T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1175.1 | It was disappointing... | MSDSWS::DBROWN | Dwight Brown, KXO | Thu Aug 30 1990 21:59 | 2 |
| IMHO, there were none.
|
1175.2 | Here's what I heard | BABBLE::MEAGHER | | Thu Aug 30 1990 22:51 | 33 |
| I watched the show at MRO1. I thought it was fairly entertaining (I've never
watched one of these before). Most people seemed to leave the MRO1 cafeteria
smiling.
To me, there were three memorable moments:
1. There will be another buyout package announced next Tuesday, to be offered
to people whose jobs the company doesn't think it will need anytime soon if
ever. The package will not be as generous as the earlier ones, and people will
have only four weeks to decide on whether or not to take it. It will be
voluntary.
2. In response to a question about poor performers, Jack Smith said that the
subject of poor performers was one of his "hot buttons," and that no employee
in the company should have to put up with having to work with poor performers.
He said he'd like to know about poor performers (or words to that effect).
(Before answering the question, he joked to John Sims, "I thought you told me
we got rid of all those."
3. Someone asked a question about Digital's unimpressive revenue per employee
ratio. Ken Olsen was defensive about the question, and said it was a
meaningless statistic. He said we're in the service business, and you can't
compare our revenue per employee to other companies' revenue per employee. He
totally ignored the issue of IBM's revenue per employee, which the person who
asked the question had mentioned as being better than ours. (I think Digital
and IBM are comparable companies, and IBM is even more of a "service" company
than we are.)
I went to the telecast hoping to hear about the new buyout package. I planned
to leave and come back to work if I got demoralized or annoyed. Ended up
staying for the whole show.
Vicki Meagher
|
1175.3 | Good for Jack Smith on his "hot button" | CSC32::S_HALL | Pumpen the Airen in the Parroten..... | Fri Aug 31 1990 10:31 | 19 |
|
Yep, for me the highlight was Jack Smith's comment
about poor performers. The context was a query from
a field employee who asked something like:
"Well, we've had one buyout, and there's another one
coming along... Shouldn't we be looking at poor performers
FIRST.... THEN look at buyouts ?"
The first to field this one was John Sims, who really remained
non-committal. He was almost interrupted by Jack Smith,
who made the statement about poor performers being his
"hot button."
First time I've ever heard a Digital manager ever make a
definitive statement about this one.... Maybe we'll see
some change.
Steve H, who's currently working in a group that's about 16% fat.
|
1175.4 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Fri Aug 31 1990 10:47 | 6 |
| re .2:
Didn't Ken say that we're not comparable to other companies with the
possible exception of IBM? I don't think he's ignoring our costs vs.
IBM's costs. I think he was just attacking the notion that revenue
per employee is a valid measure of productivity.
|
1175.5 | Sorry I missed it... | STAR::DIPIRRO | | Fri Aug 31 1990 11:25 | 8 |
| So besides answering questions, weren't they supposed to inform us all
on how they plan to turn the company around and become profitable
again? I didn't see it but thought this was the main thrust of the DVN
broadcast. Instead, it sounded like a Ronald Reagan press conference. I
was really hoping for more than "Don't worry - Be happy." This just
sounds like more of the same. I guess I was right when I said it will
take a few more kicks in the head before we see real action...(I was
hoping I was wrong...)
|
1175.6 | is leadership anyone's "Hot Button" ? | SYZYGY::SOPKA | Smiling Jack | Fri Aug 31 1990 11:32 | 30 |
|
I didn't last until the end. I was disappointed by Ken's
comments indicating that he feels we can't do a capable
and competitive job of delivering Unix because there's no
one definition of what it is. The Open Systems Group, our
engineering department responsible for delivering various
Unix implementations, is apparently being directed to undertake
their third or fourth change of strategic direction since the
beginning of this year. Employees accepting the need for change
is one thing, management accepting the need to stay the course
once a decision is taken seems to be something else entirely.
