T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1202.1 | Only at Digital could one even imagine this... | HYEND::DMONTGOMERY | | Wed Sep 26 1990 10:33 | 5 |
| Talk about the height of bureaucracy...
Wow.
-DM-
|
1202.2 | | STKMKT::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney in New York | Wed Sep 26 1990 11:40 | 2 |
| I think that task force was identified as one of the unnecessary task
forces by the unnecessary task force task force.
|
1202.3 | Or perhaps ... | SRFSUP::MCCARTHY | Value indifferences? | Wed Sep 26 1990 13:23 | 4 |
| Actually, I think that the committee's membership has now grown to
8,000 as a result of the need to reach consensus among all of the
potentially affected individuals. At last report, they're still looking
for a large enough conference room to hold their kick-off meeting :-).
|
1202.4 | Hmmm. | DELREY::MEUSE_DA | | Wed Sep 26 1990 13:31 | 4 |
| What a morbid topic for a discussion, but please tell me more..let the
games begin!
|
1202.5 | | ALOSWS::KOZAKIEWICZ | Shoes for industry | Wed Sep 26 1990 13:52 | 11 |
| A memo came out a few months ago to Field managers noting that there
was a general reluctance to pursue corrective action for marginal and
low performers due to the inability to replace people with outside
hires (there is virtually no replacement pool of fully qualified internal
candidates for most jobs). The policy change, if I understood it
correctly, was that an automatic approval to hire from the outside
would be granted for any req opened as a result of a disciplinary
firing.
Al
|
1202.6 | � | WORDY::HAKKARAINEN | Autumn's here; dress accordionly | Wed Sep 26 1990 14:08 | 13 |
| > The policy change, if I understood it
> correctly, was that an automatic approval to hire from the outside
> would be granted for any req opened as a result of a disciplinary
> firing.
Re .5:
I hope that has one of those implict :-)'s in it. I shudder to think
that managers will be rewarded for their inventiveness in being able to
toss people to the street corner. If there are performance problems,
then dead with them. If we need outside talent, justify it and bring
them in. Times are tought enough with encouraging managers to spend
their time drafting written warnings for extra credit.
|
1202.7 | Do Your Job!! | COOKIE::LENNARD | | Wed Sep 26 1990 14:12 | 2 |
| The only "streamlining" required is/was a good injection of intestinal
fortitude in a lot of our wimp managers.
|
1202.8 | :-) :-) | HEFTY::CHARBONND | scorn to trade my place | Wed Sep 26 1990 14:27 | 1 |
| re .7 Is that all ?
|
1202.9 | | ALOSWS::KOZAKIEWICZ | Shoes for industry | Wed Sep 26 1990 16:18 | 9 |
| re: .6
No :-) expressed or implied. A poor performer working at 50% is still
better than nobody working at 0% if that's the only alternative.
Managers should not be inordinately handicapped for sensible
performance management.
Al
|
1202.10 | Everybody? | DELREY::MEUSE_DA | | Wed Sep 26 1990 17:40 | 2 |
| Does this policy apply to firing managers?
|
1202.11 | Nothing is sometimes better than something! | CSSE32::RHINE | A dirty mind is a terrible thing to waste | Wed Sep 26 1990 21:04 | 13 |
| RE: .9
A poor performer is not necessarily better than no one.
1. Poor performers can cause real morale problems among good people in
a group who are working hard to do their job while they percieve the
low performer as someone who gets paid for not contributing.
2. Poor performers can hurt the credibility of a group with other groups
and therefore hinder the ability of others to do their jobs.
3. Poor performers can cause extra work that is required because people
have to undo and redo work.
|
1202.12 | | NEWVAX::TURRO | Watch the skies | Thu Sep 27 1990 07:34 | 20 |
| I honestly couldn't believe reading the replies to .0..
A good part of the reason DEC is in the position it is IMHO is
just this LAZAE (sp) fare attitude about poor performers. Believe me
the poor performer knows just who he/she is.
They are the ones whos names have been bounced around conference room
walls for the last 5-10 years. At least in cases Im familiar with yet
nothing is done due to manager awareness that if they don't have all
the facts straight then DEC will be in for a lawsuit.
Poor performers hurt everyone they add extra weight to everyone,make
extra work for everyone and put nothing out.
Would you like to read a book using a single light source of a 20watt
bulb or replace the bulb with a 75-100watt bulb.
Apparently most people here would use the 20watt bulb and turn on every
light in the house..
