it is normal practice for a headhunter to advertise a job
opening at it's highest possible salary point to "hook" people in. When
you then apply for the job, you are told that the salary advertised was
really for a person several notches higher than the job described.
My point is this: The job code, job description, and salary should be
consistent for a req, because a req is *advertised* to the rest of the
Digital community. To me this walks the line of misrepresentation a
little to closely for comfort.
How many times have I read a job requisition that is advertised as a
"WaterWalker III" and the job description reads more like a "Junior
MakeWorker I" ...
Geoff
|
1065.22 | | WORDY::HARRISON | | Thu Apr 19 1990 17:24 | 10 |
| Salary compression in large companies is hardly unique to Digital. The
only employees at large companies who have no complaints about
promotions and salary are the people who perform at "God-like" levels.
For the rest of us, we must choose between settling down with a single
company and accepting our fate, or risk a little a job hop.
As someone said earlier, people hired from the outside must generally
be overpaid. That should tell you something.
JAH
|
1065.23 | It's OK, nobody's in charge | COUNT0::WELSH | Tom Welsh, UK ITACT CASE Consultant | Sun Apr 22 1990 17:10 | 25 |
| re .18:
I agree strongly with everything you say. The reason seems to be
simple enough: nobody in Digital is responsible for our most
valuable resource.
"Personnel", do you say?
Let's be serious. Is that the right level to place that
responsibility? Do Personnel know that much about the
knowledge which is our stock-in-trade as a company?
NO WAY! In my experience, the best way to tell a Personnel
person is that they will be acutely uncomfortable at any
mention of software, hardware, computers, communications,
networks, or anything else remotely "technical". Yet that is
what we need to understand and communicate to our customers.
When one of the real super-employees leaves the company, who
stays awake at nights worrying why, worrying about the impact,
worrying how to stop this happening?
When you find out, let me know.
/Tom
|
1065.24 | personnel??? | WOODRO::BUCZYNSKI | | Mon Apr 23 1990 10:32 | 11 |
| In my 20+ years with DEC it has always been my observation
that personnel is either poorly trained or don't care.
They have always been a stumbling block to anything
constructive to the employee. BTW; there are always some
noteworthy exceptions. Most, however are simply resume
referral service clerks.
You can aleays tell a DEC personnel rep. but you can't tell
them much.
No sour grapes; just an observation
|
1065.25 | | SA1794::LIVE | | Wed May 09 1990 12:11 | 5 |
| re .19 Sounds like false advertising to me. Good for you,
who gets a larger pool of applicants to play with. Not so
good for the poor schmuck who really wants the job you *posted*.
Why not open two reqs and fill *one*, then close the other ?
|
1065.26 | | NORYL::KOZAKIEWICZ | Shoes for industry | Wed May 09 1990 15:15 | 16 |
| re: -1
Be real. Opening two reqs requires justifying both. That's not always
possible.
If a person is really qualified for the higher position, then they will
get it. The only harm that I can see is that a person who only wants
the higher position (and is presumably not qualified as evidenced by a
lack of offers) will end up getting a few job offers at less than the
advertised position instead of NO offers at all.
No, it's not perfect, but I hardly think this is the perfidy some seem
to believe it is.
Al
|
1065.27 | | HANNAH::MESSENGER | Bob Messenger | Wed May 09 1990 16:18 | 21 |
| Re: .26
> If a person is really qualified for the higher position, then they will
> get it. The only harm that I can see is that a person who only wants
> the higher position (and is presumably not qualified as evidenced by a
> lack of offers) will end up getting a few job offers at less than the
> advertised position instead of NO offers at all.
Another problem is that Software Engineer II's might be discouraged from
applying for the job. That's a problem I faced when I was a SE II and was
browsing through the jobs database: all the interesting-looking jobs were for
Seniors or Principals. Based on .19, I should have realized that it isn't
out of the question for a SE II to apply for a job that's advertised as being
for a Senior Software Engineer, but if I got the job I shouldn't expect to
get a promotion (at least not right away).
Is it possible to advertise a job as being for "Software Engineer II, Senior
Software Engineer or Principal Software Engineer; the responsibilities of
the job will depend on experience and ability"?
-- Bob
|
1065.28 | | LESLIE::LESLIE | Andy Leslie, CS Systems Engineering | Wed May 09 1990 19:35 | 9 |
| Actually there's an even more interesting problem: what happens when a
Software Principal Engineer sees a great job going - but for a Senior
Software Engineer?
One thing I'm finding somewhat frustrating is that the pyramid
principle applies, the higher one gets, the less chance of movement.
- andy
|
1065.29 | | RANGER::TARBET | Haud awa fae me, Wullie | Sun May 13 1990 07:18 | 4 |
| Ask them if they can bump the req, Andy. Quite often they'd be glad to
get a Principal rather than a Senior.
=maggie
|