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1150.1 | Group Teams with EACH member an EQUAL PARTNER | ODIXIE::CARNELL | DTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALF | Tue Jul 31 1990 10:18 | 72 |
|
Here's my thoughts just sent to Ken Olsen/Jack Smith/John Sims.
Subject: Employee Suggestion for Turning Digital Around -- Overnight
I believe with a single "pivotal" change, Digital could achieve a turn
around within six months, with dramatic reductions in wasteful cost
and dramatic increases in customers, revenue, margin and profit.
Real change for increasing Digital efficiency and effectiveness is not
taking place on any large scale because a good many managers are
risk-averse toward incurring change in order to protect career gains
and personal ambition. The best way of attaining significant salary
increases is to move up the corporate management ladder and it has
proven to be safer not to make waves, to just get the work done as
required, and to cater to the next boss up the line, making him or her
"look good" thereby ensuring raises, fringe benefits and promotion
higher into the ranks of management.
The fundamental question is "who should own the power to make Digital
a better and more successful company?" Just managers? Or ALL
employees?
My suggested pivotal change, quite simply, is to change policy,
overnight, decentralizing power. Give real power to ALL employees to
build a better and more successful Digital. What this could mean,
beginning as soon as next week, is every group within Digital, AS A
GROUP, having full responsibility with full authority. Thus, a group
of direct reports now meets weekly, and
- AS A GROUP defines the work needing to be done by the group in
order to get the job done efficiency and effectively that WILL
impact building a more successful company.
- AS A GROUP defines the goals for attaining higher levels of
accomplishment by all group members, working together.
- AS A GROUP defines and communicates the work and goals necessary
from other groups whose work impacts the group in order for the
group to achieve its goals and higher levels of accomplishments in
building a more successful Digital.
- AS A GROUP defines the group's leadership and the measurement of
that leadership, and has an equal say on who leads and manages the
group, to support and lead the group in achieving its goals and
eliminating any obstructions impeding the accomplishment of the
group's work, and "change" to build a more successful Digital.
- AS A GROUP defines problems and creates idea solutions for
anything impeding progress to accomplishing the group's work, and
to attaining the goals and desired higher levels of achievement,
affected either from within the group or from another group.
- AS A GROUP decides on a group member who presents in-person to
another group defined work/goals needed to support their group,
identified problems and/or ideas as other groups' work affects
their given group.
- AS A GROUP reviews, analyzes and makes GO or NO GO decisions on
all problems and ideas for change coming into and being presented
to the group, either generated from within the group or from
outside such as from another group, customer, supplier or third
party company we do business with.
Digital employs highly intelligent people, one of the highest paid
workforces in the world. The corporation should capitalize on our
intelligence, trusting us by giving power to us, its people, to truly
create and drive into reality change, where we AS GROUP TEAMS WITH
EACH MEMBER BEING AN EQUAL PARTNER hold authority along with
responsibility to achieve a dream, to build a better and more
successful Digital, greater than what is.
|
1150.2 | | GOOBER::ROSS | RALLY time | Tue Jul 31 1990 11:23 | 9 |
| All answers to the question should provide real-life case examples of
Fortune 1000 companies employing 100K+ people globally who have had success
using the techniques described.
Here's my wild idea of empowerment... An accomplished CEO with a number of
senior level direct reports who set the strategy. Everyone else carries
out that strategy. Promote and pay the best, dismiss the worst.
I know it's radical but it has worked before.
|
1150.3 | | DELREY::WEYER_JI | Make Sense, not Cents | Tue Jul 31 1990 12:37 | 15 |
| Management gets "paid the big bucks", so why aren't managers working to
make the company successful? Perhaps it is because most are too
concerned with their own personal gain, as mentioned in reply .1
If individual contributors were actually empowered, then the work-group
concept would work. In reality, individual contributors must always
report to managers - so it is a case of everyone looking out for
themselves rather than looking out for the company as a whole.
The "politics" in this company are worse than any other company I have
worked for. I would like to see promotions given to those workers who
really deserve it rather than to those people who are well-connected
politically.
-Jill-
|
1150.4 | Only if it has worked before? | MLTVAX::SAVAGE | Neil @ Spit Brook | Tue Jul 31 1990 12:49 | 7 |
| Re: .2:
> All answers to the question should provide real-life case examples of
> Fortune 1000 companies employing 100K+ people globally who have had success
> using the techniques described.
You mean to exclude trying anything new?
|
1150.5 | decentralized power the norm in Japan per Deming | ODIXIE::CARNELL | DTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALF | Tue Jul 31 1990 14:43 | 23 |
|
REF: <<< Note 1150.2 by GOOBER::ROSS >>>
>><<All answers to the question should provide real-life case examples
of Fortune 1000 companies employing 100K+ people globally who have had
success using the techniques described.>>
Having to prove something should not replace acting on intuition and
common sense, making decisions with little to no known facts.
Especially when a company is in crisis.
Regarding decentralization of power to groups with all being equal
partners on the group team, Dr. W. Edwards Deming, recognized father to
Japan's more effective business operating practices, reports in his OUT
OF THE CRISIS that most major Japanese corporations operate this way --
decisions are a group function.
Since Japan has some of THE largest corporations in the world,
dominating worldwide several industries, many of which were created in
America, one might deduce that the decentralization of power to groups
is more effective to change and to building a more successful company
than power residing solely in the hands of just managers.
|
1150.6 | | GOOBER::ROSS | RALLY time | Tue Jul 31 1990 14:46 | 17 |
| >> All answers to the question should provide real-life case examples of
>> Fortune 1000 companies employing 100K+ people globally who have had success
>> using the techniques described.
>
> You mean to exclude trying anything new?
Certainly not. But trying to implement "empowerment to the masses" in a
company as large as Digital would be a total failure. Maybe it works in
some smaller, less diverse companies, but I just cannot see the powers that be
making a such a radical move.
I'm in favor of trying something new but not something completely different.
But I think the only major changes we will see are cuts and re-orgs.
But if you can show me examples of where large corporations have successfully
made a transition to the work-group style, you might change my mind. The only
cases I ever see are of companies that start small with that style and grow.
|
1150.7 | Recipe for power sharing | MLTVAX::SAVAGE | Neil @ Spit Brook | Tue Jul 31 1990 14:50 | 4 |
| If it fails - it's my (management's) fault
If it works - we did it together
If it succeeds beyond all expectations - you (the workers) made
the difference
|
1150.8 | | GOOBER::ROSS | RALLY time | Tue Jul 31 1990 15:02 | 28 |
| > Having to prove something should not replace acting on intuition and
> common sense, making decisions with little to no known facts.
> Especially when a company is in crisis.
a. I don't think Ken Olsen would consider this short-term
problem a "crisis" and it doesn't help the situation to
label it so. And it's not like the problem is inherent
to Digital alone. It is an industry-wide problem.
b. Management can make intuitive decisions that do not rely
on changing the entire make-up of the company. Strategic
changes would seem to be less risky and possibly more
beneficial. For example, making a strong commitment to
software development over hardware sales.
> Since Japan has some of THE largest corporations in the world,
> dominating worldwide several industries, many of which were created in
> America, one might deduce that the decentralization of power to groups
> is more effective to change and to building a more successful company
> than power residing solely in the hands of just managers.
