T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1102.1 | | DEC25::BRUNO | IMT: We document the world! | Thu May 10 1990 20:13 | 4 |
| If that was a real policy, I know entire sites which would be on
written warning.
Greg
|
1102.2 | Courtesy, Not Policy | SSGVAX::MCCULLER | | Thu May 10 1990 22:48 | 30 |
|
I do not see that a policy is needed (nor does one exist. If it
existed at one time, it was certainly before 1984). It is a matter
of courtesy, not rules, that dictates when you routinely (notice
I said routinely--exceptions do happen) return phone calls. I was
taught that one returned calls in the same manner one expects others
to return your calls--promptly. Even if you simply never heard of
the person who left you the message. If I had a dime for every time
I responded to a secretary with "No, I'm sorry, if Mr/Ms XYZ is
not there, then simply mention that I returned his/her call. No,
I do not wish to leave a more detailed message (because I often
have absolutely NO IDEA who the person is, or why they called)."
I do not want other people to hold me in disdain because I am sloppy
(and VERY inconsiderate) of not returning their calls. And if there
ever was a case where the old axiom "DO UNTO OTHERS AS YOU..." comes
into play, this is certainly it.
I feel sorta strongly about this. We are possibly the largest fully-
networked private company in the world. But, from a business
perspective,we must employ ALL of our networked resources. And
telephones are networked resources in the original and classic sense.
We simply must communicate in the fastest, best manner to make good
business (and technical, and administrative, and et al) decisions
to maximize of business posture. Simply put: "There ain't no
unimportant telephone calls."
Mac McCuller
|
1102.3 | | LESLIE::LESLIE | Andy Leslie, CS Systems Engineering | Fri May 11 1990 00:26 | 10 |
| Mac is absolutely right, returning calls is courtesy and no policy
should be needed.
I'm very concerned that anyone would think such a policy was NECESSARY
- and sincerely believe that anyone who argues that they are too busy
to do a job properly should be reminded that this is paid employment,
not playtime in a personal feifdom.
- andy
|
1102.4 | | SAUTER::SAUTER | John Sauter | Fri May 11 1990 08:55 | 10 |
| I also endorse Mac's position.
I've been at DEC since 1975, and a customer before that since 1963.
During that time I've never heard of a policy that required telephone
calls to be returned within 24 hours, or any other period of time.
I can see how a manager might impose such a policy in order to correct
a problem in his domain, but the policy should die when the problem is
corrected.
John Sauter
|
1102.5 | why do so many employees fail to return calls | ODIXIE::CARNELL | DTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALF | Fri May 11 1990 09:30 | 17 |
| REF: <<< Note 1102.3 >>>
>><<... returning calls is courtesy and no policy should be needed.
I'm very concerned that anyone would think such a policy was
NECESSARY>>
Digital seems to be rife with discourteous people, whose actions
(failing to return phone calls) then flies in the face of the ethics
being preached, "Doing what's right."
Regarding policy, how much "business" is affected when CUSTOMERS do not
get their telephone calls returned, or employees who are working
customer issues. There is nothing wrong with rules to govern the
philosophy and actions of an organization (or laws to govern a nation)
in order to ensure positive discipline and ethical actions as they
affect the whole, be it an organization or a nation.
|
1102.6 | Policies and People | CALL::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney in New York | Fri May 11 1990 10:07 | 17 |
| There are plenty of unwritten practices/ courtesies/ habits/
guidelines/etc that apply to life here at Digital that are informally
referred to as "policies". That much is just a semantic game.
Digital is in the grip of bureaucrats who want to substitute formal
written policies for good business judgment.
They are aided by individualist/ minimalists who will only agree to "do
the right thing" when they see a formal written policy or written
instructions to do so from their supervisor.
