T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1213.1 | | LESLIE::LESLIE | leslie%[email protected] | Tue Oct 02 1990 13:33 | 7 |
| WW II only lasted 3 years 3 months? Oh boy, I never realised it
finished in 1942.
Sorry to be nit-picky, but DAMMIT! We're not just DEC/America!
/andy/
|
1213.2 | | BEAGLE::BLOMBERG | | Tue Oct 02 1990 13:53 | 6 |
|
Re .-1, I would rather guess that an american perspective is that
WW II started 1942 and ended 1945. After all, internal european
quarrels can hardly be called a WW. semi-:-)
/Ake
|
1213.3 | Let George figure it out | MLTVAX::SAVAGE | Neil @ Spit Brook | Tue Oct 02 1990 13:55 | 4 |
| Well, to prolong the nit, direct participation of US armed forces in WW
II ran from December 1941 to August 1945. According to my arithmetic,
that's 3 years and EIGHT months. Oh, George! Can you help us out here
with these WW II dates?
|
1213.4 | Even longer than we think! | CSOMKT::MCMAHON | Carolyn McMahon | Tue Oct 02 1990 14:00 | 6 |
| And, of course, there were those individual Americans that enlisted in
British and French armed forces as early as 1939 (particularly, "air"
and sea forces).
In a way, WWII may actually only be ending TODAY - as THE WALL comes
officially down!
|
1213.5 | Do DEC a favor, Quit. | WJOUSM::PAPPALARDO | | Tue Oct 02 1990 14:09 | 8 |
|
You know, the last 4 reply's have been un-believable. I mean, if that's
all the added value you can bring, well.....Let's just say ....well
forget it. You all make me sick.
Rick
|
1213.6 | | BAGELS::CARROLL | | Tue Oct 02 1990 14:32 | 9 |
| re .1-.4, as .0 points out, mistakes are a fact of life. The analogy
of WW II is still valid.
I have been very critical of dec management. However, the past 2-3
weeks have proved to me that I was (partially) wrong. Dec management
will turn this thing around. For the first time in my time here, I
am encouraged. As Jack points out, there is no cost to small or too
large, that it can't be looked at and cut, if not mission essential.
Management IS on the right track.
|
1213.7 | | TOPDOC::AHERN | Dennis the Menace | Tue Oct 02 1990 14:56 | 10 |
| RE: .1
>WW II only lasted 3 years 3 months? Oh boy, I never realised it
>finished in 1942.
>Sorry to be nit-picky, but DAMMIT! We're not just DEC/America!
Hey, Andy, what can you expect from a country whose President thought
Pearl Harbor was on September 7th?
|
1213.8 | question authenticity of .0 | SAUTER::SAUTER | John Sauter | Tue Oct 02 1990 14:59 | 7 |
| re: .0
I'm confused. Who wrote 1213.0? It claims to be a memo from Jack
Smith, Senior Vice President of Operations, but it reads like an
article written by a reporter, refering to things said by Jack Smith.
I wonder if 1213.0 is authentic.
John Sauter
|
1213.9 | mission? | CSOA1::FOSTER | Frank, OVD Seminars, DTN 432-7730 | Tue Oct 02 1990 15:02 | 6 |
| re .6
> As Jack points out, there is no cost to small or too
> large, that it can't be looked at and cut, if not mission essential.
> Management IS on the right track.
....now if they would only tell us what the mission (i.e., vision) is....
|
1213.10 | | LESLIE::LESLIE | leslie%[email protected] | Tue Oct 02 1990 17:26 | 14 |
| > <<< Note 1213.5 by WJOUSM::PAPPALARDO >>>
> -< Do DEC a favor, Quit. >-
> You know, the last 4 reply's have been un-believable. I mean, if that's
> all the added value you can bring, well.....Let's just say ....well
> forget it. You all make me sick.
Rick,
you may not appreciate just how utterly fed up the
ethnocentricity of DEC's senior management makes a lot of non-US
employees.