Talk to me about very large U.S. companies that have made such a
radical change of management style. The American culture and
value systems are totally different from the U.S. You're dreaming
if you think a company as large as Digital can, should, or would take
the extreme measures you suggest.
|
1150.9 | power vs anarchy | ASDS::COHEN | Nothing is EVER easy... | Tue Jul 31 1990 15:29 | 12 |
| RE.1
Although I can see the good intentions of .1, I think the ultimate
results of decentralizing power into smaller groups would just lead
to more anarchy.
Having seen projects stymied because one group could not get the other
group to "buy-in" for needed support, I belive a better solution is
required.
George
|
1150.10 | Another Cohen heard from | ASABET::COHEN | Silence . . . Snake breath. | Tue Jul 31 1990 16:34 | 36 |
|
If I remember my readings correctly, the group concept that
works so well in Japan does not work in America because of
basic cultural and work ethic differences.
I believe it was Nippocera some years ago who tried opening
a plant on the west coast with American workers, but Japanese
managers who indoctrinated them in the group concept.
The plant bombed. The workers couldn't function under the new
methods. The Japanese plants remained productive and profitable.
The American plant fell behind in production levels, quality,
and lost a great deal of money in the process.
PBS did a program on this a few years back showing several
companies that tried this group, open, equal, oriental approach
to running a business in America and the conclusion was that
it doesn't work as long as Americans are involved anywhere in
the process.
I had a neighbor once who got it into her head that cactus would
look great in her backyard. She like the contrast and the texture
and the brillant flowers. And she had friends bring back
specimens from the southwest when they traveled and she kept
her eye out at the local greenhouse for what looked like hardy
prospects. But try as she might, the plants kept dying.
One day she asked Frank, a quiet old Maine garderner-type for
help. "Do you have any idea why they keep doing this?," she
asked pointing to the lastest crop of dead spiny columns.
Frank nodded and answered, "Yup, ain't supposed to be here in
the first place."
ralph
|
1150.11 | | CGHUB::CONNELLY | Eye Dr3 -- Regnad Kcin | Tue Jul 31 1990 19:03 | 10 |
| re: .10
> If I remember my readings correctly, the group concept that
> works so well in Japan does not work in America because of
> basic cultural and work ethic differences.
I used to own a Nissan truck that was made at their Smyrna, Tenn., plant.
It seemed like your basic zero-defect Japanese product from what i could see.
paul
|
1150.12 | Power and authority are two very different things | HYEND::DMONTGOMERY | | Tue Jul 31 1990 19:25 | 70 |
| :
: Who should own the power
: to make Digital a better and more successful company?
Whoever earns it.
You didn't say "authority"; you said "power". Authority can be given
or assigned or delegated; power must be earned or created.
Regarding your comment about Japanese companies succeeding with the
team/group concept: I suggest you dig deeper and learn more about
Japanese business and organizational practices. The Japanese are
extremely authoritarian in their top management. Top executives'
words are LAW. However, the execs and middle managers know that there
is a vast amount of knowledge, intuition, and experience to be tapped
from the workers. For this reason, they do "empower" their workforce
to innovate and contribute ideas. But make no mistake about it; the
management holds 100% of the power.
Regarding the reply (Sorry for forgetting the name) which stated, in
effect, "Top management sets directions, goals, and corporate strategy;
Middle managers execute that strategy by managing the pool of workers":
There is much to said for this healthy dose of sanity. Creating a
workforce where all workers have equal "vote" will ensure mediocre
decisions. The Digital "tradition" of consensus decision making
already ensures mediocre AND time-consuming decisions. Why dilute the
final decision more? Anarchy will not drive a multi-billion dollar,
technology company. Neither will Socialism. Neither will Democracy.
There must be a single leader or small board of leaders to create
corporate goals and strategy to achieve those goals. There must be a
body of executives to execute those strategies through positive, strong
leadership and, yes, enlightened management. There must be a body of
management to turn those strategies into tasks, assignments,
operations, and responsibilities; and to manage the completion of those
things. And, there must be a body of workers to complete the tasks.
Where appropriate, the body of workers may contribute innovative,
creative ideas which may help the company operate more efficiently, or
may help the company exploit competitive advantages. Enlightened
management will solicit and value this input. However, you must
realize that there are many employees who simply cannot, will not, or
should not contribute. "Valuing Differences" has not yet assigned
value to stupidity or incompetence. In a company of 120,000 people,
does anyone REALLY believe that there are NO stupid or incompetent
people? Can anyone REALLY believe that soliciting the input to
business decisions from minds uneducated and/or uninterested in the
ways of business will somehow INcrease the quality of decision-making?
I sure hope not.
While I too am appalled at the parochialism and ineptitude displayed by
far too many of Digital's managers; and I see far too many disgraceful
situations where men and women have attained positions of
authority and great reward based only on their inclusion in
certain cliques; and I am well aware of the incredible power in a work
group turned loose on a goal when there are no political or organizational
constraints to hold them back; I can still clearly see that a
corporation made up of thousands of "empowered", equal-voting workers,
with no clear reporting structure or authoritarian management will only
end up resembling one of those turtle races, where a whole bunch of
turtles are turned loose in the middle of a circle, free to race toward
wherever they choose. Only each turtle has a different goal, and even
the fastest turtle takes an eternity to win the race -- which has no
clear finish line anyway.
-DM-
|
1150.13 | | SMOOT::ROTH | Grits: Not just for banquets anymore! | Wed Aug 01 1990 00:57 | 11 |
|
Re: .12
Well said. Digital must figure out how to once again promote and
encourage leadership instead of mere management. Digital grew as it
did in the past due to great leadership at all of its (few) levels.
Employees weren't empowered; they were inspired and rewarded.
Today most simply try to 'stay low, keep moving' and preserve
themselves.
Lee
|
1150.14 | Power without skill is worse than useless | COUNT0::WELSH | Tom Welsh, freelance CASE Consultant | Wed Aug 01 1990 06:17 | 56 |
| re .3:
>>> Management gets "paid the big bucks", so why aren't managers working to
>>> make the company successful?
Because they're too busy working to make sure they go on getting
paid the big bucks. Even I can see that.
Besides, "money doesn't motivate". I wish I had a $100 for every
time a manager has told me that when I asked for a raise. Maybe
they get paid so much they are really unmotivated.
One reservation - it is only some managers who deserve these
strictures. There is a whole range of behaviour and performance
(probably the familiar "bell" curve) in managers, as with everyone
else. Different things motivate - personal prestige, money, power,
achievement, respect, etc. On the whole, those who are mainly
motivated by a desire for achievement and respect are those who
help the rest of us and the company. Those who are more interested
in prestige, money and power - for themselves and their friends
only - tend to behave in ways harmful to the rest of us and the
company. The trouble is, they take great pains to look good from
above. To spot them, you need to get "under the camouflage" - the
only way to do that is to talk to the people who work for them.
>>> The "politics" in this company are worse than any other company I have
>>> worked for.
Yes, I'd agree with that. In fact, it reminds me of some of the
discussions we've had about marketing here and in NODEMO::MARKETING.