If one doesn't have a real job, one can always find at Digital a job
that either looks over the shoulder of the people with real jobs and
attempts to find "policy violations", or you can be a symbiotic
supervisor of a minimalist and make sure that one hour of real work is
always preceded by three hours of coordination.
|
1102.7 | symptoms of a bigger disease! | ATLACT::GIBSON_D | | Fri May 11 1990 11:40 | 26 |
| re .6 Sweeney
Does your diatribe assume that people within Digital will return phone
calls promptly because it makes good business judgment, or that it
doesn't make good business judgment to return phone calls promptly?
Whatever, my experience in the last 3+ years is that Digital has one of
the worst "return phone calls promptly" records of any company I've
worked for. It makes it hard for me to do my job efficiently, and hard
to provide rapid customer responses.
re all you who agree with "Mac"
I agree with Mac too, unfortunately that doesn't get phone calls
returned. The system is broke, and part of it is the bureaucrats who
want to use information as a power base. All of you who agree with
Mac, do you return your phone calls promptly? How about you Patrick?
If you're getting too many phone calls, then some needed information
isn't being distributed correctly. If there were a policy or guide
that said all phone calls have to be returned within 24 hours and you
found you couldn't do your job because you had to return phone calls,
then there is an information flow problem that needs to be fixed. The
fix today is to ignore the phone calls, not to solve the information
flow problem.
|
1102.8 | | SAUTER::SAUTER | John Sauter | Fri May 11 1990 14:02 | 6 |
| re: .7
I guess I'm lucky. I receive very few phone calls each day, so it is
no problem for me to return them promptly. That also applies to MAIL
messages.
John Sauter
|
1102.9 | What next? Policy to tell us how to tie our shoes? | HYEND::DMONTGOMERY | | Fri May 11 1990 14:34 | 21 |
| [
[ If one doesn't have a real job, one can always find at Digital a job
[ that either looks over the shoulder of the people with real jobs and
[ attempts to find "policy violations", or you can be a symbiotic
[ supervisor of a minimalist and make sure that one hour of real work is
[ always preceded by three hours of coordination.
This is the most accurate and concise summary of "the way things
are" (as opposed to "the way things ought to be") in Digital these days
that I've seen. In one tidy little sentence, you've spoken countless
volumes about the company and its middle management.
Regarding the silliness about a policy to make us return our phone
calls: Now THAT would be a classic example of fixing symptoms rather
than solving problems. The PROBLEM isn't that someone doesn't return a
phone call. That's the SYMPTOM of a deeper problem, which might be
described as a PROBLEM in simple business courtesy. sheesh.
We need a lot less policies and a lot more good management.
-DM-
|
1102.10 | A little effort will go a long way | MSBCS::KING | Mid-Range Systems Business Group @BXB | Fri May 11 1990 16:36 | 23 |
| Working on an IS hotline in the past, I made alot of outgoing phone calls and
less than 50% of the return calls I made to relay status information made it
through the first time. We used to joke that as soon as someone called our
hotline they either left their office or else got on the phone with someone
else. Then call us back for a status because they hadn't hear from us within
a matter of minutes.
So I employed a technique whereas I tried twice, no response the second time,
I sent mail. If I did connect I left a message with whoever answered the
phone, usually a secretary for the group. I'd ask for my call to be returned
I'd say 30% of these calls were returned. Then a week or so later I'd hear
back from the person saying they hadn't heard from me. Well I kept a list of
who I had called or sent mail to and I'd present this to them when they tried
to nail me for not getting back. That got results!
Returning calls is the least one can do especially in a technologically
orientated company such as DEC. We've got several avenues available with
which to communicate and I've found that most people don't bother to make
the effort to communicate back.
Bryan
|
1102.11 | rubber meets the road?! | ATLACT::GIBSON_D | | Fri May 11 1990 16:38 | 13 |
| re .9 HYEND::DMONTGOMERY
> Regarding the silliness about a policy to make us return our phone
> calls: Now THAT would be a classic example of fixing symptoms rather
> than solving problems. The PROBLEM isn't that someone doesn't return a
> phone call. That's the SYMPTOM of a deeper problem, which might be
> described as a PROBLEM in simple business courtesy. sheesh.
> We need a lot less policies and a lot more good management.