Value the difference, chum, or quit yourself.
/andy/
|
1213.11 | | ULTRA::WITTENBERG | Secure Systems for Insecure People | Tue Oct 02 1990 18:09 | 8 |
| RE: .8
It's my guess that that article comes from a "Management Memo",
and claims to speak for Jack Smith. It is interesting that it
jumps from first to third person, with the first person writing
sounding more personal and the third person more official.
--David
|
1213.12 | Sheesh... | ALOSWS::KOZAKIEWICZ | Shoes for industry | Tue Oct 02 1990 20:45 | 13 |
| So let's all crucify Jack Smith for his horrible sin of 'ethnocentricity'
(more like 'americacentric'; after all, the Smith name would seem to
trace it's origin from a rather Anglo-Saxonish ethnicity).
The tone of comments in this conference lately is frightening. We're
headed for the falls in a barrel and the only thing many seem to be
able to talk about is that their hair might get mussed.
C'mon guys (and I don't mean to be gendocentric 8*) ), put aside the
petty gripes and be constructive.
Al
|
1213.13 | Opinion | STKMKT::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney in New York | Tue Oct 02 1990 22:30 | 48 |
| The crisis in communication in Digital is over content and style.
When "style" is poor, it's really obvious to all. As Andy points out,
gaffe after gaffe happens that shows that top management's concerns are
greater Maynard area-based and secondarily United States-based. In
fact, it's gotten to the point where seeing at least one of these
errors in sensitivity to the international Digital employee population
is routine. Top management can't be excused for not having the
political savvy to realize this.
The solution
Increase revenue, lower cost, and start charging for value-added
service. Well, excuse me, what's an example of a valued-added service
that we don't charge for and could without affecting any other aspect
of our business?
Focus on the small stuff
The criticism that focusing on the small stuff demonstrates a lack of
concern for the big stuff is a valid criticism. It'll stop when the
big stuff is addressed. Until then it's "reactive" and properly so.
"Porches"
The analysis is faulty. Digital has constituencies that will fight to
the death to place the label "foundation" on a "porch". The key to
solution in the memo was that the porch-builder had no accountability
to the porch only pride in it, accountability was to the family. The
clarity of the _options_ Digital has doesn't exist, nor are we willing
to let the marketplace decide and cancel the products that don't meet
the challenge of the marketplace. Even once once a "porch" is
identified, who controls the demolition? No, we haven't learned one of
the important lessons of the Rainbow.
All this and World War too
The Allied side had generals who were willing to try things that
ultimately were errors, fatal errors. But so were the Germans.
What was the real difference between the generals?
Eisenhower had the support of the Commander-in-Chief and Ike was
delegated real power. Eisenhower in turn delegated to Bradley and in
turn to Patton and he in turn to division commanders. Hitler on the
other hand overrode the generals in the field, issued orders not to
retreat, meddled in trivial orders and completely destroyed the morale
of his officers. His best, Rommel, joined the assassination plot.
|
1213.14 | From Europe | LEMAN::BURKHALTER | | Wed Oct 03 1990 02:50 | 18 |
| I was encouraged by Jack Smiths 'communication', it was honest and to
the point, not so common these days.
As a European in 1990 the WWII date arguement is stupid, this weeks
folks there will a new united Gernmany third only to the US and
Japanese economies, and in under 2 years there will be a United Europe.
Digital at this moment is a 'Computer Company' and as such, in
my opinion to really push ahead again will have to produce the
equivalent of the PDP for years 2000 and beyond.
I hope we are seriously looking at small very powerfull portable
computer/communication systems.
If we are not we will 'stall'
Salut
Dom
|
1213.15 | I'm from "Europe" too! | LESLIE::LESLIE | leslie%[email protected] | Wed Oct 03 1990 03:03 | 29 |
| re: .12 I *am* very constructive indeed in my approach. Occasionally
I'm as liable to a knee-jerk reaction as anyone else.