Mike
|
1202.13 | percussive sublimation, anyone ? | HEFTY::CHARBONND | scorn to trade my place | Thu Sep 27 1990 09:09 | 5 |
| re .10 Managers are only fired if they screw up big time. Firing
a manager reflects very badly on whoever hired them, so they're
usually passed on to another job, often at better pay. The
basic reference work on this is 'The Peter Principle' by Lawrence
J. Peter.
|
1202.14 | Poor or Bad??? | CSOMKT::MCMAHON | Carolyn McMahon | Thu Sep 27 1990 09:23 | 13 |
| I agree with .11 and .12. Poor performers AND poor people managers are
COUNTER-PRODUCTIVE, not harmless. Anyone in any role with a certain
responsibility who isn't performing that responsibility has negative
impact on the whole. (Of course, the tricky question in DEC is "Who
has responsibility for what?")
Accepting poor performance and management is like saying "Any
information is better than no information." That just isn't true. Bad
information can easily lead us to making wrong decisions - and has.
We'd be better off just flipping a coin than having bad information.
We'd be better off having no one than having bad performers and
managers, too.
|
1202.15 | | ALOSWS::KOZAKIEWICZ | Shoes for industry | Thu Sep 27 1990 10:30 | 14 |
| Not all poor performers are incompetent and therefore counter-productive.
People run the spectrum of abilities. Some people are simply not as
productive or versatile or energetic as others. Some of those will fall
below the threshold of expected performance. Many will still contribute
marginally to the corporation but not nearly as much as expected.
But this is just sophistry. The fact remains that, for whatever reason,
managers were keeping poor performers rather than firing them because
of the inability to replace with appropriate people from the outside.
This restriction is now, apparently, removed. Does anyone disagree
with the change?
Al
|
1202.16 | | MAHIMA::TOPPING | | Thu Sep 27 1990 10:53 | 22 |
| I have been in management here for over 12 years, and I have seen lots
of examples of poor performers - some are let go; others are not.
I don't believe that the motivation of most managers who keep bad
performers is a feeling that "half a loaf is better than none". I
really feel that most managers agree that a real bad performer does
more harm than good. However, the process of removing a poor performer
at DEC is one that requires (as it should) a lot of checks and balances
to make sure we are really being fair. Many managers do not have the
skill or determination to really manage this difficult process, so the
typically follow the path of least resistance and let a problem fester.
The real solution to the problem of poor performers being not dealt
with is in management education. Managers need to really learn how to
recognize problems, document them, and deal with them.
It is important that we exercise due care when dealing with performance
issues - we really want to be fair. However, fairness is not defined
as letting someone beat their head against a wall forever trying to do
a job for which they are ill-suited. Some people are just in the wrong
job, and could be extremely productive if reassigned to a job better
matching their skills.
|
1202.17 | Reminds me of a joke | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Thu Sep 27 1990 11:28 | 8 |
| He was such a poor performer that...
when he left the company, they had to fire two people to replace him.
|
1202.18 | | HERON::PERLA | | Thu Sep 27 1990 12:19 | 7 |
| .16 hits the mark squarely. Managers with sufficient courage will "do something"
when confronted with non-performers. The options are available (re-train,
demerit, re-assess job objectives, transfer to a more suitable position, etc.)
Managers without courage refuse to recognize the problem, refuse to identify
the problem, refuse to "negotiate"(ie. dialog) a solution, in short,
refuse to act.
|
1202.19 | The "trickle-up" theory? | HYEND::DMONTGOMERY | | Thu Sep 27 1990 13:24 | 15 |
| re .16:
: Many managers do not have the
: skill or determination to really manage this difficult process, so the
: typically follow the path of least resistance and let a problem fester.
Then they shouldn't be managers. It's part of the job
description; it's part of the responsibility; it's part of the
accountability.
All of those "many managers" who don't have "the skill or determination
to really manage this difficult process" should be considered poor
performers, and dealt with accordingly.
-DM-
|
1202.20 | | CSSE32::RHINE | A dirty mind is a terrible thing to waste | Thu Sep 27 1990 14:47 | 19 |
| RE .16
One of the few decent management courses I have taken from DME was
Managing Performance which did teach how to deal with corrective action
as well as behavioral issues.
RE. 19
Many good individual contributors are promoted into management as
reward for being good individual contributors. Often these people are
more valuable and happy being individual contributors but accept the
management job because there is not a good or financially rewarding
career path in their discipline or they are afraid to say no.
Digital Management Preparation seems to be:
Here is your office, terminal, phone, and subordinates.
