T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1191.1 | give us the right to vote, and to build a dream | ODIXIE::CARNELL | DTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALF | Wed Sep 19 1990 11:49 | 22 |
|
The 115,000+ employees who are individual contributors WANT to build a
more successful Digital, for their livilihoods and the welfare of their
families are tied to Digital's continued prosperity. These same
115,000 employees know the changes needing to be made, both to cut
waste and to increase effectiveness in getting and keeping customers,
and in making money on satisfying customer needs and wants.
Miliken, Kodak and Toyota are all proving that empowering "the people"
of a company to change and build a company IS the better road to higher
success than traditional top-down management by an elite management
infrastructure. If the 115,000, nay, all 125,000 are THE most
important asset of the company, then should not GROUPS be making all
decisions, driving change, with full authority, with each member of a
given Digital group having an "equal vote" both on changes, as well as
the "leadership" of that group? Perhaps the head kahuna might consider
decentralization of power and give us the right to vote; WE are not
children needing told WHAT to do and HOW to do it and we do not need to
be managed -- we want committed leadership in each group to help us
excel, support us, and "enable" real change to take affect that will
make Digital MORE successful. Everyone should be franchised to build;
not just the foremen.
|
1191.2 | DEC Ain't a Democracy!!! | COOKIE::LENNARD | | Wed Sep 19 1990 12:56 | 7 |
| Dave, you just don't give up do you? I don't want to be part of a
Digital run by "groups", and with employees voting on issues. We'll
go down the chute even faster.
I think our entrenched management, inflexible processes, and lack of
real understanding of what our customers want remain unchanged. Do
you think Silber would be interested in a higher-paying job?
|
1191.3 | .3: DEC SHOULD be a Democracy! | AKOV06::DCARR | Too bad we cant vote the DEC ins out | Wed Sep 19 1990 13:39 | 32 |
| > Dave, you just don't give up do you? I don't want to be part of a
> Digital run by "groups", and with employees voting on issues. We'll
> go down the chute even faster.
(At first I thought you were talking to me, and I couldn't figure it
out, seeing this is the first time I wrote a note in here - but then I
found out that the .1 reply author was Dave too)
Anyway, as the author of .0, I'd be interested in hearing your reasons
for the above statement. If you can convince me, it might make me feel
better. Because I don't believe it. I _know_ that I could suggest a
better reorg. than the one that is about to be implemented - but I'm
about three levels below the level I'd need to be to influence the
final decision - in the current, top-down, environment!
I also don't understand what you mean by this:
> I think our entrenched management, inflexible processes, and lack of
> real understanding of what our customers want remain unchanged.
Are you saying that you think that management would remain entrenched
if we gave employees the vote on who stasy and who goes? Not in my
little corner of the world, I can guarantee that! And how do you
think inflexible processes get set up? But bureacrats trying to
justify their existence (no, not in all cases - but in a helluva lot of
them!). Finally, do you think top management has a better
understanding of what the customer really wants than a salesman?
I don't buy a word of it, but I am open-minded - so convince me!
Dave
|
1191.4 | | HYSTER::ROBINSON_J | | Wed Sep 19 1990 15:43 | 18 |
| re .3, DEC _is_ a democracy. It is run by people appointed by
directors who are elected by the owners, each with one vote per share.
What can be more democratic than that? Is there _any_ democracy in the
idea that the _employees_ should be allowed to vote the company's
direction solely by virtue of their employment? If you want a vote in
Digital, buy stock. It's a bargain right now.
And the thought that John Silber would see things any other way is
absolutely absurd. When I was a junior at BU, and I was involved in a
tuition-hike protest, Silber told students that they deserved no voice
in how the university operated because we were mere consumers. "Buying
a car doesn't give you the right to run GM" was his analogy. He also
told the faculty that they had no right to influence how the university
ran because they were merely labor, and management was not going to
surrender its perogatives. Hence the faculty and staff strikes in my
senior year.
|
1191.5 | one team means all team members own power to build | ODIXIE::CARNELL | DTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALF | Wed Sep 19 1990 15:50 | 40 |
| REF: <<< Note 1191.2 by COOKIE::LENNARD >>>
-< DEC Ain't a Democracy!!! >-
>><<Dave, you just don't give up do you? I don't want to be part of a
Digital run by "groups", and with employees voting on issues. We'll
go down the chute even faster.>>
The bureaucracies and self-serving interests of dictatorship management
of Eastern communistic countries shows that an unempowered people leads
to econonomic disaster. Ken Olsen has even stated that Digital's
structure more resembles such countries and their economic states
proves that it dooms any organization to failure.
