T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1325.1 | bravo/what's frightening about networks? | JBEICH::BEICHMAN | its only information if its in your head | Thu Dec 27 1990 12:36 | 13 |
| Overall, bravo. A nicely balanced view of what's good and bad about
digital from a semi-acculturated perspective. It does us good to
remind ourselves of what is right while we decry the wrong. If you have
not read extensively in this conference in the past 6 months or so you
can find many, many supporting examples and viewpoints about almost all
your points. Welcome.
But tell me, before the inter-holiday break is over and we all head
back to slaving away, what is 'frightening' about the efficiency and
subtelty of our network.
jonb
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1325.2 | | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney in New York | Thu Dec 27 1990 13:18 | 5 |
| I don't think you have assumed much "personal risk" in posting .0.
Let's face it, finding ills within Digital doesn't take much effort.
It's the person who says everything's just fine who is taking the
personal risk.
|
1325.3 | Good Thoughts!! | COOKIE::LENNARD | | Thu Dec 27 1990 14:24 | 13 |
| I really like your commentary. It's nice to see some clear thinking
from the outside. Shows us how dangerous corporate incest is.
I don't necessarily think the "vast array of products" is a good thing
though. I'd rather we built a few good ones, particularly software.
Our large number of products is kind of a product-equivalent of one of
our major customer problems....i.e., we are very good at the big
things, but terrible at small things. IBM has quite a reputation for
the opposite. Last I heard they were winning, while we continue to
slip.
'Preciated your insight though.
|
1325.4 | | OASS::AMATO_A | | Thu Dec 27 1990 21:36 | 9 |
| >>> ...IBM has quite a reputation for
>>> the opposite. Last I heard they were winning, while we continue to
>>> slip.
Winning what?
Angela
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1325.5 | | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney in New York | Thu Dec 27 1990 22:27 | 8 |
| Oh spare us that blind hatred of IBM.
IBM is doing several things right. In fact, what Digital promises in
terms of restructuring, customer focus, ability to enter new markets,
IBM has already achieved.
This is reflected not in my opinion, but in their stock price,
profitability, and market share.
|
1325.6 | Just do th right thing. | GRANPA::JFARLEY | | Thu Dec 27 1990 23:13 | 16 |
| Digital is doing everyhting right.
1. We are managing to drive our customers to T.P.M.
2. We are like "Crazy Eddie" Our prices are insane.
3. We promise the moon, sun and stars and deliver excuses.
4. We quote on contracts that we can't deliver.
5. We have a customer rollout and no one shows up.
6. Customers call for software support and we hang up the phone.
The days of giving our customers "the warm fuzzy feeling" are gone, as
now we can outbid the whole world when it comes to cost, we can throw
more red tape and innuendos at them then " carter has liver pills". We
can "retire" people and then add three more levels of managers. Yes it
really seems we can do "the right thing" when we have to.
Just another country heard from.
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1325.7 | The Network Monster! | MOCA::BELDIN | Pull us together, not apart | Fri Dec 28 1990 08:27 | 27 |
| re .1
> -< bravo/what's frightening about networks? >-
I won't speak for Gordie, but what worries me is how easily a 'we-they'
outlook, unfounded rumors, and destructive paranoia can appear and
spread infectiously throughout the network.
Kinzelman's memo is a good illustration of the positive results we can
get using the network. I have another. I formed a distribution list
from two related conferences, invited the people on the list to join a
member's only conference, and had an active conference going in three
days. Several weeks later, there are more than a dozen points of view
recorded there.
Negatively, our collective paranoia about Dan Infante's "don't backup
the EIN conferences" spread like wildfire. In a physical facility,
there is a management which is ultimately responsible for employee
morale, debunking rumors, etc. In the network, each of us must assume
that responsibility. We do a good job, overall, but don't kid
yourself. The results of an open network like this in many business or
educational environments could be very different!
Regards,
Dick
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1325.8 | It's called "licking the bullet". | COOKIE::LENNARD | | Fri Dec 28 1990 11:06 | 6 |
| re .4....they're winning the war for market share...and are quite
successful in lot of product spaces that we are slipping in.
Basically, IBM "bit the bullet", and went through a couple of years of
massive restructuring and down-sizing. We're still walking in ever
widening circles around the bullet.
|
1325.9 | | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney in New York | Fri Dec 28 1990 13:51 | 20 |
| I'm going to take a position between .6 and .7. hopefully skpetical
but not cynical to the point of no return
re: .6 Expressions of frustration and futility with Digital in this
conference are so common that there's little novel in the last one
hundred or so entered here in the conference.