Second, I found the memo in .0 to be confusing in the way that it is
written and the ideas that it tries to present. As Pat points out in
.13, Generals that destroy their line of command to 'take charge'
don't always achieve the desired results.
The problems in DIGITAL today largely stem from 3 things, of which #1
is by far the biggest problem:
1) Cost of Sales: our sales organisation is top heavy and confused
by the fact that we are in the business fo selling systems, not
just hardware. Sales just aren't set up for that yet - and
incidentally neither are the vast majority of our Senior Management
many of whom think in hw terms and don't understand that todays
market means that selling hardware makes us little money in
comparison to software and services.
2) Poor price/performance of our hardware in comparison to our
competition, something that we will begin to address in the
near future.
3) The "Open Systems"/U*IX market is one that we make no money on
today. Yet time and again we take resources away from profitable
business in order to look good for the market.
/andy/
|
1213.16 | Oh my God! | HERON::PERLA | | Wed Oct 03 1990 07:10 | 3 |
| The last guy to speak in parables also walked on water, which is one feat
I do not expect soon from our management any time soon. Though, they're
probably "workin' on it".
|
1213.17 | | TOPDOC::AHERN | Dennis the Menace | Wed Oct 03 1990 09:43 | 3 |
|
"My other veranda is a porch."
|
1213.18 | Jack's US bias is undeniably important | COUNT0::WELSH | Tom Welsh (UK CASE Marketing) 768-5225 | Wed Oct 03 1990 09:44 | 65 |
| re .10,.12:
I admit that the length of World War II is a rathole
with reference to Jack Smith's actual subject. But it is a
perfect example of the American isolationist way of
thinking in its purest form, as exhibited quite
naturally by the man who is in day-to-day charge of
Digital Equipment Corporation.
Many of us have had occasion more than once to point
out that it is really bad news for the leaders of a
multinational corporation to behave as if it was an
American corporation - especially when the USA is
less than half of their business and dropping
steadily. As a parallel, how would the USA fare if
the President and everyone in the White House
consistently ignored everything West (or East) of
the Mississipi?
My first reaction to the "3 years and some months"
remark was pure shock. I thought "my 11-year old
knows better than that - what sort of ignoramus
is this guy?" Then I got thinking and quickly
realized what had happened.
Here's a test question, just to see what all you
guys think: if Jack Smith is capable of totally
ignoring a war which consumed the whole of Europe
(including Russia) for 3 years, and which could
easily have led to the disappearance of the UK, France,
Belgium, the Netherlands, Norway, Denmark, Austria,
Czechoslovakia, Poland, Hungary, Rumania, Bulgaria,
Albania, Greece, Tunisia, Libya and Egypt (at least)
from the map...
...how much attention is he likely to pay to the
opening of the Warsaw Pact countries to Western
trade, or the single European market of 1992?
I have just spent the best part of four days getting
together a proposal for Digital UNIX(tm) workstations,
which required collecting information on several third
party products. My desk is littered with reports,
directories, catalogues, white papers etc., generated
within Digital, none of which gives me all the information
I need. A major reason for this is that most of the
work was funded in the USA and therefore is US-oriented.
Here's a simple example. One of these lists refers to a
C++ compiler sold by Oasys. People have been known to
search (in vain) for Oasys in Europe, and give up. Yet
the product is actually written and sold by a company
called Glockenspiel, in Dublin, Republic of Ireland.
But because the report was commissioned, funded and
written in America, it only mentions Oasys - Glockenspiel's
US distributors!
Multiply this simple example by several thousand, and you
have a gross distortion of the corporation's business
posture. Many person-years are being routinely wasted by
doing things first for the USA, then for Europe, then for
each country - and getting things wrong, introducing delays,
confusing people, at every stage.
/Tom
|
1213.19 | | ELWOOD::PRIBORSKY | Don't bother me, I'm busy making tomorrow yesterday, today | Wed Oct 03 1990 10:56 | 8 |
| I don't usually pipe in on these kind of p*****g contests, but the fact
that Jack's memo contains incorrect historical references and is
jingoistic is tantamount to the people of Rome complaining about
Nero's off-tune fiddling while Rome burned.