A lot of us have come to the conclusion that Digital, seen from
outside, doesn't really do marketing at all. Similarly, it strikes
me that the company doesn't "do" management either. In both cases
the situation is the same: people are given jobs in "management"
or "marketing" and left to make what they can of it. Nobody trains
them, there are no standards or rules, and above all there is no
review or assessment to decide whether they are doing a good or a
bad job.
Life might get a lot better if each manager was held responsible
for managing well, and measured appropriately (for instance, by
asking his/her direct reports for feedback and acting on it). At
the moment, they're measured only by results on given metrics,
and even then the system has no memory. If a manager seems to
succeed brilliantly one year, leaving behind a hostile customer
or a ruined team, nobody ever holds him accountable.
People who truly succeed and build up effective teams of people who
cooperate with and trust each other, however, are rarely forgiven.
I have just been told of one such - one of the most effective
managers I have ever known - who, after spending seven years building
up a superbly effective combined sales/support team, has been
*made redundant*. That is, they are paying him to go away and stop
showing them up.
/Tom
|
1150.15 | Power to Change | CSG001::MAKSIN | Joe Maksin 291-0378 PDM1-2/H4 | Wed Aug 01 1990 07:48 | 27 |
| From a recent "little" publication:
"Lee Gammill beams as he tells his story. 'In two days, we designed
the product that absolutely blew the industry apart. We had an
80 percent increase in volume within one year. We're a big company
-- even an 8 percent would have been great.'
Frozen pizzas? Personal computers? Post-it notes? Not at all.
Gammill is an executive vice-president of New York Life Insurance
Company. The product he's describing is a totally redesigned whole
life policy. In just two years the product boosted New York Life's
market share by two percentage points, as astonishing increase
in an industry that most of us think of as huge, entrenched, and
stagnant."
The publication is "Adhocracy: The Power to Change" by Robert H.
Waterman, Jr. (coauthor of "In Search of Excellence" -- but not
as jingoistic as Tom Peters the other author). It is an interesting
little book -- only 86 pages. The chapters are: The Power of
Adhocracy, The Right Start, Off and Running, Getting Results (a
MUST READ), and The Context for Vibrant Adhocracy.
Remember -- without friction those simply machines, pulleys, would
not work. Also remember the wonder "mechanical advantage" pulleys
can bring.
Joe
|
1150.16 | This is good BUT... | NEWVAX::MZARUDZKI | I am my own VAX | Wed Aug 01 1990 08:24 | 10 |
|
All these replys contain good information, people seem to have a grasp
at what to do, how to do it..... etc. So what will become of these
ideas. Will they just sit on a disk on some node in the network. How
can we solve some of digitals problems today? The real POWER needs
to get involved with the workers. Perhaps one should forward these
replys to ones immediate management, sooner or later it will (should)
filter to the top!
-Mike Z.
|
1150.17 | Here's one... | MPGS::BOYAN | | Wed Aug 01 1990 08:44 | 6 |
| > All answers to the question should provide real-life case examples of
Fortune 1000 companies employing 100K+ people globally who have had
success using the techniques described.
3M Corporation, St. Paul, Minnesota.
Source: Thriving on Chaos by Tom Peters
|
1150.18 | united we stand, divided we fall | ODIXIE::CARNELL | DTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALF | Wed Aug 01 1990 09:45 | 114 |
| REF: <<1150.8 GOOBER:ROSS>>
>><<The American culture and value systems are totally different
from the U.S.>>
REF: <<1150.12 HYEND::DMONTGOMERY>>
>><<Regarding your comment about Japanese companies succeeding
with the team/group concept: I suggest you dig deeper and learn
more about Japanese business and organizational practices.>>
There are many business gurus writing the same story about Japan
major corporations -- there is no difference as it applies to
business. Rather than quote many, I will take as gospel whatever
Dr. Deming has to say about Japan since Japan recognizes his as
the architect of more enlightened business practices that work
better in building a successful company (see his book OUT OF THE
CRISIS). I will also rely on Digital's own Japan Mission
Studies, which confirm the same story.
Essentially, the business practices of major Japanese
corporations and the business practices of major American
corporations are nearly identical. EXCEPT for a few differences
practiced by the Japanese corporations.
Differences that ARE making the world of difference in
determining which corporations will prosper over those that fail
to adopt these few differences in operating practices.
Three that stand out are:
1. Satisfying customers is NOT lip service. It is real and it
is the highest priority of the corporation and ALL its members.
Continuous customer input and intelligence is sought, and acted
on in incurring change to ensure optimum satisfying of customers'
wants, as the customers define those wants. Pure fundamental
marketing, whose consequence is more effectively winning and
retaining customers, and making money from having those
customers.
2. Identifying problems and new ideas for change is NOT lip
service. It is real and it is the second highest priority.
Using statistical tools, the identification of problems and
generation of ideas for change are actively nurtured and
solicited from all employees and customers and suppliers, and
problems and ideas are pursued with change being accepted and
methodically incurred, constanting improving all products,
services and all company functions, with the goal of improving
qualilty, productivity and the satisfaction of customers' wants.
3. Employee involvement is NOT lip service. It is real where
every employee has a sense of ownership in incurring change and
building a successful company. Groups do work as teams where
members are equal partners in making GROUP decisions on ideas and
change. Managers of groups are charged with leading, not
managing, and are measured on leadership accordingly.
These three differences are applicable to any business in the
world and are universally workable as it relates to winning and
retaining customers, and making money with the assets of a
company.
What is impeding their implementation in American companies, and
within Digital, revolves around the fundamental issue of power
and authority.
As Dr. Deming points out, the problem is the system and
management owns the system; and management will not change a
system that protects and rewards personal agenda of upwardly
mobile managers who put career gain ahead of the company and its
employees.
To change the system means changing the company culture and my
argument is that the only way that is ever going to happen where
a quantum leap in corporate efficiency and effectiveness takes
place is via the total decentralization of power and authority to
where all employees own both the responsibility and
power/authority to build a better and more successful Digital via
incurring change, including the adaption of the above three
differences outlined.
Comuter competition by IBM and Japanese corporations are not
going to stop, waiting on Digital to catch up. Either Digital
starts changing, making some intuitive leaps in philosophy or the
handwriting may indeed be on the wall.
Think not? Let us count the industries that have been lost (read
now dominated by companies in West Germany, Japan, etc) due to
archaic American self-centered management philosophies:
Steel
Optics
Ship building
Consumer electronics
Automobiles
Video equipment
Industrial ceramics
Factory automation
High definition television
Banking
Computer chips
We could have a dialogue for days on what managers within the
American Savings and Loan industry and regulatory agencies have
accomplished for America, taxpayers, stockholders, customers and
employees.
The ageless cliche is: UNITED WE STAND, DIVIDED WE FALL
Authoritarian dictatorial "what's in it for me and MY career"
management over "employees" has simply proven not to be as
effective as group teams of employees that are self-managed with
all members being "partners" owning full responsibility with full
authority, with REAL LEADERSHIP leading the group in its
contributions to build a better and more successful company.
|
1150.19 | Another ageless clich�: "Too many cooks spoil the broth" | HYEND::DMONTGOMERY | | Wed Aug 01 1990 13:50 | 43 |
| : Authoritarian dictatorial "what's in it for me and MY career"
: management over "employees" has simply proven not to be as
: effective as group teams of employees that are self-managed with
: all members being "partners" owning full responsibility with full
: authority, with REAL LEADERSHIP leading the group in its
: contributions to build a better and more successful company.
