T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1333.1 | | BUNYIP::QUODLING | Aussie Licensing Devo | Fri Jan 04 1991 17:21 | 21 |
| Sounds like speculation to me, but this is as good a place as any to put a
comment.
Recently,I saw an analysis of all of the Economic recessions over the last
few decades. The average duration was somewhere less than twelve months.
(Now whether this recession turns into a depression is another matter, but
given the Military build up and it's supportive effect upon economies, I
doubt it.)
I think that signs of upturn in the economy are not far off. I can only
hope that Digital (and it's employees who have a horrible habit of taking
every directive far too literally) aren't too enthralled in their "Sky is
falling" chant to notice it.
As an aside, I do believe that this is a good time for expansion, as we
have the resources and momentum to weather this "flicker" in the economy
far better than many of our competitors, but, as I said, to many people are
playing chicken little to notice this...
q
|
1333.2 | lots of 'chicken littles' | CSC32::K_BOUCHARD | Ken Bouchard CXO3-2 | Fri Jan 04 1991 19:40 | 5 |
| re:.1
You get laid off in the Northeast and the sky *is* falling.
Ken
|
1333.3 | Bill knows layoffs! | MARX::BAIRD | Not bad, 4 out of 6 | Fri Jan 04 1991 20:55 | 9 |
|
I heard the new Mass. gov, Bill Weld, on the news say that he has been
briefed by the '128' crowd (hi tech companies) that large layoffs
are in the works. No company names were attached to the 'briefing'
companies in the news stories. I saw the same info on two channels with
only minor additions by one reporter and a slightly longer clip of
Weld's comments.
|
1333.4 | | CVG::THOMPSON | Does your manager know you read Notes? | Sat Jan 05 1991 21:37 | 4 |
| RE: .0 I heard that about a year and a half ago. I don't believe
what we've had since then counts as official layoffs though.
Alfred
|
1333.6 | | VMSZOO::ECKERT | Once-upon-a-time never comes again | Sat Jan 05 1991 22:32 | 4 |
| re: .5
The security memo might have been referring to people leaving
under TFSO.
|
1333.7 | Newspeak | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney in New York | Sun Jan 06 1991 13:39 | 2 |
| I like the way the "office of engineering security" equates
"transition" with "threat".
|
1333.9 | exercise in futility | LABRYS::CONNELLY | House of the Axe | Sun Jan 06 1991 23:40 | 10 |
|
Maybe we should have a lottery or office pool to see who can come up with
the closest-to-accurate guess for how many people will get laid off? I'll
bet on *6000*, since that's what somebody from *outside* the company (and
hence probably better-informed than most of us;^)) said he'd heard was the
number.
Boyoboy, are we good little morale-boosters here or what?? :-(
paul
|
1333.10 | | FDCV07::HSCOTT | Lynn Hanley-Scott | Mon Jan 07 1991 08:09 | 5 |
| Gee, they better do the Mass layoffs quick. The Boston Globe last week
had an article discussing the status of unemployment funds for various
states. Massachusetts estimates that their funds will be depleted by
April of 1991!
|
1333.11 | management should either lead or leave | CVG::THOMPSON | Does your manager know you read Notes? | Mon Jan 07 1991 09:53 | 11 |
| What bothers me most about all this is that management is letting the
speculation, uncertainty and worry build. If management has actually
made a decision to have layoffs they should say so. They should allow
people to plan based on knowing that they will or will not have a job
at Digital. If they have decided that there will not be layoffs then
they should say that as well and knock off the wishy washy "never say
never" talk. If they haven't made up their minds, highly likely I'm
afraid, then no wonder we're in trouble. If management doesn't know
what to do yet maybe it's time for some new management.
Alfred
|
1333.12 | Thank the SEC, perhaps | SVBEV::VECRUMBA | Do the right thing! | Mon Jan 07 1991 10:03 | 14 |
|
re .-1
I'm afraid it might be that old insider trading bug-a-boo again. If we
were told, we could engage in trading our stock on inside information.
We should probably thank the SEC for the seemingly intentional lack of
solid information.
Not to be cynical, but does a leak to the press make previously "inside"
information "public" information?
/Peters
|
1333.13 | | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney in New York | Mon Jan 07 1991 10:14 | 11 |
| I'll disagree with Alfred. The message, I think, has no ambiguity. It
was "Don't be surprised if we have layoffs.".
That clearly means that the long-term "no layoff" tradition is dead. It
also means that a layoff could be announced at any moment. If you are
in a "no output" group, then you know that your job is at risk right
now.
As Peters points out, such announcements go to the Dow Jones News
Service first because of the material effect it would have on the stock
price.
|
1333.14 | what I heard | ROYALT::NIKOLOFF | Visualize World Peace | Mon Jan 07 1991 11:58 | 8 |
|
My understanding is that the company has to let the state know
30 days before the lay-off and that is what DEC did.. DOes anyone know
anymore about this???
|
1333.15 | Me Too. | RAVEN1::DJENNAS | | Mon Jan 07 1991 12:05 | 3 |
| Hope for the best, but PREPARE for the WORST.
|
1333.16 | Or was it 60 days in advance? | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Mon Jan 07 1991 12:18 | 2 |
| Wasn't a new law passed requiring EMPLOYEES to be notified 30 days in advance
in the event of a layoff of this size?
|
1333.17 | | CVG::THOMPSON | Does your manager know you read Notes? | Mon Jan 07 1991 12:23 | 13 |
| RE: .16 A number of different states have been passing such laws.
Both 30 and 60 days have been used in various laws. I don't know
what MASS does. Also I believe that some of the laws treat plant
closings with layoffs differently from layoffs without plant
closings.
FWIW, the latest rumor I heard was that someone called the MASS
Dept of Employment Security and that they denied recieving any
notification from Digital. On the other hand I don't know if that
would be concidered public information or not so believe what you
want.
Alfred
|
1333.18 | | COOKIE::LENNARD | | Mon Jan 07 1991 12:23 | 8 |
| I believe there's a new federal law that requires 60 days notice to the
persons effected.....or maybe they can get around that by giving people
60 days pay. Anyone know for sure on this?
The sad part about it is that most of the bad actors that got us in
this mess will get away with their highly paid jobs intact.
I too wish they would either do it, or get off the pot.
|
1333.19 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Mon Jan 07 1991 12:28 | 7 |
| re .18:
> The sad part about it is that most of the bad actors that got us in
> this mess will get away with their highly paid jobs intact.
What does Ronald Reagan have to do with DEC's problems? Or are you talking
about a different kind of "bad actor?"
|
1333.20 | No need to drop an anvil on my head. | COGITO::HARPER | | Mon Jan 07 1991 12:34 | 3 |
| "Never say never" is what Dukakis always says when asked if he will run
again for president. And we KNOW he will. Translation of "never say
never": YES.
|
1333.21 | | UPWARD::HEISER | hell is for wimps | Mon Jan 07 1991 12:50 | 4 |
| I was led to believe the 60 day notice was for employees affected by
plant closures.
Mike
|
1333.22 | | COOKIE::LENNARD | | Mon Jan 07 1991 13:13 | 7 |
| re .19 .....well, now that you mention it there is more than one
definition of "bad actor", but I was thinking more along the lines of
people who made the really severe strategic thinking mistakes in the
past 4-5 years. Things like P.C.'s, work stations, snake oil, etc.
I would hope that at least 30-40 of our VP's make the cut. I can't
believe how many we have lately.
|
1333.23 | | TOPDOC::AHERN | Dennis the Menace | Mon Jan 07 1991 13:14 | 4 |
| I can see the headlines now:
DEC Evac's 9000
|
1333.24 | Transition people??? | CSSE::STANZ | | Mon Jan 07 1991 14:50 | 5 |
| I was told by someone tht we in Mass and N.H. have a LARGE number of
people in Transition, and that's where the bulk of the 9,000 would come
from.
Does anyone know how many folks there are in Transition today?
|
1333.25 | are we overreacting to this piece of news? | HPSRAD::DESAI | | Mon Jan 07 1991 15:10 | 10 |
| I was told that it is mandatory for a company to give an estimate
of the number of layoffs anticipated in a given year to the state
authorities - otherwise they cannot layoff people. And to make
a safe bet, the companies give the worst possible estimates. I also
heard that last year DEC had given the number 5000 but there were
no involunteery layoffs. I guess states need to know these estimates
to plan for it.
In anycase, this explanation came from a senior fellow employee and may
not be a fact.
|
1333.26 | CYA lives ! | AKOCOA::OSTIGUY | Secure it or SHARE it | Mon Jan 07 1991 15:30 | 6 |
| I also heard that we did the same thing 6 months ago and
probably are doing it every month just in case layoffs are
required. Probably just an automatic CYA.
Lloyd
(I hope)
|
1333.27 | hasn't been communicated to Corp. Employee Communications | VIA::EPPES | I'm not making this up, you know | Mon Jan 07 1991 17:12 | 4 |
| I asked someone in Corporate Employee Communications about this rumor, and he
said that, to the best of his knowledge, it's untrue.
-- Nina
|
1333.28 | The Prince should be mandatory reading for management | OZROCK::MCGINTY | Truffle prefers vi | Mon Jan 07 1991 17:15 | 13 |
|
In The Prince Machiavelli suggested that when you come to power you
should look around, see who has to go, and wield the knife to wipe
your opposition completely. This should be done once and as early
as possible. That way those remaining can rest assured that their
necks are no longer on the line, and so get down to some productive
work. If you leave it linger on for too long people are overcome by
FUD (like most of the later comments in this notes file).
If Digital's management applied these principles we would be working
in a more productive, better place.
Bryan
|
1333.29 | power freak | DELREY::MEUSE_DA | | Mon Jan 07 1991 17:25 | 5 |
| re: 28
I think Sadem Insane read the book.
|
1333.30 | Legal Implications? | HSOMAI::SKIEST | | Mon Jan 07 1991 17:45 | 17 |
| Can Digital legally lay off people without offering them the package,
if they were not offered the package before? Like, if you have 10
years with the company and some one just got hired recently, and you
are laid off but the new person is still employed and you have the
same skills. Can the company be sued? I'm just wondering how this
supposed layoff would occur. Would tenure and job skills have any
thing to do with it, or could managers pick and choose as they wish
with no regard to length of job at DEC. A lot of us know its not
what you know but who you know......
Like everyone else here at DEC, if layoffs got to happen lets get it
overwith in a "Fair" manner, so that we can get back to work in a
company that has almost always been a real people oriented company.
I want to feel good about the company I work for and not have the
axe hanging over my head!
