T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1187.1 | | BUNYIP::QUODLING | Innovation, but no Momentum | Wed Sep 12 1990 14:25 | 10 |
| Sell the rights to one of the soap operas...
q
:-)
Sorry...
Try involving personnel?
|
1187.2 | Managerial & Organizational Improvements? | CSOMKT::MCMAHON | Carolyn McMahon | Thu Sep 13 1990 09:58 | 155 |
| I'm uncertain if this note is intended to be serious or humorous - for
I felt both when I read it. Also other emotions came to mind -
particularly concern about what seems to be our accepted, cultural
managerial style.
Although our cultural managerial style may have many advantages, it
also has numerous attributes that are detrimental to both subordinates
and managers AND Digital's bottom-line productivity.
I've frequently thought of refining some of these ideas and elevating
them. I'd like to know what some of you think:
1. Managers should DEFER COMPLAINTS (or "concerns") ABOUT
SUBORDINATES TO THAT SUBORDINTATE - no matter who (peer, superior,
etc.) is registering that complaint with the manager.
Personally, I haven't seen so much back-stabbing since I left the
6th grade! "Telling Daddy" is one of the most flabbergasting, accepted
cultural behaviors I've encountered in 26 years of working - it's
also both immature and cowardly.
It might be more productive and adult if, when someone comes to a
manager with a "concern" about an employee, that he/she asks if
that person has discussed it with the person him/herself - BEFORE
GETTING INTO THE DETAILS. If the complainer says yes, then the
manager should say he/she wants to discuss it with the subordinate
first. A MANAGER SHOULD NEVER SIDE WITH A COMPLAINER BEFORE GIVING
THE TARGET AN EQUAL, UNBIASED CHANCE. Heck, most of the time the
target doesn't even know the complainer is sneaking around behind
his back!
As a manager elsewhere, I've found that if the complainer hasn't
faced the target with the complaint, it usually means that the
complainer is really a spineless griper and trouble-maker in the
mask of a "concerned corporate citizen."
Somehow, our culture has evolved to support the devious,
back-stabbing complainer at the expense of one of the most
important responsibilities of people management - supporting those for
whom one has accepted responsibility.
2. MANAGERS SHOULD NEVER PUBLICLY PASS THE BUCK OR BLAME
SUBORDINATES. Actually, there's way too much buck-passing all
around inside Digital. It's not amazing that people try to pass
the buck. What is amazing is that the culture accepts and rewards
those who do!
The first time I sat in a Digital meeting where someone openly
blamed his secretary for a typo on an overhead, I thought he was
probably just having a bad day or was just a buck-passer and
everyone knew it. Since that time, I've learned that in Digital
that's the way we absolve ourselves of the responsibility we have
for our own jobs.
Each of us should be professionally and individually responsible
for any and all information we pass on through the organization.
That means that if we have a problem about what comes to us, we
must fix it at the source - not pass it along. And this applies to
all sizes of things - both big and small.
Of course, this takes guts. And in the light of a culture that
supports and perpetuates the tattle-taling in #1, could expose us
to trouble. But, after all, if each of us hasn't guts inside the
company, how can we have real courage and fortitude when it comes
to really competing in the marketplace?
3. ORGANIZATIONAL LEADERSHIP AND INNOVATION COMES FROM *** BOTH ***
THE BOTTOM UP *** AND *** THE TOP DOWN.
It seems we collectively see this important organizational and
managerial attribute as either black or white - either bottom up
*** OR *** top down. It must be BOTH.
The trick we've yet to appreciate and learn as an organization is
that ... CERTAIN LEADERSHIP AND INNOVATION MUST COME FROM THE TOP
DOWN and OTHERS MUST COME FROM THE BOTTOM UP. That is, if we
really want to make the most of what we have as an organization.
For instance, top down leadership that stimulates innovation could
take the form of upper management testing the information he
receives. All top and executive management must learn to ask the
right kinds of questions of the rest of the company. Like ...
- Where did this information come from?
- If this were your company alone, would you do this?