Pray prove your case indeed. Show us the stellar U.S. companies where
dictatorial and bureuacratic management where "thinking" and authority
are limited to just the management structure is proving itself over
companies such as Kodak, Milliken or Toyota where the troops are truly
part of the family, all sharing responsibility to build and drive
change, all sharing the authority, and in some cases, where employees
are share in the rewards of greater success.
DEC should be a democracy where we all employees have a stake in
building a greater Digital, where each of us do more than just a job
getting a paycheck with managers doing all the thinking and worrying
and decision-making.
Japan succeeds so well because everyone works together as one team and
that truly means one team. Even with unions, the workers and managers
and executives still all work together, in harmony and cooperation.
The stout cowboy individualism personal competitiveness of meism
mentality is killing American companies and no amount of point
solutions is working -- look at the lack of success of Deming's
methodology in the U.S. and Europe despite 30 years of proven success
in Japan.
The entire Digital workforce needs to be galvanized and a democracy
where all share the responsibility for success, with the authority to
drive change, is the best solution.
|
1191.6 | Lot's of 'em | COOKIE::LENNARD | | Wed Sep 19 1990 16:50 | 15 |
| I can think of one right off the top of my head.....EDS, when Ross
Perot was running it....and I mean running it. Autocratic from the
word go, with strict dress and behavorial standards, and highly
profitable and successful. They also beat the crap out of on virtually
every government bid that we competed on.
Also Chrysler during the turn-around years. Also AeroJet where I
worked ten years ago. Managers called "sir", standing up in a
conference room when a senior entered, dictatorial president that
was highly respected...and BTW, a nice place to work.
Don't kid yourself on the Japanese. Senior management makes the
decisions, and then everyone else goes through a process which to
the uninitiated appears to be concensus forming. What they are
really doing is lining up behind management fiats.
|
1191.7 | getting a say to create change | ODIXIE::CARNELL | DTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALF | Wed Sep 19 1990 18:09 | 82 |
|
On a short-term basis, I will concede an organization can be successful
under the autocratic, dictatorial rule of a CEO. Fear is a great
motiviator. In the short run. But I then argue that the company
culture is built on a house of cards that fails the long-term
prosperity of the organization when either the CEO bails out (like
Perot selling out) or when the CEO ceases to be one of the team (like
Iaccoca taking a $20 million dollar bonus, then closing plants
alienating the workers).
Chrylser is spiraling down again. And EDS?
The crux of the problem is power and whether "labor" (meaning all us
individual contributors, white and blue collar, plus all managers,
bottom moving up) should have a say in "how" we work as a company or
not. Taylorism says blind obedience to authority. Yes, sir! and how
high shall I jump, sir?
Such a philosophy is a dianosaur and should be scrapped. Or would you
have Saddam types ruling the world, and all its organizations, forever?
Every DEC employee should have the responsibility to do more than just
the job called for by a manager. Every employee should also hold the
responsibility for using their intelligence "to think" creatively on
what can be CHANGED to cut waste and increase productivity and enhance
the effectiveness of all actions and functions to get and keep
customers, and make money on assets accordingly. And every employee
should have also then a say in the decision-making of said changes, and
a say to remove all impediments, like bureaucracy and self-serving
interests incurred at the expense of the organization.
Yes, Japanese corporations have not relinquished all power, although I
seem to recollect that someone posted that first line supervisors at
Fujitsu are elected by the members of each given group.
But there is no doubt in my mind that in most of the major Japanese
corporations, and in Miliken, and in increasing segments of Kodak,
employees are being listened to, and by subsequent default, customers,
and change is occurring faster in building more successful companies
because there is no longer blind obedience to authority where any given
manager gets to determine "how" his or her fiefdom will be run, and
balderdash on any open door policy, or employees thinking or being
empowered.
Iraq would argue it is successful as a country, with all falling into
line, blind deference to authority without question, from the bottom
right up the ranks to Hussein. Yet will it last? Is this autocratic,
dictatorial really going to bring long-term prosperity to Iraq?
