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1203.1 | is this issue a cause of current margin problems? | ODIXIE::CARNELL | DTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALF | Thu Sep 27 1990 17:57 | 191 |
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Here's my opinion, sent in a memo to IDEAS CENTRAL @OGO and copied to a
select few others. LONG-MEMO ALERT! Danger, Will Robinson, danger!
Subject: Idea Sug: Survey employees' understanding of fundamental bus
I would like to submit the employee idea suggestion of
surveying all employees to determine their understanding of
the core "fundamental" business that Digital executive
management has explicited stated that we are in.
It is my opinion that 125,000 employees cannot work in
cooperation and harmony to build a more successful Digital,
greater than what is, if each employee has a different idea
of what the fundamental business is that Digital is pursuing.
A survey would determine just how diverse the perception is
of this topic among employees.
In addition, in order to ensure greater cooperation and
harmony with active employee empowerment to create and drive
change to attain prosperity, now and into the future, I would
like to further suggest re-examining the precise definition
of the fundamental business Digital is in. The reason is
this.
Many companies go bankrupt because of incorrectly defining
their fundamental business, and consequently as market wants
changed, with companies refusing to truly listen to customers
and act proactively on market intelligence linked to
engineering and product development, failed to affect
continuous change, and ultimately failed.
The classic business textbook example was the entire railroad
industry in their "fat cat" days which failed to understand
that they were NOT in the "railroad business" but rather in
actuality were in the TRANSPORTATION business. In other
words, customers cared first and foremost about fulfilling
wants related to transporting something.
Similarly, the makers of buggy whips failed to realize they
were in the transportation acceleration business, not buggy
whips. When buggys became obsolete, and quickly disappeared
with the emerging auto industry, so did companies disappear
that still made only buggy whips.
The examples are endless.
Thus, it is important to know that all 125,000 Digital
employees have the same understanding of the fundamental
business that we are in, its precise definition, and the
implications as it affects all actions of all employees in
creating and driving change and building a more successful
Digital.
And it is important to know the correct fundamental business
Digital "should" be in.
Many would simply say our fundamental business is computers.
Others, platform business. Or computer systems. Or
integrated solutions. Or computer services. Or information
technology. Or enterprise computing. Or systems
integration. Or distributed transaction processing. Or
changing organizations. Or empowering organizations where
everyone works together as a single team. Or increasing
productivity.
We do all these things. Yet, if employees just think we do
ONE of these things, disharmony results since the cohesive
understanding of ALL the pieces fitting together is missing.
Are "we" in the railroad business or the transportation
business?
Thinking just railroads caused the employees of railroad
companies to think only of railroads, and ultimately
adversely affected all railroad companies.
Is Digital in the computer business
or the _____________ business?
is my question, with the survey determining first where
all employees think we are now.
Perhaps another question on the survey for an empowered
workforce being asked to contribute creative thinking might
be what business SHOULD we be pursuing as a single entity in
order to ensure our prosperity, now and far into the future.
What "fundamental" business.
As my initial input to such a survey, I believe the survey
would show a wide variety of responses. I believe the most
common would be, "We are in the computer (read hardware
primarily) business."
In response to the second possible question on such a survey,
I would say we might better define our "fundamental" business
as being in the INFORMATION FULFILLMENT business.
All the things earlier listed provide value-added
information. In other words, fulfilling wants regarding
information.
If this were the best definition, then obviously our efforts
would revolve around information technology, which is indeed
the case.
And subsequently, our marketing would revolve around
utilizing said information technology to satisfy market and
customer wants for information, with internal leadership
drawing all employees into developing customers and business
with this "specific" focus.