- Would you stake your job on this?
All too often trash has been raised to and accepted by top
management. All levels of management must set the standards of
quality and acceptability. This is one example of top-down
leadership and stimulation of innovation.
And Bottoms-up leadership and innovation? Well, we're certainly
hearing enough about continuous improvement, improving our own
jobs, making and working on good ideas, etc. Now, for those of us
on the "bottom," it's time for us to make these organizational
protestations cough up! Call those professing these platitudes to
task! If it's the right thing to do, keep at it. If it's not
getting anywhere with one approach - try another.
I'm not talking revolt here. I'm talking persistence, perseverance
and giving a damn.
And what about those of us in the middle - between "top" and
"bottom"? Well, we've got even more opportunity to develop courage
and guts. We're in the position to both translate, perpetuate,
enhance and support the best of both "Top-down" *AND* "Bottom-up"!
I maintain that, if we in the middle aren't doing this ALL THE
TIME, then we aren't earning our pay.
Actually, if each of us aren't doing our part in leadership and
innovation from our own positions within Digital, then we are not
earning our pay.
"Playing the game" is not earning one's pay - it's covering one's
Maximus Gluteus! But here I digress ...
I've yet to see a free enterprise, private sector company survive a
truly competive marketplace without having the RIGHT KINDS OF
LEADERSHIP AND INNOVATION COMING FROM THE TOP DOWN AND THE RIGHT
KINDS COMING FROM THE BOTTOM UP. And it certainly doesn't work
either if leadership and innovation from either "end" dies in the
middle.
4. THE PRIMARY COMPONENT OF HOW DIGITAL EVALUATES AND REWARDS IT'S
MANAGERS OF PEOPLE SHOULD BE ON *** HOW WELL PEOPLE-MANAGERS MANAGE
PEOPLE ***
Here I mean "manage" - not "control" or "manipulate."
I realize that this is in the Orange Book somewhere - but only as a
guideline that is inconsistently applied throughout Digital.
Improvement doesn't really come from machines or books or grooming
classes - it comes from people.
Those put in charge of people and given people as a resource must be
held accountable for the success of those people. If
people-managers are to be primarily measured on their individual
contributions, then they should be individual contributors - not
people-managers.
I suggest that it should be a Rule - not a guideline - that ALL
PEOPLE-MANAGERS IN DIGITAL SHOULD HAVE 80% OF THEIR EVALUATION
BASED ON HOW WELL THEIR SUBORDINATES DO AND IMPROVE. I suppose
that that is what the "stock option" stuff is supposed to be doing
- but it has truly fallen far short of the real needs of the
organization.
Well, this note has gone on far too long. But I fear that these
fundamentals of effective organizational and managerial style fall too
short for us to continue to be successful.
What do you think? How can we get us to be better at these things?
|
1187.3 | re:Mgt & Org improvements | CECV01::C_ROBINSON | | Thu Sep 13 1990 10:52 | 1 |
| Carolyn Mcmahon, Wow! Well said...if only it could be!
|
1187.4 | A Good Manager Is Worth Much | ICS::WEBER | | Thu Sep 13 1990 14:17 | 17 |
| Carolyn, I agree with you totally. I've been in an organization for 6
years, working in 3 different groups within that organization. I
seen and worked for a number of managers. Most of them had potential
at being a people-manager, if only they would work with us. Instead
they worked against us. Only my last manager was excellent. She
allowed me to kick back at her, she encouraged me to stretch myself
and was there to help me work that process. She always backed me and
checked up on facts before ever accepting negative comments/opinions
about me. She encouraged me, praised me, made me feel good (great at
times) about the work I did. The other managers all ended up making
me feel worthless, used, and not valueable. Now having worked for
a good manager I at least know (and will stand up for) what a good
manager should (and can) do.