"...proven not to be as effective..."?
Quote your source.
I undertook to write a master's thesis, hypothesizing that Employee
Involvement programs indeed have a direct, statistically correlatable
effect on corporate profits. I abandoned the effort after six months
of research, because I came to realize that I could not prove my
hypothesis. I could not disprove it either. While I (and many)
believe that EI is good; it simply has not been PROVEN to have a
direct, positive effect on profit (and profit is, in fact, the only
true measure of a corporation's success).
Now, in your replies, David, you make some very good points. But, my
impression is that you go too far with the
decentralization/power/authority concepts. Yes, tapping the
innovation and creativity of an empowered workforce can be very
valuable. But your proposals for corporate utopia seem to go well past
that and advocate anarchy. Giving "power" and "authority" to all, as
equal partners in a corporation cannot work. There must be central
authority for corporate strategy and executive decisions. Your point
that some of the "managers" in those lofty positions are not fulfilling
their duties properly is well-taken, but we cannot throw out the baby
with the bath water! Yes, remove incompetent people from positions of
authority. Yes, solicit ideas from those whom are capable. Yes,
reward top performers based on real contribution; not on political
game-playing. But don't scrap the entire infrastructure of a
corporation where leaders lead, executives execute, managers manage,
and workers work. "Lead, follow, or get out of the way" is truly a
desirable state of affairs! The key is to find, keep, and reward our
best leaders; find, keep, and reward our best followers; and push aside
the mediocre, the incompetent, and those for whom personal positioning
is more important than corporate success.
-Don-
|
1150.20 | IBM does it...(?) | NEWVAX::ZIMMERMANN | DCO, Washington D.C. | Wed Aug 01 1990 20:27 | 61 |
| I have just read a book, which seems to be relevant to this topic. It
is authored by David W. Ewing, sponsored by the Harvard Business
School, titled 'Justice on the Job, resolving grievances in the
nonunion workplace'. I found it quite interesting reading. In the
book, Mr. Ewing describes 'Corporate due process'. The book ends with
a profile of 15 companies which have 'true' grievance handleing
procedures (IBM's open door was listed, but ours was not). Here were
some of the differences a due process procedure can make (in the author
opinion):
fewer lawsuits against the corporation
supervisory compliance with personnel rules
employee trust
ability to hold and attract good employees
As the author continues:
'Perhaps all this is another way of saying that due process is more
than a "nice" approach to have, providing employees with more that a
"warm feeling". It contributes in a positive way to employee
relations, and though it is a link in a subtle chain, it contributes
distinctly, not invisibly. Sometimes people say, in effect, "If you
don't have unions or many lawsuits from employees, that must be because
of your high pay or participative management, not your nonunion
grievance procedure." It is true that one of the companies studied,
Polaroid, is known for its generous pay levels, and that another,
General Electric in Columbia [Maryland], for its participative
management. But several of the companies in the sample are not known
for paying better than the competition, and around half are not known
for participative management. In all of these cases, however, employee
relations are good, union threats are not serious or are nonexistent,
and legal actions from employees alleging unfair dismissal,
discrimination, and related complaints appear to be low.'
The companies sited in the book:
Bank of America
CIGNA
IBM
NBC
Citicorp
Control Data
Donnelly Corporation
Federal Express
General Electric (Columbia Md.)
Honeywell
John Hancock
Northrop
Polaroid
SmithKline
TWA
As the author points out, we are all human, and so human managers and/or
employees can make mistakes. An avenue needs to be available to
address these errors. I am tempted to write the author, to ask why DEC
didn't make his list. That might spark a very interesting
conversation here.
Mark
|
1150.22 | A 2nd hand anecdote | EAGLE1::BEST | R D Best, sys arch, I/O | Thu Aug 02 1990 03:42 | 48 |
| re .10:
A friend who works as a consultant for a Japanese based company,
and has had many years of interaction working with groups in
this company and others, told me that much of what passes for group consensus
building in Japan is really a sort of elaborate social dance in which lower
status employees gradually submit to decisions that higher levels of
management have already made.
He said there is an appearance of disagreement or the working out of
alternatives, but almost invariably the plan presented by the most
senior person in the hierarchy is adopted with no significant modification,
and significant objections are not raised despite being in the environment.
Borrowing a phrase from Noam Chomsky and Edward Herman, consent is
'manufactured'; only certain questions are allowed, and the senior people
frame and steer the discussion to ensure that only their preconceived answer can
ultimately pass muster.
He said that he got into quite a bit of trouble when he started
consulting with them before he understood what was going on; his
problem was that he raised serious objections and made cogent arguments
for them ! He found himself dealt out of the 'consensus building' process very
quickly.
The only thing that saved him was the company's dependence on him for
maintaining a critical software product that he had written and only he had
sufficient knowledge of.
He also claims that the proper way to operate in this environment is to publicly
agree to anything senior management says, and then to quietly go off and do
the correct thing.
If this is generally so with Japanese corporations (I don't claim it is),
it is easy to see how a Japanese management team attempting to engage in
'consensus building' with an group of American individual contributors would
encounter serious problems. The managers expect a ritual of submission, and
the contributors expect to have real input into the what the final outcome is.
This is, of course, just one person's experience (and not mine at that), but
he claims he's seen it in most business meetings he's been in in Japan.
He also had some other interesting observations about Japanese behavior that
I won't share here in detail. Briefly, he believes that U.S.ers have bought
into a lot of nonsensical mythology about Japanese motivations and operating
styles, and that some of the popular works about Japanese business practice
are way off the mark. He has a much less complimentary view of a lot of
what goes on there, and feels that American interpreters are misleading
people here because they are only looking at things superficially.
|
1150.23 | Just another opinionated opinion | MPGS::BOYAN | | Thu Aug 02 1990 09:29 | 21 |
| re: .21
Perhaps Tom Peters did get it wrong about 3M Corporation. I also
viewed on PBS TV seminars of Tom Peters and interviews of employees
at corporations (3M featured) he visited. Of course, one cannot always
believe what's seen on the One-eyed Monster.
Sadly, however, the same observation and comments you've made about
3M have also been directed at me by some of our customers regarding
DEC. I've already commented (yes, complained) in this conference with
my opinions as to how and why DEC has backslidden from 1980 when one
Tom Peters ranked Digital as one of the worlds 10 best companies in his
book "In Search of Excellence". I apoligize in that I may have
bitched too often, too loudly. But it comes from fustration. I
believe all the elements for Excellence persist still in this company.
I believe our "crew" are the best that can be had and that good crew
are more than capable of making DEC excellent one again. It is self-
indulging management that has steered our ship too close to the rocks.
The employees do need more empowerment so that our creativity and
innovation may reach it's full potential.
|
1150.24 | decentralization of power & authority can be tested | ODIXIE::CARNELL | DTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALF | Thu Aug 02 1990 09:35 | 30 |
| Ref: 1150.22
I do not disagree that there is a lot of hierarchy even in major
corporations in Japan and that "senior" managers still have the "power"
and my real intention is that Digital NOT emulate Japan but take the
good points, and then make some quantum leaps, and surpass the best
operating practices, whether from Japan or the United States.
