T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1206.2 | | STKMKT::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney in New York | Sat Sep 29 1990 23:32 | 29 |
| There might be something in the DEC_HISTORY notesfile on this in more
detail.
The org chart in 1980 from the field's point of view was a joke:
They (product lines) pretend to support us and we (the field) pretend
to take direction from them. Maxtrix management was already a decade
old.
Nominally powerful product lines in 1980 served a purpose. At least
one know where the buck stopped. It stopped with the product line
manager. After several "empowering" re-organizations we've lost that
accountability.
A consequence of being bigger now than we were then is the lengthy
decision making process. I figure that in constant 1990 dollars, a
commitment of $10K has gone from a week to a month and a commitment of
$1M from two weeks to three months.
In engineering, in 1980 there was a bias towards action, doing
something and then trusting the marketplace ie customers to let you
know if you were doing the right thing. Around 1983, when everyone
told us we were doing the wrong thing, we kept on doing what we were
doing, stubbornly. Volumes have been written about this arrogance.
Finally, there was less hypocrisy in 1980. But in 1990 we have NOTES,
so that makes it infinitely better.
Myself, I prefer the 1970 org chart: 6 software specialists to cover
the United States east of the Mississippi.
|
1206.3 | And...it's time to do so... | MORO::BEELER_JE | In harm's way... | Sun Sep 30 1990 12:53 | 31 |
| Comparing the field sales force reporting structure when I joined the
company versus now:
1976 1990
---- -----
KO KO
\|/ \|/
Vice President Vice President
\|/ \|/
Regional Sales Mgr Regional Sales Mgr (VP?)
\|/ \|/
District Sales Mgr District Sales Mgr
\|/ |
Sales Group Mgr |
\|/ \|/
Sales Unit Mgr Sales Unit Mgr
\|/ \|/
Sales Representative Sales Representative
When the Group Managers disappeared there was not even as much as (from
my perspective) a minor hick-up. Never missed 'em. No reduction
in the quality or quantity of work.
I am now, more than ever, convinced that the Sales Unit Manager or the
District Manager can disappear with a corresponding non-noticeable
effect. We need only to automate some functions and another level of
management can easily be cut....in particular, the Sales Unit Manager.
I may be wrong...this is just a gut feeling...
Jerry
|
1206.4 | Full Circle | HERON::PERLA | | Mon Oct 01 1990 07:19 | 20 |
| The product lines were established with the intent of focusing our Marketing
efforts to a particular set of customer needs. The P/Ls vanished ('81) when the
redundancy (multiple Finance/Mareting/Operations Managers) was felt to be
burdensome. In fact, we did away with a great deal of industry-oriented
expertise and fumbled around for a good many years without a Marketing
orientation. It is now the Digital Competence Center (ala IBM), more or less
devised along Industry Sector lines, which is intended to replace them. We spent
many years lost in the desert and generated much heartache amongst the
P/L Marketeers after abolishing the P/Ls. And for what, to arrive very much
where we are today in terms of Industry Marketing strategy. The transition
could have been quicker, more effective, less de-motivating.
One advantage today is that the Account Manager, depending upon ROI, can
be empowered to make investments in his/her Account development, much as the
original P/L Manager could for all his/her accounts. Another difference is the
fact that an International Account has one point of entry into Digital - the
single, assigned Account Manager - not one per region. In a globalized business
world, where our revenue tends to concentrate in the larger accounts,
both changes make very good sense.
|
1206.5 | Goin' Downhill | COOKIE::LENNARD | | Mon Oct 01 1990 13:20 | 10 |
| Having been a manager in the 80's....here's my opinion.
The average manage now is less experienced, better educated, much more
self-centered, and cares much less about their employees' welfare.
We are feeling the full impact of the yuppification of DEC, and an
extreme over-dependence on MBA's and other generally worthless pieces
of paper.