Sure we do, that's apple pie & motherhood. Will it happen? Probably
not. So, since another policy is "silliness," what do you suggest be
done to fix the PROBLEM?
|
1102.12 | Then again, there are good reasons not to phone | VMSDEV::HALLYB | Twin Peaks Municipal Software Works | Fri May 11 1990 16:40 | 35 |
| Does this mean I should be able to phone up K.O. to ask why I haven't
gotten a pay raise lately? And that he should be required to return
my call promptly?
The fact of the matter is there are "jerk calls". I'll get messages to
call so-and-so with no idea of why they called me in the first place.
(And, of course, returning the call results in a secretary intercept).
I'll get calls from people who don't want to read the documentation,
and feel they have the right to disrupt others to save them some reading.
Or people who are absolutely sure I know something they need, even if
I haven't the foggiest idea what they are referring to. I'll get calls
from specialists who need a simple answer that isn't publicly available,
so they can win a $10M sale. (Right, not all calls are jerk calls).
Well, there is a better way. Electronic mail wherever possible.
When somebody is forced to sit down and compose a coherent message,
suddenly it becomes a lot easier to crack open a manual and find the
answer directly. Or at least a written message is more likely to be
direct and to the point, making it easier to supply a similarly direct
and to the point answer. Further, written messages are less of an
imposition on the receiver and therefore less likely to receive a
shot-from-the-hip response.
Of course there are times when phone calls provide better bandwidth
and problem isolation. Such times are the exception, not the rule.
If it were the other way around we wouldn't have notesfiles, we'd have
a massive number of teleconferences.
Sure, there's plenty of jerk mail, too. But it's far easier to deal
with unwanted mail than unwanted callers. If anything, I say DEC
employees should be made more literate in the use of computer networks
we sell instead of the telephone networks we don't sell.
Remember, you aren't dealing with AT&T...
John
|
1102.13 | Where are *today's decision makers*? | SVBEV::VECRUMBA | Do the right thing! | Fri May 11 1990 16:43 | 55 |
| re .9
>[ If one doesn't have a real job, one can always find at Digital a job
>[ that either looks over the shoulder of the people with real jobs and
>[ attempts to find "policy violations", or you can be a symbiotic
>[ supervisor of a minimalist and make sure that one hour of real work is
>[ always preceded by three hours of coordination.
>
> This is the most accurate and concise summary of "the way things
> are" (as opposed to "the way things ought to be") in Digital these days
> that I've seen. In one tidy little sentence, you've spoken countless
> volumes about the company and its middle management.
Don beat me to the punch. In my years at DEC, all I've ever seen
management do here to fix "problems" is to start another organization,
institute another metric, add more "staff" managers. (Here in our
geography we have an entire history of people who make six figure
salaries whose responsibilities are fulfilled by secretarial staff.)
It is precisely those managers who don't do anything, that is, the
*experts at risk avoidance*, who routinely get to move up the ladder,
since they never offend anyone, never make mistakes, and by virtue of
doing nothing have plenty of time to schmooze. Hence our propensity for
task forces, committees, etc.
This is not to say that competent managers also don't progress at DEC.
It's just that they *aren't* the ones that the skids are greased for.
Risk avoidance also promulgates committee decisions. For example, when
you are ready to be a manger at DEC you go before a review board. If
they "pass" you, then your boss (who recommended you for a management
job) is absolved if you screw up, since the decision to approve you for
management was communal. After all, he wasn't the only one who didn't
realize you weren't ready yet.
Where are the *individual* decision makers at Digital? If somone has
an idea which fails, then try another. If that fails, try again. Even
if you try something 5 times to get it right, you'll get whatever it is
done faster and better than putting 5 people with 5 approaches on a
committee and having them decide, and, if it fails, not be held
responsible because they made the best "communal" decision they could.
We're trying to breed thoroughbreds, but we're producing 3-humped
camels and saying, "Gee, it's the best we could come up with."
> We need a lot less policies and a lot more good management.