Alan
|
1333.31 | Only if.. | DELREY::MEUSE_DA | | Mon Jan 07 1991 18:03 | 13 |
| Laying off a large group of people will only be a "short term"
solution. If the "real" problems are still there, then the, effects
will be the same and the solution will only be more layoffs.
I have friends at other companies, Unisys and Wang and they have been
going thru nonstop, periodic layoffs for a long time. There was yet
another round of layoffs scheduled for next week at Unisys.
So if the problems aren't solved, you are forced to keep laying people
off. Hopefully we will cut our costs, and be more competitive real
soon.
|
1333.32 | | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney in New York | Mon Jan 07 1991 18:10 | 11 |
| re: the others
I agree the "rumor" is probably nothing more than pro-forma notice to a
government agency as opposed to real news.
re: .-1
Unless otherwise legislated or specifically contracted, it's hire at
will, quit at will, fire at will. As I understand the laws that apply
here, there's no obligation on Digital's part to offer the same
"package" or for that matter "any" package.
|
1333.33 | Heads or Tails? | DACT6::DEADY | | Mon Jan 07 1991 18:25 | 10 |
| re. .30
Unless you have an Employment Contract, you are an Employee At Will,
and can be layed off, fired etc. at the decision of an empowered
Manager. However most companies, for several reasons, set guidelines
for dismissal. Tenure, typically has little to do with down-sizing.
my .02 worth
Fred Deady
|
1333.34 | legal!! Ethical??? | CANYON::NEVEU | SWA EIS Consultant | Mon Jan 07 1991 18:26 | 28 |
| The procedures for layoffs are strictly up to local management
perogatives. Since Digital is not a "union shop", you can expect
that seniority will not carry much weight, some countries in europe
may see different results due to governmental regulations.
There is no basis for a suit, unless you can show age, sex, or some
other prohibited form of discrimination. Afterall DEC never guaranteed
you a job for life!!!
As for the unfairness of allowing some people to volunteer to leave
with compensation, while forcing others out without such compensation!
It is unfortunately for those forced out quite legal, unless they can
prove discrimination per the categories above.
I especially sympathise with people who were offered the package and
chose to continue to work at Digital because they were told their
skills were needed last year, but are now in a facility about to be
closed because it is not needed by Digital. These individuals have
been contributing in the face of a losing battle, and now their offer
is dependent upon Q2 results??? Legal (of course) Ethical (????)
The questions others will have to ask is, do I wait around till
my group is downsized.... and there are no funds to pay TFSO...
or do I try to get myself out now, or look for a new job... or....
The resultant drag on employee productivity is not helping us move
forward. I am not sure people need to read "The Prince" but they
need to get on with whatever downsizing and be done with it.
|
1333.35 | It takes a LONG time to find a job these days | WHYNOW::NEWMAN | What, me worry? YOU BET! | Mon Jan 07 1991 21:31 | 14 |
| Driving home the other evening I heard an interview from the head of a
major "outplacement" firm in Massachusetts and heard some very
frightening (but not surprising) data.
The "old rule of thumb" was that it would take 1 month for every $10K
of salary to find a job. For example, if you were looking for a $50K
per year salary you should expect to spend about 5 months on the job
market. Now, with the current economic climate in Massachusetts, the
"new rule of thumb" is 3 - 5 months for every $10K of salary to find a
job. The person also stated that they expected this to approach the 5
month number consistently if the job market continued to shrink in the
state.
Some sobering news...
|
1333.36 | so why is DEC still hiring? | FSTTOO::BEAN | Attila the Hun was a LIBERAL! | Tue Jan 08 1991 08:14 | 1 |
|
|
1333.38 | | COOKIE::LENNARD | | Tue Jan 08 1991 11:54 | 10 |
| ...because we're grossly mismanaged! There are still hundreds of
managers, who when tasked with a new project, etc., can only think
in terms of how many req's to issue.
Personally, I wish more people had been given the chance to really
volunteer for the package....also would have liked to see a real
early retirement package.
Enough people might have gone for those as to obviate the need for
real lay-offs.
|
1333.39 | | BUNYIP::QUODLING | Aussie Licensing Devo | Tue Jan 08 1991 13:26 | 6 |
| Off course the other considerations is that with other companies doing
layoffs, there is some new talent in the job market, that it would probably
be to our advantage to acquire...
q
|
1333.40 | just another company?? | CARTOG::PASQUALE | | Tue Jan 08 1991 13:36 | 17 |
| i would hope that DEC would attempt to avoid a layoff at any cost.
KO has tried valiantly to stand alone when it came to conforming to
the western style of conducting the business of the day by attempting
to care for employees (value them). It's been the one thing that makes
DEC a desireable company to work for. I'm afraid if DEC does embark on
a layoff then it becomes just another company and perhaps not as highly
coveted as it once was by potential future employees. This mystique if
you will allows us to attract some of the best people in the industry
which in turn affords us a competitive advantage in the marketplace.
I have heard that we did not lose money last quarter and in fact earned
approximately .50 per share. About 60% off from last years Q2 earnings/
. Have the financials for Q2 been published yet??
|
1333.41 | You never know where you're going till you get there | WJOUSM::GASKELL | | Tue Jan 08 1991 13:48 | 28 |
| Re. notes:
.1 If you believe that, I've a lovely piece of land in Florida--lots
of water attached to it. Read my lips--this is a recession!!!
.11 What do you expect, that's DEC style!
.27 If Corp Employee Communication said the rumor is untrue, then that
confirms it for me.
.16 I am, I am (prepared for the worst).
.35 If that's how long it takes to get another job (per 10K of salary)
the I'm laughing. It should take me all of a couple of weeks to
find a new job.
Could be that the rumor (as all rumors do) became garbled. Could it have
been that (the VAX) 9000 (designers and engineers) would be laid off?
As for an announcement (if DEC goes to lay-offs)--keep your eyes on
the Boston Globe. I have had more information on DEC from that source
than any internal announcement (I first heard of the TFSO1 that way).
The only thing I am sure of (other than death and taxes) is that what ever
happens I will be the last to know.
Think positive and how's your typing skills--plenty of reqs for
secretary. 7
|
1333.42 | KO is Part of the Problem | COOKIE::LENNARD | | Tue Jan 08 1991 15:14 | 11 |
| re .40....I strongly disagree that KO should avoid lay-offs "at any
cost". We always justified overstaffing situations in the past by
claiming we would need the people when we returned to a fast growth
scenario. Well people, it ain't gonna happen, and a lot of the blame
lays directly in KO's lap. I believe we'll get back to healthy levels
of profitability, but the good all days of sloppily managed growth
are gone forever.
.41, you are very naive. I hope you're not over 45 or making over 50K.
I think, and my experience tells me, that the once month/10K figures
given are very conservative. But, good luck.
|
1333.43 | | BAGELS::CARROLL | | Tue Jan 08 1991 16:17 | 36 |
|
I haven't flamed off in a while sooooo.....
RE .40
As I have said before, this company does not exist to "care for it's
employees". This company exists for only one purpose; to sell
hardware, software and services to customers, at a PROFIT.
I cannot understand why some employees would let this company
maintain the status quo "so that it is a desirable place to work".
They obviously have lost sight of why we were hired.
This is not the dept of human services. We are fat in some areas
and too lean in others. The hell with downsizing, we need to rightsize.
We need to get rid of any deadwood (managers & IC's alike), unnecessary
jobs (there are many) AND we need to place competent people in groups
that are shorthanded, such as software engineering (118 openings).
No, KO can't take people from personel, finance etc and make them
software engineers so he can "care for his employees". We need
qualified people who have experience.
I never cease to be amazed at how many spoiled people there are
working here, probably the only place they have worked and think
this company is gods gift to the people, it ain't. It IS just
another company and if not managed properly, it will be just another
bankrupt company.
Yes, we can make this a very profitable company, for the stockholders.
That is what we are paid to do. We cannot do so however, by
maintaining this half assed status quo.
|
1333.44 | Is it time to dust off my resume? | BOLT::MINOW | Cheap, fast, good; choose two | Tue Jan 08 1991 16:52 | 11 |
| re: .43:
As I have said before, this company does not exist to "care for it's
employees". This company exists for only one purpose; to sell
hardware, software and services to customers, at a PROFIT.
If this company does not "care for it's employees" the employees it
needs to have in order to make the hardware and softare and sell it
and deliver it and fix it will be the first out the door, as t*h*e*y
are still in demand.
Martin.
|
1333.45 | If True, Expect Wide Impact | AKOCOA::BIBEAULT | Bob, (DTN) 291-9162 | Tue Jan 08 1991 17:42 | 12 |
| If Digital lays off anywhere near the number rumored, think of the
impact on the real estate market here in the Northeast.
Just this past weekend, Bank of New England was seized by the Feds and
on Monday the bank filed for bankruptcy protection. Cause of the
demise: non-performing real estate loans. How many other banks will
buckle if real estate prices, reacting to a DEC layoff, head much
further south?
If DEC lays off in a big way, the casualites will extend far beyond
those involuntarily terminated...
|
1333.46 | | SQM::MACDONALD | | Wed Jan 09 1991 10:26 | 8 |
|
Re: .43
OK, let's give your idea a try and how about you being the
first one to go. Try it on and see how it feels.
Steve
|
1333.47 | Test them!! | RAVEN1::DJENNAS | | Wed Jan 09 1991 12:05 | 14 |
| Re: 43
You are hired to produce a product that the company sells at a Profit.
If you cannot see the correlation between satisfied employees and
Profits, you're out. It's an "n" way street, if DEC is not competitive
in how it treats its employees, guess what? the competition gets the
best and you get the REST! Unfortunately the REST seems to be a
disproportionate fraction of the pie at this point in time.
Our hiring policy, if such a thing exist, is one of the loosest in the
industry, when the grass is green and the gate is wide open the goats
overwhelm the sheep!
We need Metrics, just like the good old days at school!
|
1333.48 | Leak generators don't usually check their sources well | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Wed Jan 09 1991 12:24 | 9 |
| Well, this story has just hit the local news.
At about quarter past noon today, Channel 5 (WCVB) news reported that there
was an internal memo detailing 7500 Mass and 1500 NH layoffs.
I wonder if there's an internal memo, or if there's just this VAX Notes
discussion.
/john
|
1333.49 | also a headline story | NETMAN::KRISHNASWAMY | You can see a lot just by looking | Wed Jan 09 1991 13:05 | 11 |
| For what it is worth, this is the front page, full banner story on the
local newspaper in Hudson, MA. It quoted the same numbers and the
infamous "internal memo" but went on to say that the memo (and some
discussions) had been going on "in USENET". That leads me to suspect
that the source might have been this notesfile and they did not know
what to call the network.