Overall, we've lost a lot.
|
1206.6 | the guy with ten years doesn't respect the shingle | SA1794::CHARBONND | scorn to trade my place | Mon Oct 01 1990 13:44 | 5 |
| re .5 >the average mager now is less experienced, better educated
I smell a contradiction. More properly, 'less educated through
experience, more 'schooled'". Too many people, including and
especially hiring managers, prefer a shingle to a rank-and-filer.
|
1206.7 | KO Blames our woes on MBA's | COOKIE::LENNARD | | Mon Oct 01 1990 14:23 | 8 |
| re -1....I think we're in violent agreement. I can remember for many
years when a hiring manager was not allowed to specify degree
requirements in a req (except for doctors, lawyers, etc.) Now the
reqs are full of such silliness.
This new generation of management, having wasted many years and much
coin in pursuing paper, cannot conceive of someone without an
advanced degree being even remotely functional. Sad.
|
1206.8 | Ironic, Indeed ! | XCUSME::SAPP | Free the DEC 100,000 ! | Mon Oct 01 1990 14:39 | 8 |
| As a manager in the '80s, I remember getting resumes of PhDs and
asking "...but can he/she code ?".
Now many of those go straight to already bloated staffs.
Sad, indeed !
Edwin
|
1206.9 | evil MBAs | STKMKT::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney in New York | Wed Oct 03 1990 09:01 | 20 |
| 1206.5 brings up one of my favorite boogey-persons, yes it is the
subversive MBA trying to undermine the foundations of Digital.
I've yet to meet an MBA at Digital who's in a position to do 1/100th
the damage that folks with engineering degrees are doing.
Where are these evil MBA's?
I'll concede that there's a pseudo-MBA mentality in trying to create
discounted cash flows, internal rates of return, and so forth when
there isn't adequate common sense to proceed or kill a project, but
that's as far as I'll go.
I think it's demeaning to employees who have invested 3 or 4 years of
their life in academic work to get an MBA and _know_ the limitations of
financial models, to assign to them the stigma of short-term thinking
and exclusive focus on short-term financial results.
If anything, MBA's have seen more case studies than anyone else of
companies that went down the tubes for these reasons.
|
1206.10 | | PSW::WINALSKI | Careful with that VAX, Eugene | Wed Oct 03 1990 19:24 | 21 |
| I don't see much difference between the quality and deportment of DEC's
management in 1980 from the way it is now. The biggest difference that I see
is that there are a lot more managers around now than there used to be, but
that's to be expected, since the company is several times larger than it used
to be. This in turn has led to a major problem with DEC's traditional "decision
by consensus" approach. There're a lot more people who have to "buy into"
something before it happens now than in 1980. I think it's time to toss
"decision by consensus" on the scrap heap and replace it with "lead, follow, or
get out of the way."
One thing that we had in 1980 was a well-articulated sense of long-term
corporate direction. We were working towards bringing together the disparate
machine architectures and operating systems of the past into a single,
company-wide systems offering. This materialized in the middle of the decade
as "one company, one architecture, one message." The time for that strategy
is past, but in its day it was responsible for most of our growth. It has been
discarded, but it has not been replaced by anything else. Here in 1990, I no
longer have the sense that my work is feeding into realizing any kind of
long-term plan for the company's future.
--PSW
|
1206.11 | Need another G Bell | XLIB::THISSELL | George Thissell, ISVG Tech Planning | Wed Oct 03 1990 22:12 | 7 |
| RE -1
>One thing that we had in 1980 was a well-articulated sense of long-term
>corporate direction.
You spell that Gordon Bell.
/George
|
1206.12 | Re .7 Shingles vs Function | STAR::PARKE | I'm a surgeon, NOT Jack the Ripper | Thu Oct 04 1990 18:36 | 6 |
| I take it, then, that I would be considered a non functional engineer by said
Mgt types. Hmm, after 24 years doing various things in, with, and around
computers is seems I have been wasting my time }8-)}.
Bill
|
1206.13 | | SAUTER::SAUTER | John Sauter | Fri Oct 05 1990 08:09 | 7 |
| re: .12
I think even the most degree-worshiping manager recognizes the value of
experience. Experience, however, is the thing most clearly lacking in
a person just out of school.
John Sauter, BS '67
|
1206.14 | is the below in practice universally in Digital? | SAHQ::CARNELLD | DTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALF | Fri Oct 05 1990 09:22 | 4 |
|
Neither education nor experience can take the place of effectively
using wisdom, common sense and intelligence.
|
1206.15 | I guess it's simple if you're at the top | WLDWST::KING | | Fri Oct 05 1990 10:59 | 27 |
| There is a "Reprint of the September 12th Report to Readers of the Wall
Street Journal" inserted in the September 23 issue of Digital Today.