It's a sad commentary that espcially here, out in the field, the most
effective people are those who build their own support network so they
don't need management help to get their job done.
I'm running on... perhaps I should cross-post in SOAPBOX ;-)
/Petes
|
1102.14 | maybe we found one of the problems!? | ATLACT::GIBSON_D | | Fri May 11 1990 17:04 | 55 |
| re .12 VMSDEV::HALLYB
> Does this mean I should be able to phone up K.O. to ask why I haven't
> gotten a pay raise lately? And that he should be required to return
> my call promptly?
Oh gee, let's make up some silly example about calling K.O. to show
that not everyone needs to return phone calls. If K.O. did have an
open door and got such a silly call, you'd deserve to get what's
coming.
> The fact of the matter is there are "jerk calls". I'll get messages to
> call so-and-so with no idea of why they called me in the first place.
> (And, of course, returning the call results in a secretary intercept).
> I'll get calls from people who don't want to read the documentation,
> and feel they have the right to disrupt others to save them some reading.
> Or people who are absolutely sure I know something they need, even if
> I haven't the foggiest idea what they are referring to. I'll get calls
> from specialists who need a simple answer that isn't publicly available,
> so they can win a $10M sale. (Right, not all calls are jerk calls).
What might be a jerk call to you could be important to someone else.
So, let's label calls you don't like as jerk calls. I get calls for
publically available information, but not everyone knows where to look
for it or how to interpret what they find if they do find it.
> Well, there is a better way. Electronic mail wherever possible.
> When somebody is forced to sit down and compose a coherent message,
> suddenly it becomes a lot easier to crack open a manual and find the
> answer directly. Or at least a written message is more likely to be
> direct and to the point, making it easier to supply a similarly direct
> and to the point answer. Further, written messages are less of an
> imposition on the receiver and therefore less likely to receive a
> shot-from-the-hip response.
Mail works sometimes. Generally, I find those that don't return phone
calls, don't return mail either. And many times, what would've been a
15 minute phone call turns into a 2 hour mail Q & A spread over x days.
> Of course there are times when phone calls provide better bandwidth
> and problem isolation. Such times are the exception, not the rule.
> If it were the other way around we wouldn't have notesfiles, we'd have
> a massive number of teleconferences.
Obviously our experiences are different.
> Sure, there's plenty of jerk mail, too. But it's far easier to deal
> with unwanted mail than unwanted callers. If anything, I say DEC
> employees should be made more literate in the use of computer networks
> we sell instead of the telephone networks we don't sell.
> Remember, you aren't dealing with AT&T...
Funny you should say that. Yep, "del" sure works better than telling
someone they're a jerk for asking that question. Oh boy, onward to
better communication.
|
1102.15 | Person to person | CALL::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney in New York | Fri May 11 1990 23:00 | 29 |
| re: .7
David, we'll let the readers of the replies to this note judge who is
writing "diatribes" and leave it at that.
Of course, it makes sense to return business calls promptly. I try to
return calls to me promptly. On the other hand, I don't place my
ability to do my job efficiently at risk when phone calls _from_me_
don't get returned.
In the MARKETING conference for years, I've been talking about
"information gatekeepers". The opening of the phase review process,
the proprietary information disclosure process, frequent training
sessions, NOTES, all go a long way towards making things better than
they were three years ago.
Some people are out of town, some people are in all day meetings.
I answer message slips and voicemail with electronic mail to people
just to let them know I got the message. But 24 hours is unrealistic,
unless telephone support for unsolicited calls is number 1 on your job
plan, it's not on mine.
The point about "policy" is that is never is a substitute for good
business judgment. A person who feels that an employee has been
unreasonably slow in returning phone calls should be bringing that
opinion to the person's manager. This should be done without thinking
that this is "getting someone in trouble". If it's hurting Digital,
do something about it, person to person. That's the Digital way.