A case of rumors feeding on rumors? Or could it be real?
krishna
|
1333.50 | | MUDHWK::LAWLER | Twelve Cylinders - NO LUCAS electrics. | Wed Jan 09 1991 13:36 | 5 |
|
Let's see if it's denied as quickly as the story about Bob
Glorioso's reassignment...
|
1333.52 | Canada has acted | KAOFS::N_BAXTER | we'll see who rusts first... | Wed Jan 09 1991 13:55 | 4 |
| Tune into the NOTE KAOSWS::CANADA note 397 to hear about the Canadian
"restructuring" that happened today.
|
1333.53 | things happen quickly it seems | CVG::THOMPSON | Does your manager know you read Notes? | Wed Jan 09 1991 14:02 | 4 |
| The note refered to in .52 has been deleted. A place holder is
there now. Wonder what's up?
Alfred
|
1333.54 | just another average not so good company | CARTOG::PASQUALE | | Wed Jan 09 1991 15:02 | 12 |
|
re. 43
geeshh.. .just another company with a bunch of average employees is
really something to aspire to...i guess we ought to be just like the
rest of them. i'm not ashamed to admit that i've worked here for 11
years and i don't consider myself to be spoiled!! apparently you feel
very strongly about being associated with just another company so why
don't you lead the way.... there's always Wang......?
|
1333.55 | 2-300 Canadians | CECV01::C_ROBINSON | | Wed Jan 09 1991 15:26 | 4 |
| re .53 Now the note referred to in .52 just says that 2-300 Canadian
employees have been offered a package...no details...
Carol
|
1333.57 | Layoff is real | WAYBAK::LEFEBVRE | Everybody knows this is nowhere | Wed Jan 09 1991 16:09 | 16 |
| We just received official word in Andover. The management line is
that there will be an involuntary layoff (that's right, the group
manager used the "l-word") of 5000 US employees "sometime this
quarter".
The breakdown will be 2000 field employees, 1000 engineering and
2000 "other". The selection process will be based on performance
and the financial package will be based on TFSO 2 numbers.
Groups that did not participate in TFSO1 and TFSO2 will be hit this
time around.
That's all they would tell us, but Livewire is supposedly announcing
it this afternoon.
Mark.
|
1333.58 | | HPSCAD::FORTMILLER | Ed Fortmiller, MRO1-3, 297-4160 | Wed Jan 09 1991 16:14 | 1 |
| In MRO we were told 1000 "other" also another 10K in FY92.
|
1333.60 | LiveWire announcement of 'downsizing' | EDCS::HORGAN | go, lemmings, go | Wed Jan 09 1991 16:34 | 74 |
| from LiveWire:
New phase of U.S. downsizing announced
Increasingly intense competitive pressure within the computer industry --
business practices, technological advances and manufacturing efficiencies --
are placing added pressures on the company's cost structure, in spite of
ongoing cost reduction efforts that focused on increased productivity and
efficiency and two voluntary downsizing programs.
An analysis of the results of these efforts has been completed and was
reviewed this week by the Corporate Operations Committee and the Executive
Committee. This analysis shows that those cost reduction efforts, while
impressive, have simply not been enough, in light of the increased pressures
applied by economic conditions.
As a result, a new phase of the U.S. downsizing effort, involving involuntary
selection methods, has been approved effective immediately. The decision to
move into a new phase was finalized yesterday.
As we move ahead into this phase, it is critical for everyone to try to
grasp the full impact of the intense competitive and economic forces at
play. Those pressures are driving fundamental changes in this company and
this industry. And even as business improves, we can no longer expect things
to "return to normal," as many of us assumed in past economic downturns.
This phase is different in two ways from prior phases. It will involve
involuntary methodology, and while a financial support package will be
offered, it will be somewhat less generous.
While we need to move ahead quickly, we also intend to proceed in a rational
and orderly way that will not disrupt business. This program is a U.S.
program. Other downsizing programs will continue to be implemented outside
the U.S., based upon business conditions, local laws, customs, and
traditions, on a country-by-country basis.
Regarding methodology, two primary factors will determine whether an employee
is selected: 1) his or her work has gone away; 2) he or she is selected from
a larger group being reduced based on performance (i.e., the last documented
performance rating, as indicated on the employee's most recent performance
evaluation). If additional selection steps are required, they will be based
on additional performance criteria (those details are being further refined
and will be finalized shortly.)
The elements of the financial support package include a lump sum payment
based on years of service to the company; maintenance of medical, dental,
and life insurance coverage for a period represented by the total payments,
not to exceed one year; formal outplacement/employment assistance;
and, where applicable, five-year acceleration of any restricted stock
options. This latter element is subject to approval by the Compensation
Stock Option Committee (CSOC). There is no open-window period as before.
Though the manner in which the payment will be made has been structured
differently than in previous programs to accommodate certain legal
requirements, the total payments will be as follows:
0 - 2 years of service 13 weeks of pay
3 - 10 years of service 13 weeks of pay, plus three weeks
of pay for every year of service
between three and ten years.
11 - 20 years of service 37 weeks of pay, plus four weeks
of pay for every year of service
between eleven and twenty years.
77 weeks of pay will be the maximum
financial bridge available.
The progress of this program will be assessed periodically, and we will
endeavor to communicate relevant information to managers and employees as
quickly as possible through the appropriate communication channels.
|
1333.61 | It's Happening!! | COOKIE::LENNARD | | Wed Jan 09 1991 16:38 | 8 |
| I'm sure there will be a generous-as-possible settlement, but not
voluntary.
My source in MRO confirms that in a staff meeting this morning it was
announced that lay-offs really will happen. Mentioned 1,000 engineers
as a starter.
....now where is that damned resume???
|
1333.62 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Wed Jan 09 1991 17:09 | 62 |
| Digital to cut 3,450 jobs in first ever layoffs
By BARRY FLYNN
UPI Business Writer
BOSTON (UPI) - Digital Equipment Corp., the nation's No. 2 computer
maker, Wednesday said it will lay off about 3,450 employees worldwide,
breaking a 34-year tradition of no involuntary cuts and striking another
blow at the reeling regional economy.
Most of the cuts should be complete by the end of March, said Nikki
Richardson, a spokeswoman, but she could not say when the first workers
would lose their jobs.
The company has not yet determined who will be laid off or where the
cuts will be made, Richardson said. But because Massachusetts has a
large proportion of the company's employees, it can expect a big share
of the layoffs, she added.
Digital's 29,000 employees in Massachusetts make the company the
state's second biggest employer after only Raytheon Co. based in
Lexington. Digital is New Hampshire's biggest employer with about 7,000
employees there, she added.
Digital's goal has been to slash its worldwide work force by about 6,
000 employees, or nearly 5 percent, to about 117,500 by the end of the
fiscal year June 30 from a year earlier, Richardson said.
The company said it had 123,500 employees around the world at the end
of last June. Richardson said the company does not know how many
employees it has now - after a voluntary severance program that fell far
short of its goals - because of an undetermined degree of other
attrition.
Richardson said the severance program had resulted in about 2,550
people leaving the company voluntarily by the end of the year despite a
goal of 5,000 to 6,000.
She said the company reached the 3,450 estimate for layoffs in the
next few months by extrapolating from the results of the severance
program.
Digital, based in Maynard, Mass., is the nation's No. 2 computer
maker after International Business Machines Corp.
Company spokesman Dallas Kirk said the 2,550 total for voluntary
severances was "as good as we could get considering the outside
environment," which includes both a nationwide slump in the computer
industry and the region's highest unemployment in almost a decade.
Digital has been under heavy pressure from the investment community
to slash its bloated work force and thus strengthen its profit margins.
A Wall Street analyst, George Elling, who follows Digital for Merrill
Lynch, said, "unfortunately, in light of the current environment,
they've got to control their overhead costs. In DEC's case, we're all
aware that business is rough" and the way to imporove results is to cut
costs.
Elling said a reduction in costs now would poise the company for
sharp improvement once the economy and the computer industry turns back
up.
Richardson said the company believes the costs of the severance
package have already been accounted for in a restructuring charge it
took last year, but declined to say how much of a savings would be
achieved by the layoffs.
The Digital spokeswoman said the cuts would be done "on a business
by business basis" and "no business is exempt from doing the analysis.
A company statement said an analysis of the voluntary severance
program's results "in light of the continuing changes in the computer
industry as a whole, business practices, technology advances and
manufacturing efficiencies indicates that the result is simply not
enough.
"In addition, we believe that outside economic conditions make
continuing with a totally voluntary program unlikely to succeed."
[upi 09-JAN-1991 04:52]
|
1333.64 | | TRCO01::FINNEY | Keep cool, but do not freeze | Wed Jan 09 1991 19:48 | 6 |
| I just received official notification that the subject under discussion
in this topic, with respect to Canada, is not to be discussed in VAX
Notes. I therefore have hidden the reference in CANADA notesfile and
deleted my notes on that topic in this reply.
Scooter
|
1333.65 | Topic title changed | EXIT26::STRATTON | Reason, Purpose, Self-Esteem | Wed Jan 09 1991 20:41 | 5 |
| I've just changed the topic title to "First ever Digital
layoffs."
Jim Stratton, co-moderator, DIGITAL conference
|
1333.66 | Define Official Notification! | GLDOA::MCMULLEN | | Mon Jan 14 1991 10:26 | 6 |
| Re: .64
Wouldn't it be "enlightening" when posting such official notifications
to specificly identify the authorized official making such a directive?
|
1333.67 | Great Timing | NEURON::VIOLA | The Adventures of DECtracy | Mon Jan 14 1991 14:44 | 26 |
|
I was reading the Denver Post yesterday, and low-and-behold
in the help wanted section was a rather large ad placed by
a Sausalito, Ca. based advertising agency (Austin Knight)
conducting a search for a unnamed client.
I'm no brain surgeon, but I was still able to figure out this
"client" was DEC! (Unless another Fortune 100 computer manufacturer
has Customer Support Centers in Colorado Springs, and Atlanta, *AND*
is hiring VAX/VMS, DECnet, Via Products, and ULTRIX folks)
Finding this a little hard to swallow in the wake of the layoff
announcement, I called a friend in Atlanta, who found the same ad in
the Atlanta Journal Constitution!
I understand some jobs are hard to fill, but wouldn't it be appropriate
to give the unfortunate folks being layed off...excuse me, involuntarily
right-sized, the first shot at these openings?