The last page has a quote from K.O.:
"One of the things I loved about Digital when it was truly a small
company was the way we worked together. We shared information, energy,
and ideas with a real sense of entrepeneurial teamwork."
The article goes on to say how our global computer network allows this
teamwork to happen on an international scale.
"The greatest problem facing any large compay is how to foster
teamwork across barriers of size, time, and distance. The network
makes it possible for everyone to work together."
I would agree that the network is a tool that makes teamwork possible,
but the network does not "foster" teamwork; people (managers *and* workers)
foster teamwork. That may be nit-picking but I did a double take when I
read the next paragraph (emphasis is mine):
"Digital's teamwork philosophy and SIMPLE ORGANIZATIONAL STRUCTURE
underscore its long-standing commitment to bring the power of
information closer to people who make decisions."
"Simple"?? Are there other organizations more complicated than ours?
-pk
|
1206.16 | Press hard, Ken! | BEAGLE::BREICHNER | | Fri Oct 05 1990 11:12 | 10 |
| re.15
EXACTLY,
The network ENABLES teamwork, but doesn't initiate, lead it.
It's like most modern adhesives. They are great glue, but need
pressure, heat to become effective.
/fred
|
1206.17 | much simpler | SAUTER::SAUTER | John Sauter | Fri Oct 05 1990 11:32 | 6 |
| re: .15
Yes, our structure is much simpler that some other large
organizations. Consider the Executive Branch of the U.S. Federal
government, for example. At Digital we don't even have divisions.
John Sauter
|
1206.18 | Dear manager | AISG::BORNEO::SOO | | Fri Oct 05 1990 15:29 | 23 |
|
Dear Group Manager,
Please try to remember that the people who get the work done are the
worker bees.
Do not try to insulate yourself too much from them. They are the
heart-beat of your organisation. You will quickly lose touch with the
reality of your organisation if you choose to have a small army of
smaller managers filter information for you.
Remember, these smaller managers will also have their own agenda.
The good ones will tune it to accurately reflect his/her charges.
But there is about one that's not-so-good for each good one.
You need to be in touch with your individual contributors. Give them
more room to make important project decisions. Insulate them from
unnecessary paper work and endless hours of preparing for
presentations after presentations. Keep them in tune with technology
and encourage them.
- An individual contributor
(Phil)
|
1206.19 | Critical Mass | CUSPID::MCCABE | If Murphy's Law can go wrong .. | Mon Oct 08 1990 11:38 | 43 |
| The difference between my first interactions with DEC in 1972, thru
DEc in the early 80's and now is pretty minimal.
Once Digital aquired enough momentum to keep growing it never got
really bad. Every 2 years we were the darling of Wall Street, a
one year so-so bit, and every other cycle DEC was oh so bad. Nothing
internally changed, it was just business as usual.
When we were good, we hired, felt invincible, started projects on
a moments notice, and had a wonderful time.
When we were bad, ALL groups got frozen, REQ's stopped, lots of
memos got circulated, we stopped delivery of the Wall street journal,
required VP signitures on international travel, etc. AND lots of
GOOD people got fed up and left.
Then it all got magically better, everyone felt vindicated, and
we started to spend like drunken sailors on leave. Nothing changed.
I think the problem is that everyone is taking this as just another
bad cycle. The internal politicians are building a power base and
canibilizing little groups for charter that can be exploited when
the bindge comes. Lots of good news is being circulated so that
those in power will look else where for cuts.
I don't think that very many people at Digital can even concieve
of this as being the one that ends the good times once and for all.
Then it gets sick. Anyone working for the turn around will have
lost significant political power time in the case it does come about.
If we rebound, the ones who worked in the right direction will suffer.
If we don't rebound, the ones who want to work hard won't have the
power base to hold on for a long long slow time.
