T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1313.1 | WSJ, 12.12.90, pg A2 | GRANPA::RPHILLIPS | | Wed Dec 12 1990 20:57 | 7 |
|
had a story on DEC cost cutting, possible lay offs, expenses out of
control, etc. They reference an internal document they had obtained.
I don't recall any official DEC quotes, comments, or statements
supporting the story.
rkp
|
1313.2 | Still looking for solid text... | NEWVAX::PAVLICEK | Zot, the Ethical Hacker | Wed Dec 12 1990 21:35 | 10 |
| Someone in the office here heard a report on CNN about this announced
$1B plan (with layoffs "likely"). I've been trying to get some text on
the matter for use in our local NEWS system (not as gospel truth, of
course, but we need to know what our customers are hearing), but I
have yet to see any.
If someone finds a story (it's gotta be in the Glob by 12/13, no?), I'd
appreciate a transcription of the text. Thanks.
-- Russ
|
1313.3 | This was in today's WSJ | EMASS::SKALTSIS | Deb | Wed Dec 12 1990 22:01 | 102 |
| The WALL STREET JOURNAL, Dec 12, 1990 (page A2)
Digital Equipment Reassigns Executives, Begins Cuts, Probably including Layoffs
By John R. Wilke, Staff Reported of the WSJ
DIGITAL Equipment Corp. quietly reassigned two major executives and began a
$1 billion cost-cutting effort expected to bring its first ever layoffs,
possibly as soon as next month, insiders say.
The expense cuts are sketched in a series of memos circulated among senior
executives by John H. Smith, Digital's senior vice president for operations,
which were obtained by this newspaper.
David W. Grainger, vice president of Digital's huge U.S. sales and service
organization, was reassigned to handle relations with distributors and
resellers. The move sidelines a fast-rising executive once considered a
candidate for president.
Donald P. Zereski, formerly vice president for customer service, will assume
Mr. Grainger's position and some added responsibilities. The new assignments
resolve a tense standoff between the two executives and significantly broadens
Mr. Zereski's authority, executives say.
GROWING ANXIETY
The shakeup underscores growing anxiety in the top ranks of the nation's second
largest computer maker as it struggles to cut costs, reverse slow sales and
counter a resurgent International Business Machines Corp., the industry
leader. A spokesman confirmed the changes, which weren't announced, but said
neither executive was available for comment.
Digital's worries are reflected on the companies electronic-mail network, which
has been crackling with criticism. "Out here in the trenches, management is
not considered part of the problem, but rather *the* problem, says an
electronic-mail message sent to Mr. Smith and seen widely across the network.
Other missives complain the company has been burdened by too many middle
managers protecting their turf. An employee reports that her group has five
managers - overseeing six workers. A chorus of electronic catcalls greeted Mr.
Smith's effort to trim expenses by declaring that workers wouldn't be repaid
mileage for auto use within something called the "virtual office", a 25-mile
zone around Digital facilities. The hasty edict was quickly rescinded.
Layoffs and deeper cost-cutting will be welcomed by Wall Street, which has
criticized the company for moving too slowly. Digital eliminated 3,000 positions
last fiscal year through a voluntary severance program and has said that it
hopes to cut 5,000 to 6,000 more the same way in the year ending June 30. But
insiders say Mr. Smith now plans to reassess the voluntary program at the end
of the December quarter and - if results remain weak, as expected- will order
the first layoffs in the Maynard, Mass.-based company's 33-year history.
SHARP PROFIT DROP
Digital's results have been weak for more than a year. In its first quarter,
ended Sept. 30, net income fell 83%, to 26.2 million, or 21 cents a share, or
a 1% decline in revenue to $3.09 billion.
J.P. Stevens, a Dean Witter Reynolds Inc. analyst, said that for Digital to stay
competitive it must continue to consolidate manufacturing and administrative
sites and pare some 12,000 jobs from the payroll or 123,000. Kenneth H. Olsen,
Digital's president and founder, who long resisted calling to cut jobs, seems
to have come around. "We don't have people standing around doing nothing," he
says, then changes his mind. "Well, I'm sure that we do. But not where I can see
them."
Mr. Olsen says Digital is nonetheless in good shape to weather a recession with
1.6 billion cash on hand and a raft of new products. Indeed, Digital appears
prepared to exploit the recession, and the troubles of its smaller competitors,
to grab market share - even if it comes at the expense of quick profits. Mr.