We need more good people-managers. People who are willing to admit
their not perfect, admit their weaknesses and failures. We are not
all gods...just people.
|
1187.5 | Well said! | COUNT0::WELSH | Tom Welsh, freelance CASE Consultant | Thu Sep 13 1990 14:23 | 23 |
| re .2:
Absolutely right, Carolyn! These are harmful forms of behaviour
that we all recognise, and many of us have suffered from. After
a while, like maltreated dogs, we become a bit vicious ourselves.
But the calm, fair, caring treatment of a real manager soon sets
things to right again. You know one when you meet her/him.
What I'd like to know is: why do we have this situation? Is it
because
1. Digital culture somehow encourages bad people management?
2. Digital attracts people who are good at other things but bad
at managing people?
3. Digital simply doesn't make the effort to hire good managers,
or train them, so simply gets "normal" (i.e. bad) behaviour?
I really don't know.
/Tom
|
1187.7 | Digital Management Quality | MAGOS::BELDIN | Dick Beldin | Thu Sep 13 1990 15:26 | 38 |
| re .5
Think hard. Have you ever known a "good manager" who wasn't also
a remarkably "good person"? Contrariwise, did you ever know an
exploitative, or uncaring manager who didn't demonstrate these same
qualities in his/her personal life? Managers are human beings,
as such they are just as susceptible to human failings as you and
I. The reason Digital has so many (IMHO) is that it is not enough
to preach to people, you have to show them. (I can't hear what
you're saying 'cause your actions drwon our your words). We often
seem to think that preaching will change the way people behave.
I doubt it.
When Martin Luther King was organizing marches, in order to assure
that they would be non-violent, there was a lot of preparation.
Specifically, the prospective marchers would be put through a dry-run
with others playing the roles of the police and hecklers. Anyone
who couldn't hold his/her temper under abuse was not allowed to
march.
We need to use some high pressure rehearsals of stressful managerial
situations and prune out those managers who can't keep their cool.
Clearly, a lot of disliked behavior is based on failure to act as
well as on actual behavior. That may be more difficult to simulate,
but certainly the technique of selecting only the tested for critical
positions should be considered.
Without the rehearsal, we are left with a selection process based
on (costly) failures in prior positions. But the evaluating manager
a) may not know about the behavior problem or
b) may not perceive it as a problem.
I don't think we have worse managers than elsewhere, I think our
expectations are not in tune with reality.
Regards,
Dick
|
1187.8 | Too many to get quality? | ODIXIE::SILVERS | Sales Support Ninja... | Thu Sep 13 1990 19:37 | 3 |
| I think we'll all agree that this company has TOO MANY managers...
(from an IC who has seen the number of managers go UP every year, many
managers without ANY direct reports!)
|
1187.9 | Re: .8 Too many managers ... | CSOMKT::MCMAHON | Carolyn McMahon | Fri Sep 14 1990 09:03 | 11 |
| Could be that there are too many people designated managers in
Digital's society. Wouldn't weeding out the bad ones, e.g. poor
people-managers, be a great way of killing 2 birds with 1 stone?????
That is, we could reduce the number of those in an over-stuffed
societal slot (managers) AND end up with only good people-managers
(which is really what Digital needs)!!!
I say that Digital needs only good people-managers, and no other kind,
because I believe that our people are, indeed, our greatest asset AND
our greatest hope for both survival and success.
|
1187.10 | | COOKIE::LENNARD | | Fri Sep 14 1990 13:17 | 3 |
| Digital neither rewards nor recognizes good people managers. In
fact, if you spend too much time managing people, you'll hear about
it. But, with the stock at 56....who cares?
|
1187.12 | People skills are half the equation. | CIMNET::PSMITH | Peter H. Smith,MET-1/K2,291-7592 | Sat Sep 15 1990 17:37 | 19 |
| While I agree that people management skills are a crucial asset we need
to develop ( along with personal management skills for ICs ), I hope we
don't end up going the route of "professional management"...
We need people who can manage both people AND technical projects. I've
had freinds who were placed under "professional managers" who were pulled
from outside, who were good at "delegating" and handling (and generating)
"conflict." They breathed sighs of relief when those managers left and
were replaced by "tecchies" who hated the red tape, but who knew when a
project needed to slip to preserve quality.