Problem of the commons. Anyone looking to the eventual outcome
treats this as a "personnal opportunity"
The real problem here is that in past times there were fewer managers
and the number working for turn around had a higher impact. Now
we have a lot more managers and organization but the number working
to get good things done is constant.
|
1206.20 | Re: .17 We don't have divisions | STAR::PARKE | I'm a surgeon, NOT Jack the Ripper | Mon Oct 08 1990 15:18 | 7 |
| No, but we do have "product lines' or whatever they are called this time around.
If individual business entities (profit centers) exist, are not these in essence
"divisions" operating indivirually under the global direction from the corporate
center ?
Bill
|
1206.21 | not as much | SAUTER::SAUTER | John Sauter | Mon Oct 08 1990 17:15 | 3 |
| re: .20---Divisions are more separated than our product lines. We have
a lot more central direction than a typical many-divisioned company.
John Sauter
|
1206.22 | "simpler" may make life more complicated | XANADU::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (381-0899 ZKO3-2/T63) | Tue Oct 09 1990 13:01 | 54 |
| re Note 1206.15 by WLDWST::KING (and .17 and .21 by SAUTER::SAUTER):
> "Digital's teamwork philosophy and SIMPLE ORGANIZATIONAL STRUCTURE
> underscore its long-standing commitment to bring the power of
> information closer to people who make decisions."
>
> "Simple"?? Are there other organizations more complicated than ours?
John Sauter's comments have pointed out that a simple
organizational structure (i.e., no divisions) might actually
result in an organization which is more rigidly controlled
and therefore harder to work in.
During the 12 years I've been at Digital, I've seen a steady
progression of centralization in engineering. Back in '78,
it seemed that a lot of important engineering took place in
the "product lines" -- outside of central engineering. And
even central engineering was divided among product families
with sturdy walls between them.
Also, back in '78, Digital occasionally (often?) suffered
from parallel and duplicative engineering efforts, as well as
from incompatible architectures.
I believe that the move toward centralized engineering was
motivated primarily to solve the problems of duplications
and incompatibilities within engineering.
Did it work out? I would argue that the company has suffered
as much as it has benefited from engineering centralization.
I strongly believe that the company must find a way to create
and nurture islands of engineering excellence. Yes, and I
do mean "islands." They need considerable isolation from the
day to day intervention and need to coordinate with
engineering at large.
About 10 years ago, it was recognized that Digital, if it
were to do world-class research, needed to form research labs
that were isolated from engineering and had a great deal of
independence. This appears to have worked out -- the labs,
even though at arm's length, have contributed to major
architectural efforts.
I think it is time to recognize that world-class engineering
and product development likewise needs, in many cases, a
degree of independence that is not found in central
engineering today.
This may result in a (slightly) more complicated
organizational structure. However, it will "bring the power
of information closer to people who make decisions."
Bob
|
1206.23 | Centralization = Uniform Failure | MOCA::BELDIN | Pull us together, not apart | Tue Oct 09 1990 13:58 | 62 |
| re .22
> I believe that the move toward centralized engineering was
> motivated primarily to solve the problems of duplications
> and incompatibilities within engineering.
> Did it work out? I would argue that the company has suffered
> as much as it has benefited from engineering centralization.
> I strongly believe that the company must find a way to create
> and nurture islands of engineering excellence. Yes, and I
> do mean "islands." They need considerable isolation from the
> day to day intervention and need to coordinate with
> engineering at large.
From my perspective, centralization is just as risky as
decentralization. Instead of loss due to duplications and
incompatibilities, we can all go down the tubes together, with a
very efficient, well controlled, crowd of lemmings.
<flame on>
I fear that we are following a market that is not there with some
of our (and our competitors, too, thank goodness) moves in the
direction of consistent [ :-) ], pretty [ :-| ], and complex
[ :-( ] user interfaces. We are writing software for hardware
designed for people who can juggle several processes on their
workstation and still get work done. There are very few "users"
who can do this.
How often must we repeat it?
"People buy computers to get work done, not because they love
computers!"
(ok, you and I are exceptions, we work in this business, but most
of the world doesn't!)
We are contributing to a rate of change in technology that is
designed for a niche market, and yet we wonder why it doesn't
have mass appeal?
Beldin's rule (excuse me, Jerry Pournelle) is:
"One user, one window, one visible process."