The system needs to change.
|
1202.21 | who _wants this job ? | SA1794::CHARBONND | scorn to trade my place | Thu Sep 27 1990 15:18 | 8 |
| re .20 Instead of promoting people to managers for the reasons
you give we institute a policy that states if at least three
people do *not* apply for the job, and fight hard to get it,
the req is torn up. That way we make sure that we get people
who really _want_ the job, and that the job is not makework.
(My bet is attrition would reduce the # of managers by several
percent a year under this plan.)
|
1202.22 | yes.. | DELREY::MEUSE_DA | | Thu Sep 27 1990 18:43 | 10 |
| re .13.
Yes, you are correct and I knew that too. I am just tired of seeing it
in practice, more at Dec than any of the computer companies I have
worked for in the past 11 years. The bad ones just keep getting moved
around and around.
Dave
|
1202.23 | "We don't fire family" | AISG::CHAVEZ | | Fri Sep 28 1990 15:07 | 31 |
| .16 comes closest to another side of this issue that hasn't yet
been addressed. Has anyone out there (reading this file) really
ever seen a firing or fired anyone in DEC? (Yes, I know its'
happened). And, if they have - would they admit it?
I think there is a stigma in Digital, not spoken, which relates
to our "family orientation." In others words, as I've heard it
said, "We don't fire family..."
.16 said < I have been in management here for over 12 years, and I've
< seen lots of examples of poor performance - SOME ARE LET GO;
< others are not.
How about it, MAHIMA::TOPPING ?
Do you know any of those managers personally that did the firing?
(No names please). Given all the right criteria;
- Every other option was tried,
- The employee wasn't really trying,
- It was necessary due to demoralizing effect,
disruption, etc.
- It was documented, etc. etc. etc.
How did that manager handle it, and how well did DEC, its' employees,
and their colleagues support that decision?
|
1202.24 | been there... | MAHIMA::TOPPING | | Fri Sep 28 1990 16:57 | 38 |
| re .23
Yes, I have seen people actually fired at Digital, and have done the
deed myself, I have also had managers who worked for me do it, and I
helped them in the process.
I really don't want to be specific at all, because of privacy
considerations, but a few points can be noted.
The first time for me was the worst. I went through the entire
performance improvement process, with documentation, etc. all the way
through written warning. Previous managers had attempted to solve the
problem, but had failed in one way or another. Finally, I had to do a
termination. I worked closely with Legal, Personnel, and my boss, who
really kept me out of trouble. It was an UNBELIEVEABLY difficult and
painful experience, even thiugh there was absolutely no doubt that it
was the right thing to do. I will never forget it. Since then I have
done others, but almost invariably, a resignation occurs before
termination.
I am happy to say that many more times, the employee was able to
overcome the problem and became a productive performer, either in the
same or a different job. This requires very sincere effort on the part
of all concerned, and a lot of tact and skill.
The exception is a few cases where a very serious rule violation occurs
and the employee is dismissed on the spot, with no long process at all.
( I have not done this myself, but have seen it done several times)
Having been through this process and seen other managers do it, I am not
at all suprised that often managers think they can avoid the problem by
ignoring it. I have learned otherwise. (The hard way)
Even though many managers would like the process to be streamlined,
there is value in being sure we are doing the right thing. The
processes we now have in place CAN work if the manager is truly willing
to do the right thing and has a lot of fortitude.
|
1202.25 | | ESCROW::KILGORE | Wild Bill | Fri Sep 28 1990 17:05 | 9 |
|
I was thinking about this very subject the other night. I have worked
here for 17.5 years. In that time, I have personally known two people
who were fired. They were both certifiable nut baskets -- one carried
a gun _everywhere_, the other tried to claim a taxi fare from New York
for his relocation expenses and immediately started harassing
secretaries. It's safe to say that neither was fired as a direct result
of their failure to perform to expectations.
|
1202.26 | accountability should begin top down | ODIXIE::CARNELL | DTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALF | Fri Sep 28 1990 17:23 | 41 |
|
I personally found an employee stealing, and have known others to
discover other employees doing the same. It was reported to higher
management and termination was affected.
"Performance" is, however, very subjective.
Who is going to call to task a manager who fails to lead, to drive
change, and who reacts totally on a crisis basis, taking absolutely no
initiative TO BUILD anything. Certainly no one below or at a peer
level. Yet, just processing reports upward or downward is not real
performance that contributes to anything!
Who is going to call to task an individual contributor who has become
apathetic BECAUSE OF LACK OF LEADERSHIP in his or her manager?
Certainly not the manager and not likely the peers within the group.
Lack of performance according to well-defined job responsibilities is
an easy call and requires only a manager to follow procedures to either
get corrective action or to reach a point a termination. Yet,
situations that fit this are limited. There are THOUSANDS of employees
in Digital that have had only one written defined job plan in the last
TEN years!