Smith, Mr. Olsen's top manager, recently made the strategy explicit: "Profit is
our focus, but revenue generation is far more important - that is our future.
At the same time, he emphasized tougher expense controls.
The sales organization may be taking much of the heat, but the problems appear
more widespread. Critical product-design projects have been hurt by political
infighting. Morale is poor in the sales force, which still isn't paid
commissions, sales people complain.
Digital's auditor, Coopers & Lybrand, was critical of a key part of the
company's organizational structure in a recent confidential review for
management. It called the structure "too far removed from the business, lacking
in clear directions and goals." The report also found a lack of accountability
in budgeting and a "lack of upper-management involvement" in designing internal
control systems. It said customer service and invoicing are slow.
So, Digital is scrambling again to reorganize itself. Its top strategists
recently circulated a study - entitled "Why is IBM growing and what should
Digital do about it?" - in which a broad reorganization of existing business
units is recommended, including "redeploying New England resources to fast
growth markets", such as Japan, and stressing sails of the flagship VAX line in
Europe. Another goal was a stronger focus on industry-standard Unix-based
machines working in tandem with proprietary, higher margin products.
At the same time, Digital engineers are feverishly working on a project
code-named Alpha to succeed the VAX - the computer design that fueled Digital's
explosive growth through most of the 1980s. Analysts say the new processor,
based on reduced instruction-set, or RISC, technology, will offer sharply
higher performance at less cost.
Digital shares closed yesterday at $54.625, off $1.357, in New York Exchange
composite trading.
|
1313.4 | WARNING - Gallows humor follows... | ALOSWS::KOZAKIEWICZ | Shoes for industry | Wed Dec 12 1990 22:23 | 5 |
| I knew that if we waited long enough we'd find an opportunity to reuse the
old B$ST slogan...
Al
|
1313.5 | Damn, Al, if I hadjust gotten home at the normal time, ... | YUPPIE::COLE | A CPU cycle is a terrible thing to waste. | Wed Dec 12 1990 22:59 | 6 |
| ... not 10:30p, I would have beat you in with that! Thought of it on
the way home tonight!
A more serious topic might be how virtually exact quotes from THIS
conference got in the WSJ article. Not the way to win friends and influence
the cost-cutters!
|
1313.6 | which high level VP do you think leaked this stuff? | CVG::THOMPSON | Does your manager know you read Notes? | Wed Dec 12 1990 23:57 | 22 |
| I've heard a number of people talk about a billion dollar problem
at DEC. They've been refering to talk of there being 10,000 employees
making more then $100,000 a year.
I'm not too worried about the stuff that looks like it came from
notes in general or this conference in spicific. It was all widely
passed around in mail as well. I would be surprised if most people
in the company hasn't seen it. With stuff sent that widely there is
always going to be some idiot who wants to show up to a reporter.
The stuff that worries me is the stuff the WSJ got that was suppost
to be circulated only among top level people. When those people are
irresponsible with distributions that is scary. The Coopers & Lybrand
report and the study RE: IBM should not have made the press.
The Coopers & Lybrand study sounds like something that could have
come from this and the MARKETING notesfile by the way. And for less
money. :-) But at least it shows that we may be getting some value
from them. I may actually for YES on next years proxy to retain them.
For the first time as I usually vote no.
Alfred
|
1313.7 | | TRCO01::FINNEY | Keep cool, but do not freeze | Thu Dec 13 1990 00:54 | 5 |
| Look at the bright side :
Kinzelman got quoted in the WSJ !
Scooter
|
1313.8 | | SAUTER::SAUTER | John Sauter | Thu Dec 13 1990 08:14 | 7 |
| Another bright item---the publicity for our electronic mail system.
It shows that we use what we sell.
If anybody happens upon a copy of the Coopers & Lybrand study, please
post it in this conference for comment and criticism. I wonder if it
uses text from this conference?
John Sauter
|
1313.9 | They shoulda took da risk | DEC25::BRUNO | The Watcher | Thu Dec 13 1990 08:21 | 6 |
| Yeah, but I was slightly disappointed that they didn't try to
explain/describe Notes, which is obviously where they got the
"electronic catcalls" from. Their readers are getting more astute in
that area. I think they can handle it.