As per my suggested action in 1150.1, I advocate a quantum leap over
what ANYONE else is doing worldwide in business. I base the
correctness of decentralization of power and authority to groups on the
fact that from an intuitive and common sense viewpoint a group working
together as a motivated, self-managed team with group responsibility
and authority and power, seeking to achieve greater effectiveness and
build something greater than what is, will ALWAYS outperform any group
where "someone has to be in charge" to tell the group what to do, how
to do it, if they are allowed to do it, and when they can do it, all
while this in charge person is maintaining a selfish attitude that the
group's members exist to serve the one in charge, to make him or her
"look good" and to satisfy his or her desires for personal ambition for
power and monetary gain.
Anarchy will result from decentralization of authority and power? I
believe not. Prove it? How about testing it. Ken Olsen can merely
decentralize power and authority on a targeted, select basis. He can
select all the groups, plants, functions, field unit/district/areas and
countries THAT HAVE BEEN DOING "POORLY" FOR SOMETIME and simply change
the rules to change their culture on a micro basis and we'll see what
happens.
|
1150.25 | | BAGELS::CARROLL | | Fri Aug 03 1990 10:32 | 19 |
| re .24
If each group was self managing and empowered, how would decisions be
made that cross group/organizational boundaries. Would inter-group
meetings have to be held, then inter-organizational meetings?
It seems, this way it would take forever to make a decision and
difficult to enforce that decision.
To give an analogy, a dictatorship is infinitely more efficient than
a democracy. The only problem is that, historically, the person
that secures and retains his/her dictatorship usually has done so
by evil means.
The best of both worlds is a somewhat republican form, where a person
is chosen to make decisions in behalf of a group. I admit, for this
to be successful, input from the members of the group is needed and very
good leaders are needed. catch-22???
|
1150.26 | one company team, working together, motivated | ODIXIE::CARNELL | DTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALF | Fri Aug 03 1990 12:57 | 49 |
| REF: <<< Note 1150.25 by BAGELS::CARROLL >>>
>><< If each group was self managing and empowered, how would decisions
be made that cross group/organizational boundaries. Would inter-group
meetings have to be held, then inter-organizational meetings? >>
The given group's leader, selected by the group, would represent the
group at all inter-group, inter-organizational, upward or downward,
meetings. The selected group leader would hold that position based on
committed, leadership skills and actions. Decisions committing the
group would require the group's confirmation; the group leader would
not do so in some "other" meeting unless he or she thoroughly had the
confidence of the group where he or she knew a confirming decision
would be forthcoming.
As a sidenote on compensation, I would change the compensation to a
wage or salary based only on being an individual contributor with
various levels dependent on breadth of skills attained and depth of
skill level practiced in actions. If an individual became a selected
group leader, he or she would receive, in addition to his or her
individual contributor wage/salary, a "manager/leader allowance" of so
many X dollars, depending on level of group management/leadership. Say
$10,000-15,000 a year for the lowest and $100,000-150,000 for the
highest, which would be to that level of manager/leader who report in
turn to a manager/leader who reports to the president (those executive
positions that reported directly to the president would be selected by
the president). You become a leader in whatever group, you get the
additional weekly pro-rated "allowance" amount for as long as you are
the selected manager/leader of that group. If you revert back to an
individual contributor job, then your "manager allowance" stops, and
you receive just your attained regular individual contributor
wage/salary based on skills attained and level practiced.
With say the additional pivotal change of equal profit sharing for all,
dependent on making "extra" net operating income ABOVE a desired goal
(15%? looks good these days) going into the bucket, everyone has an
incentive to build something greater via working effectively and smart
via constant change for improvement with attaining of the reward
interdependly linking all employees/groups in greater cooperation, plus
there is an extra incentive to lead, but with a more effective check
and balance, affected via the decentralization of power/authority to
the bulk of the employees who are responsible for doing the work,
creating effective change, implementing it, and driving the hundreds of
thousands of fine-tuning actions necessary to build a far more
successful Digital, greater than what is now, and of course, to get the
equal profit sharing dollars at the end of the year ;-)
One total company team, working together, self-managed, motivated.
|
1150.27 | present structure in management might change little | ODIXIE::CARNELL | DTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALF | Mon Aug 06 1990 18:22 | 15 |
|
REF: 1150.1
As another sidenote to my idea in 1150.1 around the decentralization of
power, and authority, it should be noted, that if indeed every group
had a say in who would lead/manage their groups, it is not
inconceivable that the present structure of management would remain
exactly as it is now, most getting a vote of confidence, with but
nominal changes in leadership among some groups. The only difference
then that results overall is a workforce with greater ownership in
building a more successful Digital since that workforce now has a say
in making the rules, creating and implementing changes, and selecting
the right leadership to support their efforts to achieving greater
success. The employees are more franchised than disenfranchised.
|
1150.28 | What real is POWER?!?!?!? | GBMMKT::MCMAHON | Carolyn McMahon | Tue Aug 07 1990 16:33 | 54 |
| Interesting topic - POWER.
According to my 2 dictionaries, the primary definition of "power" is
"1. The ability or capacity to act or perform efficiently." Under this
definition, it seems to me that there is really very little power in
Digital (considering its size and the IQs of its people).
Perhaps the organizational formula for there even being real "power" is
AUTHORITY + RESPONSIBILITY = POWER.
[please bear in mind that "bullying" isn't really power - it's actually
counterproductive]
What I mean here is that until we get the vast majority of our authority
resting on the same heads as the responsibility, I don't see how there'll
be much real power to own.
For instance, I've been working for 26 years - 12 of which were in an
Fortune 10 (yes, ten) company where I was professionally respected and
known by a handful of VPs (not so in DEC .... but that's another
story). In the 21 years all together before coming to DEC, I had never
encountered so much Buck-passing (especially down!) as I did the first
6 mos. here. When I first heard a DEC professional blame his secretary
for a mistake, I thought he was a oddball - around here he's not!
Sure there was politics and even self-acknowledged bureaucracies, but
at least in the majority of cases those who "did good" for business got
somewhere - not DECimated! We seem to be so politically bound that it
is very rare that those who really want to "do good" for business even
get some authority to do so (we already know where the responsibility
for failure will land).
In some large areas and levels of our company, it seems we've adopted a
"No Bad News" policy - which means that we don't acknowledge bad news
at our own levels and we surely don't pass it up the ladder. The real
world has both pluses and minuses. The major problem this "No Bad News"
policy causes is that those who DO make decisions end up having an
unrealistic picture of the environment of that decision. Therefore,
those that take the responsibility and DO make decisions are almost
predestined to failure. [let's not even talk about risk-avoiding,
non-decisionmakers ... that's another topic in itself!]
I guess I just came from a world where to be a professional, either a
manager or an individual contributor, was to be responsible and not be
a baby. But what do I know?!?!?
... and why do I stay? Because I still believe we've got what it takes
- all we have to do is have the guts to get our ducks in order. From
all the organizational behavior stuff I've read and heard, although a
lot of good things can happen from the bottom up, the style and tone of an
organization's behavior is determined from the top down.
