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Conference 7.286::digital

Title:The Digital way of working
Moderator:QUARK::LIONELON
Created:Fri Feb 14 1986
Last Modified:Fri Jun 06 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:5321
Total number of notes:139771

1322.0. "LESS MACRO-MANAGEMENT PLEASE!" by UKCSSE::PARKERD () Thu Dec 20 1990 12:59

    
    A possible analogy we could use to illustrate Digital's current
    mailaise:
    
    The USA and UK have some famous seats of learning.
    Out of Harvard, MIT, LSE etc have come the most celebrated economists
    of this century. 
    Macro-Economics is intellectually seductive in that it leads you to 
    believe that you really can predict and hence control the workings of 
    an advanced economy. 
    Some of these 'eggheads' have had a great influence on our Governments, 
    eg Walters, Galbraith etc.
    Consequently, the US and UK Governments have always tried to do Macro
    economic 'things' eg, control the money supply, fiddle with the
    tax system etc. on the basis that people would respond in a certain
    way. "Less Government" was their cry and basic Micro-Economic factors
    like transport policy, education, investment were left to 'the market'.
    
    Moneyterism was a doctrine followed by the Reagan and Thatcher 
    administrations. While we had strong growth things were great but
    isn't it now strange that both UK and USA are going into recession
    where Japan and Germany continue to grow strongly. Both USA and UK
    have huge trade deficits, have relied on service industries for their
    GNP growth and made few strides in their manufacturing industries.
     
    Germany and Japan have shown no interest in these high-brow theories.
    Their Governments get on with making sure strategic technologies are
    funded where the short-termisim of the market would not tolerate
    the R&D costs. They have education systems properly funded and
    appropriate to the needs of commerce and industry. They have good
    rail and road systems geared to export of goods.
    
    In these countries the micro-economic factors are considered too
    important to be left to 'the market' so are centrally planned for
    the long term good (a little applied socialism goes a long way!). 
    
    I may have generalised and it's just 'little me's' view of the world,
    but what about the analogy with Digital.
    
    This is it....
    We too have 'eggheads' and 'personalities', people who make great
    pronoucements from above on our condition and tell us what we must
    do to make things better. But a large corporation is like an economy,
    you can take action 'A' expecting result 'B' but find that anything
    from 'C' to 'Z' is actually what happens....(human nature Y'know).
    
    It is so difficult to understand some of the 'Macro' statements that 
    emerge from darkest Maynard....an example quote Ken, Mgmt Memo Vol 9,9
    "In our new architecture, we break the company into three obvious
    pieces....."  Obvious to whom?....certainly not to me, and I tried
    it on several colleagues (all clever folks), none of who could
    imagine which three obvious pieces Digital breaks into!
    These Macro-policy statements are full of high brow conceptual stuff
    that does nothing but confuse people. No doubt Ken & Co. are much
    cleverer than yours truly, but what do I and other 'yours trulies'
    really want to hear?
    It's interesting to know that sweeping changes are being made, VP's
    re-assigned, whole new groups created etc but...??????...its like sitting
    in a traffic queue for hours on end listening to the radio telling
    you about some new road building program!...
    What I (cant speak for others) want to know is what 'micro-policies'
    are going to change to improve our performance? What tools, training,
    improved processes etc are going to help me perform under these
    new grand designs.....MICRO-things.
    
    Dave
    
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1322.1SDSVAX::SWEENEYPatrick Sweeney in New YorkFri Dec 21 1990 14:4119
    Maybe we can use this note to discuss classic principles of management.

    Top management sets a strategy.
    Middle management interprets the strategy and creates tactical plans.
    Individual contributors execute the plans.

    The problem is there is no strategy.  Everything at the top appears to
    be opportunistic or reactive.

    "Macro" and "micro" are meaningless concepts here, except for those
    specific messages regarding trivial expense items which constitute
    "micro-management".

    For the most part, Digital talks Adam Smith and acts Karl Marx.

    The most important power is to spend the companies money (either
    expense or capital) and the discretion of managers to do so has been
    steadily eroded and the non-discretionary expenses directed by
    "corporate" have mushroomed.
1322.2JUST DO IT!POCUS::HOdown in the trenches...Fri Dec 21 1990 15:0723
    re: -1
    
    >Top management sets a strategy
    >Middle management interprets the strategy and creates tactical plans.
    >Individual contributors execute the plans.
    
    I couldn't agree with you more.  Throughout all the company
    "realignment" discussions & actual changes, there was a consistent 
    theme of "empowerment" & pushing decision making authority downward
    toward the field, and hence closer to the customer.  With the recent
    cost-cutting and restructuring going on, upper management seems to be
    talking out of both sides of its mouth.  
    