Amd you cannot just threaten termination to a large apathetic workforce
that does what's called for, but only what's called for, taking no
responsibility to create and drive change. Responsibililty with no
authority leads to this. And this gets back to leadership and power.
Demanding that apathetic employees "work harder" likewise accomplishes
little. What is work harder? Five more minutes after five? 90 hours
a week? Shorter lunches? And will just workers working "longer" lead
to a more successful Digital? Not likely, considering that
"management" for the last thousand years has always been pushing for
maximum "effort" from human beings (dusk to dawn, seven days a week)
yet it was never quantitative performance that lead to stellar success;
it was ALWAYS innovative, "qualitative" changes that increased
productivity and return on investment. Namely, "thinking" and then
acting proactively affecting change accordingly, thus building one's
way to higher levels of achievement.
|
1202.27 | here, here to .-1 | GUFFAW::LINN | Just another chalkmark in the rain | Fri Sep 28 1990 18:47 | 23 |
| another voice to .26's sentiments
Who is the betteer employee, i.e. "doing the right thing?"
-- The employee who works harder than ever at doing something
unlikely to succeed/not in the company's interest, something
only to make a bad effort/manager/program "look good?"
-- The employee who doesn't?
If you say the employee who doesn't, what does "doesn't" mean, when the
manager is holding your reviews in his/her hands? Defining your job?
RE-defining your job?
The above is why I hate hearing this harangue about "deadwood." An
apathetic worker may be a badly managed, misused one. I've certainly
seen it often enough.
I hate the harangue, that is, unless the individual is also hawking
leadership and responsibility, as .26 does. In other words, the "deadwood"
is identified as management busy managing "up" rather than doing its job.
Which is leading people.
|
1202.28 | | ESCROW::KILGORE | Wild Bill | Fri Sep 28 1990 22:45 | 6 |
|
Yes, .26 talks a good line about leadership and responsibility.
For an example of how .26 _enacts_ leadership and responsibility, see
DELTA_IDEAS note 87.5.
|
1202.29 | emptiness of content | ODIXIE::CARNELL | DTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALF | Sat Sep 29 1990 12:41 | 58 |
|
REF: <<< Note 1202.28 by ESCROW::KILGORE "Wild Bill" >>>
>><<Yes, .26 talks a good line about leadership and responsibility.>>
>>For an example of how .26 _enacts_ leadership and responsibility, see
DELTA_IDEAS note 87.5.>>
And your personal attack, Wild Bill, adds a great deal of intellectual
thought to the topic of this note.
Enclosed is said DELTA_IDEAS note 87.5 and I stand on my reply.
I will NOT be a co-dependent to dysfunctional local management
practices that by lack of local action to support AN EXECUTIVE
COMMITTEE endorsed program for Employee Involvement, is saying
essentially to Ken Olsen, "to hell with that and employees being
encouraged and supported to think."
And I will NOT support hypocracy, either locally with management not
caring about encouraging employees to think and do, or within Notes
just to "look good" to those such as yourself.
Your cheap shots, Wild Bill, reflect nothing but emptiness of content.
Pray enlighten us now with your counter argument on 87.5 on WHY I
should have responded differently, relating both to the idea and to my
response. And then give us a 200 line detailed rebuttal on why my
logic and intuition is flawed in my arguments and actions.
Speak.
<<< CAPNET::CAPVAX$PAGE:[NOTES$LIBRARY]DELTA_IDEAS.NOTE;1 >>>
-< DELTA_IDEAS >-
================================================================================
Note 87.5 Cutting Waste Produces $$$ US:CARNELL 5 of 5
ODIXIE::CARNELL "DTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALF" 18 lines 19-SEP-1990 13:17
-< empowerment without authority=zip >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
REF: <<< Note 87.4 by DNEAST::LADNER_WAYNE >>>
-< putting money where mouth is >-
>><<so, now that you've had this idea, have you taken the time and
'empowered' yourself to put up these stickup notices at all of the
printers in your building?>>
>><<Take responsibility!>>
Since all the management within this building has elected to ignore the
DELTA program totally for an entire year now, I concluded there was
neither need for employee involvement at this facility nor cost cutting
ideas. Thus, I did not put up the stickers but nevertheless still
submitted the idea to DELTA.