It's never ceases to amaze me how in agreement KO and I are on many
philosophies. Something must be happening in between him and me!?!?!
|
1150.29 | How about learning from others? | GBMMKT::MCMAHON | Carolyn McMahon | Tue Aug 07 1990 16:51 | 23 |
| Seems to me that we are so obsessed with doing something "new" that
we'd rather do something wrong than FIRST try to learn from what others
have done. Too often we do this both organizationally and
individually.
For instance, in this "down-sizing" our company we're doing we seem to
be making all the mistakes that other U.S. companies did 10 years ago
when they were in the same boat. On top of that, we're added our own
"flavor" of mistakes. I can't believe that the results we're seeing
were the original objectives of "transition." For example, if morale
was a productivity problem 2 years ago, I can't find a word for what it
is now.
Individually, most of us are not much better. Just 2 hours ago I heard
(and not for the first time) from a fellow employee a bizarre-but-true
observation. It seems that as individuals we do not respect or
acknowledge any experience one has gotten outside of Digital - or even
much of the experience from within Digital. We tend to highly discount
anything not homegrown - which seems to me like or business is really
re-inventing the wheel most of the time.
Is it wise to perpetuate this behavior? Is wisdom even a cultural
value? I sure hope it is at least a cultural hope.
|
1150.31 | Credentials are to help you; not impress others | SMAUG::GARROD | An Englishman's mind works best when it is almost too late | Wed Aug 08 1990 10:58 | 14 |
| Re .-1
I'd agree the manager was doing the employee a favour but I don't
condone the 'TOLD' piece. If you want to hang anything in your cube
then nobody should stop you. But personally if I see people displaying
evidence of their prowess, educational or otherwise they've already
started off one notch down with me. It makes me think. 'Presumably this
person has to display evidence of their achievements because they feel
they need to bolster their position with others'.
It makes no difference to me whether it is a qualification I have or
haven't got.
Dave
|
1150.32 | No gratuitous comments please | SAHQ::DERR | | Wed Aug 08 1990 14:50 | 5 |
| Re .31 "Only wimps display credentials"
A totally uncalled for remark. An alternative view would be
that the individual worked hard for and is proud of his or her
accomplishments.
|
1150.33 | What is the recipe for marshmallow? | COUNT0::WELSH | Tom Welsh, freelance CASE Consultant | Thu Aug 09 1990 05:47 | 61 |
| re .28:
>>> It's never ceases to amaze me how in agreement KO and I are on many
>>> philosophies. Something must be happening in between him and me!?!?!
Carolyn, I think a lot of us feel the same way you do about this.
I seem to remember Ken being reported as saying something like
"Tigers at the top, tigers at the bottom... and layers of marshmallow
in between".
If he didn't say it, he ought to have! 8-)
But, in an effort to look at things constructively, I suppose we
ought to ask "what are the conditions that make a person behave
like a tiger, or like marshmallow?" "Is it possible a tiger, once
promoted to management, may feel her sinews softening into something
sweet and glutinous?"
The syndrome you describe fits in perfectly with the often-diagnosed
problem of a culture in which managers "manage up" and hardly ever
"manage down". I've heard this said by a number of people from
different functions and different countries, including one of my
own recent managers (6 in the last 2 years, so don't guess!)
In "managing up", you put almost all your time, energy and work
into the interface with your boss and other senior figures - her
boss, the VP, the "management community". You make presentations,
"gain visibility". You do some work along the lines of implementing
one or two parts of the VP's "vision". Managers soon see you as a
positive team player.
Meanwhile, anyone who reports to you is starved of attention. You
don't know or much care what they are doing, and how well they are
doing it. You spare one or two days a month to check the numbers,
and that tells you all you need to know.
I saw a perfect example of this a few years ago, when I was working
for Field Service.
The manager of a support group spent almost all his time in meetings,
but whenever he met with his direct reports he criticized them
heavily for their "low productivity". This was odd, since they
were some of the best people in the UK, and they were coming in
early, working through lunch, and leaving late. The manager reckoned
they were only closing 3 calls a day. In fact it was 30. One of
his employees dealt with the situation in the Digital way: he
took a day off, found the guy who maintained the software that
generated the manager's reports, went through the sources with
him, and pointed out the place where a factor of ten got lost.
The interesting things about this are:
1. If the manager had walked out of his office once, and stood
watching his people work, he would immediately have seen that
his numbers were wrong.
2. If the engineer had tried to talk the problem out, he would have
got nowhere - if he'd pushed it he'd have been labelled a
troublemaker.
/Tom
|
1150.34 | Not a good subject for taking sides | COUNT0::WELSH | Tom Welsh, freelance CASE Consultant | Thu Aug 09 1990 06:00 | 29 |
| re last few:
Let's respect each other's points of view. I agree with .32,
sweeping assertions about "wimps" create heat, not light. This
sort of discussion can benefit us all if those who take Dave
Garrod's point of view get some insight and sympathy into the
motives for hanging up qualifications - and if those who take
it for granted that a framed diploma brings respect begin to
see that it could have the opposite effect.
One thing that seems clear is that a qualification is useful
only in so far as it improves your behaviour or performance.
I certainly wouldn't automatically respect a person with a framed
MBA, unless that person commanded my respect for other reasons -
like being a good manager, a team catalyst, or a high performer.
On the other hand, there's no reason why a qualification should be
kept secret, and since it probably won't come up at the coffee
machine ("Did I mention my MBA?"), why not display the evidence?
Take another example - suppose you got a certificate for completing
a half-marathon (I've got one at home). If it gives you satisfaction
to hang that, why not? Surely even Dave wouldn't think you a wimp.
It's not bragging - it's an assertion of individuality.
We don't have a "valuing differences" program in the UK, but this
seems to be a good example of where it should apply.
/Tom
|
1150.35 | Working harder doesn't equal being more productive | HYEND::DMONTGOMERY | | Thu Aug 09 1990 11:33 | 42 |
| I find it illuminating, Tom Welsh, that your .33 seemed to equate
"coming in early, working through lunch, and staying late" with
"productivity". While this seems to have been true in your example --
since the real problem was indeed the manager -- it may not always be
true. "Work smarter, not harder" is true, and so is making sure that
management is accountable for harnessing the work toward the proper
goals.
If we take the concept of productivity a little bit farther, (and take
it completely away from your example, Tom, so as to be speaking purely
theoretically), we see that coming in early, working through lunch, and
staying late may have some effect on productivity, but ONLY if the
management has set the proper goals and criteria for success, and only
if that management actually stays involved in the progress toward those
goals. Going 100 MPH in the wrong direction isn't going to get you
there any faster than going 25 MPH in the right direction. Or, to
use the same metaphor: A group of 10 people are responsible for
getting from Boston to New York as quickly as possible. Another
individual is given the same responsibility. The group of 10 people
sets out in earnest -- coming in early, working through lunch, and
continuing late into the evening. The individual, all by himself,
starts late -- perhaps 10 AM instead of 7:30 -- takes a 2-hour lunch
break, and knocks off early -- maybe 3:30. Who has more productivity?