Greg
|
1313.10 | In place for several months . . . | CAPNET::CROWTHER | Maxine 276-8226 | Thu Dec 13 1990 09:02 | 14 |
| Mick Prokopis is heading up a group of folks across most areas of the
Corporation on cutting 1 billion in expenses by the end of this fiscal
year. He was appointed by Jack Smith 3-4 months ago and has been
mentioned on DVN's and in articles in Digital newspapers. Mick has
set up a series of Cost Captains in areas like purchasing, Training,
Telecomm, Travel, Facilities each of whom have targets to meet.
Mick and his group are tightly connected to DELTA Employee
Involvement so your ideas are reaching them for consideration.
If you have proposals or ideas for cost cutting in any area send them
to DELTA and they will reach the right folks to act on them.
|
1313.11 | | EN::ROBINSON | | Thu Dec 13 1990 09:34 | 15 |
|
It's not true that the WSJ was necessarilly referring to Notes. The
Kinzelman memo, which has prompted another note in this conference
damning whoever leaked it _from_ this conference, came to me in mail
about six times. I also saw copies of messages bewailing the "virtual
office" idea, in mail. If I saw them in mail, then it's possible that
the WSJ's source was mail.
Let's not overestimate the importance of this conference. We've
decided in the last few months that Jack Smith _must_ read it (remember
the "more easy stuff" excitement?), and now we've decided that when the
Wall Street Journal wants the scoop on DEC, they log into this
conference? I think both Jack and the Journal have a broader pool
of sources.
|
1313.12 | The sky isn't falling..... | BUNYIP::QUODLING | Aussie Licensing Devo | Thu Dec 13 1990 09:39 | 28 |
| Why do I get the feeling that we are nickle and diming ourselves into
oblivion.
Watch my lips folks... We are not going to survive a recession/depression
by hatcheting here there and everywhere, alone. Now is the time to get
agressive. Hell, lets target wang and DG, between them, they must have a
few billion dollars worth of installed customer base. UNisys is stumbling,
lets go for them. Hell, why don't we counterbid against AT&T for NCR.
Compaq are chasing a new chip source. Why don't we try to remedy the
mistake we made in the past, and start OEMing our chips...
All I seem to see, is Cost reductions, that end up cutting productivity,
and notably a large number of the suggestions are tainted with "sour
grapes" i.e. Field people saying how come Engineering need all of those
computers, and Engineers saying how come field people get to go to Hawaii.
Let's stop acting like children and get back to work.
We are not going to survive, by cutting off our arms and legs (and hearts),
and putting buckets over our heads, and cowering in a corner. We are going
to survive (and expand) by being agressive in a marketplace where we have a
lot more to offer than our competitors, and a lot better chance of
providing it.
Peter Q. (who majored in Ecomonics at University)
p.s. flames are off now.... :-)
|
1313.13 | Their source was probably hard copies of both | DEC25::BRUNO | The Watcher | Thu Dec 13 1990 10:18 | 9 |
|
While I too received mail messages on some of the topics the WSJ
mentioned, I saw far more in various note conferences. It is not
guaranteed that their source was notes, but it is very likely.
Just FYI, one does not need to "...log into this conference..."
in order to receive information from it.
Greg
|
1313.14 | | ASABET::COHEN | | Thu Dec 13 1990 10:37 | 20 |
|
The memo which was originally intended for upper management
did go astray in some cases and copies did end up in areas not
expected. Therefore, we can't assume that one of the senior
people leaked it.
Also, I wouldn't get too enthusiastic about the mention of
electronic mail. What if a casual reader wonders how WSJ
tapped into the system. Just how secure are DEC's machines,
anyway?
Of course, the answer is The Journal didn't tap in. Someone
sent hardcopy to Mr. Wilke of several memos written both on
high and in the trenches. Probably that person is in the
Greater Maynard area since Wilke is with The Journal's Boston
bureau.
There's a lot of frustration and confusion going around now as
we are all aware. Leaking material like that doesn't help at
all. Not at all.
|
1313.15 | | CVG::THOMPSON | Does your manager know you read Notes? | Thu Dec 13 1990 11:14 | 11 |
| > The memo which was originally intended for upper management
> did go astray in some cases and copies did end up in areas not
> expected. Therefore, we can't assume that one of the senior
> people leaked it.
Maybe we can't assume a senior person leaked it to the WSJ but one
of them had to have given it to someone who shouldn't have had it
or it would not have gone astray. Or are you assuming someone swiped
it from a senior manager?
Alfred
|
1313.16 | Oh NO!! | RAVEN1::DJENNAS | | Thu Dec 13 1990 12:40 | 3 |
| Shhhhht! The strategy is WORKING!!