What made me leave the room, however, was his response to a
question from a caller in MKO. The caller asked about how to deal,
as a first-line manager, with employee demoralization resulting from
an upper-level manager flying 20 miles in a helicopter to a meeting
that other lower level employees had to drive to. While Ken failed to
convey any sense of appreciation for the damage done to the manager's
ability to provide leadership and motivation to his employees in
cutting costs, his gratuitous comment about employees who needed
some extra money going out and driving around was intolerable. If
there is a serious enough amount of unnecessary cost being created
by dishonest employees collecting unjustified mileage reimbursements
or by any other means for Ken Olsen to be concerned about it, we have
a motivational and leadership problem that can't be corrected by
simple elimination of unnecessary jobs or other proposed cost
reduction efforts. Effective leadership does not seem to be an
issue of concern to most of the top management at DEC today.
john
|
1175.7 | No stated Strategy | SMAUG::GARROD | An Englishman's mind works best when it is almost too late | Fri Aug 31 1990 11:46 | 7 |
| What reeally bothered me was when a caller asked if this company had
a real vision for the future.
Ken basically hesitated for quite some time and then in many words
basically said "No". At least that was my interpretation.
Dave
|
1175.8 | some very high level ideas for strategy were given | SYZYGY::SOPKA | Smiling Jack | Fri Aug 31 1990 12:01 | 41 |
| Re: 1175.5 by STAR::DIPIRRO
>>> weren't they supposed to inform us all on how they plan to turn the
>>> company around and become profitable again?
yes, i also thought that was the topic of justification for the
broadcast. they did open with some discussion of broad strategy
for accomplishing that. reduce costs and increase revenues was
the starting point. they mentioned reducing costs by eliminating
redundancy and increasing centralization of some support functions
such as Information Services (IS), Financial Services and Purchasing.
they talked about eliminating forms of bundled or free support for
our products and customers. they want to sell our products at prices
competitive with the other vendors in the market and to provide the
additional service and support only to those willing to pay for them.
they also talked about three broad segments of the company each
contributing to its profitability:
1.) product development departments
(i think this means Engineering)
2.) applications integration departments
(i think this means EIS and Software Services)
3.) sales and delivery
their objective is to encourage entrepreneurial initiative,
responsibility and rewards within each of these areas for their
ability to produce profits = revenue - costs.
that's the grand strategy. they didn't offer any detail in terms
of organizational or tactical approaches, but this is supposed to
be a report on the ideas coming out of a woods meeting held only
weeks ago. obviously lots of hard work is still to be done just
developing specifics and choosing among available alternatives.
how and where this work is being done was not even suggested.
they seemed big on 'write up your ideas in a proposal' describing
how to produce more profit and send it to Ken or Jack.
|
1175.9 | two cents on the revenue per employee stat. | ROYALT::IORIO | | Fri Aug 31 1990 12:08 | 17 |
| re: .2 - on the part where Ken said the statistic of revenue per
employee was meaningless...he also said TWICE that one should not
pay attention to what 'some young reporter at business week writes'..
since i have friends at business week it made me smile..i'm not sure
if it angers him that they're the press, that they're not always 'pro-
digital', or that they're "YOUNG"...
any way..certainly Business Week has been wrong before and will be
wrong again..but it made me smile. I do agree with previous notes
that he didn't fully explain how it's a meaningless statistic when
comparing two service oriented companies. he did make clear that
the statistic was unreliable when comparing apples and oranges..a
service oriented company like DEC and a product oriented company
like Apple.
|
1175.10 | Need for a global vision | NEWVAX::DOYLE | Ellen A. Doyle, Landover MD | Fri Aug 31 1990 12:08 | 12 |
| Re: -.1
I, too was bothered by the nebulous nature of Ken's reply on
this... I would have thought that with the sweeping changes in
the (formerly) Iron Curtain nations and the radical alterations
planned for Europe, some solid strategies would be formed for
capitalizing on these new markets. As I recall, the caller specifically
mentioned "global vision". Ken's reply seemed to be basically
"go with the flow", and in times when we're lucky enough to be given
advance notice about events like EC '92, I don't believe we can
afford to be without a planned, truly global vision for DEC.
strategy.
|
1175.11 | whoops...reply .10 addresses reply .7 | NEWVAX::DOYLE | Ellen A. Doyle, Landover MD | Fri Aug 31 1990 12:11 | 1 |
|
|
1175.12 | Another point of view | MSDOA::VVEREGO | | Fri Aug 31 1990 12:27 | 24 |
| My impression of the whole DVN is that it probably cost the company
a lot of money to have employees sitting around watching (expectantly)
for a message that never materialized. Like others, I expected to
hear something visionary about the direction of the company. Instead,
I heard thought-provoking questions from employees who really care
about Digital and want to make a difference. The answers to these
questions, however, were the carefully crafted work of practiced
politicians.