Can't answer that question until you find out that the apparently lazy,
unproductive individual is driving a car, while the hard-working group
of 10 is on foot. The individual, after giving all appearances of
being unproductive succeeds at the given task in 5 hours, and moves on
to the next project. The exhausted group, despite 12 and 14 hour days,
finally succeeds at the given task in 10 days. Who was more
productive?
The point of my parable is that hard work does not necessarily equate
with productivity. Ideally, given clear goals, the proper tools, and
the proper means of measuring success, the hardest working team will
indeed be the most productive. But, if management fails to provide any
of those things, productivity plummets. And, even worse, if the
management is out of touch, or blind to reality [back to Tom's
example], it gets even worse because no one even knows whether the
organization is productive or not! Management-by-the-numbers does not
work -- even when the numbers are correct!
-DM-
|
1150.36 | Kodak decentralizing power -- it works | ODIXIE::CARNELL | DTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALF | Thu Aug 09 1990 12:19 | 81 |
| I just sent the following to Ken Olsen/Jack Smith/John Sims.
Subject: Some Proof that Decentralization of Power will Pay Off BIG
In follow-up to my July 31, 1990 memo (enclosed) suggesting
the pivotal change of decentralization of power as the best
solution to build a better and more successful Digital in the
least amount of time, I offer the following as some evidence
that this will work, and HAS WORKED. The article below just
appeared in yesterday's issue of USA TODAY, Wednesday, August
8, 1990.
KODAK DEVELOPS NEW WAY OF MANAGING
by John Hillkirk
USA TODAY
ROCHESTER, N.Y. - Eastman Kodak Co. has discovered a novel
way to turn an ailing manufacturing operation around: Put the
hourly workers in charge.
Ralph Olney, a Kodak division manager, did just that in "13
Room" - a Kodak operation that manufacturers professional
films, including Kodachrome and 70mm movie film. Olney, a
12-year Kodak veteran, eliminated five levels of management
between him and the 95 people working on the shop floor. He
gave hourly workers the power to make purchasing decisions,
start or stop the assembly lines and design equipment to suit
their needs, not management's.
"Now the managers ask you questions instead of telling you
what to do," says Bob Bryant, a 13 Room veteran.
The payoffs quickly hit the bottom line. In 1988, 13 Room
ran about $1 million over its $30 million annual budget. In
1989, with workers in charge, the unit came in $1.5 million
UNDER budget. And, so far this year, 13 Room is running
$600,000 below target [budget]. Quality and productivity
also soared. The percentage of finished films with zero
defects jumped from 75% to 99%.
To boost morale, Olney and his supervisors created a unique
award system. Employees who make good suggestions to improve
quallity or cut costs get a handful of red power chips worth
$1 each in Kodak's company store.
Reports about 13 Room's success have begun to ripple
throughout Kodak. The photography giant has been searching
for ways to slash costs and improve quality to keep pace with
relentless Japanese rivals such as Fuji Photo and
Konishiroku. And 13 Room's success is a blueprint for the
rest of the company to follow.
"We must improve quality...and you can't do that without
empowering your people," says Kay Whitmore, Kodak CEO. "You
have to get rid of the managerial infrastruture that
historically was put in to control people."
The methods employed at 13 Room aren't widespread yet.
Whitmore says about 10% of Kodak's divisions are heavily
involved, and another 30% to 40% are starting to mimic
Olney's handiwork.
But it's not always easy going. Line workers who have spent
20 or 30 years doing things a certain way, with managers
making the tough decisions, aren't champing at the bit to be
retrained, given new responsibilities and being urged to
speak out. "Not everyone wants to work in this kind of
environment," says Whitmore. "They think it's beyond their
ability."
About 15% of the hourly workers -- and two of the five
front-line supervisors -- in 13 Room simply refused to
cooperate with Olney's effort to push decision-making down.
Those who objected were immediately transferred to another
Kodak operation. Those who stayed are first in line for pay
hikes and promotions, as well as stuffing the suggestion box.
"Our hourly guys didn't used to do a lot of thinking," says
Olney. "Now they use their brains, and it's paying off."
(attachment, posted already in 1150.1, removed)
|
1150.37 | Mutex | KYOA::LOGRANDE | | Thu Aug 09 1990 16:41 | 12 |
| This is all very interesting but I believe the this problem was
originally identified by Plato in his "Republic". I don't believe he
had a solution. In fact I do not believe it has ever been solved.
I think after 2 + millenia we could conclude that power and
enlightenment are opposites. At least in a republic you can your
disenlightened leader.
|
1150.38 | | KYOA::LOGRANDE | | Thu Aug 09 1990 16:44 | 5 |
| addendum to .37
insert whatever word you like between you can and your disenlightened
in the last sentence
|
1150.39 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Thu Aug 09 1990 19:23 | 3 |
| Re: .37 and .38
Gee, I thought "can" was the complete transitive verb.
|
1150.40 | A more fitting title | SMAUG::GARROD | An Englishman's mind works best when it is almost too late | Thu Aug 09 1990 23:22 | 18 |
| I changed the title of my note in .31 because subsequent replies seemed
to be concentrating on the title rather than the content. The current
title more accurately reflects my feelings and fits in better with the
content of the note.
Also amusingly enough there was a reply to my note that the author
subsequently must have deleted (a kind person mailed it to me)
who seemed to believe that those of us who are put off by the display
of credentials have some sort of inferiority complex!
Maybe it is just a cultural differerence. I'm English and I must admit
that I've noticed that Americans seem to do far more 'show and tell'
than the English so I guess it is more the norm to display your
credentials in America.
Dave
Dave
|
1150.41 | Again, it comes down to culture | SVBEV::VECRUMBA | Do the right thing! | Fri Aug 10 1990 16:44 | 36 |
|
re .28 et al
I agree totally, including on why I stick around. And I'd add one more
thing to
> AUTHORITY + RESPONSIBILITY = POWER.
and that is
AUTHORITY + RESPONSIBILITY + ACCOUNTABILITY = RESULTS.
I definitely see a lot of marshmallow (it does sound like something K.O.
would say). I still think back to Marge H.'s note about how everyone in
management between her and Ken changed -- her job and Ken's job remained
the same. If Marge's ability to do her job wasn't impacted, then it's
guaranteed there's a fair amount of white fluffy stuff in-between.
About moving decision making down the the shop floor...it's like self-
industrial-engineering. The problem is that in the services part of our
company or software development part, where we're not producing widgets
in a structured environment, this whole idea breaks down. Instead of
doing something better (one group does one thing better), you wind up
doing that one thing differently all over the place (many groups do the
same thing "better" according to their own judgement -- making it much
more difficult to share anything).
About diplomas...I don't have any hanging, and I'll be honest enough to
say that where it comes to getting something done, I'm from the "Show Me"
state. I chuckle when I see Ed Services certificates (both at DEC and at
customer sites), and I'm curious when I see diplomas -- they _do_ say
something about the person and often improve your perspective on "where
they're coming from." But I must also admit that we have a cultural
bias to value education much less than experience.
/Peters
|
1150.42 | Tom Peters on "changing the rules" | ODIXIE::CARNELL | DTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALF | Fri Aug 10 1990 17:25 | 93 |
|
SAN JOSE MERCURY NEWS MONDAY, APRIL 30, 1990 TOM PETERS
In the '80s, the world's chemical giants got roughly the same idea at
roughly the same time, shifting for commodity products to low-volume,
specialty chemicals. The predictable result: Overcrowding and
paper-thin margins. Special (as in specialty chemicals) turned out to
be not so special after all.