One derivative of this then must be the satisfying of "user"
wants for information. In business, the user at the desk
wants information and does not want to be "held up" either by
the glass house computer center IBM mainframe controlled by
an MIS manager or even in fact by a department mini-computer
controlled by a department system manager. The future,
especially considering dropping chip prices, might then
suggest ultimately large capacity mainframe capability
sitting in a small box on the desk that can be, as desired,
able to communicate with all other desktop mainframes,
sharing and accessing information, either internal to the
organization, or external to anywhere in the world, yet, able
to function independently with ALL applications loaded
(easily done because of astronomical massive amounts of CPU
memory/disk space available because of advancing chip
technology), should the network connection be disrupted for
any reason.
Additionally, the technology would also seem to revolve
around chip technology, then a operating system that meets
international open standards, then supported by integrated
software and networking capability.
Lastly, fulfilling information wants of users would seem to
extend beyond just the use where a certain number of workers
would have capability on their desks for use in fulfilling
business information applications. In other words,
information could be fulfilled in other ways other than
running a traditional business application on a traditional
computer with keyboard.
If my suggested definition were perceived to be correct, the
question would then have to be asked, "Are the actions and
investments of Digital focused on meeting the markets of
users' wants for information fulfillment, protecting our
position via effective marketing, engineering and product
development, now and 20 years into the future?"
As both a computer terminal user at the desk satisfying
information wants, and observing many other employees in
similar positions here in Digital, I would observe over the
years several recurring problems: inability to find
applications that will generate desired information to meet
specific information fulfillment wants, or the inability for
available applications to work on the existing operating
system, or the inabililty to load compatible applications
because of CPU disk space problems, or the inability to
maximize usage of applications because of disk space
limitations, or the inability to do any work if the node or
the network connection goes down, leaving many unable to do
the work since all the applications resided on the node and
not at the desk.
Digital is indeed into many products and services, all
enabling Digital to be one of the leading suppliers of
networked computer systems, software, services and systems
integration, as stated in the first paragraph of the Digital
1989 Annual Report.
However, is calling our fundamental business networked
computer systems, software, services and systems integration
sufficient to ensure optimum effective focus on the core
actions necessary to ensure prosperity. Or is this the
equivalent of saying we are in the railroad business.
In any event, I write this employee involvement memo with two
concerns in mind: 1. To suggest that it would be of benefit
to ensure all employees understand the same definitiion of
our fundamental business for this is important in getting
everyone to work in harmony to build something greater than
what is, and 2. To suggest exploring alternative definitions
that perhaps may be more accurate thereby better ensuring our
prosperity; and if none turn out to be better, this exercise
will then re-affirm that the present one indeed is the best
one.
Regards,
David
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1203.2 | "information" is only 1/3 | LEMAN::DAVEED | What you get is how you do it | Thu Sep 27 1990 18:46 | 46 |
| re .1
Focusing on information fulfillment may skew our focus off track.
Most businesses have three main types of activities:
"systems"
/ \
/ \
/ \
/ \
/ \
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control processes
Note that I am not necessarily using the word "systems" in a
computerese way.
Control tends to be a stabilizing/directing force and its main "food"
is information. Process tends to be the action force and its main
"food" is knowhow and skills. Typically the departments of Finance,
Marketing and Human Resources are more interested in data and
information. Engineering, Manufacturing and Sales are more
action-oriented and therefore more interested in applications.
The role of "systems" is to integrate the activities:
communication
/ \
/ \
/ ?KNOWLEDGE? \
/ \
/ \
---------------------
information applications
Digital's traditional market was in technical computing, with a heavy
emphasis on applications. We now purport to be the networking company.
To now place the emphasis on information/database would be off balance.
Many management pundits claim that we are exiting the industrial age
and entering a post- or trans-industrial era ... the knowledge age.
If we're going to be in some kind of fulfillment business, maybe it
should be the KNOWLEDGE FULFILLMENT business.
-dinesh.
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1203.3 | interesting topic | MUSKIE::BLACK | I always run out of time and space to finish .. | Fri Sep 28 1990 19:22 | 21 |
|
Interesting topic(as usual) David.