People skills are half the equation. The other half is an understanding of
the business we are in. If we want to develop software, we need people who
understand how to manage a software project. If we want to sell services,
we need people who understand how to work with a customer and pass their
requirements on to the technical team.
And once again, I say that we ALL need those skills, even if we're only
responsible for one person.
|
1187.13 | People + Product = Goodness | COUNT0::WELSH | Tom Welsh, freelance CASE Consultant | Sun Sep 16 1990 12:19 | 25 |
| Carolyn's suggestion is one that would find favour with many of
us. The question is, how would Digital set about identifying the
poor managers who ought to go? This sort of thing is ALWAYS done
top-down, and this guarantees that the poor managers will be able
to prepare a defence. The only way to identify them is by asking
those who report to them (and lower levels as well). Are we at
the stage where this would be acceptable? ("Popularity contests",
"running for office", beauty competitions", I can hear all the
sneers now). If we had a real open door policy that worked, poor
managers would be routinely shown up to their bosses, but from
all I've seen bosses usually back up their direct reports, so
that the "open door" leads directly into the street.
re .12: Peter, I believe the good managers are precisely those
with two major concerns: people management, and Digital's
technological capability. The poor ones often appear overly
concerned with 'looking good", and cultivating the approval
of those senior to them. They often bluff heavily, and will
disdainfully profess an ignorance of technology in a way which
makes it sounds dirty and common. But they can readily be
identified by one simple test: most of those who have worked
for them for a year or more personally dislike and distrust
them.
/Tom
|
1187.14 | Shared Management Works | MOCA::BELDIN | Dick Beldin | Mon Sep 17 1990 09:25 | 14 |
| My experience with dual-management (two persons operating as a
management team) suggests that this is a technique that can be very
useful. One of the two is the "official" manager, while the other
is an equally senior person who shares the responsibility. Both
can learn from each other, the technically oriented manager and
the people oriented manager can use each other as sounding boards,
incorporate an internal "open door", and each focus on that which
he/she does best. It sounds like double cost, but I can assure
that it is more effective and conservative of both human relations
and time than either the technical specialist or the "professional
mangager".
Dick
|
1187.15 | Evaluate the manager | CIVIC::FERRIGNO | | Mon Sep 17 1990 10:34 | 15 |
| I often wondered why there were no "performance reviews" of managers
done by their subordinates. At a university that I attended, courses
and professors were evaluated by those who took the course. The
evaluations were available for all to see. It was not difficult to
figure out which professors were effective, respected, and worth the
salary. In one case, repeated dissatisfaction with a professor's
abrasive personality led to non-approval of tenure.
I hear a lot of employees grumbling about their managers. Perhaps
their voices need to be heard in a "chorus" rather than a "solo"
(open door?)
If it were policy for employees to rate their managers and action
was taken on the results over time, the company might be able to
deal with some of the management problems that it now has.
|
1187.16 | | HERON::PERLA | | Mon Sep 17 1990 10:35 | 22 |
| Managers dont grow on trees. There are two ways we obtain them. Typically,
they are promoted from amongst the staff after some miraculous decision that
he/she is a comptent individual and should be given a chance - no vetting
process whatsoever. Untypically, but often, they are recruited from outside
because of - supposedly - an internal lack of some skill/talent/knowledge.
Let's consider the former first: If we had established a proper interviewing
process it is entirely possible that we would have a base culture of individuals
who are talented, ambitious but honest with good inter-personal skills. Those
who wish to be managers would then be cultivated from a group pre-disposed
to succeed as managers. It would also work wonders by increasing total
productivity for the individual contributors, wouldnt it?
Considering the latter: Such recruitment implies great risk, as the individual's
behaviour cannot a priori be assessed. It should not be permitted, I think,
and promotion should be made from within, for the very reason exposed above.
This is not unheard of in the computer industry, or elsewhere.