I, too, was very disheartened to hear Ken's reply to the manager
who was trying to set a good example to her employees. "Maybe we
should get another plane" just doesn't seem to be the message that
will inspire us to tighten our belts for the sake of the corporate
wallet.
The caller who asked about looking to other very successful companies
as role models (i.e., these companies never have more than 5 layers
of management, etc.) never did receive an answer to his question.
Far from instilling any confidence that things are going to change for
the better, we all walked out of the room with our heads down. The
most important thing that we wanted to hear was how the company was
going to fire up our most important asset: the employee. And IMHO,
the message never came.
|
1175.13 | Boring | COOKIE::LENNARD | | Fri Aug 31 1990 12:46 | 4 |
| Not too impressed...was glad to see them having so much fun!! Was
glad to hear about Tuesday, but why couldn't they give us the details
then? Could we possibly need some severance packages at very high
levels? (There, I said it).
|
1175.14 | How Will We Find Out? | SALEM::LORANGER | | Fri Aug 31 1990 13:13 | 13 |
| All this talk about increasing employee productivity, and they go ahead
and waste x number of attendees and viewers, times 1 1/2 hours, for
what amounted to almost nothing but a big letdown. My guess is that
a huge percentage of those employees were mainly interested in the new
buyout program. What a marvelous opportunity that was to have revealed
the details directly to the employees yesterday; instead we were told
that would happen next Tuesday---By what vehicle??? The Boston Globe?
TV? radio? livewire? your manager? your wife when you get home that
evening? They had a perfect opportunity to communicate directly to
the employees, and they muffed it. Ken made it a point to not put too
much credence in the media; so if we see something in print next week,
should we believe those details? Disgusting!!!
|
1175.15 | not impressive display by the 3 bigwigs | SKIVT::INGRAM | Welcome to Vermont, now leave | Fri Aug 31 1990 13:20 | 5 |
| I watched about 30mins of it, and was not impressed. No wonder were in
trouble. I see know clear vision or strategy for getting us out of this
messy situtation we have created.
-Harv
|
1175.16 | It was mostly a big >YAWN< | CADSYS::HECTOR::RICHARDSON | | Fri Aug 31 1990 13:24 | 18 |
| IMHO the broadcast conveyed about 10 minutes' worth of real solid
information in the hour and a half, and that only in response to
called-in questions. I wasn't expecting a concrete answer to an
amorphous question on a subject like "visioning", so I dismissed the
answer as CEO-speak, nothing I could get my teeth into. The two salient
points were 1) that some kind of a new, less generous, transition package
will be announced next Tuesday and that affected people will have one
month instead of one quarter to decide what to do about that, and 2) that
the next DVN announcement will be about "health care". (That scares me
some as a probable announcement of yet another way to extract more
moeny from my too-thin-already wallet; maybe they won't implement
whatever transfer-more-cost-to-the-employee scheme that turns out to be
until after I finally get another pay raise, if that ever happens again
in this mad place. Sigh.) So, if you didn't attend, you saved
yourself about an hour and twenty minutes of time - hope you used it
wisely...
/Charlotte
|
1175.17 | | BAGELS::CARROLL | | Fri Aug 31 1990 14:05 | 13 |
| I have said it before and will say it again. The problem with this
company is management. And it starts at the top and goes all the way
down. Ken Olsen should do DEC a favor and retire. He may have been
good in the 50's-60's and 70's but this is the 90's and he is not
in touch with the realities of the industry, the marketplace or
even his own company.
This company will not get turned around with the present management
staff and philosophy. Lay off the managers and hire some leaders.
(I will probably catch a lot of sh*t for saying this but I graduated
from the Jerry Williams School of Diplomacy).
|
1175.19 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Fri Aug 31 1990 16:32 | 6 |
| The people complaining about lack of content must never have been to one
of these events before. This one had much more substance than the last
one I went to.