Reminds me of a similiar question/topic: who is the competition? I used
to think it was IBM etal. Then I heard the CEO of IDS (an AMEX
division - an investment firm) answer that - he didn't think it was the
stock market or insurance annuities - he felt is was Disneyland, new
cars etc. Basicly, he puts more corporate effort in to getting people
to invest in their future (as opposed to in gratificatin today) then in
getting them to buy from IDS versus NYL - he feels that once they
decide that they want to invest, IDS will get it's share because their
ad might have gotten the consumer in the investment mood anyway.
So who is the competition for us? I think it is continuing to do things
in the traditional way. IBM, team Xerox, HP etc all seem to understand
that as they advertise about how their products solve day to day
business needs - in prime time no less. How often do you see us try to
intice someone to try a new way to do an old task and oh by the way we
can do that as well as anyone!
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1203.4 | change both focus and organisation | LEMAN::DAVEED | What you get is how you do it | Sun Sep 30 1990 19:26 | 40 |
| Perhaps we should change our Corporate objectives to something along
the following lines:
To be the best global provider of integrated services and products
enabling customers to implement integrative/networking organisations.
This would be an explicit commitment to helping organisations restructure
themselves (around empowered task-focusing teams?), a statement about
how we feel technology should be implemented, a shift away from the
continued automation of today's steep hierarchical structures.
Of course, if we're going to sell it we need to do it, too.
Some advantages of changing our objectives:
o it addresses our own current organisational crisis while providing
a much needed business focus
o as we change our own organisation, we gain experience and expertise
which directly helps us achieve our business goals, e.g., engineers
who work in an organisation structured like the customer will better
understand the customers' needs, consultants who experience the
organisational transition will be better able to help customers go
through a similar transition than competitors who are still working
in a steep hierarchy.
o the business focus leverages off our traditional strengths in
technology (e.g., networks) as well as our informal culture (e.g.,
personal networking, valuing knowledge over authority).
o the integrative/networking type of organisation aligns Digital's
business objectives with the personal beliefs/philosophy of many of
its individual contributors (alignment of personal and professional
objectives and beliefs is an important individual success factor).
o this proposal changes perceived organisational problems into
perceived opportunities: for increased personal and organisational
growth as well as for business success.
-dinesh.
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1203.5 | | MU::PORTER | Nature Abhors a Vacuum Cleaner | Sun Sep 30 1990 21:41 | 16 |
| > To be the best global provider of integrated services and products
> enabling customers to implement integrative/networking organisations.
That's so vague as to be meaningless. It says we're going to
sell "services" and "products". Great, that eliminates
all those things that aren't services or products that
I was worrying about trying to sell.
The base note claims that overly restrictive ideas about
a corporation's objectives are fatal. I contend that
excessively vague objectives are equally fatal, since
quite obviously no-one then knows what they're supposed
to be doing.
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1203.6 | still too vague? | LEMAN::DAVEED | What you get is how you do it | Mon Oct 01 1990 14:08 | 19 |
| re -.1
Uh, sorry. I didn't intend to be vague. Perhaps a translation would
help. How about if me say that we're going to provide the services and
products that support very flat organisations...peer-to-peer human
networking and lots of multi-functional teams as an organisational
style (organisational and business consulting services) AND we back this
up with the technical products and services needed to implement it.
Another way of saying it is that we want to bash down the stovepipes
and baffles in today's steep beurocracies and replace them with
something more human-oriented and more productive.
And we could start with Digital first, as in RIGHT NOW...before they
lay off the rest of us.
Is it clear now?
-dinesh.
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1203.7 | Use Spin-offs to Support Customers and gain FOcus | MAGOS::BELDIN | Pull us together, not apart | Mon Oct 01 1990 18:00 | 72 |
| Second thoughts.
I was one of the chorus during the early 80's that said it was time we
got into applications software, since it was obviously going to drive
hardware sales. Service was soon added to the agenda of different
businesses we could/should be in. It seems we either we echoing what
top management was thinking or we convinced them. Fine, here we are.