Franc.
|
1313.17 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Thu Dec 13 1990 13:12 | 1 |
| Perhaps the leaks were deliberate.
|
1313.18 | dejavududes | DELREY::MEUSE_DA | | Thu Dec 13 1990 18:20 | 3 |
| Didn't Nixon have this problem?....wasn't his name.."deepsomething".
|
1313.19 | Wall Street Journal --- from VOGON NEWS | HGOVC::JOSEPHCHOI | Democracy Fighter | Fri Dec 14 1990 01:55 | 90 |
| Digital - Reassigns executives, begins cuts, probably including layoffs
{The Wall Street Journal, 12-Dec-90, p. A2}
[This is the entire article - TT]
Digital Equipment quietly reassigned two major executives and began a
$1 billion cost-cutting effort expected to bring its first-ever layoffs,
possibly as soon as next month, insiders say.
The expense cuts are sketched in a series of memos circulated among senior
executives by John H. Smith, Digital's senior vide president for operations,
which were obtained by this newspaper.
David W. Grainger, vice president of Digital's huge U.S. sales and service
organization, was reassigned to handle relations with distributors and
resellers. The move sidelines a fast-rising executive once considered a
candidate for president.
Donald P. Zereski, formerly vice president for customer service, will assume
Mr. Grainger's position and some added responsibilities. The new assignments
resolve a tense standoff between the two executives and significantly broadens
Mr. Zereski's authority, executives say.
Growing Anxiety
The shakeup underscores growing anxiety in the top ranks of the nation's
second-largest computer maker as it struggles to cut costs, reverse slow
sales and counter a resurgent IBM, the industry leader. A spokesman confirmed
the changes, but said neither executive was available for comment.
Digital;s worries are reflected on the company's electronic-mail network,
which has been crackling with criticism. "Out here in the trenches,
management is not perceived as part of the solution, or even as part of the
problem, but rather THE [italics - TT] problem," says an electronic-mail
message sent to Mr. Smith and seen widely across the network.
Other missives complain the company has become burdened by too many middle
managers protecting their turf. An employee reports that her group has five
managers - overseeing six workers. A chorus of electronic catcalls greeted Mr.
Smith's effort to trim expenses by declaring that workers wouldn't be repaid
mileage for auto use within something called "the virtual office," a 25-mile
zone around Digital facilities. The hasty edict was quickly rescinded.
Layoffs and deeper cost-cutting will be welcomed by Wall Street, which has
criticized the company for moving too slowly. Digital eliminated 3,000
positions last fiscal year through a voluntary severance program and has said
it hopes to cut 5,000 to 6,000 more the same way in the year ending June 30.
But insiders say Mr. Smith now plans to reassess the voluntary program at the
end of the December quarter and - if results remain weak, as expected - will
order the first layoffs in the Maynard, Mass.-based company's 33-year history.
Sharp Profit Drop
Digital's results have been weak for more than a year. In its first quarter,
ended Sept. 30, net income fell 83% to $26.2 million, or 21 cents a share, on
a 1% decline in revenue to $3.09 billion.
Jay P. Stevens, a Dean Witter Reynolds Inc. analyst said that for Digital to
stay competitive it must continue to consolidate manufacturing and
administrative sites and pare some 12,000 jobs from the payroll of 123,500.
Kenneth H. Olsen, Digital's president and founder, who long resisted calls to
cut jobs, seems to have come around. "We don't have people standing around
doing nothing," he says, then changes his mind, "Well, I'm sure that we do. But
not where I can see them."
Mr. Olsen says Digital is nonetheless in good shape to weather a recession
with $1.6 billion in cash on hand and a raft of new products. Indeed, Digital
appears prepared to exploit the recession, and the troubles of its smaller
competitors, to grab market share - even if it comes at the expense of quick
profits. Mr. Smith, Mr. Olsen's top manager, recently made the strategy
explicit: "Profit is our focus, but revenue generation is far more important -
that is our future." At the same time, he emphasizes tougher expense controls.
The sales organization may be taking much of the heat, but the problems
appear more widespread. Critical product-design projects have been hurt by
political infighting. Morale is poor in the sales force, which still isn't
paid commissions, sales people complain.
Digital's auditor, Coopers & Lybrand, was critical of a key part of the
company's organizational structure in a recent confidential review for
management. It called the structure "too far removed from the business,
lacking clear directions and goals." The report also found a lack of
accountability in budgeting and a "lack of upper-management involvement" in
designing internal control systems. It said customer service and invoicing are
slow.