If your interested, send your resume to:
Confidential Reply Service
Austin Knight Advertising
Dept. CLW-DP, POB 2126
Sausalito, CA. 94966
|
1333.68 | | CVG::THOMPSON | Does your manager know you read Notes? | Mon Jan 14 1991 15:05 | 6 |
| RE: .67 What makes you think those jobs were closed to people in
transition? I'll bet most if not all of those jobs have been posted
for weeks internally. If people inside Digital wanted those jobs
why haven't they already tried for them?
Alfred
|
1333.69 | | CSC32::J_OPPELT | Just give me options. | Mon Jan 14 1991 15:09 | 21 |
| re .67
Yep. The customer support centers have open reqs. You *DO*
have first shot. They are posted internally, and they are trying
to fill them with internals first. See note 1644 in JOBS for
some of those positions.
As has been said many times over in this and other conferences,
sometimes there just isn't the available (or willing) talent
internally to fill certain positions. Here they are looking
for a certain technical level to start with, and that technical
experience should be in the products for which they are looking
for specialists. They don't want to spend the next year training
a hardware engineer to be technically proficient enough in RDB
that he can provide customer support in it! And there may be
dozens of employees who can do the job well, but they live in
New Hampshire and do not want to move to Colorado Springs or
Atlanta. Sometimes you have to find that talent through other
sources, I guess.
Joe Oppelt
|
1333.70 | | TRCA03::FINNEY | Keep cool, but do not freeze | Mon Jan 14 1991 18:59 | 8 |
| re: .66
Yep. You'd be surprised at how high that fell on me from.
... and I got called at *home* to be told what I describe in
.64...
Scooter
|
1333.71 | no relo. | CSC32::K_BOUCHARD | Ken Bouchard CXO3-2 | Mon Jan 14 1991 19:49 | 5 |
| One problem that I can see (concerning DEC advertizing for applicants)
is that the appropriate internal talent may not reside in the area with
openings. In other words, DEC doesn't want to pay relocation.
Ken
|
1333.72 | No relo for *who*? | SMEGIT::ARNOLD | Diet Special: Molecule of Beef | Mon Jan 14 1991 20:01 | 9 |
| re .71 "DEC doesn't want to pay relocation".
But wait a minute. You mean we're advertising in various newspapers
across the country about job openings in Atlanta or Col Springs, and we
wouldn't pay relo for the right external candidate? Surely the case is
not that we'd pay relo for an *external* candidate and not for an
*internal* one? Say it ain't so...
Jon
|
1333.73 | know what I mean? | CSC32::K_BOUCHARD | Ken Bouchard CXO3-2 | Mon Jan 14 1991 20:16 | 7 |
| As far as I know,DEC's policy is *not* to pay relocation to new-hires.
Anyone know different?
Ken
BTW: To my knowledge,the ads are in local papers for local openings so
relocation would be a moot point anyway.
|
1333.74 | Required talent ??? | BUSY::BELLIVEAU | | Mon Jan 14 1991 20:35 | 24 |
| RE: .69
About 1 year ago I was trying to transfer into the CXO Customer
Support Centers from Ma. When I looked in the jobs book, I saw
between 6 - 7 open positions for Customer Response Reps. I sent in
my resume.
When I called the recruiter, I was told "There are no openings." My
fiancee, who worked in the CSC in Westboro, Ma., took a trip that same
week to CXO and interviewed with several managers who had openings,
(that very same job). When I again called the recruiter, I was told,
"there are no openings". When I disputed this, she said basically I
didn't have much of a chance at them, because, although I did similar
work, I didn't have a computer science degree. This was not a
requirement for the job, but she claims other people who had applied
DID have computer science degrees. So therefore, I didn't stand a
chance, despite the fact that my current job was a higher level.
Imagine that: a computer science degree to become a Customer
Response Rep. Yet the job openings lingered on.
Do they call this unavailability of required skills?, or am I missing
something obvious here?
John (who_would_still_like_to_move_to_CXO)
|
1333.75 | add to .74 | BUSY::BELLIVEAU | | Mon Jan 14 1991 20:52 | 4 |
| RE: Last few
Back then I did not require relo. I would go, as I would have gone,
without relo.
|
1333.76 | | DEC25::BRUNO | Nuthin' compares 2 U | Mon Jan 14 1991 21:24 | 15 |
| RE: <<< Note 1333.73 by CSC32::K_BOUCHARD "Ken Bouchard CXO3-2" >>>
> As far as I know,DEC's policy is *not* to pay relocation to new-hires.
> Anyone know different?
If this is policy, it has taken effect since 1989 when a new
member of our group got relocation funds upon being hired.
> BTW: To my knowledge,the ads are in local papers for local openings so
> relocation would be a moot point anyway.
The ads in the Colorado Springs Gazette-Telegraph were for Atlanta
positions as well as Colorado Springs positions.
Greg
|
1333.77 | your mileage with recruiters may vary | LABRYS::CONNELLY | House of the Axe | Mon Jan 14 1991 23:08 | 16 |
| re: .75
I applied for some CXO jobs and also got the response "no openings", but
the Personnel recruiter said that actually meant "CSC internal hires only".
So possibly a CSC person from YWO or ALF would be considered eligible. I
think that was back in the days when certain organizations were under
overall headcount restrictions. At least the recruiter responded, which
is more than i can say for about 30-40% of the recruiters to whom i sent
my resume for SPECIFIC req numbers. Now that latter situation is WRONG.
As far as relo for external hires, my guess is that there's no policy per
se, just a great reluctance on the part of most hiring managers to pay
"DEC buys your house/condo" type relo (vs. just moving your furniture) to
external hires. But for a "critical" opening i'll bet that would be
negotiable. That just boils down to common sense, i hope.
paul
|
1333.78 | | CSSE32::RHINE | A dirty mind is a terrible thing to waste | Mon Jan 14 1991 23:35 | 8 |
| RE.73
I don't know what the current policies are around external hiring,
although I think the policy should be no external hires. However,
in the past, external hires got travel costs, moving of household
goods, and I think 30 days of temporary living. They did not get
closing costs, house selling costs, etc. The US Policies and
Procedures are in VTX if you are really interested.
|
1333.79 | Atlanta and Colorado Springs advertised in Seattle, too | DECWET::MCBRIDE | It may not be the easy way... | Mon Jan 14 1991 23:43 | 3 |
| The advertisement for Atlanta and Colorado Springs openings appeared in the
Seattle Times Sunday, Jan. 13. So they are not just recruting in the local
areas.
|
1333.80 | Why does speculative gossip have to be negative? | CSC32::J_OPPELT | Just give me options. | Tue Jan 15 1991 00:38 | 15 |
| It is absolutely irresponsible to even GUESS that relocation
is not available for internal transfers. As of the last I
heard, it has not been determined whether internal relocation
is available or not. To state that it is not available when
that decision has not been made might only serve to discourage
qualified and valuable candidates from even trying.
The CSCs are excited to be able to snatch some DEC careers from
disaster. It would make tons of sense to pay a year's salary
towards relocation and placement into a new job rather than
have DEC spend that kind of money to watch some quality employee
walk away crushed, or to pay headhunters' fees and limited
relo funds for an external hire.
Joe Oppelt
|
1333.81 | And leave to go somewhere else? | FLYWAY::ZAHNDR | | Tue Jan 15 1991 02:35 | 11 |
| -68
Maybe they were not looking for a job, maybe they did not want
to relocate, maybe they just wanted to stay where they were. In
relocating to another city, when you have children, a house, animals,
friends. Do you know how hard it is on all the family members?
I moved without my family, alone to Switzerland. I had to go as
far as this to find a job.
I believe the lay-off people should get a chance at those jobs
with relocation.
I hope they get it. Ruth
|
1333.82 | The reqs say there is relo | CASDEV::SALOIS | | Tue Jan 15 1991 09:48 | 7 |
|
FWIW
The jobs discussed in CXO "do" have relo....
It's easy once you type in VTX JOBS_US.
|
1333.83 | I'm sure there's a sensible explanation | BOLT::MINOW | Cheap, fast, good; choose two | Tue Jan 15 1991 11:45 | 14 |
| re: .69:
... And there may be
dozens of employees who can do the job well, but they live in
New Hampshire and do not want to move to Colorado Springs or
Atlanta.
Ok, I'm showing my ignorance, but when I did telephone support, I had
a phone, a desk, and a stack of manuals. Why do these have to be
physically located in Colorado Springs?
The telephone network should be able to move customer calls to the
appropriate person, no matter where that person is physically located.
Martin.
|
1333.85 | | COOKIE::LENNARD | | Tue Jan 15 1991 12:51 | 15 |
| Three Comments:
1 - Don't be so naive as to assume that a recruiter is going to
automatically help line you up with an open req. Their job is also
very much to filter out "undesirables". In my direct experience they
are fully capable of lying to applicants they don't want to deal with.
2 - External New Hires get a very comprehensive relocation
package. See PP&P Manual, Section 5.03, dated Dec 1990. Of course a
hiring manager always has the option of not offering relocation on
any req.
3 - Anyone that thinks the good job, usually higher level, end
up on the JOBS List is really naive. Anything from SRI 41 or above
is handled via the old-boy network.
|
1333.86 | Starship CXO | BIGJOE::DMCLURE | Swimmin backstroke on Niagra Falls | Tue Jan 15 1991 13:24 | 35 |
| re: .83,
>re: .69:
>> ... And there may be
>> dozens of employees who can do the job well, but they live in
>> New Hampshire and do not want to move to Colorado Springs or
>> Atlanta.
> Ok, I'm showing my ignorance, but when I did telephone support, I had
> a phone, a desk, and a stack of manuals. Why do these have to be
> physically located in Colorado Springs?
I've been to CXO a couple of times since I've been at DEC,
and while there, I noticed a communal atmosphere unlike any other
DEC facility I've ever visited. The CXO3 support facility is filled
almost entirely with people working together handling support calls.
This, in itself, might not seem so unusual, but I knew I wasn't in
Kansas anymore when suddenly a particular call queue became too
full and this sexy voice came on the public address system saying
something to the effect "The xxx call queue is approaching a critical
level, please check this queue...thank you...", at which point, the
entire facility seemed to stir in reaction to the news. There were
a few other differences as well, but this is one thing that really
made an impression on me.
All in all, it was a pretty impressive demonstration of the
support center's capability. I was left with a feeling of pride
in being able to say I worked for such a high tech firm which was
able to work together in such a team-oriented approach (In some
respects I felt like I was being given a tour of the Starship
Enterprise). I doubt whether what appeared to be such a high
quality of support could be maintained with a geographically
diverse group of employees at the end of some phone lines.
-davo
|
1333.87 | My 2 cents...
| DACT6::COLEMAN | No, this isn't Perry--it's Cheryl | Tue Jan 15 1991 13:52 | 5 |
| The ad was run in the Washington Post (Washington, DC, that is)
on Sunday. The cost of the ad? $1200. Imagine the price
of that ad in every major newspaper across the country.