A bigger rulebook isn't the answer here.
|
1102.16 | Which DEC we talking about? | TPS::BUTCHART | Machete Coder | Sat May 12 1990 20:16 | 19 |
| re .12 & .14
Same planet, different worlds? Engineering tends to live by mail,
and getting an engineer by phone is difficult. So, I (as an engineer)
go to mail as the FIRST resort and act as if the phone doesn't exist
unless calling someone I know. Most of the world is (still) wery
different, and is likely to be so for quite some time.
Even "jerks" can be educational sometimes, and I can often steer them
on to who/what they need. I try to do so when possible - since I'm
sometimes the "jerk" looking for a lead to some piece of information
that either isn't in any of the notes files or documentation I have
available or isn't in a form I can readily recognize. (Engineers
get stumped once in a while.) Good thing I know a few people after
almost 16 years - sure as HELL couldn't find the stuff I need in any
regular company communication - don't know how the folks in the field
do it (but I get the impression that a lot of the time they can't).
/Dave
|
1102.18 | Let me introduce you to Engineering Mgt | RTL::HOBDAY | Distribution and Concurrency go hand-in-hand | Sat May 12 1990 23:06 | 7 |
| I receive an average of 80-100 mail messages per day and 5-10 phone
calls (many of which are from other vendors or consortia and must be
answered to keep alliances and partnerships healthy). I directly manage
15 engineers and spend 70% of my time in productive meetings.
EXCUSE ME if I don't get around to answering your mail or phone call
promptly!
|
1102.19 | listen to the customers! | VINO::WEINER | Sam | Sat May 12 1990 23:55 | 11 |
| A few months ago, my manager sent us a copy of the results from a focus
group meeting of customers and non customers. High up on the list of
things which they didn't like about dealing with Digital was the non
return of phone calls.
Using mail for contacting folks within the company is fine (assuming
everyone has bothered to update their entry in ELF V2) but some of our
customers aren't connected to the net world or don't know how to
contact the person they need by mail. The phone network still has use
even in today's computer networked world.
|
1102.20 | self-management and a sense of ownership of reward | ODIXIE::CARNELL | DTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALF | Mon May 14 1990 09:58 | 64 |
|
So what is the underlying problem? I submit it is apathy. If success
in reality is tied only to "making your boss successful" then there is
no linkage and interdependence for working in harmony with all other
employees and customers, there is no motivation to think of changes to
build a more successful Digital totally, and there is no reason to pay
other than lip service to all that is preached.
Possible solutions? For all employees, equal profit sharing with no
cap, with complete responsibility and authority where every employee is
self-managed working in virtual teams, able to affect change, all
having an equal say.
Professional manager positions (like "professional politicians") would
be eliminated. It is absurd to think that people can be taught to be
managers of people and we all know that the motivation of most
employees for moving upward into management is NOT to lead and nurture
others to higher levels of success and achievement but rather to build
one's OWN career rewards of power, money, prestige and perks.
As I read recently somewhere, the essence of business -- taking
sensible risks, creating valuable products and services, motivating
people and satisfying customers -- cannot be taught from books,
seminars and classroom dialogue. Real leadership is not a profession;
it is a calling and it comes from within. Digital should change the
criteria of how those who lead us should be chosen -- eliminating to
begin with promotion into management because of connections in the good
ol' boy system, because of longevitiy, because of just technical
knowledge, because of degrees and advanced degrees, and/or because
someone was a "leader" in another company. None of these ensure that
those who could lead as a "calling" are the ones being promoted to lead
the rest of us to BUILDING a greater Digital than what is, WITH ALL
SHARING IN THE REWARDS OF THAT ACCOMPLISHMENT, and not just the manager
who looks good.
A bureaucracy of mindless "meism" results in stifling initiative,
change and commitment of all to one another in ensuring our mutual
success as a single organization.
I do NOT advocate more rules, policies and regulations but rather a
fundamental change in the foundation of Digital that determines HOW the
organization works, with the desired result being almost literally no
policies and regulations because they would not be necessary if every
employee were truly self-managed, and totally committed, via the
interdependence of reward and linkage to all parts of the team with
every member having a say in affecting change, and true responsibility
with authority to affect change.