Regarding responsibility, pray tell us, what is the responsibility of
said management? Who owns exclusively the authority to drive change?
|
1202.30 | do it or don't | WLDWST::KING | Mfg.Engineer - Cupertino,CA | Sat Sep 29 1990 13:51 | 33 |
| > by ODIXIE::CARNELL "DTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALF" >>>
> I will NOT be a co-dependent to dysfunctional local management
> practices that by lack of local action to support AN EXECUTIVE
> COMMITTEE endorsed program for Employee Involvement, is saying
> essentially to Ken Olsen, "to hell with that and employees being
> encouraged and supported to think."
> Since all the management within this building has elected to ignore the
> DELTA program totally for an entire year now, I concluded there was
> neither need for employee involvement at this facility nor cost cutting
> ideas. Thus, I did not put up the stickers but nevertheless still
> submitted the idea to DELTA.
> Regarding responsibility, pray tell us, what is the responsibility of
> said management? Who owns exclusively the authority to drive change?
We all drive change.
The way your attitude comes across, you seem to be saying that you want
others to do your work for you. More specifically, you expect
management to be the leader for your idea.
If *you* believe in it, *you* make it happen. Don't wait for official
committee approval to take action. By doing so, you are only contributing
to "dysfunctional local management practices... by lack of local action
to support AN EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE endorsed program."
If you don't choose to take action, that is your perogative (sp?), but
don't blame your lack of action on someone else.
-psk
|
1202.31 | | ESCROW::KILGORE | Wild Bill | Sun Sep 30 1990 11:22 | 14 |
|
Re .29:
.30 encompasses my thoughts eloquently and completely (thank you),
in a lot fewer than the 200+ lines you seem to require - and demand - for
even the simplest ideas.
But I can boil it down even futher...
Put up, or shut up.
|
1202.32 | Your contributions to debate lack substance, still | ODIXIE::CARNELL | DTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALF | Sun Sep 30 1990 13:15 | 222 |
|
REF: .30 and 31. "YOU do it"
Dysfunctional garbage veiled in attack by innuendo, put down and an
addictive manipulative practice, "I won't be responsible to lead as
management, YOU do it for me."
You do it? Do what? The issue of the idea memo suggestion to DELTA as
posted in 87 in DELTA_IDEAS was NOT about stupid stickers. Focusing on
the 'example' of stickers was a petty putdown by the author of 87.4 and
attempt to divert attention from the REAL theme of the idea submitted
(posted below) for consideration by executive management. Which was
that the situation was NOT going to be resolved by one or two BIG ideas
from management (like streamline firing to get rid of LOTS of people,
or BUYOUT programs, as two examples) or a couple of little ideas (like
bottled water, as another example). The real solution lay only in a
million changes, most subtle, as exemplied by Toyota (who now has made
in the mundane business of autos $18 billion in cash) and that could
only happen when all employees were empowered with authority and had a
carrot like equal profit sharing. And the current "system" was a
disincentive to employees, especially MANAGERS, to nurture creativity
and change. THAT was the idea in 87, not stupid stickers that you
would have all think, thereby putting me down via this garbage of "YOU
make it happen by YOU doing it."
Since that IS the idea submitted, please educate me how I can do this
Monday morning? Shall I just declare it here, "Equal profit sharing
for all commences Monday, Oct 1, 1990. Anything over 15% operating
income as a percentage of revenue goes into a bucket to be equally
divided by all at year's end. Everyone now is empowered to drive a
million changes to reach in ONE year 20 billion in revenue with 20%
operating income so all can divide the difference (a billion) as a
bonus profit check. You all now have responsibility to create and
drive change, with authority to make it real, since now all "groups as
groups" make change decisions, as this is no longer the sole
prerogative of managers, some of who, wishing to protect career
interests and ambition, have in the past made no decisions and
exemplied no leadership, especially in supporting employees in thinking
and participative management. In fact, take a vote of confidence as a
group, and if negative, give your leader 90 days to improve. If no
improvement, a second negative gives your group the right to elect a
new manager who will LEAD you to achieving higher excellence, getting
this company $20 billion in revenue and 20% op profit. That's your
goal. BUILD!"
Oh, wait. Gosh, I proposed and I just did, but this isn't going to
happen is it. For I do not have the AUTHORITY to implement my idea,
the REAL idea posted in 87.0, now do I. Shall I storm the bastille and
take it by force? Or is my speaking, expressing my opinion to Ken
Olsen and company actually the "doing" which my authority DOES allow.
You preach, and you manipulate, making co-dependents of us all, saying
its OUR fault to fix other's deficits, and you contribute little to
creative intelligent exchange of ideas and evolving them. You are
professionals of a well-practiced art in the halls and alleys of
Digital: attack by put-down and suggested innuendo to silence those who
you do not agree with, whose ideas for change threaten you.