So, Digital is scrambling again to reorganize itself. Its top strategists
recently circulated a study - entitled "Why is IBM growing and what should
Digital do about it" - in which a broad reorganization of existing business
units is recommended, including "redeploying New England resources to
fast-growing markets" such as Japan, and stressing sales of its flagship VAX
line in Europe. Another goal was a stronger focus on industry-standard
Unix-based machines working in tandem with proprietary, higher-margin
products.
At the same time, Digital engineers are feverishly working on a project
code-named Alpha to succeed VAX - the computer design that fueled Digital's
explosive growth through most of the 1980s. Analysts say the new processor,
based on reduced instruction-set, or RISC, technology, will offer sharply
higher performance at less cost.
Digital shares closed yesterday at $54.375, off $1.625, in New York Stock
Exchange composite trading.
|
1313.20 | INTERESTING PARABLE | PRCFS1::PRCFS | | Fri Dec 14 1990 03:49 | 24 |
|
WE RECEIVED FOLLOWING PARABLE AND WOULD LIKE TO SHARE WITH YOU...
ANONYMOUS...
WE RECEIVED FOLLOWING PARABLE AND WOULD LIKE TO SHARE WITH YOU...
ANONYMOUS...
There once was a town by a river. The townsfolk decided that they
needed a bridge to cross the river. After building the bridge, it was
decided that they needed a watchman to take care of the bridge. With the
addition of the watchman, it was determined that a supervisor was necessary
to make sure the watchman did his job. With the addition of the
supervisor, the town now needed an accountant to make sure that salaries
were paid and the expenses were kept straight. Well, you guessed it, next
it was determined that the books should be audited, so they hired an
controller. The first thing that the controller saw was that expenses were
way out line for the work that needed to be done. He immediately set out to
cut expenses, and his first action was to, you guessed it again, he got rid
of the watchman!
|
1313.21 | MORE INTERESTING PARABLE | JGO::KWIKKEL | The dance music library 1969-20.. | Fri Dec 14 1990 10:33 | 21 |
| RE-1
Hey?...this same parable was this summers('90) label for a company
from Holland called Philips.They too are hacking there way into cost
saving actions.Thousands and thousands of its workers have already
been layed off.
Here is another parable for sharing.
A rowing competition was setup between Philips and Sony.
Sony sends 8 people to row the boat and 1 for the steering.
Philips sends 1 man to row their boat ans 8 for the steering.
Eventualy Sony wins the game and goes home satisfied.
Philips top management pulled themselves back in a room meet with
each other to study what went wrong.A conclusion came out of that
meeting which they thought was the answer to the problem.
Their statement in front of the press was this,
"Our man who was rowing the boat,was not motivated enough to win
the race".
;)
|
1313.22 | The downward SPIRAL | PNO::KING | | Fri Dec 14 1990 10:51 | 10 |
| It has aways been in DEC that the people who caused the the problem are
asked to solve the problem. These people never see themself as the
problem. This is what is happening today. Layoff Manufacturing folks
and keep nonrevenue generating middle and upper manager. If it were
not for the Manufacturing folks DEC would not have any product to sell.
If DEC is going to continue to be a profitable company it need to
generate better and more revenue manufactured goods not less. I see
the present course of action the company is taking eventually killing
DEC. DEC is good at manufacturing PRODUCT not selling consulant
services. DEC need to stick to what it does best.
|
1313.23 | Kill all the politicians | MIANO::MIANO | John - NY Retail Banking Resource Cntr | Fri Dec 14 1990 11:13 | 14 |
| I was more than a little pissed off by the WSJ article. Do to the
word-for-word precision of the quotes it is clear that someone collected
a set of hardcopies and sent the to the Journal. This was no case of
a "journalist" overhearing an innocent conversation, but rather a
diliberate stab in the back.
Could this be a case of a trooper who thought a desparate act might
help Digital?
Not likely.
This stinks of office politics. The fact that stuff like this gets into
the press shows what the real trouble in Digital is: Politics is
killing this company. Leaking stuff to the press is politics.
|
1313.24 | RE: .22 - Unfortunately the "customer" isn't putting a lot ... | YUPPIE::COLE | A CPU cycle is a terrible thing to waste | Fri Dec 14 1990 11:31 | 3 |
| ... of stock in the "products" anymore, they're commodity items! The
value-added services they WILL pay for, however, and we are striving to be-
come better at marketing and delivering them.
|
1313.25 | No Change Here.... | COOKIE::LENNARD | | Fri Dec 14 1990 11:45 | 7 |
| Cost cutting??? Get serious. Travel still goes on as usual, at least
from what I can observe. Just in the last two weeks, Employee
Communications ran FIVE!!! off-site, third-party-run sensing sessions
to find out how employees feel about internal communications.