The world is tumbling down around us folks. Getting Jack to choose
better or more appropriate metaphors or take a history lesson isn't
going to solve the real problem at hand.
|
1213.20 | | SSBN1::YANKES | | Wed Oct 03 1990 12:07 | 17 |
|
I agree with .19. I've read through these replies and am totally amazed
that there has been more discussion correcting the reference to WWII than there
is discussion about what Smith is talking about.
Where would you prefer for everyone (not just Smith, but every employee)
to spend their time -- worrying about if everything they say or write is
historically impeccable and perfectly internationalized or worrying about how to
make Digital a more profitable company? We can't ignore international issues,
but come on, we can't look *only* at the internationalization issues to the
detriment of everything else and totally dismiss a memo because it doesn't
meet up with your definition of "properly internationalized".
Sheeze, sad to say, it wouldn't suprise me to see someone put a reply
in here complaining that Smith's memo was not originally issued in Swahili.
-craig
|
1213.21 | | COOKIE::LENNARD | | Wed Oct 03 1990 13:12 | 7 |
| I think the Europeans are correct in their feelings of outrage. I
was stopped in my tracks by Smith's statement, and amazed at his
lack of sensitivity.
BTW, .18, we DO have a President and White House staff, not to mention
the whole Congress, who totally ignore everything outside of the
so-called "Belt Way". (That's a highway system surrounding D.C.)
|
1213.22 | re: .20 | LESLIE::LESLIE | Andy Leslie, CSSE/VMS | Wed Oct 03 1990 13:13 | 12 |
| You are missing the point entirely. Important decisions have to be made
in the fullest possible knowlege of how they will affect the prospects
of the corporation. No-one is asking for "perfect internationalisation"
here - what worries me (and others) is that the memo in .0 illustrates
an incomplete and restricted view of the corporation.
As said, lets not get into pissing contests - I've provided my
suggestions here and elsewhere as to the way ahead for the corporation
to succeed.
/andy/
|
1213.23 | Am I surprised? No! | TROPIC::BELDIN | Pull us together, not apart | Wed Oct 03 1990 14:49 | 25 |
| re last few
Yep, we don't do a good job of presenting DEC internally or externally
as an international company.
Pardon me while I get philosophical.
I am not surprised. I suffer from a not-so-rare mental disease. It's
called out-of-sight, out-of-mind. I rarely think of any person I
haven't seen in the past few days. My wife thinks I am insensitive,
cold, and a few other things, but the fact is I fill my life with the
people and things I live among, not memories of those past. As
self-protection against this tendency, I schedule myself to physically
visit the business units I support on a regular basis.
Extrapolating from this, I would be surprised by, (and would admire) any
business executive who can make sensible decisions for a part of his
organization that (s)he does not physically visit or make direct
communication with.
Bottom line - Managers must have real contact with their organizations,
not just the abstract reporting relationships. Best thing for
internationalization would be to move the offices of vip's around from
time to time. (or move the responsibility to senior managers remote
from greater Maynard).
|
1213.25 | Here's your chance to affect change -- act now | SAHQ::CARNELLD | DTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALF | Wed Oct 03 1990 17:16 | 19 |
|
Key feedback on DVN:
The majority of call-in questions revolved around the same issue,
stated in different ways: There are fundamental problems impeding
employee involvement, real participation, good ideas and programs
getting truly implemented, and effective change. One cause expressed
by many seemed to be bloated bureaucratic management who did not care.
When asked specifically if MANAGERS "should resign" who do NOT support
employee involvement programs and encouraging employees to create
ideas, Jack Smith said, "YES." He also said management structural
changes may be weeks away as time is running short.
Jack invited feedback on the DVN and repeatedly said he wasn't real
sure "what the problem was." Enlighten Jack, everyone. Send a memo.