<flame off>
to get back to the centralization - decentralization issue
Yes, there are some business requirements that make
centralization useful. There are market exploration and
development imperatives for decentralization. Our problem in
Digital seems to be that we can't "value differences" between
organizational styles, we can't have recognize (or find) a
non-dogmatic approach to organization, management, business
objectives, or anything else. We don't even recognize our own
dogmatism.
<all right, I didn't turn it all the way off. So sue me!>
|
1206.24 | clarification | XANADU::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (381-0899 ZKO3-2/T63) | Tue Oct 09 1990 14:31 | 15 |
| After I wrote Note 1206.22, I realized that my suggestion of
"islands of engineering excellence" might be misconstrued. I
in no way wanted to imply that today's engineering
organization lacks excellence, or that excellence required
isolation in all cases.
Sometimes you need large numbers of highly-coordinated
developers, but often you don't.
I am also not advocating that all of Digital's engineering be
decentralized, but I do think that some larger number of more
independent engineering groups would help the company react to
changes in the market and technology
Bob.
|
1206.25 | Dups ok, long as management ships only the best | DELNI::MCGORRILL | Its your turn anyway.. | Tue Oct 09 1990 22:27 | 8 |
| rep ;.22
> Also, back in '78, Digital occasionally (often?) suffered
> from parallel and duplicative engineering efforts, as well as
You mean like the 8650,8700,8550,6410 cpus we made over the last couple
of years, all with the same power, and no resemblence to each other?
/Dean
|
1206.26 | ? | JUMBLY::DAY | No Good Deed Goes Unpunished | Wed Oct 10 1990 08:17 | 7 |
| Question. How many of our software products originated in the
skunkworks ?
Question. How many were deliberately planned by "the hierarchy".
Question. Which are the most successful ?
Mike Day
|
1206.27 | | XANADU::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (381-0899 ZKO3-2/T63) | Wed Oct 10 1990 13:09 | 18 |
| re Note 1206.26 by JUMBLY::DAY:
> Question. How many of our software products originated in the
> skunkworks ?
> Question. How many were deliberately planned by "the hierarchy".
> Question. Which are the most successful ?
Well, I recently saw some lifetime profit figures for the
BOSE "family" of products (this is from memory).
ALL-IN-1, a "skunkworks" product, was enormously profitable.
VTX, origin unknown to me, is mildly profitable.
Everything else, planned by "the hierarchy", is enormously
unprofitable.
Bob
|
1206.28 | | LESLIE::LESLIE | Andy Leslie, CSSE/VMS | Wed Oct 10 1990 13:19 | 1 |
| Excuse me, but wasn't VMS a 'hierarchy' product?
|
1206.29 | | STAR::HUGHES | You knew the job was dangerous when you took it Fred. | Wed Oct 10 1990 13:39 | 25 |
| I'm sure Kelly Johnson (late of Lockheed's Skunkworks, the earliest use
of the term that I know of) would object to the idea that his projects
were unplanned. But that Skunkworks was setup to hide 'black' projects
from the outside world, not specifically from Lockheed management.
Also, most skunkworks type products have much of their development
costs hidden in other projects, making it easy to create spectacular
ROI figures.
If you accept the implication that the skunkworks approach has
consistantly resulted in better (or more profitable, and the two may
not be the same) products, what does that tell you? Both (a)"the
skunkworks approach is inherently better" and (b)"Digital's planning
heirarchy is broken" are valid conclusions. And if (b) is true, (a) is
probably also true. Which leads one to ask "what is the best way to get
my project done?", accept (a) and go underground or try to tackle (b)
head on. Which is best for my project? Which is best for Digital?
IMO, the skunkworks approach (or anything that tries to end run "the
heirarchy") may solve an immediate problem but does Digital a
disservice by allowing the base problem to continue to grow. Indeed, if
you are successful with the skunkworks approach, the view from one or
two levels above may very well be that the heirarchy is working well!
gary
|
1206.30 | Anyone know? | SX4GTO::BERNARD | Dave from Cleveland | Wed Oct 10 1990 13:39 | 7 |
|
I had heard that All-In-1 was originally developed for a specific sale
for a specific customer. If that's true, it wasn't really a skunk-works
deal.
|
1206.31 | well, yes and no | XANADU::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (381-0899 ZKO3-2/T63) | Wed Oct 10 1990 13:47 | 21 |
| re Note 1206.30 by SX4GTO::BERNARD:
> I had heard that All-In-1 was originally developed for a specific sale
> for a specific customer. If that's true, it wasn't really a skunk-works
> deal.