Or more likely the insanity of war, with the people paying the price.
There is not, nor ever will be, any competition to an organization, a
company, or a country where literally ALL MEMBERS WORK TOGETHER IN
HARMONY AND COOPERATION, building a dream, all sharing the work, the
responsibility to build, the authority to change and progress, and,
ultimately, an equal share of reward in accomplishing that dream.
The philosophy of management vs labor being separate gets the same
results as the government of Massachusetts vs the people of Mass.
being separate. Bureaucracy, stagnation, self-aggrandizement at the
expense of all, fiefdoms, lack of leadership and decision-making.
And ultimately, economic failure.
If DEC cannot be a democracy, why should Massachusetts be a democracy?
Why is one more effective, and not the other?
Stockholders, citizens, Ken Olsen, Digital employees,
all want the same thing. Prosperity and long-term success.
Democracy works better because its more fun.
Working hard under fear in a dictatorship may work in the short run but
must fail sooner or later.
The people in Massachusetts get a say. And exercised it.
When will Digital's people get a real say in affecting change.
When will management and employees become a single group, a single
galvanized team, with no longer a them vs us.
|
1191.8 | Employee Empowerment is NOT the same as democracy! | HYEND::DMONTGOMERY | | Wed Sep 19 1990 18:21 | 31 |
| Dave, you're assuming (incorrectly) that "employee
involvement/empowerment" equals "democracy". It doesn't.
Toyota is not a democracy; Kodak is not a democracy.
I doubt that one could find a single successful company run internally
as a democracy. Electing the board is as democratic as it gets.
I've responded to your "Make Digital a democracy" notes with this
before, and I'll do it here again:
True democracy cannot and will not run a for-profit corporation
successfully. The ideal business structure, in my opinion, is a sort
of benevolent autocracy. The president is the leader. He/she sets
direction and corporate goals. He/she sets corporate strategy. Top
executives execute that strategy; managers manage the completion of
the tactics which fulfill the strategies; workers do the tasks. Take
away that structure by having workers set corporate strategy, for
instance, and your business is doomed to fail. Want checks and
balances like a democracy? You already have them. They're called
directors, and they represent the shareholders who own the company.
They oversee the actions of the top officer. One problem with U.S.
industry these days is that too many boards are just hollow
organizations. Boards of directors do need to be more involved in
"managing" top officers. But it is the implementation, not the
structure, which must improve.
Employee involvement is good. But giving equal votes for running a
company is not. We're not in business for our employees. We're in
business to maximize return on equity to our shareholders.
-DM-
|
1191.9 | workers only work? | ODIXIE::CARNELL | DTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALF | Thu Sep 20 1990 09:41 | 58 |
| REF: <<< Note 1191.8 by HYEND::DMONTGOMERY >>>
-< Employee Empowerment is NOT the same as democracy! >-
>><< The president is the leader. He/she sets direction and corporate
goals. He/she sets corporate strategy. Top executives execute that
strategy;>>
Agreed to this point. But under those senior executives reporting to
the president, I believe the future holds where the corporation's power
structure will be turned upside down. It is happening in Miliken,
Kodak and Toyota.
>><<managers manage the completion of the tactics which fulfill the
strategies; workers do the tasks>>
I believe absolutely that this is no longer an effective philosophy to
build a successful company in the world today. Common sense says that
no manager can possibly ever "know" the work as well as the person doing
the work. Who better then to make decisions on changes in that work:
manager or the worker?
I believe in Miliken, Kodak and Toyota, the workers now as "groups"
determine the work, determine the tactics, determine the changes to
improve efficiency and effectiveness, make all decisions as a group,
and have some say in the leadership of the group -- and there must be
leadership. Evidence in these pioneering major corporations suggests
this IS more affective than the traditional business school philosophy
that the "thinking" and ownership of responsibility with full authority
is a no-no for those who do not have "manager" in their title.
Who is the most important asset of this company? ALL employees or just
managers? Under your scenario, all employees being the most important
asset of Digital is then an empty piece of dialogue. To have meaning,
empowerment must include authority to create and drive the building of
a company, and that must mean groups where all members have ownership
over the work and all changes affecting it, and its interdependent
relationship to the work of all other groups in Digital.
