T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1344.1 | reporters always look for out of character quotes | CVG::THOMPSON | Does your manager know you read Notes? | Sat Jan 12 1991 15:20 | 22 |
| "Tricking, Teasing, and Manipulating" sound subtle. I don't know KO
but no one I know who does has ever accused him of being subtle.
My guess is that there is some critical context missing in that
article. For articles like that they usually spend a couple of days
with someone like Ken. I'd hate to think what kinds of things would
show up in an article about me after 2-3 days. He probably did say
that but I doubt they explained it in the article anything like what
Ken meant when he said it. In the last 9 years that I've been at
Digital I have heard a lot of people complain that if anything Ken
is too often to direct BTW.
By puritanical style I would assume that they mean things like his
not drinking or using rough language. And it wasn't puritanical style
that lead to the witch hunts it was petty jealously and paranoid
suspicions on the part of people who were *not* the leaders of the
puritan society. Also puritanical style implies that everyone knows
the rules and the expectations made on them. Sort of the opposite of
tricking them and manipulating them. The puritans were pretty straight
forward about such things and trickery was not a part of their style.
Alfred
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1344.2 | | LESLIE::LESLIE | DEC will eat itself | Sat Jan 12 1991 18:13 | 8 |
| Actually, the witch hunts were a result of (male) doctors wanting to
stop (female) midwives putting them out of a living. That's what most
of them were, you know.
Just goes to show how things can be distorted if there's an advantage
to someone to do so.
- andy
|
1344.3 | | SICVAX::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney in New York | Sun Jan 13 1991 12:46 | 11 |
| Rather the Ken Olsen not being subtle, I think it's a matter of not
knowing when to take him seriously or not. This is the impression I
got from reading about him in "The Ultimate Entrepeneur" and from
hearing him in person at meeting where he talked about UNIX.
So Ken Olsen may have said that, but he may have not meant it in the
way it was understood by readers.
Leadership is not manipulation. It's getting complex and ambiguous
goals into a clear and concise form and getting the overall goals to be
incorporated into personal goals.
|
1344.5 | only the best will still be here... | CSS::GORDON | | Mon Jan 14 1991 11:58 | 16 |
| re: .4
and hasn't this always been one of KO's best management qualities...
he has said many times that you load a person down with as much work
as you can until they can't possibly do anymore and in this
way you learn what someone is made of and who can actually produce...
sort of like the old saying "when the going gets tough..."
or sayings such as "well this will seperate the men from the boys..."
the point being that some people see strong tough competition as
someone manipulating whereas others see it as a challenge to be taken
|
1344.7 | | COOKIE::LENNARD | | Mon Jan 14 1991 13:54 | 4 |
| I also strongly disagree with loading people up to see what they are
made of. My pay stub says full-time, 40 hours.....that's what I do.
There is life after DEC, y'know.
|
1344.8 | hey...it ain't my job...!!! | CSS::GORDON | | Mon Jan 14 1991 14:00 | 9 |
| re: last two
some look at it as a challenge others as being tested
some see that glass as half full others as half empty
guess it depends on your perspecitive....
|
1344.9 | | BAGELS::CARROLL | | Mon Jan 14 1991 14:18 | 9 |
| re all;
Carolyn, I too find KO's words very scary. I wonder what our
customers think of his "management style".
Question; Why does DEC remind me of a college campus instead of a
business???
|
1344.10 | risky business | TAMARA::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (381-0899 ZKO3-2/T63) | Mon Jan 14 1991 15:13 | 19 |
| re Note 1344.5 by CSS::GORDON:
> he has said many times that you load a person down with as much work
> as you can until they can't possibly do anymore and in this
> way you learn what someone is made of and who can actually produce...
Of course, the problem is that once you do this you've:
1) identified your strongest workers,
2) discouraged all your other workers, including
those of average competence and productivity,
This is a smart strategy if you can run your business with
the first class alone; otherwise it may be corporate
suicide.
Bob
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1344.11 | close | CARTUN::MISTOVICH | | Mon Jan 14 1991 16:12 | 2 |
| Amend 1) to identified and _burned_out_ your strongest workers, and
possibly alienated them as well.
|
1344.13 | a different view... | CSS::GORDON | | Tue Jan 15 1991 08:36 | 14 |
| Of course, the problem is that once you do this you've:
1) identified your strongest workers,
2) challenged all your other workers, including
those of average competence and productivity, to
become better
This is a smart strategy if employees feel challenged,
it may be corporate suicide if those of average competence
feel threatened and give up.
see .8
|
1344.14 | An appalling creature | LYCEUM::CURTIS | Dick "Aristotle" Curtis | Tue Jan 15 1991 10:05 | 10 |
| .6:
The mis-manager you mention could, I think, be described as being in
some respects sub-human.