Observe how a handful of public housing projects are flourishing as
model communities, with everyone (tenants) working TOGETHER, when the
bureaucratic management was eliminated, and the residents had the
ability to SELF-MANAGE, with the upcoming possibility of being able to
own their own apartments.
I submit, with a similar approach of self-management and a sense of
ownership of reward, Digital could become the largest, most profitable
corporaton in the world.
But now? Ask fifty employees at random what the Digital dream is that
they are participating in building and what their motivation and reward
is for working in cooperation, harmony and commitment with all other
employees -- the current "system" is in fact a dis-incentive. It
should be changed.
|
1102.21 | Management not being learned is poppycock! (euphemism) | SVBEV::VECRUMBA | Do the right thing! | Mon May 14 1990 10:41 | 29 |
|
re .20
We've discussed profit sharing and other "motivators" before. The issue
is: either you do the right thing for you and for Digital -- or you
don't. Either you don't compromise your professionalism -- or you do.
As I said about "communal" decision making, nothing gets done if no one
is clearly in charge. Everyone having input is fundamental. Everyone
having an equal say is absurd.
As for management "not being learned," the article you quote must have
been written by someone who never worked for world-class managers. I
have, unfortunately not here, and you can learn a tremendous amount:
about business dealings, finance, handling people, etc. An excellent
manager is a treasure-trove to be held on to dearly. Managing is like
any other ability. If you're musical, with a good teacher and practice,
you can be a superb musician. Even if you're not musical, with a good
teacher and practice you can still be competent. Talent or no talent,
without a good teacher or without practice, you'll get nowhere.
Around here, we look at someone and say, "Hey, you're musical," and stick
them on stage with no preparation or guidance.
Until the head starts paying attention to the body, not *measurements* of
the body, the quality of management will not improve, and the commitment
to do the right thing for Digital will not deepen.
/Peters
|
1102.22 | We are in the business of selling things??? | CLADA::BENO | | Mon May 14 1990 10:56 | 12 |
| I was a DEC customer for about 14 years and ran the VAX MIS group for a
large Aerospace company. I'd purchase anywhere from $250,00 to $2 million
worth of equipment per year plus all the associated hardware and software
maintenance contracts. By far, my worst complaint with DEC was the failure
to return phone calls (my sales rep was always in sales meetings and I was
his/her only account!,etc.,etc. ) I did finally fix the problem by giving
Sales and Hardware support an average of "2" out of 10 (software support
was great!) on the Customer Satisfaction Surveys. I got all sorts of calls
after that! To those of you that think that returning a Customers call
within 24 hours is unreasonable due to .... Please rethink or leave DEC
and become a customer. If I can't even talk to you the chances of buying
goods or services from you now or in the future are quite slim.
|
1102.23 | traditional training does not work | ODIXIE::CARNELL | DTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALF | Mon May 14 1990 11:24 | 20 |
| REF: <<< Note 1102.21 by SVBEV::VECRUMBA "Do the right thing!" >>>
-< Management not being learned is poppycock! (euphemism) >-
We all want real leadership. You say leadership can be taught. How do
you then reconcile the fact that Digital managers DO IN FACT receive
tons of training every year (books, seminars, courses, meetings,
one-on-one, tapes, woods meetings, university courses, advanced degree
programs) yet all this effort and cost does not translate into a highly
motivated workforce acting professional and doing what's right ALL THE
TIME, building something greater, TOGETHER, than what is?
Traditional training programs do not seem to be effective, evidenced
not only of what is happening in pockets throughout Digital, but in
fact throughout many American companies!
What are your concrete suggestions for change that WILL WORK, totally
and universally throughout Digital, affecting change in all employees,
especially all those who would manage and lead?
|
1102.24 | Hey, you want my business? You return my calls. | CVG::THOMPSON | My friends call me Alfred | Mon May 14 1990 11:42 | 30 |
| RE: .23 People what want to learn how to be good managers can and
will and do benifit from training. People who think they already
know it all don't. DEC, as with other companies, has it's share of
managers who think they know it all already. Some of them are wrong.