Again, why should Massachussetts be run differently than Digital? Why
can't the citizens just use an "open door" policy to affect change in
how the government and agencies work in the state as all that work
affects the people of the State. After all, government officials
"must" be more knowledgeable than the citizens who are doing all the
work to produce the revenue that produces the State tax income.
Shouldn't government managers set the tactics and citizens just work;
why should citizens have any say, and how could they possibly have any
capability to contribute anything intelligent that would lead to a more
prosperous state?
Digital has 6,000,000 customers and 115,000 individual contributors,
all of whom have the capability of "thinking" and applying their
collective intelligence to creative change in a million subtle ways
that would reduce costs and increase customers, margin and revenue.
When will Digital franchise that brainpower and enthusiasm into a
single team, working in harmony, where their is no longer any
distinction between managers and "other" employees.
|
1191.10 | True Democracy is like a utopian society | VAXWRK::FALLIS | | Thu Sep 20 1990 09:55 | 35 |
| re:.8 and other replies
I am glad to finally see someone set it straight. I was getting a
little tired of this one person one vote non-sense. A
business, Japanese or otherwise can not function as a democracy. Sure
good managers should be hiring good people with new an innovative
idears to stimulate products and growth (when have you seen this
lately ?) but the manager still has to be the final decision maker. He
and he alone should take all responsibilities for the action of the
group. The people in the group have responsibility for executing and
delivering the managers goals (or decisions). A good manager will listen
to his people and be able to make a good decision based on the input of
his group. The problem I see here at DEC no one has to take responsibility
for any actions, we have managers reporting to several different uppper
level managers that have different goals and agendas. The matrix
management that this company grew so fast with is IMHO is what is
starting to destroy us now.
The large profit margins of yesterday are gone, customers want partnerships
with there computer company, and customers want standards so if we mess up
they can go some place else with little interruption of business and at a
minumum cost. Until DEC realizes and restructures with a flatter
organization (less management more workers) and a clear corporate message
for all organizations this company IMHO is going to see very hard times.
We have some great people and some really good products but we need tighter
control over the messages we are telling customers, clear lines of
communication and cooperation within our own organizations.
We need people who "Do the right thing" even if it means
dissolving thier group because of redundancy. Today, managers are scared
of saying thier group is redundant for fear of being transitioned out of
the company, we need tough decision makers and leaders in these hard times.
Power to the people works for technical projects but IMHO not in
business.
|
1191.11 | | ESCROW::KILGORE | Wild Bill | Thu Sep 20 1990 10:46 | 31 |
|
re .9:
David, you're starting to burn my butt again...
1. If you think the entire company works in a dictatorial manner, you
don't know what you're talking about. You may have lousy management
in your neck of the woods, but where I work the individual
contributors can and do have a direct impact on the direction we
take. Documentation people make suggestions to engineering,
engineers make suggestions to marketing, etc, etc... AND THE
SUGGESTIONS ARE TAKEN SERIOUSLY. So concentrate on making your piece
of the world work better, and leave my piece alone!
2. Take your comparison of Digital to state government to its full
extent. We decide who will lead us, and then they make lots of
decisions on our behalf -- WE DO NOT INDIVIDUALLY MAKE DAY-TO-DAY
DECISIONS ON HOW THE STATE RUNS. What is missing in Digital is NOT
the ability of individual contributors to make day-to-day
corporate-wide decisions, but the ability to have even a small say
in who makes those decisions for us. Review of managers by the
managed would go a long way toward making the comparison complete.
Individual empowerment to make corporate-wide decisions, as you
espouse, can only lead to absolute chaos (for example, I decide that
based on your rhetoric to date, I will ignore any decisions you make
because I am convinced they will be bad for the company).
I make my corporate influence the old-fashioned way -- I EARN IT!!
|
1191.12 | clarification | ODIXIE::CARNELL | DTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALF | Thu Sep 20 1990 10:58 | 18 |
| REF: <<< Note 1191.11 by ESCROW::KILGORE "Wild Bill" >>>
>><< Review of managers by the managed would go a long way toward
making the comparison complete.>>
Since we agree on this, I must not upset you all the time ;-]
>><<Individual empowerment to make corporate-wide decisions, as you
espouse>>
Not true. I espouse individual empowerment to have an equal say on
GROUP-WIDE decisions in which the individual is a member.