Today's perspectives include:
1) Let's do what we know how to do well.
o design, make and sell iron?
o design, program, and sell systems software? (including
DECwindows and CASE products)
o woo and win CMP's with attractive applications?
2) Let's learn what it takes to be successful in tomorrow's
marketplace.
o provide consulting services?
o design, program, and make standards-adherant
applications?
3) "Process" or "Management" is the problem. Too much bureaucracy
- let's go back to the old "dynamic", "rough-edged", "informal"
style we knew in old DEC. (This approach is irrelevant to
defining the business we should be in. But it does suggest that
our reach has exceeded our grasp.)
I think that we embarked on software and service businesses just like
we start any new product. We make no plans to stop supporting old
products or to support them by selling them off to spin-off companies.
We are still making replacement parts for products that are no longer
in the price book. All of that supports the customer, but confuses our
employees.
Instead of trying to do everything, let us focus on a few high
potential areas and
STOP doing the traditional business!
---- ------------------------------
Let us seek to spin off businesses to provide support to our older
products in their own manufacturing facilities, provide them with
suitable staff with the experience of people who know the products
(instead of early retirement or buyouts).
Let us seek to spin off businesses to design follow-ons to PDP-11's,
PDP-8's, PDP-10's, and other low activity businesses.
Let us prepare to spin off businesses which do the maintenance of low
volume, but valuable software. Let us staff these businesses with
today's maintenance software engineers and let them have a chance at
making these products even more competitive.
All in all, I believe we need a simpler, more concrete vision, one
which emphasizes high investment technology we can support and
believe our customers need as well as ongoing support through spin-offs
for those customers who are not interested in changing technology so
quickly as we are doing.
Regards,
Dick
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1203.8 | | KEYS::MOELLER | DEC-rewarding successful risk takers | Mon Oct 01 1990 19:08 | 3 |
| Remember DECtap. Please.
karl
|
1203.9 | You don't get into a business without investing | COUNT0::WELSH | Tom Welsh (UK CASE Marketing) 768-5225 | Tue Oct 02 1990 06:06 | 64 |
| re .7:
Dick, I agree with most of what you're saying. But there's a
fly in the ointment:
>>> STOP doing the traditional business!
>>> ---- ------------------------------
...in that the "traditional business" is what pays you and me
and the other 120-odd thousand. If we are looking at cutting
several thousand staff today, it would be a lot worse if we
"stop doing the traditional business". In fact, with the current
financial climate, hiring freeze, equipment freeze, and heavy
emphasis on getting in revenue this week, we are headed right
back down the path to heavy hardware sales. That's the only way
it can be done.
It's a familiar situation in business. To become healthy and
establish a successful future, we need to invest the time and
money to build up new lines of business. But the moment we lift
our noses from the grindstone - WHAM! the results dip, the stock
market goes sour on us, and we react by taking the measures
we are all seeing today.
CASE is to do with selling expertise. Digital is uniquely
well positioned to sell CASE, including software products,
third party products, services, support, consultancy, training,
you name it. But we're crippled for lack of the expert field
people to carry all this to the customer. It takes up to 2-3
years work in an account before a steady stream of CASE revenue
can be counted on, and at any time during those 2-3 years a change
of account team, a cut-back in funding, the loss of the CASE experts
who have previously been available, any of these can blight what's
been done. It's rather like building a house of cards - credibility
is slowly built up, lost in a moment.
I just spent two years building up a CASE program in what was
until recently Digital's largest European customer. Since July 1st,
the account team has been turned upside down - the account manager
has been replaced and most of the people who set up and drove the
CASE program have been moved on. In particular, the consultants
who were responsible for technical expertise in AI and CASE have
been reorganized and are no longer available. There is serious
danger that the whole effort will just wither on the vine, while
IBM, HP and Sun walk in and reap the fruits of our labour.