I think they can't tell us specifics about the new transition plan
before they make it public because of SEC rules regarding insider trading.
|
1175.20 | | COOKIE::LENNARD | | Fri Aug 31 1990 16:39 | 5 |
| I didn't care for the categorical dismissal of the revenue per employee
question. Fine we don't make widgets, but we are in exactly the same
business as IBM, exactly, and their earnings-per-body are 50% greater
than ours. You can sit-step, hem and haw all you want, but the facts
remain.
|
1175.21 | Definitely Not A "10"! | BOSACT::EARLY | Are we having FUN yet? | Fri Aug 31 1990 23:40 | 24 |
| - I was not motivated
- KO's comment on the people driving to the meeting (referred to
in another note) to get the 22 1/2 cents wasn't funny to me
- If our senior managers think cutting out "Wall Street
Journals and Bottled Water" is a attacking the real problem,
they're more out of touch than I thought
- I liked the idea of putting expense control squarely on
the shoulders of the employees ("Do what's right") but most
employees don't have a ROI model to work with that tells
them if they're within the money they should be spending or not
- I didn't get the feeling that we're "on top of the problem"
and that we're about to turn things around
- I was greatly disturbed by the lack of understanding around
DELIVERY. All they talked about were our great products. They
don't seem to understand the importance of getting those products
delivered to a customer to the customer's satisfaction. Lots of
talk about inventing new services, but not on how to deliver what
we have. Not understanding this allows competition to strip away
the added value of our superior products. ("DEC makes a better
widget, but I'm going to buy from [company] because they provide
the best service").
- All in all, not the most inspiring meeting I ever went to.
/se
|
1175.22 | Tuesday Announcement | MAMTS2::JCARRUOLO | | Tue Sep 04 1990 20:30 | 6 |
|
Re. 1175.2
Does anyone have any information on the buyout package that was
supposed to be announced today ?????
|
1175.23 | | DATABS::HETRICK | George C. Hetrick | Tue Sep 04 1990 20:54 | 1 |
| See 598.211
|
1175.24 | | 16BITS::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dog face) | Tue Sep 04 1990 22:24 | 13 |
| I didn't see the broadcast last week as I had too many other things going on.
I wish I hadn't missed it. It sounds like enough stuff got flubbed that the
video tapes will probably never show up in the DLN. I certainly wouldn't
want to risk any of that getting into the media's hands if I were Ken or Jack.
Re: comments on Poland Springs and WSJ's - All things being equal, the claim is
(from what I read) that this exclusion can save in excess if six figures. I
think that probably _IS_ worthwhile, though maybe not of the _MOST_ pressing
importance. The school of management I subscribe to says ya gotta look at
all the issues, though.
-Jack
|
1175.25 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Wed Sep 05 1990 10:29 | 7 |
| re .20:
> Fine we don't make widgets, but we are in exactly the same
> business as IBM, exactly, and their earnings-per-body are 50% greater
> than ours.
We make PCs that are sold at your local computer store?
|
1175.26 | | COOKIE::LENNARD | | Wed Sep 05 1990 12:11 | 3 |
| come on .25, gimme a break. I know we don't make PC's. I would also
hazard a guess that IBM's PC business is very low margin, and probably
a drag on their earnings per employee. I stick with my observation.
|
1175.27 | earnings vs. revenue | ICS::FALIVENA | Mike DTN 251-1404 CFO2-3/C18 | Wed Sep 05 1990 15:19 | 4 |
| re .26
IBM's PC business may be a drag on their earnings per employee but not
on their revenue per employee--which is what the discussion is about.
|
1175.28 | We're the same,...but different? | SCAM::GRADY | tim grady | Wed Sep 05 1990 16:31 | 13 |
| Uh, this may no longer be the case, but at least through much of IBM's
domination of the PC industry, didn't they merely put together parts
purchased from other manufacturers? I mean, they didn't MANUFACTURE
PC's, but just put together (OEM'ed?) parts from INTEL, etc. Similar
to the Tandymate, in a way.
No,we don't make typewriters either, nor do we make photocopiers or
cash registers, but I still think that if we're going to call ourselves
the number two computer company, and incessantly compare ourselves to
IBM whenever it's convenient, then we should at least be consistent.
Either we're in the same business or we're not. What'll it be?
|
1175.29 | We're not #2. | HAMPS::NOBLE | | Thu Sep 06 1990 10:31 | 6 |
|
We cannot call ourselves #2 Computer Company, as we are back at #3
again, and on current performance will never get back to #2.