Oh well...
|
1333.88 | | BRULE::MICKOL | You can call me Keno... | Tue Jan 15 1991 14:12 | 18 |
| Re: External Hiring
I just distributed my brother's resume throughout the corporation. He
is a Unix heavy and I KNOW we need this skill set. I got many
responses from recruiters, but practically every one said something
to the effect that "we do not have external hire approval". I figured
strong UNIX skills were the kind we would bite the bullet on and hire
from the outside. I find it hard to believe we can't fill many of the
CSC slots from within.
Re: CSC Atmosphere
I also visited the CSC and felt the same "we all have a common goal"
attitude. I was excited and impressed with the spirit of everyone
I saw there. I don't know how they do it, but perhaps they should
try teaching other groups how to achieve the CSC team spirit.
|
1333.89 | play smart | DELREY::MEUSE_DA | | Tue Jan 15 1991 14:21 | 11 |
| re:85
Yes..and most good job hunting books tell to "whatever it takes, you
must get past the personnel people and deal with the hiring manager".
and most good books will instruct you how to do that...
Dave
|
1333.90 | I have lots of manuals too | CSC32::K_BOUCHARD | Ken Bouchard CXO3-2 | Tue Jan 15 1991 15:48 | 12 |
| Two things:
1) I said I believe it's policy not to offer external hires relo.
but,obviously,one can "make a deal" with a hiring manager.
2) No,a phone,desk and a pile of manuals doesn't make for a very
efficient phone support operation. Unless you know everything,there are
times (lots of times in my case) when you have to ask people questions.
I can ask questions of an un-limited (seemingly) number of people
right in my cubicle's vicinity. Try *that* if all you've got is a
phone...
|
1333.91 | | LESLIE::LESLIE | Andy Leslie | Wed Jan 16 1991 06:51 | 4 |
| A degree shoulod not be a pre-requisite for any job where it isn't
mandatory - as an accountancy position, perhaps.
- andy
|
1333.92 | send this to VOGON-BALLS? | FSTVAX::BEAN | Attila the Hun was a LIBERAL! | Wed Jan 16 1991 12:15 | 9 |
| re: .91
A degree should not be a pre-requisite for any job where it isn't
mandatory -
???
;^}
tony
|
1333.93 | a management statement | CSC32::K_BOUCHARD | Ken Bouchard CXO3-2 | Wed Jan 16 1991 15:09 | 5 |
| re:.91
Yogi Berra would be proud of that remark!
Ken
|
1333.94 | | PSW::WINALSKI | Watch my MIPS - no new VAXes | Wed Jan 16 1991 17:28 | 9 |
| Not a VOGONBALL at all. "Mandatory" in this context means "mandated by
factors not under control of the decision maker". For example, some
accountancy functions are by law required to be performed by government-
certified individuals, and you must have a degree to get the certification.
This is a case where the hiring manager may not care whether or not the degree
is held, but he must set the degree as a prerequisite because it is mandated
by law.
--PSW
|
1333.95 | Maybe this was entered under the wrong note... | CSC32::J_OPPELT | Please don't hit me any more... | Wed Jan 16 1991 17:44 | 6 |
| re .91
What does a degree have to do with layoffs? (Or was this a
reference to something way back there...)
Joe Oppelt
|
1333.96 | | LESLIE::LESLIE | Andy Leslie | Wed Jan 16 1991 18:12 | 6 |
| re: .94 Thanks Paul, got it in one.
RE: .95 Yep, a few replies back was a reference to people not getting a
CSC job if they didn't have a degree.
- andy
|
1333.97 | | CSC32::J_OPPELT | Please don't hit me any more... | Thu Jan 17 1991 13:54 | 4 |
| But degrees *AREN'T* required. Even the external hire ads
in the papers say BS or equivalent work experience.
Joe Oppelt
|
1333.98 | | LESLIE::LESLIE | Andy Leslie | Thu Jan 17 1991 14:50 | 3 |
| I know that. According to a previous reply, Personnel don't.
- andy
|
1333.99 | Maybe I should apply externally ??? | BUSY::BELLIVEAU | | Thu Jan 17 1991 19:34 | 31 |
| >================================================================================
>Note 1333.97 First ever Digital layoffs 97 of 98
>CSC32::J_OPPELT "Please don't hit me any more..." 4 lines 17-JAN-1991 13:54
>--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> But degrees *AREN'T* required. Even the external hire ads
> in the papers say BS or equivalent work experience.
>
> Joe Oppelt
>
Right. The postings in the JOBS books don't mention anything about
Computer Science degrees. But believe me, it's all supposed to
become irrelevant to you once the recruiter upon hearing that you
don't have the degree, tells you "there are no openings, despite the 6
that you are looking at in front of you now (from the JOBS book)".
Note the DECspeak: Not, "We don't feel you are qualified", or "we are
not willing to pay relocation", etc., but: "There are no positions" ?
Okay, some have said that perhaps they were trying to offer them to
the folks in that area first, or exclusively, whatever. Then I would
like to know why they are posted company wide? I do not feel that
Jobs should be posted company wide if they are only available to a
certain site or group. How many other employees are submitting
resumes, follow-up letters, numerous phone calls, etc., to be told
"there are no openings"? Bring it to a larger scale and wonder how
much company time and money is wasted annually by employees diligently
applying for these psuedo "openings" ?
John (who_hopes_for_the_best_but_doubts_it)
|
1333.100 | | SMEGIT::ARNOLD | Diet Special: Molecule of Beef | Thu Jan 17 1991 22:19 | 18 |
| You have to remember who you're talking to. If you're talking to the
hiring manager, he/she probably doesn't care how many sheepskins are
hanging on your wall or where they came from; their primary interest is
in whether or not you are qualified & able to do the job that they need
to have done.
It has been mentioned elsewhere in this conference that Personnel
recruiters, while generally nice people socially, and can under good
conditions, log into their systems without inflicting self-injury, seem
to be one of the lowest forms of multi-celled organisms when it comes
to "qualifying a candidate". They don't care that you can re-wire a
fizzboom in your sleep, or fork processes thru ionic converter channels
at warp speed. Nor do they [generally] even understand those concepts,
unless those kind of requirements are specifically written into the
req, which they normally aren't.
So how do they "qualify"? Lemme see your sheepskin, dude...
Jon
|
1333.101 | | CSC32::J_OPPELT | Please don't hit me any more... | Thu Jan 17 1991 22:41 | 12 |
| re .101
You said it so poetically! Every job I obtained at DEC since my
original hire here has been through direct contact with the
hiring manager -- each time initiated by a posting I found in
notes (JOBS) for the job.
I have also attempted to find a position through personnel at
those times, but have never been successful using that vehicle.
Joe Oppelt
|
1333.102 | | LABRYS::CONNELLY | House of the Axe | Thu Jan 17 1991 23:08 | 29 |
| re: Personnel Recruiters
I think the quality of recruiting is highly variable, so let's not
impugn the good ones because of the not-so-good. As a hiring manager
i preferred having Personnel handle the communications back to folks
who sent in their resumes for my reqs. BUT I WANTED THAT COMMUNICATION
TO HAPPEN. I just felt it was their job to handle it...in fact, i
think that DEC (Orangebook) P&P says they MUST respond to all applicants.
As an internal applicant myself i found that this communication did NOT
always happen though. The fastest i ever got a response back was within
minutes of sending off my resume by MAIL. The slowest was *never*. In
between were cases ranging from with a week to *more than 3 months*
later. That degree of variability, from an organizational perspective,
is unacceptable, especially for applications that are for specific req
numbers (which must be tracked in a system somehow).
Maybe the quality of the IS systems/applications used by Personnel is
also at fault. How difficult would it seem to auto-generate a "we have
received your resume for req #______" letter, and also to generate a
"we're sorry but another candidate was chosen for req #______ for which
you applied" when that req is closed out? Seems almost trivial to me.
I don't think long drawn out explanations are needed, especially since
some folks seem to routinely apply for reqs that are more than 2 levels
above their present position and for which they have few evident skills.
But the simple notification of "received-and-forwarded (to the hiring
manager)" and "sorry, you didn't get it" seems like common decency and
not difficult to program.
paul
|
1333.103 | we're looking around the country for: | MRKTNG::SILVERBERG | Mark Silverberg DTN 264-2269 TTB1-5/B3 | Fri Jan 18 1991 07:04 | 24 |
| re: 67-87...advertsing for the Colorado Springs & Atlanta positions
The ad appeared in the Jan. 14, 1991 issue of COMPUTERWORLD. Looks
like we've gone nationwide with our needs for the folllowing skills:
VAX/VMS System Management
VAX/VMS Internals & performance
VIA products (Rdb, DBMS, CDD+)
DECnet
Ultrix/Open Systems
NETsupport
C
Fortran
UNIX
X-Windows
MS-DOS
OS/2
PCSA
TCP/IP
UNIX operating system internals
EMC/EMI
Mark
|
1333.104 | | COOKIE::LENNARD | | Fri Jan 18 1991 12:25 | 13 |
| The biggest pain I have with recruiters is that so many of them are
(or were) contract "outsiders". To my direct experience, they're
nice folks but don't know sh** from Shinola about Digital or the jobs in
question.
I once flew to Greenville, S.C. to interview for a training manager
job at the plant. Would you believe that the recruiter/primary inter-
viewer turned out to be a contractor that lived down the street from
me in Nashua ferkrisakes!! He flew down to S.C. on the same plane I
did. I won't even mention that he didn't know anything about training.
Disgusting.
|
1333.105 | Don't blame IS | PIEB05::THOMPSON | | Fri Jan 18 1991 12:32 | 23 |
| RE: .102
I am responding to the comment about IS systems/applications in
Personnel. I write these applications as do many other very good IS
people. The problem is not with IS systems/applications. It is the
same old story, getting users to use them.
The recruiters are responsible for all the information on the VTX Jobs
Book. Many requisitions are on there that date from 1989. Many reqs
are on there that are really on "hold" but the employment people will
not remove them from the Jobs Book just in case they can interview
candidates some week. Maybe the hiring managers want them there so
that they can cut "authorized headcount" and not lose people if they
have to cut.
Many recruiters have taken the "package"/new jobs in the last
several months due to Personnel's "right-sizing". I'm sure that
some of the requisitions are trying to find new "owners" (recruiters).
I don't think anyone should blame IS Personnel Systems for Employment
people not being able to use electronic mail!