The REAL idea of 87 as posted in 87 of DELAT_IDEAS, below:
<<< CAPNET::CAPVAX$PAGE:[NOTES$LIBRARY]DELTA_IDEAS.NOTE;1 >>>
-< DELTA_IDEAS >-
================================================================================
Note 87.0 Cutting Waste Produces $$$ US:CARNELL 5 replies
SCARGO::WEISMAN_E 157 lines 25-JUN-1990 19:20
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Davide Carnell @ALF
ODIXIE::CARNELL
DA1286 - Cutting Waste Produces $500,000,000 In Net Operating Income
If certain "rules" were changed, such as if there was equal profit sharing
with no cap, and if there was true empowerment with authority, and if the
bureaucracy and good ol' boy system were blown out, and if creatvity was
mandatory in every employee, and if there was a driving passion instilled
within every employee, and a few other changes in the rules, then I submit
each of our current 125,000 employees could find and create, by LOOKING, at
least one proactive idea for change that could cut waste and increase
productivity, somewhere.
So I said, let's see how long it might take today to find a single way to
cut waste and increase productivity, just by assuming all the above, and
thus being "driven" to LOOK.
45 minutes.
I am standing in a long line at one of our facility's expensive Xerox
machines. Current person on the machine finishes and walks away, WITHOUT
CLEARING THE SPECS SET ON THE COPIER! Next person steps up, does not press
the "clear all" button and just changes the number of copies desired and
hits the print button. Boom. 7 copies, about 25 pages each, run off, all
screwed up, because the lens was set for 120%. Person had to start over.
Wasted paper, machine cost, time.
This person finishes, and walks away without clearing the specs, just like
the person before! Next person steps up, changes only the number desired
and hits the print button. Boom. Same problem. Now 5 sets messed up
because the spec was set at "staple" and this person did NOT want them
stapled.
Wasted paper, machine cost, time.
Based on an observation of two samples, I deduce this is "probably"
universal throughout Digital. How many copiers throughout Digital?
100,000?
Times say 20 instances like the above per day? Thus 20 cases per day times
100,000 times 250 business days? Conceivably, five hundred million
instances per year.
Derived proactive action to reduce this waste might simply be to put a
yellow 3-M stick 'um over the print button saying "PRESS CLEAR ALL BUTTON
TO CLEAR PREVIOUS SPECS BEFORE YOU BEGIN -- CUT WASTE"
Potential direct dollar savings just in paper waste reduction? $250,000 a
year? Less? More?
Much more?
Who knows. Suffice it to say, however, there WOULD be SOME dollar savings
and increased time productivity.
So I submit this idea to a Digital idea suggestion box. Somewhere.
And say there was management support for massive ongoing "fine tuning"
change and employee involvement and empowerment on all employees' parts.
Stickers would be up on all copiers within 24 hours in this building,
because the idea makes enough "common sense" to at least "try it" to see if
indeed it works.
Now let's say that literally and virtually ALL employee ideas go into A
SINGLE WORLDWIDE VAXNOTES CONFERENCE (write topic only), plus tracking,
implementation, and REPLY discussion by any employee on the system.
With all employees driven, motivated by the open equal profit sharing with
not cap, they would be accessing it daily, or at least weekly, and the idea
WOULD BE UNIVERSALLY IMPLEMENTED WITHIN 7 DAYS.
BECAUSE every employee is driven passionately to MAKE MORE MONEY FOR
Digital so enough "EXTRA" is generated to create a sizable profit sharing
check for themselves come the end of the year.
And with all such checks being EQUAL for everyone, interdependently linked,
this pivotal change nurtures not only a driving passion to make more NET
PROFIT with Digital's resources, both as a percentage, and in NEW profit
via INCREASED REVENUES, and ensures that all good "common sense" ideas get
looked for, created, and driven into reality universally, QUICKLY!
And it nurtures greater INTERNAL COOPERATION AND HARMONY versus personal
competition up the corporate ladder.
Now some managers and executives may argue that this idea is pidling and is
of no consequence and not worth "worrying" about as we "do our daily
business" where we'll get BIG bucks via BIG sales!
Not when we get only small margins on our BIG sales.
Further, I argue that 1,000,000 implemented "little pidling ideas"
exemplified in my example will equate to $500,000,000 just in reduced
waste, which drops immediately to the Net Operating Income line.
But no manager is going to create them; only all 125,000 employees,
individual contributors and managers alike, working as a single driven,
passionate team can generate and implement 1,000,000 actual ideas, EVERY
YEAR to "fine tune" the millions of moving actions generated by 125,000
employees every day within Digital.