Regarding DVN's being "content free", this applies to probably 90%
of those I have seen.
|
1175.30 | List of questions please ! | OK4ME::OSTIGUY | Secure it or SHARE it | Thu Sep 06 1990 11:07 | 13 |
| Does anyone have a list of all of the questions that were asked ?
Obviously mine around why each package gets to be less that the
prior one wasn't addressed ? My thinking of course is that if
someone was not offered the 1st package he/she was probably more
valuable to the company (not necessarily true though) than those
who were offered the 1st package ..... repeat for package 3 and 4.
Effectively if I am not offered 1 or 2 but will be offered 3 which
is less than 2 which was less than 1 is that anyway to treat your
more important employees ???????
Lloyd
|
1175.31 | Humourous explanation | MUDHWK::LAWLER | Twelve Cylinders - NO LUCAS electrics. | Thu Sep 06 1990 11:10 | 8 |
|
Perhapse it's the reverse - I.e. The "Scrap value" of
the effected employees has declined? :^)
-al
|
1175.32 | | 16BITS::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dog face) | Thu Sep 06 1990 12:00 | 14 |
| re: <<< Note 1175.30 by OK4ME::OSTIGUY "Secure it or SHARE it" >>>
This is being discussed in topic 598. You may find some answers (or at
least opinions) there.
re: .29
OK - I confess ignorance, not having read a trade rag or the WSJ in years.
Who _has_ supplanted us as number 2 at the present time?
-Jack
|
1175.33 | | COOKIE::LENNARD | | Thu Sep 06 1990 12:21 | 4 |
| For a quick response.....I think it's Fujitsu....fer sure it's a
Japanese company. There are also 3 or 4 other Japanese companies in
the wings and coming up fast. We will probably be #4 or 5 on a
couple years. Apparently, there is no stopping them.
|
1175.34 | Not Credible!!! | COOKIE::LENNARD | | Thu Sep 06 1990 12:28 | 13 |
| If I may be allowed a follow-on comment.....I also found the
artificiality of the whole broadcast very disturbing. The
announcer was just too damned slick for my taste. I also
thought the "audience" was laughable. They were all Bedford
employees, including at least one very senior manager whom I
recognized.....but not a word out of them. They all sat there
like lumps on a log, and I just could not help but be reminded
of some sort of staged press conference out of North Vietnam
a few years back. Also, a lot (far too many) of the calls were
from Bedford employees. I don't suppose that it's conceivable
that there could have been some sort of set-up.
All-in-all, Goebels would'a loved it.
|
1175.35 | Diversification is the name of the Game. | HAMPS::NOBLE | | Thu Sep 06 1990 13:27 | 17 |
|
Current Order is:
IBM
Fujitsu
Digital
Hitachi
NEC
The LARGEST Company which makes Computers is C.ITOH which is about
10 Times IBM Size.
The whole thing about the 3 Japanese Companies in the list is that
unlike IBM and Digital, they are not just in Computers.
So, when the Computer Market is low, they work on the TV/Microwave
Rice Cookers/etc
|
1175.36 | Missing from broadcast | GAUSS::WEINRICH | | Thu Sep 06 1990 14:10 | 17 |
| A simple point that I could make:
If the transition plan offers successively less incentives to the employees
who stay, how about broadening the base of such management perks as stock
options.
I am not talking about the stock purchase plan.
It seems to me that if raises are stretched out in time and their value
reduced, this simple gesture is (IMHO) necessary for fairness to
valued employees who are not management .
I thought this would be mentioned during DVN, particularly because the
stock is cheap for DEC to repurchase now.
Steve
|
1175.37 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Thu Sep 06 1990 16:25 | 9 |
| re .36:
One of the callers *did* mention stock options. Unfortunately, his suggestion
(DEC use its cash to buy stock and give it to employees) was not reality-
oriented.
re Fujitsu:
Fujitsu is buying out ICL. That's how they're becoming #2.
|
1175.38 | | RANGER::WHITE | sue white, decstation engineering | Thu Sep 06 1990 23:27 | 16 |
| re: 20,25 etc...