Patti
|
1333.106 | Don't give up so easily! | AISG::CHAVEZ | | Fri Jan 18 1991 16:08 | 30 |
| Hey folks - there is another strategy... If you are not happy with
their manner of disqualifying you, can't get an answer, or you just
want to make an *excellent* impression - I've found the way that
works best for me. Do my homework on the job I want (company etc.)
grab my updated resume, get in my best suit and GO to the darn place.
I've gotten more "....impossible to get" jobs that way! Sure the
personnel representative might stand in your way still - but, with
a warm body on their door step its' a lot harder to ignore your
friendly but assertive self. And, you must be ready for *anything*
from snubbing to interviewing all day.
If going there physically is not possible, try to contact someone
already there and see what they can find out for you. Perhaps all
the information you can USE is on the job requisition posted on the
bulletin board.
Of course, like all *interviews* you must be on your best behavior
- even with that person working to slam the door.
One of the most "impossible to get" jobs I've gotten that way was
with the U.S. Forest Service living in a fire look-out tower,
firefighting, and number of great experiences. That was a GREAT
student summer job. And, eventually, I turned that into a Co-op
position. I did some research and then drove to the ranger station
in the forest I wanted to work at, and ended up in the District
Ranger's office that day.
Just go for it! If your easily discouraged, perhaps you don't want
it that much.
|
1333.107 | Set up a CSC in NH? | MILKWY::MORRISON | Bob M. FXO-1/28 228-5357 | Sat Jan 19 1991 12:32 | 12 |
| Re -.1: That is excellent advice. I have done it a few times.
Re posting jobs that are not available company-wide: There is one VTX Jobs
database for all of the U.S. If a job is restricted to one group (such as CSC),
the only way to reach all CSC locations is to post it company wide. However,
the hiring manager can and should say "Open to XXX Group employees only" if that
is the case. I have seen this occasionally on postings.
Re: CSC's need people in other regions and there are excess people in MA/NH:
Why not set up a CSC in NH? That would be a good way to keep from losing a few
people in NH and MA who have skills that would be suitable for CSC's but don't
want to move out of New England, no matter how generous the relo is. I suppose
the phone bills would be a little higher because NH is not a central location
like Atlanta and Colorado are.
|
1333.108 | Question about transfer after getting layoff notice | MILKWY::MORRISON | Bob M. FXO-1/28 228-5357 | Sat Jan 19 1991 12:39 | 6 |
| I have a question about layoffs. If someone is notified that he is going to be
laid off, can he look for another internal job and, if he gets an offer before
terminating, accept the offer and remain a DEC employee? This question is spe-
cific to layoffs as opposed to voluntary buyouts. I realize that it's unlikely
someone could go on an internal interview and get an offer within the notice
period (4 weeks?) for layoffs, but it could happen.
|
1333.109 | Not the way I've heard it... | CARTUN::MISTOVICH | | Sat Jan 19 1991 20:31 | 7 |
| My understanding is that when you are laid off, that's it. No
opportunity for interviewing for another job internally. My
understanding also is that there will be no real notice given...the
13+ weeks pay covers the notice period.
But, this is just my understanding.
|
1333.110 | No Early Warning on Lay-offs | AMELIA::SEGAL | Len Segal, MLO6-1/U30, 223-7687 | Sat Jan 19 1991 22:24 | 14 |
| RE: .108
Bob, according to two independent sources (which represents two
different VP's & organizations), the word is that you get escorted
out the door the same day you get told that you have been laid off.
That is what my manager told us, and that is what personnel told my
Wife's group.
I have also heard a rumor that you are likely to have your ENET
account "locked" on you, prior to them telling you...but no
confirmation on this yet.
Not a nice picture...even Raytheon gave employees 2 or 4 weeks
notice (I can't recall...it was lots of years ago)!
|
1333.111 | | LABRYS::CONNELLY | House of the Axe | Sun Jan 20 1991 02:49 | 9 |
| re: .110 (escorted to the door)
> Not a nice picture...even Raytheon gave employees 2 or 4 weeks
> notice (I can't recall...it was lots of years ago)!
This practice is basically in the interests of security, as i understand
it. Not a nice picture, but then security issues never are...
paul
|
1333.112 | | ABACUS::ALLEN | | Sun Jan 20 1991 07:32 | 4 |
| It may be that management wants to convince an employee that has been
here for say 10 years that they are not trusted, not wanted, and better
not ever show their face around here again. Or maybe it is their best
shot at motivating the survivors?
|
1333.113 | Treason? Well, maybe a punching bag will work... | NEATO::CHAVEZ | | Sun Jan 20 1991 13:06 | 4 |
| And of course in Raytheon, if you do anything to endanger the
work there (at least on military contracts), you can be tried
for treason. That tends to keep those angry with the company
from the temptation of becoming too irrational.
|
1333.114 | Well, maybe n-1 Raytheon employees | TLE::AMARTIN | Alan H. Martin | Sun Jan 20 1991 19:47 | 12 |
| Re .113:
> And of course in Raytheon, if you do anything to endanger the
> work there (at least on military contracts), you can be tried
> for treason. That tends to keep those angry with the company
> from the temptation of becoming too irrational.
That must explain why "Larry from Lowell", an alleged Raytheon technical writer,
was on WBZ early last night claiming the company fulfilled a U.S. order to
preposition Patriots quite a while ago, implying some conspiracy to start the
war.
/AHM
|
1333.115 | Someone already did | EPOCH::JOHNSON | If we build it, they will come. | Mon Jan 21 1991 05:09 | 5 |
| re: 1333.107 "Set up a CSC in NH?"
There *is* a CSC in Massachusetts - has been for ~10 years.
Pete
|
1333.116 | 9 weeks at home and then the exit interview | HPSCAD::FORTMILLER | Ed Fortmiller, MRO1-3, 297-4160 | Mon Jan 21 1991 07:59 | 5 |
| re .110
And we were told that you will be on the payroll for 9 weeks while
you sit at home and then you come back for your exit interview and the
TFSO money. We were also told to expect another 10K layoff in FY92.
|
1333.117 | Interesting discussion about how to treat laid-off ... | YUPPIE::COLE | Profitability is never having to say you're sorry! | Mon Jan 21 1991 08:36 | 4 |
| ... long time employees, especially considering how I've seen more
than one salespersons in my District given free run of the place for AT
LEAST two weeks after giving their notice to go to work for a competitor (or
one of our more notorious "partners"!).
|
1333.118 | no noone has done it | CVG::THOMPSON | Semper Gumby | Mon Jan 21 1991 09:12 | 12 |
| .115> Title: Someone already did
.115>re: 1333.107 "Set up a CSC in NH?"
.115>
.115>There *is* a CSC in Massachusetts - has been for ~10 years.
NH is *not* Massachusetts and suggesting that having a CSC in MA is
close to the same thing as having a CSC in NH is nieve at best and
offensive at worst. For someone who lives in NH to take a job in
MA can be very expensive. A 6% (or close to it) pay cut for one
thing and additional commuting costs for an other.
Alfred
|
1333.120 | | VMSZOO::ECKERT | There'll be no fish. | Mon Jan 21 1991 10:21 | 12 |
| re: .116
> And we were told that you will be on the payroll for 9 weeks while
> you sit at home and then you come back for your exit interview and the
> TFSO money.
Does that mean they are paid weekly from their TFSO benefits for nine
weeks and then receive a lump sum for the remainder, or that they
receive nine weeks of pay in addition to the TFSO benefits?
Did anyone explain the reason for such a lengthy delay between
termination and the exit interview?
|
1333.121 | | BUNYIP::QUODLING | Who's the nut in the bag,dad? | Mon Jan 21 1991 10:50 | 7 |
| re .back a few
I think Raytheon will be the last company thinking of layoffs right now. I
dare say they have more work than they can handle...
q
|
1333.122 | | HPSCAD::FORTMILLER | Ed Fortmiller, MRO1-3, 297-4160 | Mon Jan 21 1991 10:57 | 8 |
| re .120:
Sounded like the 9 weeks were in addition but I can't say for sure.
We were told the delay had to do with some state (MA?) law. We were
not given many details.
Sounded like the selection process was to be complete by the end of
Jan or very early Feb.
|
1333.123 | Your Job Just Moved..... | COOKIE::LENNARD | | Mon Jan 21 1991 12:27 | 11 |
| I have it from a highly placed source that when you are "selected", you
will be gone that day. Don't be surprised, if you are not even allowed
to go back to your cubicle. Same source confirms the 10,000 plus
number for FY92. I hear also that business units have to have their
numbers in by the 28th of January.
On the CSC issue. If they need people that badly, it's time that
people were simply re-assigned to Colorado Springs and Atlanta, period.
There shouldn't be an issue of whether they "want" to go. Some of the
NewEngland-o-Philes need to get out in the real world anyhow. Try it,
you might like it.
|
1333.124 | Is "Larry in Lowell" still talking? | AISG::CHAVEZ | | Mon Jan 21 1991 12:53 | 11 |
| Ref: .114 I don't exactly think "Larry from Lowell" is going to
endanger the Patriot program right now, do you?
Ref: .121 Raytheon may be, "...the last company thinking of layoffs,"
but they are. Many people aren't aware of the *many* products
they research and manufacture, such as "Caloric" appliances,
marine technology and supplies, etc. And, as far as military
hardware goes, Department of Defense has been putting many
programs and contracts on hold, as well as outright canceling
them. The only Raytheon employees feeling safe right now, are
those manufacturing the Patriot missile.
|
1333.125 | Why plan for future layoffs? | SMAUG::GARROD | An Englishman's mind works best when it is almost too late | Mon Jan 21 1991 13:34 | 12 |
| I've seen reference in this topic to the rumour of laying off people in
FY92. I'm trying to understand the logic behind talking/planning for
layoffs in the future?
If I was king... I'd work out how many people needed to be laid off and
lay them off now not wait until later. In that way those that are left
can get on with their job secure in the knowledge that they haven't
been earmarked for a later layoff. Sure conditions could change forcing
the company to do another layoff. But why plan for one? Anybody like to
explain this me?
Dave
|
1333.126 | | CGVAX2::CONNELL | It's reigning cats. | Mon Jan 21 1991 14:05 | 12 |
| re .123. If you aren't allowed back to your cube and you have personal
stuff in there, how are you to get it. I have some papers in my file
that are nobdy's business but my own and I also have some books and
catalogs (not DIGITAL property or DIGITAL related) at my cube. I want
them back if I get tapped for this. Do I have legal grounds to demand
that I be allowed to get them. Personel required me to produce a copy
of my divorce agreement to prove that the courts required me to cover
my kids medical insurance. I keep this copy locked up in my cube. I
want it if I have to leave. (I won't get into whether or not personel
had a right to see my divorce papers or not.)