We're working now not to make some anonymous shareholders wealthier but
for the very survival of our careers. For me that's sufficient
incentive to put up with some BS. I offer you encouragement, but I also
warn you to know when you've been defeated.
re: .7 Oh come on now... Kinzelman's memo had some novelty in the
precision of its wording such that it could not be "hand-waved" as so
many worker-to-management gripes have been. To say that it's "a good
illustration of the positive results we can get using the network" is
cybercrud. It's just good intentions, and I think you know where the
road paved with good intentions leads to. OK, we can take some relief
in the fact that people are listening. "I hear what you are saying"
is that wonderful DEC-ism that applies here.
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1325.10 | My infrequently contributed 2�... | HABS11::MASON | Explaining is not understanding | Sat Dec 29 1990 10:38 | 33 |
| I often find myself saying that this is a business, not a democracy.
While I applaud many of the "human" aspects of Digital's policies, I
think we may have gone too far. Much unnecessary, wasteful activity
occurs when trying to make pieces fit when they should have fit in the
first place (and given good management, they might well have). We seem
to carry independence too far as regards product development, which
yields less than cohesive product sets in support of less than solid
corporate level strategies.
As for "We're working now not to make some anonymous shareholders
wealthier but for the very survival of our careers.", though Mr.
Sweeney may not have meant it that way, the attitude his statement
conveys points up my biggest disappointment upon coming to Digital.
Too many are concerned for themselves before the company while (not)
doing their jobs. I may have been fortunate in my past business
affiliations (NASA, AMS Inc., etc.), but it was almost always true
that when we were concerned for the company first, and did our jobs
well, we didn't have to worry about our careers too much. We certainly
don't seem to be helping ourselves with the "metrics" fixation. That
appears to be true when, for example, someone in the field asking for
a quote on an unannounced product without success states that if we
don't provide the quote, they will quote it to the customer anyway.
That behavior can't be explained by common sense.
I stop in here very infrequently (every few months for a short while),
but it interests me to see the same arguments and rebuttals every time.
The words change a bit, but the "problems" always seem familiar, and
the suggested "solutions" likewise. This last only for what it's worth.
My quick cut is that management mechanisms that work well when a
company comprises 1K employees doesn't scale well to 100K employees.
Cheers...Gary
|
1325.11 | | BAGELS::CARROLL | | Wed Jan 02 1991 10:19 | 3 |
| re .10
well said.
|
1325.12 | We need to work together the way we _think_ we do | SVBEV::VECRUMBA | Do the right thing! | Wed Jan 02 1991 16:48 | 46 |
| re .10
We do spend a lot of time banging square pegs into round holes. And
when we see it's not working, we stop everything and measure and
categorize all our pegs and holes before continuing (to do the same
thing again).
We make up rules and procedures and processes to follow and metrics to
measure their success where we should be using nothing but common sense.
> As for "We're working now not to make some anonymous shareholders
> wealthier but for the very survival of our careers.", though Mr.
> Sweeney may not have meant it that way, the attitude his statement
> conveys points up my biggest disappointment upon coming to Digital.
> Too many are concerned for themselves before the company while (not)
> doing their jobs...
Knowing Pat, what he was saying that we are working for Digital's
future and for jobs' futures -- a job at a company that is not going
to become healthier is not a "career."
It's intersting. I dug out an old Tom Peters tape from several years
ago. Here was a profitable steel company: thousands of workers,
incredibly high quality and customer satisfaction. No job descriptions,
minimal management. And no more than 100 people in a building. Not the
Digital way, but emminently successful. And why?
- people talk to each other
- once you get more than 100 people under the same roof everything
(quality, output,...) goes to hell -- probably because people
stop being able to talk to each other!
We're all doing a lot of talking. But the lack of immediate _effective_
response (e.g., "I hear you") sometimes casts doubt on if we listen as
well as we talk. We talk about the Digital way of working, but that way
of working breaks down after you surpass a certain size. We have
something to learn from this example about how to organize ourselves and
how to work most effectively. Being big isn't bad, it's when you're big
in a way that negates all your advantages in doing business when you were
smaller that is the real killer.
What was the topic, again? :-)
/Peters
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1325.13 | thought for the day | WLDWST::KING | ROLL WITH THE CHANGES | Sat Jan 05 1991 11:09 | 8 |
| From "Administrative Vitality" by Marshall Dimock:
"My thesis is that bureaucracy is now in large supply and that
enterprise is fading and needs to be restored; that the four main
elements of bureaucracy are hierarchy, specialization, rules, and
impersonality; the four main ingredients of enterprise are incentive,
idea, person, and process."
|
1325.14 | Thanks -- just hung it outside my office | ESCROW::KILGORE | Wild Bill | Sat Jan 05 1991 12:32 | 1 |
|
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1325.15 | But I will hang it on my...... | JGO::KWIKKEL | The dance music library 1969-20.. | Fri Jan 11 1991 11:05 | 7 |
| RE.13
Yeah...thanks,and I dared to forward it to a few people I regard as
my trusting friends.I wanted to forward it to somewhere higher but
I think that in this stage of day&age I may burn myself with it.
Jan.(ESSC Nijmegen,Holland,Europe)
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