Sorry guys....can't help replying to these...check the facts...if
the rest of DEC had revenues per employee even approaching
what we have in the PC business, this company would not be in
the current state of affairs. We build them outside because our
overhead internally is so high that we can not build them competitively
internal to DEC. I can pay external companys far less money to do the
same job and they are still turning profits. We, inside DEC, tend to
add a lot of cost for options/features/etc that our customers do not
require and are not willing to pay for....
sue white
engineering manager
pc business unit
|
1175.39 | Eng. facts, Marketing facts, C.S facts..... | BISTRO::BREICHNER | | Fri Sep 07 1990 09:55 | 34 |
| re.38
Although I agree that:
1- Buying PC's and reselling them is costeffective under present
circumstances and due to DEC's PC history
and
2- Too much overhead is obviously bad for DEC
I do not see these two things related in any way.
There might be as much overhead in the PC business as in any others.
There might be as less overhead in any DEC engineered product.
Numbers might look good for a product managers if he/she sells
lots of them with a good margin.
They might look very bad for the same product if look into
Customers Service's numbers who install/support them.
It should be the overall profitability that counts. To the
best of my knowledge with today's chinese walls between the
"functions" I doubt that there is any way to measure it, and
even if there where, who would really care.
Is a product manager/engineering manager measured on how many
SPR's CLD's his/her product(s) is gratified with ?
Is a C.S manager measured on how much customers are satisfied
with a particular product (making them buy more).
The answer is NO, as far as I know.
Fred Breichner
C.S Support manager
|
1175.40 | Hidden point? | STAR::DIPIRRO | | Fri Sep 07 1990 10:36 | 26 |
| Regarding the discussion a few replies back, I think there's an
underlying point to be made here. Many of you seem to buying the
high-level rhetoric of "we have the best people" and "revenue per
employee is meaningless" when the actions of higher-ups display the
contrary. There is no evidence to substantiate that higher-ups believe
we have some of the best people that we should hold on to. As someone
pointed out, there's no new creative incentives (like stock options)
for people we want to keep. Voluntary severance packages do nothing to
improve the company's position. As I've mentioned before, they cost a
fortune, you lose many good people to the competition, and you're still
left with the deadwood. However, general downsizing does improve the
"revenue per employee" numbers, now doesn't it? There is also some
evidence that I've heard lately that our salaries (at least in
engineering) are once again not competitive with our competitors. We're
still occasionally hiring external people and having to pay them
considerably more than internal ones for the same jobs (this might be
that the salary freeze put us just that much behind). We've seen
employee benefit cutbacks, typical of belt-tightening situations. But
the main point is that DEC isn't making the hard decisions required to
turn us around. We're continuing the way we always do...And there's no
effort being made to explicitly hold onto key people. I think the
situation is being regarded at a very high level and that higher-ups
don't really yet feel the seriousness of the situation. I have some
friends who think we're going to do the exact same thing as Wang. I'm
not quite that pessimistic, but I'm still having to really squint to
see any reason for optimism.
|
1175.41 | | BAGELS::CARROLL | | Fri Sep 07 1990 10:50 | 19 |
| re .40
I agree. To paraphrase Ted Kopple, Digital management just doesn't get
it. Voluntary layoffs are a farce. Who would volunteer to leave?
Only those that know they can get just as good a job somewhere else.
The people we need to get rid of, the deadwood, know they can't do
better somewhere else so will stay on as long as possible.
Any manager who is also a good leader will tell you the most
challenging task of a manager is to hang on to the good people as they
are always in demand everywhere. Deadwood doesn't move unless the
tide moves it. We need a reeeeeal layoff. We also need to get rid of
the the senior management staff who think they know what they are
doing and get in some real business leaders who have the guts to make
the tough, maybe unpopular decisions. Only then will this company
get turned around.
BTW, the recent memo from K.O. on his idea to return the company to
profitability was also a farce. I say again, Ken should leave.
|
1175.42 | not his fault, but... | BOSACT::CHERSON | can't think of one now | Fri Sep 07 1990 14:54 | 11 |
| I think that this is directly any of K.O.'s fault, but he was
disappointing on Aug. 30. The constant talk of cutting on bottled
water, WSJ's, etc. is missing the point. All of that is peanuts
compared with the bloated management layer we have in this company.