The flaw in both arguments above is that we have today a managerial class
which has a vested interest in its self-perpetuation. Since a fundamental
change in the selection proceses must be mandated by/from this class,
it is unlikely that such will come about any time soon.
|
1187.17 | Unofrtunate Implication | TRCC2::BOWERS | Dave Bowers @WHO | Mon Sep 17 1990 10:51 | 18 |
| re .13;
You've got the facts right, but haven't made the necessary deductions. Yes, if
the evaluation were top-down, we'ds get the same rotten managers again! WE've
got a top management and organizational structure that REWARDS bad managers.
To change the quality of management, you've got to change the organization
and/or the top management.
Get real (I hear you say). That won't change. If that's the case, this whole
crusade is IMHO totally hopeless. Even good managers learn, after being
bashed about a few times, what kind of behavior is desired by those upstairs.
Having figured this out, they either pursue their careers elsewhere or start
to produce the desired behavior. Over time you end up right back where you
started.
Depressing, ain't it?
-dave
|
1187.18 | Re: .15 Smart Cos. do evaluate managers | GBMMKT::MCMAHON | Carolyn McMahon | Mon Sep 17 1990 12:22 | 22 |
| Actually many companies that are way ahead of us in cutting headcount
AND are now recovering from it's negative effects, DO HAVE SUBORDINATES
REVIEW THE PERFORMANCE OF MANAGERS. Eastman Kodak is one such company.
My brother-in-law who is the Technical Director of Eastman Kodak's AI
group and in the AI Who's Who is evaluated by his subordinates every
year. If, in group, his subordinates trash him, he's out and the group
has to find a new manager. However, so far it hasn't happened that
way. And anyone who knows him, knows he's no marshmallow. Actually,
he's know has very demanding by subordinates, peers and superiors -
he's no darned yes-man either.
But his people know that if they do well, he'll support them and get
them more that the goof-offs get. He's smart and works harder than
anyone else in the group. He doesn't walk on water but so far the
majority of his subordinates want to keep him AND his superiors listen
to him. He has a real cracker-jack group doing things we can't even
dream of in DEC.
So management evaluation by subordinates does exist, is successful
and may be our only hope to get our competitive act together. Too bad
we beleive we can't learn from anyone else!
|
1187.19 | will the system change when the stock is $5.00? | ODIXIE::CARNELL | DTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALF | Mon Sep 17 1990 12:40 | 22 |
| REF: <<< Note 1187.18 by GBMMKT::MCMAHON "Carolyn McMahon" >>>
-< Re: .15 Smart Cos. do evaluate managers >-
>><<Actually many companies that are way ahead of us in cutting
headcount AND are now recovering from it's negative effects, DO HAVE
SUBORDINATES REVIEW THE PERFORMANCE OF MANAGERS. Eastman Kodak is one
such company.>>
I sent that idea to Employee Involvement one year ago. About two
months ago the Employee Involvement Steering Committee for reviewing
corporate-wide ideas finally got around to discussing it. I was told
they couldn't agree on WHO would make such a decision in policy. They
decided not to decide, instead deferring the idea to the Personnel
Steering Committee, which didn't exist, so I was lead to believe,
because Corporate Personnel was being reorganized.
Can you spell U.S. C O N G R E S S ?
LEADERSHIP on culture and policy changes must flow down from Ken Olsen;
creating and driving change with full authority must flow up via
decentralization of power.
|
1187.20 | | KEYS::MOELLER | DEC-rewarding successful risk takers | Mon Sep 17 1990 19:38 | 21 |
| There's a management tactic that I've seen in both Software (when it
existed) and Sales that never fails to infuriate me. A manager has a
problem with one individual in his/her organization. Rather than
direct it behind closed doors to the person in question, the entire
GROUP gets flamed, as if the problem is widespread, at the next meeting.
People look around uneasily, wondering what's going on, knowing that
they're not the offender.
Is this something taught in DEC management classes ? The only
rationale for it beyond personal cowardice that I can see is the idea
that, like children, you blame all equally and then depend on peer
pressure to fix the problem.
