T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1121.1 | You're Living In A Material World | HERON::PERLA | | Tue Jun 12 1990 12:17 | 21 |
| American management shortsightedness is no more than a reflection of cultural
values that are common throughout America. For example, with generations of
yuppies striving ravenously to have it all and have it in the next ten minutes,
can we expect their decisionmaking processes to be any more profound?
Amerca's is a mercantile society for which earning a buck is tantamount to
sitting on the right hand of God. For as long as this rather singular
value dominates others, we can expect management decionmaking to be optimized
on the quickest return, not the best. Changing cultural values permanently is
a long and laborious task. Changing our attitude towards making as much money
as humanly possible versus as much as humanly necessary would be a hopeful
start. But then, there will always be the rathole discussion of what is
econmically "necessary"? Economists are very bad at answering that question -
regardless of which esteemed academic institution they are affiliated.
They are far more attuned to macroeconomic predictions - it is quantative, not
qualitative and, therefore, easier.
Asking Americans to settle for less in the short run, to eventually have more
in the future has always proven politically untenable in peacetime. So, I fear,
there will be simply more of the same.....or, am I too pessimistic?
Let's hope so!
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1121.2 | long-term thinking and relentless improvement | ODIXIE::CARNELL | DTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALF | Tue Jun 12 1990 14:41 | 25 |
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REF: <<< Note 1121.1 by HERON::PERLA >>>
>><<Changing cultural values permanently is a long and laborious task>>
Not necessarily. Ken Olsen has the authority to change the fundamental
rules which drives "how" Digital works. If he changed those rules, the
culture within Digital would change, overnight.
Digital, by the way, had in one of its "bookstores" (part of Quality, I
believe) Dr. Deming's book. Perhaps if anyone has a copy, some of Dr.
Deming's fundamental philosophies could be entered here so we can know
in more detail what might be worth discussing, and implementing, as
practice within Digital. I believe (without having read his book yet)
that the core of his philosophy is relentless improvement in all
processes and products, via embracing and tracking change and new ideas
with maximum employee and customer involvement.
Tough to compete against this approach, especially when the corporation
thinks long-term, even out to 50 years!
As a sidenote, has anyone noticed how Digital buys all these books (by
Deming, Peters, et al) and passes them about internally but that little
from them seems to translate into practice?
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1121.3 | | CVG::THOMPSON | Aut vincere aut mori | Tue Jun 12 1990 14:48 | 10 |
| RE: .2 Which book by Deming do you refer to? He's written several
I believe. I have one and re-read it from time to time. His 4 day
course (which I took) was a truely eye opening experiance. Even after
taking the Intro to Deming course that DEC teaches (do we still?)
in house. Some groups do appear to have adopted Deming's ideas. The
problem being that the groups that feed them or surround them don't
always do likewise. It has to be driven top down (according to
Deming) to move through the whole orginization.
Alfred
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1121.4 | it indeed has to be driven from the very top | ODIXIE::CARNELL | DTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALF | Tue Jun 12 1990 15:31 | 7 |
|
REF: 1121.3
>><<Which book by Deming do you refer to?>>
Out of the Crisis
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1121.5 | For starters, here are Deming's "14 Points": | HYEND::DMONTGOMERY | | Tue Jun 12 1990 17:01 | 50 |
|
Deming's 14 Points for Management
1. Create constancy of purpose for improvement of product and service, with
a plan to become competitive and to stay in business. Decide whom top
management is responsible to.
2. Adopt the new philosophy. We are in a new economic age. We can no longer
live with commonly accepted levels of delays, mistakes, defective materials,
and defective workmanship.
3. Cease dependence on mass inspection. Instead, require showing statistical
evidence, that quality is built in to eliminate the need for inspection on
mass basis.
4. End the practice of awarding business on the basis of a price tag. Instead
depend on meaningful measures of quality along with price. Eliminate
suppliers who cannot qualify with statistical evidence of quality.
5. Find problems. It is management's job to work continually on the system
(design, incoming materials, composition of material, maintenance,
improvement of machine, training, supervision, retraining).
6. Institute modern methods of training on the job.
7. Institute modern methods of supervising production workers. The
responsibility...must be changed from...numbers to quality. Improvement of
quality will automatically improve productivity. Management must...take
immediate action on reports...concerning barriers such as inherited
defects, machines not maintained, poor tools, fuzzy operational definitions.
8. Drive out fear, so that everyone may work effectively for the company.
9. Break down barriers between departments. People in research design, sales,
and production must work as a team, to foresee problems of production that
may be encountered with various materials and specifications.
10. Eliminate numerical goals, posters, and slogans for the work force, asking
for new levels of productivity without providing methods.