TO: Jack Smith @CORE
|
1213.26 | Should be addressed to .24, sorry. | VCSESU::COOK | Public Enemy #5,381,912,001 | Wed Oct 03 1990 17:18 | 10 |
|
re: -1
Jack may have been referring to how long the United States was in the
war, although I would not know if it was indeed 3 years and 3 months.
Anyway, big deal. Everyone makes a mistake. He doesn't get paid to
be a history buff, he gets paid to be an effective Digital employee.
/prc
|
1213.28 | | 16BITS::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dog face) | Thu Oct 04 1990 09:31 | 15 |
| I did not see a DVN broadcast yesterday. What I did see was a tape of a
broadcast that took place at some other time. I'm not sure when that was.
I know it was supposed to have been last Friday when I was on vacation,
but when it actually occured is unknown to me. The tape was not dated.
But what's in .0 is quite clearly a transcription of what Jack said in the
broadcast, almost word for word in some instances and I didn't see Jack
reading any script. The only differences I saw in .0 were the grammatical
corrections for the few times that Jack used "don't" when he should have
used "doesn't" or "didn't".
Does anyone know when this broadcast actually was staged?
-Jack
|
1213.29 | We'd best get on with it | CADSYS::HECTOR::RICHARDSON | | Thu Oct 04 1990 10:13 | 32 |
| As far as I know yesterday's broadcast was actually live (someone I
know was one of the callers); Mr. Smith must have prepared some of his
answers ahead of time (since it would be easy to guess what questions
were likely!) and given them to Mgmt Memo or whatever that quote in the
other note came from. At least there was more content than the last
one of these DVN broadcasts, although a lot of us wondered where KO himself
was!
My husband (works in LKG) was utterly incensed at the WW II analogy;
most of his grandparents' generation died in the gas chambers in
Germany and Poland before "the war" started (by American terminology -
before US involvement started) - his outrage is compounded by one of
the local radio stations planning to air a program next week where the
featured speaker is going to be some history-rewriter who claims that
there was no such thing as Buchenwald... the radio station happens to
be airing this program on the eve of a Jewish holiday, to boot! At any
rate, WW II definitely did not start when the US got involved in it!
And plenty of US tactical mistakes were made long before this country
was involved, such as suppressing information about what was happening.
Not that WW II really has much to do with what is happening in this
company today. After all, if the average employee is approximately my
age, most of us were not yet born in those days anyhow!
/Charlotte
I just hope that whatever reorganizations are going to take place take
place soon, so the remaining people can get back to work and stop
looking over their shoulders to see if "the package" is gaining on
them! Drawing out the process not only fails to save money, but ruins
morale. My friends at Wang and DG all look pretty shell-shocked
(uh-oh, WW II analogies again) these days; not much work going on in
those outfits anymore, other than photocopying of resumes.
|
1213.30 | | COOKIE::LENNARD | | Thu Oct 04 1990 12:48 | 6 |
| re .26, and others. It is a "big deal" how the #2 man in a major
world-wide corporation, handles himself in such a public forum. We
Americans have a bad enough reputation for our ignorance of the world
around us, and its history, without having it compounded by such a
senior personage. He should have some kind of a PR person to look
his stuff over. I noticed the grammatical errors too.
|
1213.31 | Europa-centric .nes. internationalized | SSBN1::YANKES | | Thu Oct 04 1990 13:18 | 12 |
|
I can't help but feeling that we're seeing "Europa-centric" views as
being pass off as the "international" views. Continuing the WWII example, many
historians believe that WWII really started when Japan invaded Manchuria, *not*
when Germany invaded Poland or even when Germany annexed part of Czechoslovakia.
But was Japan or Manchuria ever mentioned in these complaints about Smith's
recollection of history? No, the complaint is that *Europe's* part was ignored.
If the complaints are that our upper management is too America-centric, trying
to replace it with a Europa-centric view gets us no closer to being truly
internationalized. Europa-centricity is as wrong as America-centricity.