I mean, f'krissakes, is this crap never gonna stop? I nominate
the whole Employee Communications Group for the package.
|
1313.26 | Do the right thing, In our lifetime, please | SSDEVO::EKHOLM | Greg - party today, tomorrow we die! (Cluster Adjuster) | Sat Dec 15 1990 15:20 | 3 |
| This reply was deleted in hopes of keeping my job.
Greg
|
1313.27 | Loaner Gear on Hold | KEYS::MOELLER | she had teeth like billowing fire | Mon Dec 17 1990 18:11 | 14 |
| In addition to cost-cutting inanities like no office supplies, one move
really gores me where it hurts. There's a company-wide freeze on Loan
of Product.. 'LOPA' gear. I support large channels customers..
resellers, where one well-placed system can theoretically leverage tens
or possibly hundreds of systems.
Luckily, we were able to petition the local DM for absolution.
Ironically, the LOPA freeze comes right on the heels that all
profitability and asset control belongs to the Account Manager.
Right.
karl
|
1313.28 | What The Hay? | TPWEST::JOVAN | in Her image | Wed Dec 19 1990 14:49 | 57 |
| -- Forwarding (particularly upwards) encouraged --
A fable for our times (prompted by the non-availability -- an appearance, not a
reality, I guaranteee -- of viewgraphs this week).
One winter day the master of the town stable went to the village reeve to pick
up a weeks worth of hay for his horses.
"Sorry", said the reeve. "As you know, last autumn the soothsayer predicted
that this would be a very difficult winter. And indeed, verily, so it is. In
order to conserve expenses, the baron has ordered that hay expenses must be
reduced. Although I have a stack of hay left, it is reserved for critical
stables alone. In order for your stable to be designated as critical, you must
submit a request to the baron via the chancellor of the exchequer, the lord high
bishop, and the interim groom of the backstairs. If it is approved, then you
may have some hay."
Now this was a nuisace to the stablemaster for only about three whits.
Of course, it was out of the question to actually apply for a critical
designation for his stable, because one would run the fairly significant risk of
having it designated non-critical and made a candidate for demolition instead.
However, this particular stable master had been through many winters in the past
and had, of course, accumulated his own "reserve" of hay immediately upon
hearing that a hard winter was predicted.
As long as he could get hay from the reeve, this reserve was untouched. As soon
as the inevitable attempt to "cut hay expenses" arrived, the stablemaster would
begin to use his private reserve to buffer his horses from starvation, while
withdrawing EXTRA hay from any supplies that might, from time to time, be made
available by the reeve -- in order to replenish his private reserve, from which
he was feeding the horses. And of course, the less regular or predictable the
supply from the reeve, the larger the private stack the stablemaster would
maintain in order to keep his horses fed.
Now, throughout the barony, this scene was repeated unto a hundred- and a
thousand-fold. The effect on the difficulty of the winter was the reverse of
what the baron intended. As soon as the soothsayers' prediction was confirmed
and the edict to cut hay expenses promulgated, the total amount of hay allocated
to private reserves instead of horses throughout the kingdom increased
dramatically. The net result was that ultimately, the rate of consumption of
hay was unchanged, while the amount of hay held in reserve was increased.
The right way to reduce the cost of hay for the barony would have been to
encourage stablemasters to pool or decrease their private reserves while
guaranteeing that enough hay would continue to be distributed to feed everyone's
horses -- combined with an ACTIVE program to identify and slaughter non-critical
horses (not stables). The baron's approach was faulty because it was based on
the false premise that most stablemasters are naive about how barons act during
hard winters.
Moral: "It is easy to conserve hay by removing horses. But it is difficult to
remove horses by conserving hay."
|
1313.29 | OVER 10,000 | CSC32::K_BOUCHARD | Ken Bouchard CXO3-2 | Fri Dec 21 1990 16:13 | 5 |
| Wondering aloud: How many of the aforementioned $100,000/year employees
are actually going to get laid off? Not many,I imagine,since the
people charged with cutting $1B are mainly those people.
Ken
|