11. Eliminate work standards that prescribe numerical quotas.
12. Remove barriers that stand between the hourly worker and his right to pride
of workmanship.
13. Institute a vigorous program of education and retraining.
14. Create a structure in top management that will push every day on the above
13 points.
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1121.6 | quotes from Industry Week article | ODIXIE::CARNELL | DTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALF | Tue Jun 12 1990 17:56 | 28 |
| Industry Week, June 20, 1988
WHAT MAKES DEMING RUN?
Four quotes from Deming from the article:
"The biggest problems that any company in the Western world faces are
not its competitors, nor the Japanese. The biggest problems are
self-inflicted, created right at home by managements that are off
course in the competitive world of today. Systems of management are in
place in the Western world that for survival must be blasted out."
"It is not enough that top management commits itself for life to
quality and productivity. They must know what it is that they are
committed to -- that is, what they must do. These obligations cannot
be delegated. Support is not enough; action is required."
"Most American manufacturers somehow suppose that they can achieve
Japanese quality and efficiency by adopting resolutions...Almost nobody
in any responsible position has the faintest idea about statistical
quality-technology."
"Replace time standards and work quotas with leadership, and quality
and productivity will go up; the people will be happier, and they will
feel more important."
"appraisal of people is actually the destroyer of people."
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1121.7 | Crushing worker incentives? | VINO::FLEMMING | No reason, just policy | Wed Jun 13 1990 08:09 | 13 |
| Since we seem to have gotten off on Deming, there is a fascinating
interview with him in the June 9th WSJ suppliment, Managing Change. I'd
recommend it to everyone. I'm not a good enough typist to enter the
entire interview but I think the very first question and its answer
give a pretty good indication of the flavor of the interview:
WSJ: "What do you think is wrong with current management at
corporations?"
Deming: "We are all born with intrinsic motivation, self-esteem,
dignity, an eagerness to learn. Our current system of management
crushes that all out."
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1121.8 | | ELWOOD::PRIBORSKY | All things considered, I'd rather be rafting. | Wed Jun 13 1990 08:50 | 15 |
| I attended the Deming course (at the same time Alfred did, I think).
It must be about 6 years ago now. A group of us had dinner with him
one night. Truly an amazing man. Few times in your lifetime do you
meet someone who, when the encounter is over, do you make the
obsevation "That person will have a big impact on the way we do things,
if only people will listen."
If you're ever given the chance, run, don't walk, to that seminar.
It's very eye opening.
Anyway, Storage Systems is into Six Sigma these days. That is
Motorola's Statistical Quality Control methodology adapted in house.
Time will tell if it works here.
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1121.9 | I'm checking, but notes helps too | NWD002::EVANS_BR | | Wed Jun 13 1990 17:29 | 6 |
| So I can learn... where might I find written materials on Motorola's
SQC methodology??? books, tapes, cassettes, videos, whatever...
thanks! Same goes for Deming seminars - would Ed Srvc know of these??
Bruce (in Seattle) Evans
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1121.10 | EUROPE EIS TIME REPORTING DIRECTIVE: WE LOVE IT | FNYTC6::HOUZE | Je dirais meme plus: Pas d'affolement | Thu Jun 14 1990 09:27 | 33 |
| RE .7
>> Deming: "We are all born with intrinsic motivation, self-esteem,
>> dignity, an eagerness to learn. Our current system of management
>> crushes that all out."
To illustrate this, here is an extract of a recent mail we got here
(FYO, Ferney Voltaire, FRANCE, with close link to Geneva European Headquarters):
----
The following EIS time reporting directive was adopted by the EISFMT on
June 1, 1990:
All Professionals, and first-line managers of those Professionals, within
all EIS functions (P&C, EIC, E.S. and I.S.) must report time as of FY91.
The only persons not required to report time are:
. Clericals
. Second-line managers (managers of managers)
. Headquarters staff
----
Note that since I'm with DEC (87) I've been doing the traditional time reporting work
( on systems which changed every six months ).
For me, management directives like the one above perpetuates the old fashioned
and how wrong idea that employees are not really responsible people (as opposed
to magagement).
Christian-Luc
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1121.11 | Coming closer to core values! | BONNET::BREICHNER | | Thu Jun 14 1990 11:45 | 14 |
| re.-1
I'd love to see the business justifications for the time reporting!
In particular with regards to 1st line managers reporting, 2nd
line managers not reporting..
As an individual contributor I used to report against projects in
engineering, or "warranty", "per call"..... activities etc
in Customer Services.
As a first line EIS manager, what would I report against ?
e.g 2 hours of leadership per engineer per month ?
1 hour of people development per """"""""" ?
.5 hours of CC management per 100k$ of capital equipment per ?
Quite exciting perspective,
Fred
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