-craig
|
1213.32 | Hmmmm. | DELREY::MEUSE_DA | | Thu Oct 04 1990 13:44 | 13 |
| Well, I was never one for getting all excited about speeches. You
know, growing up in the sixties, listening to the Viet Nam stuff from
the Johnson, Nixon and all the other quilty parties. Teaches one to
wait and see what happens. Not that I'm apathetic, just a bit of a
cynic that needs to see it in action. Lot of groups around being cut to
the bone, but on the other hand there are a lot individuals and entire
groups that keep on spending like nothing is happening. Justified by
the statement "Hey it will bring is business". Bull, prove it first,
then spend the money.
Gotta stop, I'm getting to stressed just thinking about it.
Dave
|
1213.33 | avoid all risks? | XANADU::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (381-0899 ZKO3-2/T63) | Thu Oct 04 1990 14:20 | 16 |
| re Note 1213.32 by DELREY::MEUSE_DA:
> Justified by
> the statement "Hey it will bring is business". Bull, prove it first,
> then spend the money.
Is "prove it first" the solution, or the problem?
There are very few decisions in business that can be proved
correct beforehand. Requiring business proposals to be
proved winners before they are undertaken sounds like the
equivalent to avoid risk, do only the sure thing.
Isn't that something of which we already have too much?
Bob
|
1213.34 | | FDCV07::HSCOTT | Lynn Hanley-Scott | Thu Oct 04 1990 14:23 | 9 |
| re .28
I'm not sure what you saw on videotape yesterday, but .0 is verbatim
Jack's opening remarks during yesterday's DVN - or at least, up to the
part about the porch.
re .6 BAGELS::CARROLL
I'm curious to know what it is during the last 2-3 weeks that has
changed your mind about DEC's management.
|
1213.35 | re.33 | DELREY::MEUSE_DA | | Thu Oct 04 1990 14:34 | 24 |
| Damn it, that's not what I meant, and maybe I should clarify it.
This is an example, and is a true story;
Person in marketing, one of the team, flies back east. Spends a week
and all the parties connected with the account wonder what he is doing.
Even the customer wonders what he is doing.
He isn't doing a damn thing, except wasting money.
Let me make this clear, he keeps doing this type of thing, and nobody
puts a stop to it.
Another example:
One group is working the account, another groups thinks its their
business and goes after it. Problem gets corrected but only after the
customer has screamed "what the hell is going on with you people"
These are only two examples, this is going on all over Digital and it
is why we are in trouble.
Dave
|
1213.36 | | VCSESU::COOK | Public Enemy #5,381,912,001 | Thu Oct 04 1990 14:44 | 7 |
|
re: .35
It's great that you share such a true story with us, but I think
jack would be interested in hearing it also.
/prc
|
1213.37 | Flaws in our core | CSOMKT::MCMAHON | Carolyn McMahon | Fri Oct 05 1990 08:43 | 40 |
| Seems to me that what's being said in these notes illustrates many of
our core problems ... like:
1. We are a slovenly culture. Our standards of excellence aren't low -
they just don't exist. We think that goodness is something we can
paint on the outside like an actor paints on make-up. We don't
understand that "excellence" starts from the smallest detail out - and
that includes how we treat each other - manager to subordinate, peer to
peer, etc. [Never thought I, a child of the 60s, would ever be
supporting standards. But certain standards DO make things go a lot
smoother - you're not alwaystruggling to have the smallest detail n go
right. I've been told many times in Digital to lower my standards,
often on the easiest standards for an organization to maintain.] Seems
we're so afraid of a little discipline or uniformity that we'd let it
all go down the tubes before we'd give it a REAL try.
2. The old "practice makes perfect" could get us turned around. Not
that we'll attain perfection, but that's of little concern. We are so
far from perfection that there's nothing to fear. What we must fear is
"do as I say, not as I do," which seems to prevail at all levels, in
all functions. Yes, in our culture is it exhausting and often
dangerous to DO the right thing - so we often don't. A few times I've
caught myself just going along with the tide when I knew better - but I
didn't like it then and I don't like it now.