Yes, you are right. (Hint: they make chemicals.)
But I was only given the choice between "skunkworks" and "a
planned project of the Digital hierarchy." Given the
alternatives, it was much more like skunkworks.
(Besides, I believe that the creators of ALL-IN-1 were
intending for it to become a platform to be used for other
sales to other customers.)
Bob
P.S. Yes, VMS is a "planned project of the Digital
hierarchy." But back then, central engineering was not as
central.
|
1206.32 | And don't forget Mr. Cutler's introductory ... | YUPPIE::COLE | A CPU cycle is a terrible thing to waste | Wed Oct 10 1990 14:16 | 2 |
| ... product - RSX-11M V1! If not "skunkworks", it was an "I'll show you"
type of effort most definitely!
|
1206.33 | | KOBAL::DICKSON | | Wed Oct 10 1990 16:59 | 2 |
| I was technical designer of VTX, and I can assure you it was clearly a
"skunkworks" project.
|
1206.34 | This ain't rocket science, folks! | AKOV06::DCARR | HOPEFULLY, you can call me Carr-nac | Wed Oct 10 1990 17:02 | 44 |
| The problem is, as a previous noter stated, that what works for one
type of work, doesn't work for another. Engineering may well work best
in small, innovative groups, even if some end up attacking the same
problem from a different angle. Unfortunately, however, as an engineer
started this company, this become construed as "The Digital Way", and a
loose, do it your own way, structure ("ask forgiveness not
permission"), and organization (matrix - at least) developed.
This type of organization does NOT make sense for the majority of the
work done inside Digial... Wouldn't it make more sense if the price of
something was the same everywhere? Doesn't it make more sense to have
ONE price file, ONE parts file, ONE employee file, ONE customer master
file, ONE call handling system, WORLDWIDE? And there are thousands
of other examples. I mean, when you get right down to it, we sell
products and services... anything else? then why do we need a
half-dozen call handling systems, literally HUNDREDS of databases with
something like a "CUSTOMER" or a "PART" in it, and THOUSANDS of
systems, feeding THOUSANDS of other systems, delivering MILLIONS of
pieces of information to users that suffer from information overload?
To me, the only way to be successfull is to have a very solid,
standard, infrastructure (everybody on All-in-1 is a good start,
architecturally, regardless of your feelings about the product itself),
with the built-in flexibility to handle local exceptions, laws,
requirements, etc...
The problem is, because we HAVE "grown up", instead of a result of a
"central plan", it is extremely difficult to determine any global
standard; every organization has attacked similar problems in a
slightly different way, using slightly different terms, policies, and
procedures, and to make the task almost impossible, today's management (at
least what I can see) is NOT committed to a complete structural
overhaul of everything, and instead is committed to PRESERVING their
fiefdom!
I'm afraid the only solution is to wait for things to get so bad (and
they will) that it is OBVIOUS to EVERYONE that "business as usual"
simply CANNOT continue!
Its very depressing to think that the talent is here, we know what we
have to do, and we can't get it done because of the beaurocracy. I'm
sorry if I've depressed anyone else...
Dave
|
1206.35 | Centralize What? Decentralize What? | TROPIC::BELDIN | Pull us together, not apart | Wed Oct 10 1990 17:25 | 32 |
| re .34
Yes, we need different styles of work for different tasks, but we also
need to economise on the information processing part of the house.
But do you know how hard it is to get people to understand centralization
in one aspect of the business and decentralization in another? The next
thing I expect to hear is that we will introduce a fourth order
processing system to integrate the three that are being designed in U.S.,
GIA, and Europe. Then someone will design an alternative system because
of performance problems in the compound system.
I swear, I have come to the conclusion that every level of the
organization over-simplifies everything whenever they communicate up,
down, or sideways. No manager wants to take the time to understand the
content of his/her business, just the form, the process (and with a
What's In It For Me attitude).