Can't be done? Why not. Toyata does it every year, and has for years.
Is this being done now Digital?
No.
Proof? Call randomly 100 employees throughout the world and ask them the
last time their manager asked EACH for their ideas to cut waste, increase
productivity, generate new products and services and businesses, increase
margins per sale and product, and increase our effectiveness in building
markets, customers, revenues, margins and net operating income.
And then championed those ideas that made enough common sense 'to try' into
reality.
Ask then each for details of all the ideas each has indeed created in the
last ninety days and how each employee championed and drove his or her own
ideas into reality.
I perceive you'll be lucky to find even a handful who are "looking" and
"creating" and "driving" constructive CHANGES into reality to build a
better and more successful Digital, greater than what is.
THERE IS NO INCENTIVE FOR ANY EMPLOYEE TO DO THIS.
THERE IS NO REQUIREMENT IN THE RULES FOR EACH TO BE CREATIVE.
THERE IS NO REQUIREMENT IN THE RULES FOR MANAGERS TO ENCOURAGE, NURTURE,
SUPPORT, AND DRIVE CONSTRUCTIVE IDEAS FROM THEIR DIRECT REPORTS FOR CHANGE,
TO FINE TUNE ALL ACTIONS WITHIN DIGITAL, INTO REALITY.
THERE IS IN FACT A "DIS-INCENTIVE" TO DO ANY OF THE ABOVE. IN SOME PARTS
OF DIGITAL, TO BE KNOWN AS A PASSIONATE CREATOR OF IDEAS FOR CHANGE IS TO
BE LABELED A TROUBLEMAKER WHO WILL BE DISCRIMINATED AGAINST BY BOTH
MANAGEMENT AND COWORKERS.
Thus, why bother. "That's CORPORATE'S JOB -- they'll figure out and tell
US what needs to be done and changed." Just do "your job" and "what your
boss says to do" and you will succeed. Traditional career path for
personal growth.
My continued argument: Change certain rules to change the culture to change
the discipline in how Digital works and we WILL make LOTS more net
operating income and LOTS more revenue and margins.
Imagine. All employees linked into a living network of human thought
focused on continuously fine-tuning all actions, and creating innovative
new actions, all towards building every day a better and more successful
Digital, far, far greater than what has already been achieved.
Regards,
David
|
1202.33 | Your contribution to copier efficiency lacks substance, still... | ESCROW::KILGORE | Wild Bill | Sun Sep 30 1990 15:00 | 16 |
|
...so put the stupid stickers on the stupid copiers, save the company
some money, build your credibility in small increments, and go on from
there.
The short of it is, Dave, you finally came across a small but CONCRETE,
SUBSTANTIVE idea to improve things around here, but you didn't have the
seed to do anything about it -- or worse, you are convinced you should
have the power to demand that someone else do something about it.
----------
Now I'm going to walk away from this obviously unproductive rathole. But
I haven't given up on you, Dave -- I'll be watching DELTA_IDEAS note
87 for signs of true ambition.
|
1202.34 | I know of one supervisor fired | ROYALT::KOVNER | Everything you know is wrong! | Sun Sep 30 1990 15:39 | 18 |
| I know of one supervisor who was fired. This was about 6 years ago.
(No, I will NOT give his name!)
He finally took the hint that his superiors wanted him to leave.
All his employee req's were rejected, for example, and he was heavily
criticized by his superiors.
So, he sent his resume around.
His manager got a call from someone, either a headhunter or a competitor -
informing his manager that he had put confidential information in his
resume. (Future product ship dates, for example.)
He was out that day.
Now this isn't the same as being fired for nonperformance, but it shows
that people do get fired.
|
1202.35 | yes, Wild Bill, let us close the rathole | ODIXIE::CARNELL | DTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALF | Mon Oct 01 1990 11:30 | 89 |
| REF: <<< Note 1202.33 by ESCROW::KILGORE "Wild Bill" >>>
-< Your contribution to copier efficiency lacks substance, still... >-
>><<<Now I'm going to walk away from this obviously unproductive
rathole. But I haven't given up on you, Dave -- I'll be watching
DELTA_IDEAS note 87 for signs of true ambition.>>
Since you launched the attack, chivalry says I get to make the last
closing reply to the rathole.
Enclosed below is my reply from DELTA_IDEAS. For further dialogue on
co-dependency in Digital, see topic 1208 in this conference.