3. Use common sense. It is really flabbergasting how little common
sense we exercise. Perhaps one thing that makes us avoid using common
sense is that it often doesn't support what we want to hear. What do I
mean by common sense? Lots of things from "if I were a customer, how
would I REALLY view this" to "if I do this, what else could happen?" I
guess what we call stove-pipe thinking inhibits common sense.
Well, yes; these are generalizations. But they seem to be generally
true. I don't see how we can continue to avoid addressing these core
cultural elements and still succeed through these trying times. Each
of us, as individuals, needs to exercise all the common sense, demand
certain standards of excellence and practice what we preach. I'm
trying but it does get exhausting and sometimes painful. I know some
of you are in the same boat. Please keep at it though, it may be the
thing that saves Digital when Japan really decides to compete with us!
|
1213.38 | Give Jack A Break | HERON::PERLA | | Fri Oct 05 1990 11:23 | 32 |
| Jack Smith may not be a history buff, but I rather think he knows what's
happening in Europe. He spent a summer on exchange at EHQ in the early eighties,
and he is a member of the European Board of Directors. I suspect this latter
body keeps Jack very much informed with what's happening in the European IT
market and especially the impact of the significant events that surround us
today.
We are a global company and Jack is not necessarily piloting solo from his
office. The Area management teams in place have a very large autonomy, for
as long as they do things right. And DEC Europe has been doing things right for
a while now.
(Moreover, Europe has been building the management skills and business acumen to
assure its continued economic success without outside intervention. America must
reassess its relationship with Europe, before Europe takes the iniative to
do the same in reverse. Already, we Americans have lost considerable credibility
due to a steady decay of quality and values in many spheres. We have much
ground to recuperate and Europe is not waiting around any longer to be shown
the way.)
There are many programs that have been piloted successfully in DEC Europe for
later implementation in the US. In the area of Consulting Services alone I
can name a number of methodologies which were bred here. Yet, thier exportation
stateside has not be trouble free. In the instances where I
played a role in this "methodology transfer", after the initial enthusiam,
I did not see much in the way of implementation. (NIH Syndrome?) These Services
are essential to selling total system solutions in a complex IT environment.
I can only suggest that the New World takes a lesson to heart from the Old.
You have the talent - now all you need is a childlike acceptance of new ideas
which was once so prevalent an attribute of our culture.
Tony (Unabashedly American)
|
1213.39 | Service Overseas | UKCSSE::PARKERD | | Wed Oct 17 1990 08:34 | 38 |
|
I don't think .30 need feel too ashamed. I have just returned to the
UK after a three year relocation in France during which time many of
my prejudices etc about "the French" were put right, proving just how
ignorant I was!
What worries me about J.S. memo was not the historical error itself
but the insensitivity of using WWII as an analogy AT ALL. Consider that
the vanquished parties in WWII are now the second and third largest
economies in the world, hardly insignificant for Digital's business.
The 'French experience' gave me a broader view so I am not so 'little
England' oriented now. Where I think we (Digital) could learn from the
Japanese, Germans, French etc is that in their organisations it is
compulsary for senior managers to have spent some years working
overseas. I have a German friend working for Bayer, he says that if any
German from Liverkusen (Bayer WW HQ) aspires to a European level
management position they MUST have completed a two year relocation in
another European country. Likewise, a candidate for a corporate
management job must have worked in USA, Far East as well as Europe.
1992 is forcing us to have a European rather than UK, French or German
view, US folks have such a huge country they don't get out of it very
often and they don't have to worry about other languages,so its harder
for them to have anything but an America-centric view.
As .24 says, fluency in a language or mind set is at the subconcious
level, many of our senior (US based) managers in Digital seem not to
have internalised the fact that we are a multi-national organisation
and that when they address "Digital" they are talking to people of many
nationalities and cultures.
I would like to know how many of our corporate leaders have worked
overseas (not just a few months, but two or more years) and how many
of them can speak another language?
Dave
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