Digital also seems to have more than it's share of managers who don't
want to be managers. There is no helping them. As long as the company
assumes that the talents that make someone a good salesperson make
then a good sales manager or a good programmer a good manager of
programmers we'll have this problem. I think we should make people
managers based on the skills that a manager requires rather than
them having the skills the people they manage need but I seem to
be in a minority. That's two suggestions: Stop making managers out
of people who don't want to be managers and look for managerial
skills. (Someone who is 3 at programming may be better then a 1 when
it comes to managing people but right now the 1 is going to get the
Superv. S/W Engineer first.)
RE: Basic topic. There is no valid excuse for a customer not to
get a call back in 24 hours. Even if their saleperson is on vacation
a reasonable sales manager will make sure that someone gets back to
them. (This is of course part of my definition of a reasonable sales
manager.) The same is perhaps more true of a software/hardware support
function. If we want the business we must be responsive. Anyone who
is not responsive to their customers is telling me they don't want
the business. I did some work on my house (actually it's still going
on) and any sub-contractor who didn't return my initial call didn't
get a second one. They obviously didn't want my business.
Alfred
|
1102.25 | You learn from managers, not management classes | SVBEV::VECRUMBA | Do the right thing! | Mon May 14 1990 13:18 | 36 |
| re .23
Remember what I said, a good teacher and practice. For management, a good
teacher is (and only is) a good manager whom you work for. I've been a
Digital manager and have attended some of those Digital courses. I
invariably knew what was being covered already -- because I had already
managed in the real world and had worked for good managers. (But I'm
far from "knowing everything.")
Back to my analogy: you can read all the books on music theory that you
want, but without a mentor who you can watch in action, who you can learn
from, who can teach you by example, you get zero benefit.
Management being teachable and (our) management courses not effecting
change are not irreconcilable. They are merely independent statements of
fact.
Suggestions for real change? Eliminate communal decisions. Enforce
individual accountability. For example, eliminate the MDC. Either your
manager thinks you're ready to manage or you aren't. If they're wrong, it
reflects in their next review as well as yours.
Every communal decision has, somewhere above it, a single manager. That
manager is responsible and accountable for every communal decision made
below them. If five people get in a room and make a bad decision, then
they and the entire chain up to that single person are accountable.
And NO decision reflects worse on someone than the wrong decision.
No decisions = no management paycheck.
re .24 (basic topic)
We just had our patio done. Same here on phone calls. No returned phone
call, no business. Now that I think about it, the (winning) contractor's
answering machine announcement included, "Please don't hang up. Your call
is important to me and we will get back to you as soon as possible." They
did, too.
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1102.26 | motivation to change must come from within | ODIXIE::CARNELL | DTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALF | Mon May 14 1990 15:22 | 10 |
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Ref: Discussion on incompetent managers -- let us move to Note 1108.
Ref: Getting people to answer telephone calls.
Another policy and procedure will not change behavior -- that
motivation must come from within each individual. The best this
corporation can do is address the culture and leadership that in turn
addresses that motivation within each of us.
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1102.27 | One Last Comment On This Note... | FDCV07::LEBLANC | Ruth E. LeBlanc | Fri Jun 08 1990 14:03 | 26 |
| I know this topic kinda died-out in May, but, to re-open with one
additional thought that I haven't seen suggested here:
I tend to think that good secretarial support would help with the
problem of calls not being returned. I'm not saying it'll solve it,
but it sure could help. I've been a secretary with this company for
about ten years now and I've seen the difference good support can lend
to an organization. If my boss is out of town (which he often is), *I*
return all of his phone calls. If a customer needs him, I'll track him
down. If I can answer the question or refer it to someone who can,
I'll do that. If nothing else, the person on the other end does
receive a call and does know that s/he is being heard.