<<< CAPNET::CAPVAX$PAGE:[NOTES$LIBRARY]DELTA_IDEAS.NOTE;1 >>>
-< DELTA_IDEAS >-
================================================================================
Note 87.6 Cutting Waste Produces $$$ US:CARNELL 6 of 6
ODIXIE::CARNELL "DTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALF" 69 lines 1-OCT-1990 10:16
-< do the right thing, ethically >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
In response to those individuals continuing to harp around stickers,
WHICH WAS NOT THE IDEA presented to DELTA and Executive Committee
members as posted in 87.0, let me elaborate here, where the arguments
should be made, why it would be WRONG for me to post 3-M Post-it
stickers, as was the "example" used in presented the MAIN idea in 87,
which was to change the cutlure in this company so that there is
REAL empowerment with authority instead of a co-dependent organization
where some managers take NO responsibility for leadership but are quite
willing to take all the reward.
The facility in which I work (area hdqs) has NOT supported employee
involvement and DELTA for an entire year now. To post the stickers
would be co-dependency, covering up and supporting demonstrated lack of
leadership, thereby ensuring its continuation. What happens when Ken
Olsen and Jack Smith send down a memo to managers asking for details on
how they are supporting employees getting involved to come up with
ideas to reduce expenses by one billion dollars, as is the current
desire by KO and JS, and to build more effectively customers, revenue
and margin.
Can you envision this response by a bureaucrat self-centered manager:
Dear Mssrs. Olsen and Smith:
In response to your request for details on how I as a manager have been
supporting employees getting involved to create ideas for reducing
expense by one billion dollars and to build more effectively customers,
revenue and margins, I am happy to report the DELTA program was a
complete and total success with my people contributing their share of
creativity! A total succuss, Sirs! Several people have created ideas
they have sent to corporate DELTA that will impact large areas of the
company, possibly saving tens of millions! And even locally, we have
had ideas implemented, saving money in subtle ways that will add up,
Sirs. Like a sticker on copiers to ensure clearing of commands that
WILL cut wasted paper costs. A total success, Sirs, and I am proud to
have been a part in providing the necessary leadership to have made it
happen.
In fact, if I may be so bold, my leadership as a manager has been
outstanding in bringing about greater employee involvement because
these employees became involved despite GREAT ODDS!
What were the great odds? Why the lack of my doing anything! I did
not promote the DELTA program, I nurtured no one, I set up no DELTA
councils, I encouraged no one to contribute, I did zip. Yet, despite
all this, many employees created ideas, and a few even implemented
some! Is not such great leadership on my part self-evident when
results were attained from people under me despite such obstacles!
And I even had to put down and intimidate many of these people because
they created wacky ideas, like changing OUR RULES of all things, such
as the employee who submitted the idea, posted in topic 87.0 of the
DElTA_IDEAS VAXnotes conference. It was fortunate I was able to
concentrate on the true value of said memo, namely the fine idea on
stickers, successfully ignoring all other content.
As a consequence of your now recognizing my self-evident leadership
that I provided as part of my responsibility as a manager with sole
control over authority to change and do anything, I eagerly await my
promotion from you to the higher level of big cheese, with appropriate
increase in salary, stock options, bonuses, and corner window office.
What I did locally for hundreds of employees I can readily replicate
for thousands. I am a proven commander who gets RESULTS!
Your most obedient manager,
A semi-swiss cheese awaiting promotion to big head cheese
|
1202.36 | HERE's your rathole | KEYS::MOELLER | DEC-rewarding successful risk takers | Mon Oct 01 1990 15:17 | 10 |
| I sure get grumpy when I get to pull over (using DWNotes) LOONG
DUPLICATES of notes in OTHER conferences that I have no interest in.
Taking up network bandwidth and disk space.
If you guys wanna squabble, do it over in DELTA_IDEAS.
If I were moderator of this conference, these recent replies would've
been deleted immediately.
karl
|
1202.37 | | CSOA1::FOSTER | Frank, OVD Seminars, DTN 432-7730 | Tue Oct 02 1990 10:34 | 24 |
| re .23
Like .24, I, too, had to "terminate" someone once.
It was a long (14 months) process full of performance discussions,
warning stages, counseling, EAP, documentation, etc, etc. It took an
incredible amount of my time. Keeping the person on board hurt the morale
in my group. Twice when I was ready to fire the person, Personnel balked
at the last minute and claimed I needed more documentation.
Even though there was no question that it had to be done for the
good of the group, as well as the individual, it was very hard to do.
I felt physically sick afterwards. But I still knew it was the right
thing to do.
I think my group would have been much better off if I had been
able to shorten the process. I would welcome any attempts to make the
process shorter, as long as the fairness is retained.
It's an experience I hope I never have to repeat.
Frank
|