It is extremely hard work to write any document, from a business memo to
a product document so that,
a) it will be read by those who need to read it
b) everyone who reads it will get the same basic idea.
A friend and colleague once said, "In Digital, we can only go in one
direction at a time, and at only one speed - full".
Today, I think the opposite is true - "Digital employees want to go in
one direction at a reasonable speed, but there isn't one voice telling
them how fast or which way."
|
1206.36 | Entrepreneurs vs Professional Managers | XLIB::THISSELL | George Thissell, ISVG Tech Planning | Mon Oct 15 1990 23:03 | 28 |
| I'd say the largest difference between "then and now" in in the
accountability of managers, particularly in the home offices.
"Back then" when there were Product Lines, the PL Mgr had to stand under
the bare bulb and defend his numbers on a monthly basis. A series of
failures usually meant a new PL Mgr.
In the rush to get away from the "evils" of competing PLs and to
decentralize financial accountability to the Field, PLs were demolished;
and what was left was Marketing Groups who, as Win Hindle put it, " ...
would be judged on their obvious enthusiasm...." No longer would the
management have to worry about profits .. or products .. or inventory
levels .. or advertising .. or firing up their Salespeople .. or any of
those 'details' the old style PL Mgrs carried out for the company. There
may have been stovepipes, but they were "my business" kinds of
stovepipes.
As a result, Marketing Management has evolved to better fit today's
success criteria: the "bottom line" is now a corporate problem;
accountability is much more difficult to pin down; significant issues
are long term at best; very few 'techies'; assuming the company
survives, there's very little personal risk; ....
But DEC needs some of those old evtrepreneurial qualities today and I
suspect Jack Smith lies awake nights trying to figure out how to
rekindle them in today's environment.
/George
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1206.37 | Factual correction; some things don't change | GATORS::VICKERS | We win when customers win | Sun Oct 28 1990 01:09 | 45 |
| The author of 1206.31 made the statement that ALL-IN-1 written for a
chemical company. This is a legend and not correct. The first
customer for the precursor of ALL-IN-1, which was called DECaid, was a
tobacco company. They didn't buy the package. Neither did the second
company, a textile manufacturer. The chemical company from the legend
was the third customer and the first to actually purchase the product.
I have the project plans for these in my cube in Charlotte.
Fortunately, that name was changed under corporate duress to CP/OSS
(Charlotte Package for Office System Services) to remind sales people
that the it was not a corporate product and to keep the corporate
product, OFIS, selling. The corporate product was architecturally pure
and was a horrible waste of money. The sad part was that some
former customers actually purchased the corporate product rather than
the one that solved customer needs rather than satisfying some
architects' egos.
Sadly, the architects have multiplied over the years. Virtually none
of them understand what the customers need or want. This is counter to
what a REAL architect does, of course.
The reason that ALL-IN-1 and VAX VTX are so profitable is that they
both satisfy real business needs very well. Neither is appreciated
internally to a large degree. Neither gets sufficient funding or
support in engineering to improve. Both are treated as cash cows while
the architects dream up more pure ways to waste our money. This is
largely due to the fact that they don't work the way we do inside
Digital.
Fortunately, there are still real solutions being done by the people
close to the customers and these solutions continue to pave the way to
higher profits. A small but excellent example is the EARS product.
It is yet another example of people who are close to the customer
providing excellent return while the scientists become more and more of
a drain with PROMISES of a return SOMEDAY.
We must REALLY listen to, empathize with, and provide solutions to our
customers. I hope that we will learn that architecture isn't what
sells our systems. Solutions, real business solutions and not the
marketing hype, sell our systems.
We need to adjust to our customers with or without architects.
Do what's right and DO IT NOW,
don
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1206.38 | | MU::PORTER | Small Change got rained on | Sun Oct 28 1990 15:01 | 35 |
| >We must REALLY listen to, empathize with, and provide solutions to our
>customers. I hope that we will learn that architecture isn't what
>sells our systems. Solutions, real business solutions and not the
>marketing hype, sell our systems.
On the other hand, architecture is (supposed to be) what
enables the real business solutions to be built.