He also is playing a dangerous game. Some people, when driven to such
despair, take others (such as the person who caused them the despair)
with them.
Dick
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1344.15 | | VIRTUE::MACDONALD | | Tue Jan 15 1991 11:31 | 15 |
|
Re: .13
I think loading people down until they crack is more than
just stupid, it borders on unethical.
What about the co-workers of such people who accept the "challenge"
having to deal with some fool driven to the edge of insanity.
What about the families of these people too?
The whole idea is very misguided.
Steve
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1344.16 | Paranoia - Deep Destroyer | BIGJOE::DMCLURE | Swimmin backstroke on Niagra Falls | Tue Jan 15 1991 12:39 | 19 |
| I always thought Data General was the company noted for loading
people down with work so much that they either cracked or survived
to be recognized as a [burned-out] superstar? Did Captain Eddie
learn this "trick" while working for Ken Olsen?
As to the quotes attributed to Ken Olsen, I too am troubled
by such thinking as it only serves to support the age-old dichotomy
of management versus labor in which employees are in fact a distinct
class of people being manipulated behind their backs by management.
These statements also tend to contradict other ideals and
notions attributed to Ken Olsen such as the importance of trust,
the open door policy, and "doing the right thing". I too hope the
recent KO quotes are not true, but given Ken Olsen's apparent
disinterest in using Digital's various computer hardware and
software products to convey any sort of messages to DEC's employees,
I don't expect the attributed quotes to be refuted anytime soon.
-davo
|
1344.17 | Who *really* was tricked and teased here?? | BTOVT::SOBECKY_J | | Tue Jan 15 1991 13:08 | 24 |
|
re: previous
I think the key to Ken's statement was described in his "merry
blue eyes". Now just stop and think about it for a minute. Do
you really really think that if teasing, tricking, and manipulating
were his style, that he would come out and say it in a magazine
interview?
Do you really need to depend on a magazine article to learn about
your CEO's views and philosophy?
Personally, I'd rather work for a manager that came right out and
said those things, instead of working for someone who says one
thing and does another. At least you know what you're facing, and
you ccan make your decisions accordingly.
re: Gordon. I sort of agree with you, especially at the top levels
of management. They get paid the big bucks to juggle many projects
at once. And nobody has to play that game if they don't want to.
Last time I looked, there were no chains around anybody's ankles
here at DEC.
-jfs
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1344.19 | YAWN | SVBEV::VECRUMBA | Peters J. Vecrumba @NYO | Tue Jan 15 1991 18:23 | 27 |
| re .18
Am I reading it correctly, that you're suggesting that K.O. really
resorts to "TTM", with all its concommitant faults, and that we should
be wary that TTM does not work at any level of management?
There are lots of management styles. I used the "walking around" method
and "cajoling." Appealing to people on multiple levels to get their
positive agreement is nothing new; I don't think that we're talking
about anything else here with "TTM." I could easily use the same words
tongue-in-cheek.
I'm as capable of the next person of being negative, but I don't think
negativism is called for here. Personally, I'm glad K.O. hasn't lost
his sense of humor.
As for Gordon Bell, I never knew him either. My sense from memos I've
seen, though, is that he preferred the atmosphere of the smaller DEC
and felt less at home at DEC, the "big" company. But that's neither
here nor there. Most of us, when we make career choices, know to make
them for positive reasons, most of all opportunity. Gordon didn't leave
to go fly-fishing.
Let's not start YAWN (Yet Another Whining Note) looking for managers to
fit into yet another sinister category of bad management.
/Peters
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1344.21 | end of text... | CSS::GORDON | | Wed Jan 16 1991 10:36 | 11 |
| re: .19/.20 and others
I think alot of you don't read things correctly...
In .5 I was responding to .4 "organizational manipulation"
statement...of course people read what they want into it
and soon it became teasing and tricking anxd then TTM management
styles...
let's put this much energy into our jobs and the company will come
out ahead in the long run...
|
1344.22 | Must have been sleepy | SVBEV::VECRUMBA | Peters J. Vecrumba @NYO | Wed Jan 16 1991 15:08 | 10 |
| re .last several
Well, I have to admit this topic has been a bit like playing "phone." My
response to .18 was in the context of "TTM, [K.O. espoused management
style,] does not bring positive results." Which, if you unravel
everything before, as .20 points out, is not exactly what .18 said.
Sorry for YAWNing. :-)
/Peters
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