Phil
|
1333.127 | | COOKIE::LENNARD | | Mon Jan 21 1991 14:18 | 12 |
| I may have over-stated the case. What will probably happen is that you
will be escorted back by a security guard and/or your immediate
supervisor, and they will observe what you take.
I have, however, seen the opposite. In Collins Radio in the 60's,
security packed the poor slob up while he was getting layed off, and
then met him at the door with a box.
These days, given the state of some of the cubicles I've seen, some
people will need a fork-lift and small moving van to get all their
junk out. As a matter of fact, I've seen some offices where people
could hide out for a few days at least.
|
1333.128 | take it home | SAUTER::SAUTER | John Sauter | Mon Jan 21 1991 14:57 | 5 |
| re: .126
It seems only prudent to take home anything you wouldn't wish to lose
in the event that you were laid off.
John Sauter
|
1333.129 | | CGVAX2::CONNELL | It's reigning cats. | Mon Jan 21 1991 15:01 | 5 |
| Yea, John, it might. I feel that I want to keep my cube as "homey" as
possible and will leave my stuff here. I will take important papers
though.
Phil
|
1333.131 | | COOKIE::LENNARD | | Mon Jan 21 1991 16:10 | 11 |
| Re .125, and the issue of planning for future lay-offs. While such
long term planning might seem strange initially, in a company as
grossly over-staffed as DEC, it is probably appropriate. I think
they are carefully trying to coordinate future product staffing and
arrange priorities so that the effect of future lay-offs will not be
so devastating.
Also, don't forget that a lot of it is probably contingency planning,
i.e., "IF/THEN" type stuff. With heavy FY92 budget and project
planning underway right now, I do not see how layoffs could not be
part of the formula.
|
1333.132 | | CSC32::J_OPPELT | Please don't hit me any more... | Mon Jan 21 1991 17:43 | 31 |
| re: NH CSC
I couldn't imagine how a distributed CSC would work (distributed
for a given product.) For instance, the VIA support is here
in Colorado Springs. As was mentione earlier, an important
aspect of the success here is the teamwork and knowledge sharing.
We don't even want a specialist working from HOME on a regular
basis, let alone NH (or NJ or WA or wherever else they don't
want to move from.) We need the close proximity to our fellow
specialists for a successful operation. If a handful of our
specialists were in Spit Brook, we would not be as effective on
a day-to-day basis as we are today.
Now that is not to say that NEW PRODUCTS couldn't be supported
from a new CSC in NH. I don't know what the logistical
implications would be for hooking a new CSC into the 800 network
and all...
But currently DEC is looking to fill existing CSC positions for
current products, and the respective CSCs for those products are
in Atlanta and Colorado Springs.
Here's a thought for those of you who want to work for the CSC
but don't want to leave NH. We have an engineering backup
support channel called CSSE for most if not all products. CSSE
is in NH in most cases. I have no idea if they are hiring or not.
I do not know who the respective managers for particular products
are. But the go-getter could sure find out, and probably carve a
niche for him/herself there.
Joe Oppelt
|
1333.133 | Mass. CSC is going away soon | BUSY::BELLIVEAU | | Mon Jan 21 1991 21:49 | 10 |
| RE: The CSC thing, replies .115, .118
From what I understand the Westboro, Ma. CSC is going to be dissolved
soon. I believe it will merge with the Atlanta and Colorado CSCs. I
don't believe this is any big secret. Apparently, they can no longer
justify a CSC here in the Northeast.
Also, thanks for the suggestions re: this topic.
John (still_trying_to_get_to_CXO_and_OUT_of_Mass)
|
1333.134 | | LESLIE::LESLIE | Andy Leslie | Mon Jan 21 1991 23:27 | 4 |
| re: .132 CSSE mostly co-locate with engineering. Thus, we're in ZK,
sure, but also in the Mill and indeed Reading, England.
- andy (CSSE, Reading, England)
|
1333.135 | As far as I know CSC/MA is here for awhile | HDLITE::SAVERY | | Tue Jan 22 1991 11:03 | 7 |
|
As a former employee of the Westboro CSC and with many friends and
former co-workers still working there, the word that I have been
getting is that the CSC is not going to be going away. In fact they
just moved over to Shrewsbury because Westboro was a rented building.
|
1333.136 | WE DO WORK REMOTE FROM THE CSC'S | CSOA1::ROOT | North Central States Regional Support | Tue Jan 22 1991 11:52 | 13 |
| RE: 132
We do have support engineers working remote from the CSC's both in the
local offices and at home. The program is called Unified-Support. We
have access to the same databases as the CSC's and use the same
software to take calls as the CSC's. They are still looking for
additional people to work in Unified-Support. We support individules
from all over the US from each of our locations. Usually each engineer
is responsible for specific products (ex. tapes, disks, pc's etc.).
Regards
AL ROOT
|
1333.137 | | CSC32::J_OPPELT | Please don't hit me any more... | Tue Jan 22 1991 14:08 | 28 |
| .136 gave me an idea. Al just let us know that a particular
group is looking for people. I did the same about certain
software CSC groups a few replies back.
This informal exchange of known openings could be just the
ticket for some people who may otherwise be transitioned out
or laid off in the near future.
It is obvious to me that you can't always find what you want
through personnel, even if it exists. And not all managers use
(or know how to use) OASS::JOBS to post their open reqs.
I have received several mail and phone inquiries regarding what
I have entered here about CSC openings. Perhaps there should be
a more open and free flow of information about job openings (or
possible job openings) in this conference. It would be unofficial
unlike JOBS where the responsible hiring manager places the ad.
Instead, readers interested in what we say can contact us offline
to get a manager's name for the opening. We can make the job
"network" easier for people to find.
I really don't know if such a discussion fits the intended contents
of HUMANE::DIGITAL, but it could be a big boost to alot of folks.
Comments? Any moderator objections?
Joe Oppelt
|
1333.138 | Don't fix JOBS by breaking DIGITAL | TLE::AMARTIN | Alan H. Martin | Tue Jan 22 1991 14:47 | 32 |
| Re .137:
>Perhaps there should be
> a more open and free flow of information about job openings (or
> possible job openings) in this conference.
I disagree.
The stated purpose of this conference is the discussion and informal resolution
of issues surrounding how we work in Digital.
>It would be unofficial
> unlike JOBS where the responsible hiring manager places the ad.
> Instead, readers interested in what we say can contact us offline
> to get a manager's name for the opening.
Contrary to your claim, the stated purpose of the OASS::JOBS conference is:
"
The JOBS conference is an informal place for Digital employees
to exchange information about employment within the company. It
should be considered a supplement to official channels such as
personnel and the "Jobs Book". Think of it as an extension of
the 'good old boy' network of seeking out job information, and
it carries the same risks and biases.
"
If you think the JOBS conference no longer serves these purposes, then either
work to fix it, or open a new conference which isn't broken.
Don't try and fix JOBS by breaking DIGITAL.
/AHM/THX
|
1333.139 | some facts | CSOA1::ROOT | North Central States Regional Support | Tue Jan 22 1991 17:20 | 66 |
|
These jobs are not open to all people. Support people (24CC) are the
only ones filling these jobs as far as I know. Here is a sample list to
give you an idea of the CSC needs. References to QUEUES are referring to
CSC focal groups and calls going to those groups. Some of these jobs
are short duration jobs and some are long. It depends on the needs of
individual groups in the CSC. Requests for help are sent to the
different support groups on a regular basis.
Regards
Al Root
*****************************************************************************
W E E K L Y
-----------
UNIFIED SUPPORT NEEDS (priority listed, unfilled)
-------------------------------------------------
Queue Name Notes
ISGVAX 24 calls/day/total from que, (or 4 tech's) ;HW & SW, highend VAX
ISGVAX 12 " " " " " (or 4 tech's) ;this is a cluster
;request, CDA's
SDSPCT 8 " " " " " (or 2 tech's) ;Atlanta PC's & term's
ISSVAX 12 " " " " " (or 2 tech's) ;both HW & SW, 4 months,
;micro-VAX
ISGTAP 14 " " " " " (or 1 tech) ;
;
ISGPRI 14 " " " " " (or 1 tech) ;
*****************************************************************************
Needs in Man days
Options VAX
---------------------------------------------------------------------
DIS TAP PRI CDA HDW uVAX PC/Term Total
Queue ISGDIS ISGTAP ISGPRI ISGVAX ISGVAX ISSMVE SDSPCT
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Daily 1 1 4 4 2 2 14
Weekly 5 5 20 20 10 10 70
Monthly 20 20 80 80 40 40 280
Qrtly 65 65 260 260 130 130 910
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Expected
calls
per day 14 14 14 3 6 6 8
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Needs in Call Volume
Daily 14 14 14 12 24 12 12 88
Weekly 70 70 70 60 120 60 60 440
Monthly 280 280 280 240 480 240 240 1760
Qrtly 910 910 910 780 1560 780 780 5720
*****************************************************************************
|
1333.140 | | COOKIE::LENNARD | | Thu Jan 24 1991 12:19 | 4 |
| One more time people...when you're tapped for lay-off, you're gone that
day. There will be no opportunity to look around for another job.
This ain't the old DEC any mo'
|
1333.141 | | COOKIE::LENNARD | | Mon Jan 28 1991 16:30 | 6 |
| One more thought....AMPEX here in Colorado Springs laid off 240 people
last week. They were given 20 minutes to gather personal belongings,
and then as they filed in the auditorium were handed an 80-word letter
which started out "Dear Laid-Off Employee......." Nice, Huh??
Oh, they also got two weeks pay and one month health care extension.
|
1333.142 | Normal to some is painful to others | BASVAX::GREENLAW | Your ASSETS at work | Mon Jan 28 1991 17:24 | 16 |
| This is just a thought but ..
A one point back in 1975, I interviewed with a Hi Tech company that was hiring
at that time. The person I talked to was very up-front. He said that the
company had a major layoff about every five years and that if you survived the
first one, you would most likely be OK during any future layoffs. I then
made my decision to not work for them taking this information as one on the
important inputs.
The point? When I hired into DEC, it was a well known "fact", that KO felt
layoffs were a failure of management. Is part of the problem that the current
situation feels like a betrayal of one of the original reasons that people
came to DEC? I don't know but that is one of the impressions that I get
from reading this note. And NO plan can make that feel better?