Unfortunately, when everyone's worried about headcount constraints, we
tend to hire the WC4 people instead of secretaries, without fully
understanding (IMHO) how much value-added the secretary can contribute.
When we have 40- or 50-to-one secretary/WC4 ratios, there's no way one
can expect the secretaries to perform adequately. However, change that
to a 10-to-1 or less, secretaries can perform virtual miracles with the
productivity and image of their departments.
The ol' penny wise, pound foolish problem. Is it smart to save money
by not hiring a secretary, or is it smarter to take the administrative
burden off of the exempts so they can do what they're paid for?
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1102.28 | Amen -- Good secretarial support can make a real difference | RTL::HOBDAY | Distribution and Concurrency go hand-in-hand | Sat Jun 09 1990 08:57 | 11 |
| I wholeheartedly agree with .-1. While away on a business trip last
week, I asked our group's secretary to return phone calls for me. She
did and it made a wonderful difference. However, I'm out of the office
a good deal of the time (meetings, trips, meetings at other sites) and
she supports too many people supervisors and managers to do this on a
regular basis.
In general I believe Engineering runs way too light on admin support
(certainly that appears to be the case with ZKO).
-Ken
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1102.29 | Some professional discipline would be even better! | AUSTIN::UNLAND | Sic Biscuitus Disintegratum | Mon Jun 11 1990 13:52 | 27 |
| re: .26
On the one hand, because we are a "technology company", it seems that
we get mired in lots of tools to help us be more responsive. Everthing
from customer e-mail "phone message" applications to voice-mail to $49
answering machines on peoples' desks. But the sad fact is that all the
tools in the world don't help if the people don't have the discipline
to use them.
Having a secretary available who does understand the importance and has
the discipline to properly follow things up is a godsend to any group.
But it doesn't fix the problem, it just sort of covers it up.
I do a fair amount of calling people up, for evaluation information,
for support, and even just for things like catalog shopping. And I
completely understand all the market surveys that show call-backs as
being a major factor in customer satisfaction. Because if I don't
get a response from someone, I don't do business with them. If I'm
forced by necessity to use them, I always spend lots of time and
enegy looking for an alternative, and I usually find one eventually.
Why should we expect our customers to be any different.
All of this is old hat, but anytime I get a chance, I feel it is
necessary to sound off about this ...
Geoff
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1102.30 | | SALEM::WHEELER_P | | Wed Jun 27 1990 11:07 | 19 |
|
I agree the customer should get his calls answered first. So
guess where that puts us internal people who have needs as well,
last. I have been searching for a job for 6 months within DEC.
Right now I have jobs I have interviewed for that I have been
told I would hear in 3 weeks (it's been 10, I've left 4 messages,
no news.), 2 days (it's been 9 days so far), and 2 weeks (it's
been 5 weeks, left messages, no news). And trying to get hold
of hiring managers to find out the status of a job that you haven't
yet interviewed for is virtually impossible.
I agree these people are very busy. So if it's going to be 8
weeks, TELL ME THAT! If you say 3 weeks, call or send mail after
4 or so saying no decision has been made, or whatever that truth
is. Thank goodness they didn't put a time limit on how long it
should take me to find a job. If they said less than 6 months
practical experience would tell me to take the buyout and go.
Paul W.
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1102.31 | any answer is better than none! | CARTUN::VHAMBURGER | Whittlers chip away at life | Fri Jul 06 1990 09:26 | 17 |
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I am also going thru the job hunting process and and finding it
frustrating that I cannot get a reasonable reply to my mailings, phone
calls,etc. As a hiring manager myself, I recall that it was not always a
top priority item when I had candidates waiting for answers, now I have
resolved to do a whole lot better job or responding to people in the
future, if now with answers, at least with status updates! It isn't hard to
use a pre written script and personalize it to at least let people know you
remember them and have done something with the resume, and they are still
being considered for a position.
A friend outside of DEC is also out of work currently and going thru
the exact same thing, he doesn't hear back from recruiters or hiring
managers at other companies. It is an area we could all use a lot of
improvement.
Vic H
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