People should be asked what they are doing/managing and measure that
against the value add (or don't) to the company. The amount of
overhead that is being sucked up personnel-wise could send us
travelling around the world 20 gezillion times.
--David
|
1175.43 | Wang/DG...wait for us!!! | COOKIE::LENNARD | | Fri Sep 07 1990 15:10 | 14 |
| I don't agree that K.O. is that blameless. His constant hammering
of UNIX and PC's over the years didn't do us any good. I do agree
strongly that our overhead (of which I am a member), particularly
at higher management levels is outrageous. You can bet that no matter
what happens, they will survive. I always have this mental image
everytime I go to Stow or Westboro of offices full of Customer Services
"Management" literally disappearing into the distance, with armies
of secretaries planted in front of them. I have this strange feeling
that if they were all sent home for 90 days, no one, I mean NOBODY,
would know the difference.....and that's only a sample. BTW, I am
strongly supported in this perception by more than a few occupants
of those facilities.
|
1175.45 | As I was going to St. Ives . . . | ACESMK::ALEXANDER | The older I get the better I was | Fri Sep 07 1990 17:48 | 16 |
| RE: last few
A simple observation:
I'm a first-line supervisor, and I recently counted the number of
management layers between the folks who work for me, all individual
contributors, and KO. In my organization I got 9 levels of management.
If each level of management manages 10 people (I picked 10 because it seemed
like a reasonable number and it made the arithmetic easier), that many levels
of management can manage 100,000,000 (that's right, 100 million) people.
What does that say about where the real deadwood is?
Now, I confess that I get a little fuzzy around level 6, so I'm willing to
concede that I might be off a level or two. What *really* scares me is that
I'm afraid I missed a level and didn't count all of them!
|
1175.46 | My Stack, version II | MORO::THORNBURG_DO | DTN 535-4569 Irvine CA | Fri Sep 07 1990 20:28 | 36 |
| Let's give Ken the benefit of the doubt - he is sufficiently consumed
with (well, whatever it is he's consumed with - annoying Wall St. & the
press for instance), that he should only have 3 direct reports (as he
does now, then beyond him a simple progression (with *suggested*
functional titles) would be:
1 Ken
3 Senior VP's
30 Functional VP's (Sales, Software, MFG, Europe, Asia, &so on).
300 Business / Country / Regional directors (product lines,
USA, Germany)
3000 District managers (or functional equivalents) (Southern
California Field everything, VAX xxxx product, EDCS)
30000 Unit Managers (direct people managers)
300000 worker-bees (thee and me, buckos me hearties)
(I'm the first to confess I have massively over-simplified here.
Wouldn't that be a nice change?)
At the moment, my personal pyramid is more like
Ken
Sr. VP
VP SWS Corp
VP SWS USA
VP DCC West
MGR DCC's
DCC Mgr
Unit Mgr
ME
So we have at least two layers more than the idealized model above, and
those two layers ain't in the cheap seats come payday, friends.
But we've had this discussion before, haven't we?
|
1175.47 | Still an awful lot of overhead | ACESMK::ALEXANDER | The older I get the better I was | Mon Sep 10 1990 09:51 | 9 |
| re .45 (mine) and .46
>>> But we've had this discussion before, haven't we?
Sorry, I'm relatively new to Digital and was astonished by the numbers of
levels and the implied numbers of worker bees that could be managed. My
naivete shows, I fear. :-}
Maggie
|
1175.48 | Wake up somebody! | DELREY::MEUSE_DA | | Mon Sep 10 1990 18:26 | 8 |
| All I can say is the worst is yet to come. Just a feeling, based upon
how things are being "ignored", I mean handled. Too many loafers, too
many overpaid "jet setters", too many "shake-and-bake" managers.
Too many people, not enough sales = layoffs.
DM
|
1175.49 | Is a transcription available? | GLDOA::HYDE | | Wed Sep 19 1990 05:45 | 2 |
| Is a written transcription of the broadcast available? If so, would
someone please post instructions on how to obtain one? Thanks. mg
|
1175.50 | I hope that no transcript is available | SMAUG::GARROD | An Englishman's mind works best when it is almost too late | Wed Sep 19 1990 17:22 | 5 |
| Re .-1
You must be joking. Don't you think our stock is low enough as it is?
Dave
|