Corporate-wide decisions are made at the top, and as now exists, can be
influenced since Ken Olsen has explicitly stated, Oct 1989 DECWORLD,
"We encourage people to express their opinions and to therefore help in
the formulation of policy." That would not change.
|
1191.13 | Since you asked... | HYEND::DMONTGOMERY | | Thu Sep 20 1990 18:43 | 30 |
| re:
>> Again, why should Massachussetts be run differently than Digital?
There's an easy answer:
Digital is a publicly held corporation with a fiduciary responsibility
to the shareholders to maximize return on equity through maximizing
profit. That's it. Everything else, including social responsibility,
is secondary to the primary reason for the existence of the
corporation.
Massachusetts (at least the part you're talking about) is a government.
It has judicial, executive, and legislative branches to represent and
protect the rights, and the life, liberty, and pursuit of happiness of
the residents of the Commonwealth.
The corporation must operate to turn a profit. This, by nature,
requires a corporate leader, corporate strategy, executives,
management, and workers.
The government must operate to protect the people it represents.
Here's another fundamental difference. The corporation serves its
owners, not its employees; while the government serves the people it
represents. Democracy is appropriate for a government of the people,
for the people, and by the people. It is not appropriate for a
corporation of the employees, for the shareholders, by the management.
-Monty-
|
1191.14 | corporations should look out for employees first | ODIXIE::CARNELL | DTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALF | Thu Sep 20 1990 21:43 | 60 |
| REF: <<< Note 1191.13 by HYEND::DMONTGOMERY >>>
-< Since you asked... >-
Fair enough.
>><<Here's another fundamental difference. The corporation serves its
owners, not its employees; while the government serves the people it
represents. Democracy is appropriate for a government of the people,
for the people, and by the people. It is not appropriate for a
corporation of the employees, for the shareholders, by the
management.>>
Here we disagree. And indeed, as a fundamental difference, the major
Japanese corporations, now among THE largest in the world, "owning" so
to speak several industries "invented" in the U.S., hold that while
investors are entitled to return on investments, the corporation does
first serve the interests of all its employees for it is recognized in
Japan that indeed the most important asset is its employees, all
employees, for it is the workforce, and the creative intelligence
within each member, that uses the tangible assets of the corporation TO
MAKE MONEY and it is only through incorporating the entire workforce
into all decision-making and creative change that that workforce is
franchised into driving change, focusing daily on fine-tuning the
money-making engine that is the company. A Win/Win situation for all.
In the West, we still have a Win/Lose situation where employees are
held as "resources" to be dispensed with at will, of no consequence to
the ability of a company to make money, and to ensure long-term profit
and prosperity. Major Japanese corporations routinely have 10 and 20
year plans and discussions out 50 to 100 years. The West thinks only
in terms of quarterly profits, discarding workers to "show" profit to
impress "Wall Street investors" and short-term thinking professional
bureaucratic managers whose only drive is to fulfill "personal"
ambition and success, routinely at the expense of those below and
around.
It is the people within Digital that made Digital successful. All of
us, together, collectively are THE asset that generates revenue and
profit for this corporation. And only when ALL of us are empowered
with authority and franchisement to drive change and build something
greater can significant growth in revenue and margin take place.
Without it, Digital's prosperity rides solely on some brilliant,
committed engineers once again hitting the market just right, and the
employees who are still committed to working hard, even if they have no
voice, and are frustrated when change is thwarted and impeded by those
managers who refuse to incur risk by driving change that is upward
driven from employees and customers rather than downward dictated by
higher ups where it has been officially santioned, allowing now no risk
if any failure down the line.
It just seems a shame when so much more could be realized by a
different approach, already being tried and proven in the United
States, as in Kodak.
Since Kodak is a large customer, perhaps KO should meet with the CEO of
Kodak who is 100% in favor of flipping the company upside down,
empowering employees with authority, and hear it directly from a peer.