DEC is (was?) a leader in networking. What made this
possible? Architecture. The idea that there would be
a system-independent standard for how you connect things
together - with the result that everything from teeny
systems running RT11 up to big VAXen running VMS can
interoperate in a fairly straightforward manner.
Much of DEC's success in the '80s was due to a line
of computers called "VAX", the members of which ranged
from desktop devices to million-dollar data centre
machines. What is the force which keeps new VAXen
compatible with the old? Architecture.
Now, I'm not saying that there are never sins perpetuated
in the name of architecture - obviously there are. But
don't dump on ALL architects and architectures. Designing
clean systems can be a tough job.
The converse attitude to "architects live in an ivory
tower" is "field people will sell any old junk that
barely runs, regardless of whether it will be supportable,
upgradable, or even runnable next week". I don't suppose
either of these to be totally true, although I bet you
can find at least one example of each.
Disclaimer: I am not an architect.
|
1206.39 | Purity Vs Pragmatism | HERON::PERLA | Tony Perla | Mon Oct 29 1990 09:36 | 19 |
| re. -2
I think Don has typified a fault in Engineering development startegies.
Sometimes preference is given to hardware developement over software
development (cultural?) There is an all too prevelent attitude that if a
piece of software is good, then it must have been produced externally.
I cant answer authoritatively to the allegation that "purity" overrides
pragmatism in product development, but it seems (to me) that is the case.
We are getting better at software development, meaning "layered" software
development (eg.TP and some CASE tools) but have got a fairly long route to go
before attaining the industry's performance as an average.
On the other hand, it was IBM's early tendency to build a cpu for each problem
that lead them down their path-of-no-return. So, there are some merits to the
consistency that an architecture provides, very much like an international
standard. Obviously, being consistent is time consuming.
Dunno, difficult to call this one....
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1206.40 | Not the same kinds of "architecture" | KOBAL::DICKSON | | Mon Oct 29 1990 10:46 | 12 |
| The only part of a VAX that has remained the same all these years, over
all those different models, has been the user-mode instruction set.
The various models implement this instruction set in different ways,
and the way the memory maps work, and the I/O busses, etc, are all
different.
So the long-living "architecture" of the VAX is actually only a small
part of the total system, and it says little about how parts of the
system are to interoperate.
The network "architecture" on the other hand talks about little *other*
than how parts are to interoperate.
|
1206.41 | | BOLT::MINOW | Cheap, fast, good; choose two | Mon Oct 29 1990 12:27 | 21 |
| If we look back to the entry of the PDP-11 into the commercial market
in the early/mid 1970's, however, we do see the distinction between
customer driven and engineering driven development.
The customers asked for software suitable for their particular needs,
while engineering tried (several times) to retarget a real-time
operating system to commercial tasks. This resulted in several
more or less unsuccessful products (some were disasterously
unsuccessful). Perhaps more importantly, this also resulted in
a battle-mentality where the opposing camps (noteably RSTS/E vs.
RSX/IAS/TRAX/POS) could not be made to cooperate.
In the long term, this resulted in a failure of VMS (which was a
successful solution to the real-time + timesharing problem) from
capturing the RSTS/E customer base, many of whom are no longer
Dec customers.
Whether the battles shaping up between Unix/Risc/Workstation vs
VMS/Vax/"Mainframe" will be more of the same remains an open question.
Martin.
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1206.42 | | PSW::WINALSKI | Careful with that VAX, Eugene | Fri Nov 02 1990 17:59 | 16 |
| RE: .37
> Fortunately, that name was changed under corporate duress to CP/OSS
> (Charlotte Package for Office System Services) to remind sales people
> that the it was not a corporate product and to keep the corporate
> product, OFIS, selling.
Slight historical correction. OFIS never even made it as far as field test.
It was cancelled (justifiably so, in my opinion) in favor of ALL-IN-1 while it
was still an engineering development project. A few pieces of OFIS (most
notably WPS-PLUS) eventually did see the light of day. The name change to
CP/OSS thus could not have been done to "keep OFIS selling" since OFIS never
was up for sale. Unless you mean keep it "selling" to upper management
within DEC.
--PSW
|