Likewise, each of the major players in the computer industry, including
IBM, is now promoting open-system (anyone's product can be connected to
anyone else's), network-based, close-to-the-customer problem-solving as
their "special" vision. And recent feature stories in Fortune and
Business Week described the implementation of identical strategies at
Procter & Gamble, United Technologies and AT&T. Each is blasting out
excessive layers of management, scrunching people together in
multifunction teams (design, operations, finance, etc.), sliding up to
the market to provide fast, specialized solutions to customer's needs.
I should shed tears of joy. After all this was the message that "In
Search of Excellence" sprung on unsuspecting executives nearly 10 years
ago. Now people are responding. All at the same time. All at the same
speed. "Hey, wait a minute," as football commentator John Madden might
say. Is there a problem here?
I'm not willing to recant those earlier ideas. But when all the
flattening out, multifunction grouping, speeding up and customer
cuddling is complete, each company should worry about what will have
made its approach unique. How will Du Pont's specialty chemicals binge
be noticeably different from BASF's and Monsanto's ? How will NCR's
open-systems, customized-solution approach be noticeably different from
DEC's and AT&T's? There are no easy answers. On the one hand, speedy
now processes are called for. Even in pharmaceuticals, let alone
computers, semiconductors, software or chemicals, it's becoming next to
impossible to maintain a proprietary edge for long. Legal copycats
with swift product development systems now cut the ground out from
under most any leader's "proprietary" position in a matter of months.
On the other hand, everyone's mindless emulation of everyone else's
strategies is unlikely to get you far, either.
I'm surely not suggesting that a Monsanto, which has slashed its
bulk-chemical business form about 70 percent of sales to just a couple
of percent in the last 10 years, should revert to commodity
production. Nor am I urging IBM to revert to the arm-twisting
arrogance that accompanied its proprietary schemes in the past.
I am proposing (1) that special must indeed be SPECIAL and (2) that the
big winners - companies like Fed Ex, Wal-Mart, Turner Broadcasting,
Apple - will continue to be those who change the rules and create new
games, redefining whole industries it the process.
Special vs. SPECIAL. It is not enough (though it is certainly no mean
feat) to trim now-product development cycles from three years to one
year or less and install close-to-the-customer, multifunctional teams.
Beyond that, must be able to clearly articulate what it is about your
process (for example, the way you listen to customers) that is the
basis for a sustainable difference. The architects and engineers of
CRS Sirrine of Houston, for instance, developed intensive
client-listening protocols that are truly unique. Moreover, CRS
Sirrine refines its routine with each passing month. Only this sort
of difference stands even a chance of staying the course.
Changing the rules. Companies that redefine their industries are
invariably upstarts that benefited from the
"I-didn't-know-you-could-do-it-that-way" advantage that seldom visits
the established firm. In the rare instances when mature firms do
rewrite the rules, it's usually the result of granting astounding
independence to business units and maintaining a high degree of
disorganization.
My concern about trendy but predictable strategies jelled upon hearing
a consultant applaud Apple's time-based product development process
(another new business buzz phrase). He says it allows the company to
know exactly what products will be released through 1995. For Apple's
sake, I hope he's wrong.
Consider the birth of the Macintosh computer: Company co-founder Steve
Jobs got restless, stripped most of the stars form his "bet the
business" Lisa computer project, carted them off to a little building,
hoisted a pirate flag and got down to work on the Mac. Make no
mistake, the PC/work-station/etc. breakthrough is likely to emerge in
a similar, convoluted fashion. The question Will it emerge from some
cranny in IBM, Apple, Compaq, Hewlett Packard or Sun - or, at least as
likely, from some outfit we haven't heard of ?
Perhaps my concern with copycat strategies is a premature alarm. You
decide. In any case, as you turn to the imperative task of creating
those speedy, close to-the-customer, multifunction product-development
teams, you'll do yourself a big favor by asking, "How is my process
going to be demonstrably different from that of all of my many
competitors, sitting in similar conference rooms, attempting to do the
same thing ?"
|
1150.43 | Any replys from Ken or VP's | WFOV12::KULIG | | Thu Aug 30 1990 14:56 | 7 |
| re .1
David, has Ken Olsen, Jack Smith or John Sims gotten back
to you on this proposal or any other proposals you have
submitted?
thanks
|
1150.44 | my getting a response is not necessary | ODIXIE::CARNELL | DTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALF | Thu Aug 30 1990 18:10 | 66 |
| REF: <<< Note 1150.43 by WFOV12::KULIG >>>
-< Any replys from Ken or VP's >-
>><<David, has Ken Olsen, Jack Smith or John Sims gotten back
to you on this proposal or any other proposals you have
submitted?>>
I submitted the following to Jim Johnson @PKO for the DVN quarterly but
it no mail in questions were answered during the 90 minutes.
Subject: Question for Ken Olsen at DVN broadcast
What does the Executive Committee think of the idea of
decentralizing authority to the bottom where all groups as groups are
truly empowered with responsibility PLUS full authority, as has proven
successful in building a more successful company, evidenced by two
Fortune 500 companies that have tried it: Miliken and Kodak (see
attached)[previous suggestion memos on Kodak, decentralization and
Miliken].
And his reply:
Thanks for your question. We will make every effort to
utilize it during the telecast.
To date, I have received no feedback from any member of the Executive
Committee or any sr vp on any suggestion made affecting the entire
corporation, which includes all 25+ submitted through the Employee
Involvement Program, most now posted in the DELTA Ideas VAXnotes
conference, most submitted over the last 8 months.
I was informed about a month ago from DELTA that the U.S. steering
committee reviewing ideas affecting the entire U.S. on behalf of Dave
Grainger were shortly going to discuss four of those earlier memo
suggestions, which are part of the group sent to DELTA.
The two memos in this topic went direct and did not go through DELTA.
While there is evidence that NO radical changes are being considered in
how Digital operates at this time, I did hear repeatedly throughout the
DVN 90 minutes this afternoon that any employee who feels strongly
about a suggested change is welcome and couraged to send a proposal
directly to anyone, including as applicable, Ken Olsen, Jack Smith, or
John Sims. While they said they would not guarantee answering, they
indicated it would be reviewed by someone.
Regarding my specific suggestions, most are very different, very
radical. They are not going to be replied to quickly and may have to
be considered, or allowed to percolate, over months, if not years.
Yet, their is evidence that others see some of these ideas as being a
better approach to building a better and more successful company,
evidenced by being tried in fact in the "real world" in Kodak,
Milliken, and in Japan. Ken Olsen said however in the DVN that while
Digital does look at what other major corporations are doing
differently, that Digital is unique in what it is trying to do
worldwide. The implication from his comment was that major changes in
how we work, especially ones with risk, will not be done unless first
very carefully considered, and no doubt, justified by need.
My getting a response is not necessary; the only desire is to simply
see the ideas implemented, personally believing they would
significantly lead to Digital growing more successfully. The
responsibility to carefully review and weigh the merits of any ideas
lies with those having the resources, responsibility and authority to
implement changes of such magnitude.
|