And then perhaps meet with the CEOs of Toyota and Miliken.
|
1191.15 | I can't be read-only any more! | PCOJCT::MILBERG | I was a DCC - 3 jobs ago! | Fri Sep 21 1990 00:12 | 69 |
| Dear Mr. Carnell,
While you seem to be suddenly enamored with the 'democracy' and
wonderful example of Milliken & Co., I suggest that you look beyond the
recent publicity of it's employee 'empowerment' and understand what
that really means in context.
Read your history, talk to anyone in the offices in the Carolinas who
dealt with Milliken (a customer in the 70's) -especially those who
spent any time on-site - and, more importantly, get out old newspapers
and read about Roger Milliken.
Roger Milliken ran that company in one of the most autocratic manners
of any American business leader. The labor history was even bloodier
than when Henry Ford let his strong arm man 'take care' of the union
problems.
Based on my experiences, albeit in the late 70's, empowerment at
Milliken may mean the end of bullpens, timeclocks and scheduled coffee
breaks for professionals.
If you are going to hold up Milliken, Kodak or anyone else as an
example, cite what they have done - SPECIFIC examples that would apply
to the business that Digital is in.
Yes, they may have 'empowered' workers and work groups at low levels,
similar to what we HAVE DONE in many of our manufacturing sites, BUT
there was and still is STRONG leadership and direction FROM THE TOP and
that is passed as clear and powerful messages (hate to use that term)
thru middle management.
THAT is what my definition of empowerment is - tell me or my group
what our goal and target is and let us decide how to achieve it, NOT
let us decide what our goal and our job is.
IMHO (based on 15 years here) one of our biggest problems is the
committee and consensus structure - leading to special interest groups
and stovepipes. Today, more than ever, there is a need for clear
direction and leadership and, more importantly, a single, company and
organization wide focus and target to enable all of the 1xx,000
employees to go forward.
As an example, you are dismayed at the hue and cry against (or worse,
lack of any response to) your proposals. One of the reasons for that
IMHO, is that those proposals do not communicate clear direction and
leadership. Rather, they are verbose and filled with generalities and
phrases open to a considerable variation in interpretation. That is
what the majority of comments in this file are complaining about from
senior management, except for the recent comments about too detailed a
level of direction.
Please, if you are going to keep pushing employee empowerment, then
clearly define what you mean. That will let us either agree with you
or disagree and then, maybe a consensus definition can be reached.
I personally, as both an employee and a stockholder, do not want
Digital to be a democracy.
Yes, I do want to be involved in setting MY (and my groups) goals and I
do want to be able to go after those goals in the manner I feel is most
effective - THAT is my definition of 'empowerment'. In 15 years here,
there has only been case where I was not allowed to do that and I took
the appropriate action to resolve that situation. Digital has
certainly 'empowered' me more than any of my previous (3) employers.
Please David, be part of the solution!
-Barry-
|
1191.16 | an apology for .15 | PCOJCT::MILBERG | I was a DCC - 3 jobs ago! | Fri Sep 21 1990 00:16 | 9 |
| re: .15
Sorry!
I broke one of my own 'commandments' and wrote a 69 line response that
was emotional and not clear and concise.
-Barry-
|
1191.17 | I showed you mine; now show me YOURS | ODIXIE::CARNELL | DTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALF | Fri Sep 21 1990 10:15 | 61 |
|
Ref: .0 basenote
Speaking of the political arena, I see on the national news this
morning that there is indeed a groundswell movement in the U.S. where
fed up voters are voting out of office long-term professional
bureaucrats in favor of non-politicians who promise real leadership,
solving problems and making decisions. Oklahoma apparently just passed
a state law limiting time in public office to 12 years. Another
grassroots coalition is THRO - Throw the Hypocritical Rascals Out.
Ref: .15 Barry Milberg
Miliken in the 70's indeed had a bad reputation. But we are talking
about the Miliken of the PRESENT, a much different Miliken since Roger
became enlightened and took a chance on a radical new philosophy of how
a company culture should work in determining how the corporation works.
If you don't like Miliken, there is Kodak and Toyota.
Regarding examples, I have provided these, posted elsewhere. Regarding
greater detail and MORE examples within these companies, that is the
responsibility of Digital executive management to go visit them and
meet with their CEO's to determine if said radical approaches are
indeed better approaches to building and maintaining the prosperity of
a corporation.
Regarding being verbose, that's my privilege. If you don't want to
read, hit next unseen, as is the privilege of all of us noters and
readers of electronic memos.