Lee G.
|
1333.143 | | SENIOR::HAMBURGER | Whittlers chip away at life | Mon Jan 28 1991 22:16 | 27 |
| <<< Note 1333.142 by BASVAX::GREENLAW "Your ASSETS at work" >>>
>The point? When I hired into DEC, it was a well known "fact", that KO felt
>layoffs were a failure of management. Is part of the problem that the current
>situation feels like a betrayal of one of the original reasons that people
>came to DEC? I don't know but that is one of the impressions that I get
>from reading this note. And NO plan can make that feel better?
>Lee G.
Sorry Lee, but I can't feel too bad for someone who read something into
their job that is clearly not part of the job. DEC never promised us jobs
forever or until we decided to leave. Few companies offer contracts to
their employees, and those that do would, I suspect, make sure it was clear
that loss of job was possible with some sort of recompense.
Digital is being very generous compared to many others. I have worked
in other fields where 10 minutes notice and no severance pay would be the
norm or perhaps 2 weeks pay plus accrued vacation. Certainly nothing along
the lines of what many employees here will collect as Digital is forced to
make their cuts. We may not like it, and you may feel betrayed, but Ken
Olsen has never said "never" to layoffs from what I can tell.
I don't like it either, but it is one of the tough things that has to
be done this time around.
Vic H
|
1333.144 | The big picture | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | God is their co-pilot | Mon Jan 28 1991 22:25 | 15 |
| I'm not letting Digital off the hook too fast. While I wasn't
promised that there would never be layoffs, employees and shareholders
had the expectations...
(1) Digital's hiring in 1986 through 1989 would be based on some
rational long-range plan that would prepare us for the 1990's. It
turns out there wasn't any. Hiring was out of control.
(2) Digital would recognize as other computer companies had, that the
computer industry is structurally changing from minicomputers to
smaller microprocessor based systems and from proprietary to open
systems.
These expectations were not met and the surviving senior managers are
apologizing.
|
1333.145 | Only death and taxes are guaranteed | BASVAX::GREENLAW | Your ASSETS at work | Tue Jan 29 1991 09:09 | 11 |
| RE:143
Vic, I did not say that I believe the myth. I have worked too many places
that had to do layoffs to survive. There has to be give and take in all
contracts, written or implied. If I can leave DEC with two weeks notice,
there is no reason that DEC can not leave me with the same notice (or pay
for the time). BUT my original point was that many people did believe and
now are feeling betrayed. And because they believed, there is no package
that can compensate for the feelings of pain. IMHO
Lee G.
|
1333.146 | | SQM::MACDONALD | | Tue Jan 29 1991 10:59 | 29 |
|
Re: .145
Yes, that is an important point that many are not willing to
recognize as valid. The worst of it, however, is not the
feelings of betrayal among those laid off, but the feelings
of those NOT laid off who are now being depended on to return
to their work and contribute to turning the company around.
This will without doubt cause a significant although subtle
shift in the attitude that DEC's employees have toward the
company. Among the more salient points that Japan has made
in response to U.S. criticism of our mutual business dealings
is how U.S. companies accept no responsibility to their
employees. We hire and fire without giving it a second thought
blowing it off as "well, that's just how it goes." Japan has
been trying to tell us for some time that to be competitive in
the long term, you have to have a secure, reliable, and loyal
workforce. You don't get that by laying people off. You get
that by good management which among others things ensures that
you don't hire willy nilly and end up with hordes of excess
people who you "have to get rid of" and then have to deal with
the remaining ones who come to work every day thereafter thinking
"it could be me next" instead of how to work more effectively
for the company.
fwiw,
Steve
|
1333.147 | my head vs. my gut | GUFFAW::LINN | Just another chalkmark in the rain | Tue Jan 29 1991 11:32 | 23 |
| Re: .142
Yes, I believe there definitely is something to what you say. There are
some who feel they have been standing on soapboxes of some sort for several
years saying "management" is, oh, running us into the ground. (Let's just
say that instead of the specifics that one sees over the years, in this
notes file, for example....And avoid discussions of senior vs. middle-level
management. I'm not arguing a point here, just rationalizing a point of
view.)
These folks now feel angry/betrayed/frustrated to feel it has come to this
(i.e. the "L" word) after a constant litany of "we in management need to
listen to the troops in the field." (Or words to that effect.)
I believe the "listening" was a crock, and there is little hard evidence
of "listening." Thus, I find it easy to agree with .144.
Feeling this way means that while .143 is a logical response, and makes sense
in my head, it doesn't satisfy my gut (or soothe my frustrated ulcer) at all.
I go home at the end of the day feeling Digital REALLY missed an opportunity
over the last 3-4 years. Arrogance. "The money will ALWAYS keep rolling in."
- bL
|
1333.148 | | COOKIE::LENNARD | | Tue Jan 29 1991 12:17 | 12 |
| I support .144's position completely....and the blame resides at the
highest levels in the company.
Also, don't fall all over yourselves admiring the Japanese's no-layoff
policies. Part of their secret is a VERY extensive useage of
contractors, temporaries, and captive-yet-separate suppliers. If
Digital took a similar approach we could probably have operated with
a hard-core staff of 50-60,000, and farmed the rest of the work out.
Also agree that we have been in a hiring frenzy the past few years.
Somebody should have said "NO". Unfortunately, it still goes on.
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1333.150 | ex | RAVEN1::DJENNAS | | Wed Jan 30 1991 12:47 | 8 |
| re:148
Somebody did say "Stop", actually Jack Smith himself did, way back when
first salary freeze went into effect. I know that for a fact since I read
the memo. The scary part is nobody listened and THAT may be an artifact
of a so called "unstructured" company.
Franc.
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1333.151 | D-DAY? | KNGBUD::B_SIART | THE/OWLS/ARE/NOT/WHAT/THEY/SEEM | Wed Jan 30 1991 13:08 | 8 |
|
I'm just curious. When are the layoffs suppose to occur? All this
talk and I just haven't seen it happening yet. Is there some sort
of D-DAY? No rumors, just the facts please. ;)
Brian
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1333.152 | The clock is running... | WFOV12::ABERT | Carl Abert WFO/C8 DTN:242-2521 | Wed Jan 30 1991 15:09 | 17 |
|
RE: .151
Here at Westfield, the date for Management Selected termination can be
no sooner than March 26, 1991 but no later than June 30, 1991. Due to
the potential magnitude of the involutary down sizing, a U.S. Federal
law refered to as the Warn Act was applicable. The two main criteria
for a Warn act notice is the layoff of fifty or more employees or the
closure of the facility (yes, the same notice as PNO...). In either case
sixty days notice is required. The information I received indicated
that a Warn notice is a defined window - on July 1, 1991 Westfield will
need to re-notify for another layoff or facility closure.
Now I wish that the Selection criteria was clearly defined, once one
gets involved with equal Performance Appraisals...
Carl
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1333.153 | Lots of offers were turned down, folks didn't want to move | ORABX::REESE_K | just an old sweet song.... | Wed Jan 30 1991 22:32 | 90 |
| It's taken awhile to catch up in this note.....but some notes
I've read seem to contradict what I see happening here at the
CSC in Atlanta.....other notes (sadly) confirm the difficulty
in getting interviewed for a job where you *are* qualified!!
* I work in Remote Sales Support; this group has grown from
approximately 13 people 2 years ago...to approximately 60
people today, I moved from another group within the CSC to
RSS. However, the bulk of our headcount came from All Hands
on Deck and now C.O.D. We have one more C.O.D. person (now
out on maternity leave) expected to join the team in March.
With the exception of about 10 people who came from Colorado
and other locations; the bulk of our new people relocated
from NH & Mass.
* RSS still had 7 open reqs when the last TFSO package was
announced.....those 7 reqs have been cancelled. There could
be some technical SW groups that have *some* _read few_ openings;
but the feeling around the CSC/AT is that we are not going to
see a great influx of people coming here from *anywhere*!
We've lost a few people......we aren't being allowed to replace
them.
* The note that really blew my mind is the person who was turned
down for a CRR job because they don't have a degree!! Just
goes to show how far out of touch some folks in recruiting
have become.
I was the first CRR hired for the Atlanta CSC almost 11 years
ago.....my "formal" education ended when I graduated from
high school!! Good grief, who needs a degree to learn how
to answer a call and route it to the proper support group?
Something seems amiss with that.....I would think a person
with a degree would be bored and definitely over-qualified!
* I had to "go around" folks in personnel to get my present job.
Since I was associated with an administrative group after a
previous group disbanded, when I first inquired about the
position in RSS I was told "you don't have the technical
background" for that group. I asked the gal how she could be
so sure, since she hadn't had a chance to look at my resume.
The position was for a specialist on the SW Services and
Licensing team. Six years ago I was the licensing focal
person for the entire CSC/AT.....I had been loaned to SE
District SW Services group to help when they lost people
and were short handed. As I said, the individual knew me
and IMHO was making an arbitrary decision because she thought
I was only capable of administrative tasks. This individual
also mentioned the necessity of a degree.
I had people on the RSS Services and Licensing team walking to
my desk asking when I was going to apply for a position....
once I mentioned the difficulty I was having getting around
recruiting/personnel....one the the ICs took my resume, handed
it to the UM.....2 days later I had the interview....and was
hired.
The only time I heard from the gal who initially said I wasn't
qualified is when she called me to slap my hands for circumvent-
ing policies and procedures when applying for a posted posi-
tion :-) :-) My last 2 PA's have been most satisfying and
the response from sales reps in the field has been mosts re-
warding.....they are very generous with the "attagirls".
* The RSS group is spread out over the CSC in Colorado and
Atlanta. Colorado handles high-end systems and wide area
networks.....Atlanta handles mid-low systems and local area
networks. Initally, we did attempt to have some of our
services and licensing people in Colorado, but we found it
very difficult to share information uniformly between the
2 locations.....so all services and licensing is handled
out of Atlanta. What I experienced with my team makes me
a little skeptical also of someone providing telephone support
from a location other than one of the CSCs. I'm not saying
the individual isn't qualified, but you wouldn't have the
databases to tap into that we do. I handled a few calls
from home last week when we were hit with ice and snow....
but it was dicey at best....and I was only pulling calls
out of the Call Back queue that I knew I could answer without
having access to my Sales Updates and other documentation
sitting on my desk, i.e. I can quote PATHWORKS in my sleep :-)
Karen
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1333.154 | | COOKIE::LENNARD | | Thu Jan 31 1991 13:37 | 11 |
| Re .151.....Patience. No, I don't think you will see anything remotely
like a Corporate "D" Day. The manner in which down-sizings are
implemented will vary by organization and geography. That's the
way it should be.
The Corporation has formally stated that the lay-offs will be
completed by the end of the fiscal year. You're not going to see
anything better than that.
I just wish they'd take genuine volunteers........would you stop
tapping me on the shoulder, please!!!!!
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