Sorry, this isn't a playground, and I'm not going to beat up a person
who flies to a nearby location instead of driving. Or who isn't making
their numbers. Or who isn't selling enough services. Or chronically
misses meetings.
karl
|
1187.21 | Supporting Difficult Management Decisions | TROPIC::BELDIN | Dick Beldin | Tue Sep 18 1990 09:42 | 136 |
|
{The following is a suggestion submitted to SOCIAL::INVOLVEMENT}
Problems with managers: Too many, discontent, and some not very effective
For the nearly fifteen years I have been with Digital, I have been hearing
about the numbers and quality of our management and the quality of life of
managers. I was a manager for several short terms (9 months to 3 years) and
I know the frustrations on both sides of the "wall". (And more and more it
really looks like a wall to some of our employees).
Managers of managers of managers...
We have gone through several "layer reduction" exercises, yet we still
find that the layers return. We have all seen "reorganizations" which
result in one or two new layers of management. Many employees have the
opinion that this may be wasteful or tacit recognition of limits of
management capability.
Competent individuals as unwilling managers
I know, and I am sure most people in Digital know, someone in a managerial
position who is or appears dissatisfied with his/her role but can't seem
to make the step of asking to be moved to a position which promises more
effective and satisfying work.
Managers of activities with little or no "Value added"
In addition, there are managers who are responsible for activities they
know are redundant, unnecessary or counterproductive, but who need support
to take the drastic measure of putting themselves out of business. They
and their organization have talents that are needed elsewhere, but fear
makes them hesitate to propose the change.
No measurement of subordinates' satisfaction with their manager
Although we pay lip service to participative management and "theory Z"
management styles, very few managers of managers will evaluate a manager
who gets results negatively based on his care for "our most important
assets". There is too much subjectivity involved in evaluating people
management effectiveness. Management style is like freedom of speech, we
don't like obscenity in art, but we don't want to throttle self-
expression with censorship either.
Solution: Voluntary Self-Assignment
I believe there is an opportunity for a "simple" solution that will provide
benefits for Digital as a whole, many of our most talented employees, and
will assist us in refocusing on the work that is to be done. As part of the
restructuring effort, and to make a visible statement, we should provide a
bonus to those managers who make difficult choices which go against the "path
of least resistance".
Part One: Bonus for managers changing to individual contributor positions
Although leaving management for "contributorship" is supported within
Digital, there are many who are unaware of the support or afraid to trust
it. We should provide them with stimulation to make their contribution
individually.
Keep Task/Project responsibilities
These persons should not be relieved of their Task or Project
responsibilities. They should be freed of the "formal" responsibility
for the people who currently work for them. These current subordinates
also will continue to perform their current jobs, now reporting to a
new manager.
Transfer of Responsibility
The new manager for a group will also inherit accountability for the
activity or project the group is engaged in, shared with the former
manager as "technical contributor".
Part Two: Bonus for managers who cancel activities or projects
Any manager who can cancel the activities or projects of his/her group
without affecting Digital revenue adversely should be rewarded with a
bonus and the opportunity to join another group involved in more
cost-effective work. This provides the opportunity to eliminate
unnecessary activity and should be well-rewarded.
Preservation of service levels
In order to avoid destructive dismantling of our infrastructure, such
cancellations should be negotiated with internal customers. The
positive feedback from one's customer may not be the same as the bonus,
but it does indeed clarify our mutual dependence relations and
encourage expression of customer satisfaction.
Choose a new organizational home for self and subordinates
Managers who have the maturity to make such career choices are certainly
trustworthy enough to allow them to choose (in consultation with their
current employees) a new organizational home under another manager in the
same or a different organization.
Forecasted Impact on Digital
I cannot quantify the impact of this proposal, but it is clear that if it is
successful we should see
Reduction in Number of Managers
Those who become Individual Contributors make a definite reduction in the
number of managers within Digital. Their subordinates change bosses, thus
increasing the new manager's operating span.