Regarding specific action steps, I have within my verbage outlined at
least 50 specific changes, all of which are interlinked with the theme
I espouse. Most are listed in the memos posted in the DELTA_IDEAS
conference. The changes are explicit and are not vague at all.
Regarding whose ideas are or are not part of the solution that gets
implemented, that's what Ken Olsen and his Executive Committee get to
decide.
Regarding democracy in business, if you don't want it, that's your
decision. Some of us, however, would rather have a greater say in
self-determination. We do not want to be co-dependents anymore either
to dysfunctional bureaucratic practices or to "dad" (read manager)
doing all the thinking for us, making all decisions with us "just"
doing the work, just meekly following along, taking no ownership for
creative change when things are no longer peachy keen. Under your
scenario of dictatorship management structure with managers making all
decisions, having all authority, us 115,000 individual contributors are
not responsible for the current state of affairs since managers made
and still make all decisions since they own all authority. If we have
another quarterly loss of a couple hundred million, do you espouse
replacement of 10,000 managers? After all, they own all the
responsibility since they own all the authority to affect change.
And pray, what is your solution to our dilemna as an alternative to
mine? Please detail the action steps supported by logical argument and
examples that will lead us to prosperity once again. Perhaps you do
indeed have the better plan for KO. Please post your plan that you
sent to Ken Olsen.
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1191.18 | DEC has it now. | BEAGLE::WLODEK | Network pathologist. | Fri Sep 21 1990 16:08 | 34 |
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A friend of mine works for a hi-tech company owned by Toyota.
We spent long time discussing various aspects, and yes, all employees
make suggestions, but not to a box or a notes files.
A member of a group has to convince his group then the groups proposal
gets higher, next level has to be convinced etc. The big boss ( MR
Toyota ?) makes hardly any decisions at all. Amazing but all
these task forces and committees work. BUT, from time to time , THE
BOSS, makes a decision and then.... it's a thunder. It may be expensive
and "crazy" but no questions are asked, execution is immediate.
My friend gave me an example but, I don't recollect it in detail.
How does that differ from our world ? If you have an idea, you have to
convince people around you that it is a good one. If your group can
convince other groups in your organization, idea will get further.
We are already there in some respect, but now, it's too slow for some
people. It is very slow at Toyota also.
BTW, my friend quit last month and all Japanese gather around him very
cross, they never faced this situation before.
Does Toyota have marketing ? No. When a marketing study is needed,
all employees talk to neighbors etc..
Can't wait to hear my neighbors opinions on token rings .
sincerely,
Y. Ours
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1191.19 | The Real Digital ? | XCUSME::SAPP | IN Your FACE ! | Tue Sep 25 1990 12:36 | 49 |
| ML,
You just don't give up do you?
You get an "A" in my book for persistence !
I just happen to get into these Notes. I initially added this entry
because of a memo off of a distribution list authored by
Dave Carnell.
I like the Celtics Notesfile much better. To begin with when
someone takes the time to propose a solution it gets critical review
but everyone is supportive. Except sometimes from those rowdy Lakers
fans. Not so in this File.
Next point is that in the Celtics Notes everyone makes fun of
"Bottom-Line" Cohen because we all know the "bottom-line" is not
first, last and always money. Not so in this File.
Also as Celtics fans no matter which player is our own personal
favorite, when the team loses no one ever says, " but my favorite
player had a great game !" Not so in this File.
In the Celtics Notefile, I find a deep love for the team. I also
don't find the rancor and the divisiveness there that I do in other
Notesfile. It reminds me that when teams are going through tough
or losing times, the teams with pride like our Celtics gain
strength by coming together rather than tearing each other to
shreds.
I have been at Digital for nearly 17 years. In that time it seems
to me that our philosophy has embraced three distinct constituencies:
Customers, Stockholders, and Employees many of whom are also
stockholders. I don't remember Ken ever saying the bottom-line is
money and to the stockholders only. I also don't remember Ken saying
that once a solution is proposed we don't have responsibility to
each other or to not help to make the solution better. I also don't
remember ever reading about Ken saying to any of us to "stay in
your own neighbohood."
Not like I heard in this Notesfile.
So cheer up ML, and come back to where the Noters care and give
support to each other.
Regards,
Edwin
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