    "We want you to feel empowered to do what's right by the customer and
    close business"......"BUT, if you need post-its, you can't buy it.  If
    you need to travel with your customer, you better have a good reason, &
    approval.  If you need a loaner system, forget it."
    
    If management is going to layoff people, I wish they'd do it already and
    get on with business.  If they're going to reorganize, do it and tell
    me what my new job is.  Stop waffling and reacting.  Set a direction,
    give us a strategy, tell us what our roles are, and let's JUST DO IT!
     
1322.3TOPDOC::AHERNDennis the MenaceSun Dec 23 1990 21:156
    RE: .1
    
  >    For the most part, Digital talks Adam Smith and acts Karl Marx.
    
    Which one was he?  I remember Zeppo and Gummo, but I don't recall a Karl.
    
1322.4Tell it how it is.UKCSSE::PARKERDMon Dec 24 1990 05:4939
    
    re .1 ....I agree, whatever you call it Macro/Micro is academic.
    There still needs to be a MESSAGE we can understand with a 'RAISON
    D'ETRE' behind it, and the 'HOW' we are going to do it.
    Something like this would be well received by me:
    
    	1. Strategy message......."Digital is moving into the
    				Nintendo open wristwatch market in FY99.
    
    	2. Why?........"Research shows this is growing at 3 zillion % a
    			week and we are best placed to exploit it from a
    			technology and marketing position.
    
    	3. Who, Where?."Hank E. Panky, Vice president of Not Much Right Now
    			will head up the new group to be based in
    			Lo-Lo-Kost, People's republic of China"
    
    	4. How?........This is the important bit, 1-3 you can say what you
    	   like	its the kind of stuff you feed to the press. Here you need
    	   to say something like "Budgets will be available for re-training
    	   staff who transfer to the Nintendo business units, Product
           development will be based around high performance workgroups
    etc...
    
    With that kind of structured statement you know:
    
    	1. Where the company is going (Nice to know)
    	2. Why we are going there (Nice too)
    	3. How its going to happen (Very important to know)
    	  
    3 is more important than 1 or 2 if you are directly involved as then
    you can say to your boss "hey, what about these work groups, its six
    months since Ken said.....and you haven't even sent me on a course yet"
    (Line managers need to feel pressure from above and below, letting the
     ground troops know the strategy is the best way to keep middle and 
     lowe managers in line)
    
    re. 3 If we're going to "screw up",  Harpo and Zeppo would at least give 
    us a laugh!
1322.5re .3 - the one with the moustache!SNOC02::EVANSthe pastures are just as green hereThu Dec 27 1990 19:072
    
    
1322.6Adam Smith Was RightPCOJCT::MAHERWed Jan 02 1991 11:4613
    re: .0  Yup, I'm with you -- I'm prepared to trust some GS-50 sitting
    in the Dept. of Commerce in Washington to decide what are the best
    technologies to invest in. Of course, we'll have to raise taxes so the
    federal government can do the investing instead of private industry,
    but if that's what it takes...
    
    As far as Germany & Japan are concerned, you neglect a few points. Like
    for instance having had to spend zip for defense since WWII. Like
    having built a much newer industrial infrastructure since the war
    destroyed their old stuff. Like homogeneous populations with different
    cultural attitudes about unionism, work ethic, company loyalty, etc.
    
    The profit motive is still the best allocator of resources.
1322.7LESLIE::LESLIEAndy LeslieWed Jan 02 1991 13:444
    Can't say about Japan, but Germany has spent out a lot on defense as
    part of NATO.
    
    	- andy
1322.8Profit is not always the primary motivator.AUSSIE::BAKERI fell into the void *Wed Jan 02 1991 19:2528
    >The profit motive is still the best allocator of resources.
    
    This may be true but who said that our Business leaders are indeed
    motivated to
    a. maximise profit?
    b. allocate resources in the best way possible?
    
    I would argue that they could well aim to produce a level of profit
    that keeps their shareholders happy with them and the point at which
    they can retain their jobs. This may have nothing to do with the most
    optimal point of profit. Resources can then be allocated to projects
    which maximize their goals (i.e to be the head of the number 1 computer
    company when clearly to do this would take the corporation beyond its
    most efficient productivity point) of, say, maximum growth. The fad for
    gobbling up your competitors was often to work yourself into a
    Monopolistic position so you would have to avoid all that competition
    garbage. Most business leaders push for open competition when they are
    late to a market that is controlled by someone else, they just want a
    share of what the incumbants are getting. Of course the name of the
    game is to get through the door and shut it before anyone else can get
    in.		
    
    John (BEc. but generally not admitted to)
    EIC/Eng, Sydney