The reason this sort of thing happens all the time is undoubtedly
that senior management doesn't have any focus on this sort of
activity - they're sublimely unaware of it, and therefore don't
realize when, by rearranging the furniture as they do periodically,
they are actually rupturing the gas main with dire effects on their
long-term health.
Which brings me back to where I came in: to adopt new lines of
business, whether it be Systems Integration, CASE, or Network
Management, any company needs to identify its goals, establish
a plan, and provide extra funding to "prime the pump" and get
the new business up to speed. Digital doesn't do that. It just
states some desirable directions, and hopes that they will
magically come to happen.
They won't.
/Tom
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1203.10 | More on Spin Offs | MOCA::BELDIN | Pull us together, not apart | Tue Oct 02 1990 12:15 | 49 |
| Tom, I doubt we have any serious disagreement.
Obviously, we aren't going to spin off the bread-and-butter, but we
have never handled "traditional" (read low-demand, service-parts, etc)
in a cost effective manner. There is all kinds of overhead driven by
ECO's in the hardware environment and Revisions in the software realm
that are not necessary with a stable, well defined product.
Our margins on sales of low-demand and service-parts could be much
higher without allocations for unnecessary functions and services. Its
just the old 80-20 rule again.
Your "case" (excuse the pun) history illustrates exactly my biggest
concern. We are in so many businesses that senior management, when it
tinkers (as it always will), is likely to make disastrous mistakes.
The only protection we have from that is strong middle management that
pushes back all the way to KO's office, if that's what it takes. Even
when that is successful, such incidents slow down the development (of a
hard or soft product or an account) just due to the confusion factor.
We can get business focus only by clearing away the brush.
There are people who will never be happy outside of some particular
kind of business, be it manufacturing, engineering, software,
consulting, or sales. Let us give them a chance to focus on what they
really enjoy.
This area, to be clearer than in my previous memo, includes any
products which we have made/sold and in which we DO NOT wish to invest
further. These products, the patent, development, and licensing rights
for them, and the opportunity to continue to work in an INDEPENDENT
supplier to Digital, would be an appreciated opportunity, better than
"a package", for many. These businesses can and should be spun off,
together with the workers, managers, and individual contributors who
know them best.
There are also people who are able to generate great ideas for new
business and inspire others to implement them. Let us give them a
chance also. Digital's financial resources are essential for this
latter category (which, in my mind, includes CASE tool sales,
enterprise integration, high technology software and hardware
development). We don't dare fail to provide all the resources needed
for success in these areas. By definition, this is high risk, and
therefore must be high margin business. I believe this is where the
"old DEC".
Does that help?
Dick
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1203.11 | problems with spin offs | SAUTER::SAUTER | John Sauter | Tue Oct 02 1990 14:42 | 28 |
| re: .10
What you are proposing seems to make business sense, but I find it
troubling. First there is the problem of ensuring quality. A "lean
and mean" shop that acquired responsibility for one of our older
products might not be as careful as we have been to make sure that
only high-quality product was shipped to customers. That will make
our customers unhappy, not only with this product but with others
that may go this way in the future. Similarly, there may be less
responsiveness to customer calls, and less frequent maintenance
releases.
A different troubling aspect is more personal. I keep track of all of
the products I have made significant contribution to in my time at DEC
because I like to see them continue to succeed. That's partly ego, but
partly a wish to maintain my reputation. If the responsibllity for a
product is given to an outside organization I must decide whether to go
with it or to stay. If I stay I lose contact with it, but if I go
I lose the opportunity to work on new things.
In software, at least, there aren't any real "maintenance programmers",
or at least they're rare. In my experience, you join a project if you
think it's interesting, and stick with it until you get a better offer.
A project in its early stages has a lot of design and a lot of risk
of cancellation. Later the design effort decreases in favor of writing
and debugging code, but design never completely stops, and once the first
line of code is written maintenance is an on-going activity.