Reduction of Management Levels
Those who cancel current activities or projects and remain managers do not
reduce the number of managers, but if they do reduce the number of levels
of management, that in itself is a benefit.
Better Employee Job Placement
With the prospect of a bonus for making the organizational change and the
empowerment to select a new home, we should see fewer instances of
"square-pegs-in-round-holes". A better fit for Digital and the employees.
Reduction in Non-essential Activities
Identifying and eliminating redundancy or unnecessary activity is
valuable, especially in the times we live in. Digital should reap
significant benefits by reducing the pressures against such changes.
Process for Employee Evaluation of Management
This "middle and bottom" reorganization will provide useful information
about those who remain in the management chain. They either received this
kind of expression of trust or they did not. Definitely useful (but
possibly disagreeable) information.
|
1187.22 | To .19 & .20 | CSOMKT::MCMAHON | Carolyn McMahon | Tue Sep 18 1990 10:22 | 26 |
| To .19: Great example of our cultural buck-passing! What infuriates me
is not that it's attempted BUT THAT IT'S ACCEPTED! Well, if committees
don't work, then let's try another way. I don't consider this
revolution ... one can only revolt against something in power that
works - & this obviously has no power and surely ain't workin'.
To .20: What you mentioned is typical of a one-directional power
structure. Until we have mutual respect and power, it will remain this
way - no matter how bad things get for Digital. What we're short of is
mutual respect and the way things are now, it will not happen. it's
obvious we are and have been short of this in the Marketplace. Funny
thing, mutual respect for an organization is like real beauty for an
individual - it comes from the inside out.
I don't know what goes on in Digital's managerial grooming school but I
wager that whatever it is never makes it into practice anyway. One
really good rule-of-thumb that I learned elsewhere is, when in a hiring
situation, ask yourself 2 questions:
1. Do Iwant this person working for me?
2. Would I want to work for this person?
If the answer to either question is "no," don't hire the person. This
helps inherently poor people-managers from getting into the managerial
queue. Honest answers to these 2 simple questions could greatly
improve the overall quality of our management.
|
1187.23 | Limited choices | CSG002::MAKSIN | Joe Maksin 291-0378 PDM1-2/H4 | Wed Sep 19 1990 08:04 | 24 |
| Re: all previous
Can any parallels be drawn from yesterday's Massachusetts Primary
Results? It seems status quo was not accepted and those in power
got the (justified?) blame.
Re: 22
Very good two-question rule. But, another perspective always helps
compass the issue.
If the "ruling class" which looks for yes-men, people who
don't rock the boat, those that do what they are told, ...
The second-question is valid only if the individual has alternative
positions from which to select. That choice does not exist as often
today as it once did. (Digital's growth has slowed, external
job market in Massachusetts is dead -- remember Wang, Data General,
Prime, ... reductions in force, ...).
Regards,
Joe
So the spiral gets tighter, and tighter.
|
1187.24 | ANY PARALLELS HERE ! | CURIE::SRINIVASAN | | Thu Sep 20 1990 08:24 | 35 |
|
Once up on a time, there used to be King in India and he was from the family
who built TAJMAHAL. This king was known for his eccentric decisions on the
kingdom.
Those days the king discovered that the paper currency was useless due to
short life and constant reprinting. More over he realized that those who owned
Printing equipment were making counterfeit currencies. Hence he ordered that
all currencies will be in leather due to durability. However the king found
out in the hard way that instead of printers, the cobblers are now making
counterfeit currency and he decided to go back to the paper currency.
The same king also felt that the capital of his kingdom is almost at the top of
Northern corner of India and was constantly being attacked. Those days, once
the capital is captured, the whole country falls. In order to have more time
to prepare and avoid surprise enemy attacks, the king decided to move the
capital of his kingdom from the Northern tip of his kingdom to a place at the
center of his kingdom. After making the decision, the king realized that
there are no people at the new location. He had no one to rule. Hence he
ordered his subjects to move from the old capital to new capital.