John Sauter
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1203.12 | More on Spin-offs | MOCA::BELDIN | Pull us together, not apart | Tue Oct 02 1990 15:35 | 40 |
| Re .11
You're right, John. It wouldn't be easy for any of us to make the
decision to either follow the product we put a lot of our soul into or
to stay behind and let others assume the responsibility.
It also isn't easy to offer a blanket "package" which ultimately
disolves what may have been a very good team just because some
individuals make their personal decision to go and others to stay.
I submit that DEC can build some of the strengths of our Japanese
competitors by spinning off supplier organizations, run by people we
know and who know us, and with whom we can expect good business
relations in the future.
I believe we are better off with low overhead, lean and mean suppliers
than to just plain pay people off to leave, with no synergy in view.
By the way, many of our internal service organizations could/should go
the same route, not just product oriented activities. The printing
operation we closed down could have been the base for a spin-off, free
to take on additional business, but also having people for whom Digital
does not mean a watch.
Here in Puerto Rico, Baxter-Travenol recently dissolved its EDP/MIS
operation and contracted all that kind of work with a commercial
datacenter. I interviewed for the job of the MIS manager six months
before the action was taken. I hope I would have had the guts to make
the same recommendation that the man who took the job did.
I think that "privatising" works not only for bloated governments, but
for bloated corporations as well.
But, in the end, I think I understand how you feel, and I respect that
level of committment to one's professional work.
Regards,
Dick
|
1203.13 | Spin off WITHIN the company... | CIMNET::PSMITH | Peter H. Smith,MET-1/K2,291-7592 | Wed Oct 03 1990 08:50 | 53 |
| What's the difference between "spinning off" some segment or product to
a separate corporate entity, and spinning the same thing off to a
separate P&L within Digital? Is that where the new ROI emphasis fits in?
For instance, suppose we have a team that works well together and creates
a spiffy product which finally matures. It would be great if they could
remain in Digital, take ADVANTAGE of a decent ROI as they cut down support
services, and use increasing spare time for "blue sky" work on new ideas.
The new ideas could be unrelated to the existing project, or could be
related if the group felt that their expertise was in that market segment.
Since they are still getting a positive ROI, shouldn't they be entitled to
the opportunity to try a new direction for the company?
On the other hand, maybe this is what Jack Smith is referring to as a
"porch." Work which is unrelated to the immediate task at hand. I don't
know whether our current directions are heading toward promoting or
destroying the midnight projects which used to lead to new and exciting
products.
I hope we don't end up with the worst of both worlds: Bad ROI means can
the project early in its life cycle, and good ROI and a stable product
means split up the group or, worse, spin them off to compete with us.
Anybody in the Silicon valley want to comment on the personal thinking
that goes into leaving for another new startup when the current one has
become "mature?" Does it have anything to do with wanting to continue
to be creative? I really don't know, but I'm curious.
We need some sort of structure which does not squash the entrepreneurial
inclinations of our contributers, from senior management on down to the
individual contributor who wants to tweak some process. Why not "spin
off" talent internally, rather than letting it loose? Surely we've got
the brains to figure out how to run both "lean and mean" and "fat"
operations under a common umbrella.
There are benefits for both sides of the equation. The company benefits
from new ideas and products, while the team members benefit from the vast
resources within Digital (like notes files and experts to talk to).
As an engineer, I can't think of anything less attractive than being told
"you've done a wonderful job on this project, and it is now stable. Now
we're going to spin you off into a group which does nothing but work on
tweaking your product. You will no longer have access to the people within
Digital, and you'll have to implement any new ideas using your own
resources, with no means of bringing them to market. See Ya..."
Some people may see maintaining DECfoo as easy street, but I bet a majority
would see it as hell if they were not given some opportunity to stretch in
other directions ( here I mean if DECfoo is fully mature, so that there are
no new things to add on ).
Does this make any sense?
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