No exceptions and protesters were punishable by death penalty. Hence all
subjects started moving from the old capital to new capital with their
belongings in bullock carts and horses. Those days there were no cars !!.
Half way in to the journey more than half the people died of starvation and
heat. The king realized that he made the mistake in moving the capital and
ordered all his people to move back to the old capital, thus reversing the
decision and in the journey back , the almost the other half died.
These stories are NOT fiction and were real incidents and the name of the
king was MOHAMMED BIN TUGLAK ( TUGLAK ).
Unfortunately in any organizations there are few TUGLAK managers. These
TUGLAKs move around like a jello, making poor decisions thus screwing up the
whole organization.
|
1187.25 | RE: .24 | CSOMKT::MCMAHON | Carolyn McMahon | Thu Sep 20 1990 08:53 | 4 |
| Seems to me that TUGLAK managers think too narrowly when the situation
calls for broad thinking and vice versa. Guess that the thing that
makes it so good managers think the right way for the situation is
called WISDOM or maybe even just plain COMMON SENSE.
|
1187.26 | Culture | HERON::PERLA | | Mon Sep 24 1990 04:54 | 19 |
| Cultural attributes of an organization, like a society, are formed over a great
period of time. For instance, the notion of the US as a democratic nation
was an innovative idea in 1776. It is now enshrined as an American
cultural attribute. This process takes a good many years. (Witness how difficult
it is for the Eastern block nations to make the switch.)
At Digital, the foremost cultural attribute is that we are an "engineering"
company. This attribute was instilled by its founders and is nurtured to this
day. It works. This company makes good products, because for more than thirty
years our customers have been buying them in ever increasing amounts. It is
not necessarily an engrained cultural attribute of this company to develop,
with long-term vision, a work-force which is "autonomous", ie. self managing,
within which managers are a reflection of the colleagues they manage. This
is due to the fact that our management precepts are largely parametric and
relate mostly to the non-human aspects of making Digital successful,
ie. bringing to market winning products. Development of the human resource
requires other precepts, not always parametric (we cant necessarily measure
them) and mostly behavioural. It would be time that such precepts began to
evolve, since the "time to market" is ever-so-long....
|
1187.27 | Cost savings aren't always by cuts | GUIDUK::B_WOOD | Having a wonderfull Alaska Summer | Mon Sep 24 1990 22:54 | 27 |
| RE: .26
Unfortunatly when the bad times hit, the non-engineering segments of
the comany are the first hit. Marketing get especially hit because
everyone thinks it's just sales.
When I was in college, I was required to take marketing and the
theory was presented that it was a three legged stool. One leg
sales, one leg advertising, one leg distribution.
The point where DEC has problems is probably the last.
I've spent the last 4 months in Anchorage Ak. Last week I was
listening to the radio and the commentator was talking bout IBM
building the parts and fast distribution wharehouse in Memphis
Tenn. When a Field Engineer called IBM for a part, the call was
handled by Federal Express who managed the wharehouse for them.
By gosh did the part get there the next day by 10 am.
Federal Express has just built a large distribution center in Anchorage
for their international business. Twenty dollars on who builds the
next wharehouse here.
A good marketing company cuts costs by cutting the cost of delivering
and manufacturing product for customers by increasing yeild and
decreasing delivery costs (Costs to market). What are we doing?
|
1187.28 | | HYSTER::ROBINSON_J | | Tue Sep 25 1990 12:11 | 3 |
|
As it happens, we have a PC parts warehouse co-located with Federal
as well.
|
1187.29 | to be or not to be | ODIXIE::KRAMER | | Fri Sep 28 1990 15:12 | 15 |
| Another part of the equation is:
Is management a good place to be?
In my case I was a manager for 3+ years and considered good by some. I
saw that to be a dangerous job though (given the state of the
company/industry). So I'm now an individual contributor, just as happy
and less at risk of losing my job eventually.
What we need to do is reduce the numbers of managers so that the good
ones aren't at risk of a potential wide-sweeping "layoff".
Not sure if that made sense to everyone/hope it wasn't redundant,
Phil
|