T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1355.1 | I would like it | SAUTER::SAUTER | John Sauter | Thu Jan 24 1991 13:13 | 16 |
| I think promotion by testing is a good idea. The alternative can
degenerate into promotion as a favor to boot-lickers, or for time in
grade. I would like to see the whole company eventually move to
promotion by testing, with standardized tests for each position.
Tests need not be of the "multiple guess" variety, or even written.
For example, a sales person might be presented with a scenario using
actors so that his ability to deal with people in various situations
can be judged. Part of a Customer Services person's exam should be
based on his ability to handle irate simulated customers.
I have been taught that the Chinese civil service system was excellent,
and that this was because they used competitive examinations for
promotion. I think the U.S. Civil Service system also does this,
though I don't know how effective it is.
John Sauter
|
1355.2 | RE: The government method of testing for promotion | YUPPIE::COLE | Profitability is never having to say you're sorry! | Thu Jan 24 1991 13:27 | 1 |
| Would the Postal Service be a good example of possible results? :>)
|
1355.3 | Useful = depends on application | MR4DEC::HAROUTIAN | | Thu Jan 24 1991 15:16 | 8 |
| In a previous incarnation as a trainer, I learned that testing is
appropriate for specific, factual-type of knowledge. When it comes to
intangibles, for example "how to be a good manager", testing is not
generally pertinent. Of course, learning/perceptual styles vary
widely; someone who learns best by diving in and experiencing may not
do well at all on a written test.
Lynn
|
1355.4 | it's that way now in field service | 2CRAZY::FLATHERS | Summer Forever | Thu Jan 24 1991 15:25 | 7 |
|
Lot's of groups are starting something similar. In Customer
Services, the CDP program (Career Development Progam) just recently
put in place, is required for any engineer seeking promotion. It's
a formal training/mentor program taylored to the individual depending
on the level + area of expertize.
|
1355.5 | And the CDP program also includes at least one ... | YUPPIE::COLE | Profitability is never having to say you're sorry! | Thu Jan 24 1991 15:44 | 8 |
| ... "board" grilling and an assesment of skills by an independent
contractor using actors and set senarios, right? The assesment is early-on,
the board later, if I recall my CS counterparts' conversations.
The entire US Field org is going to a standard set of courses and an
assesment center evaluation for management candidates. CS is doing formally
what goes on informally (if at all!) in Sales and EIS with the mentoring
concept. They also kept the traditional "board" review.
|
1355.6 | FS had / has qualification boards | REGENT::PATTENDEN | | Thu Jan 24 1991 16:21 | 18 |
| Field Service has used the "board" method of testing for many years,
and as far as I know still does.
A FS support engineer was / is required to show considerable knowledge of a
CPU and an I/O system hardware for T7 and with more emphasis on the
software side for T8 and for both for T9 (Principle). (or new codes)
A FS Unit manager was/is required to be qualified by a board and the
same applied / applies to District manager.
Note the board only qualified the person - it was not an automatic
promotion. The person still had to find an open position for the
appropriate level and interview for it.
I attended several, both as candidate and sponsor. With the exception
of one part of one board the boards were fair, good humoured, and realistic.
As an example, I was asked who I would hire. My answer, a 30 year old,
married- because they needed a job and would be likely to stay, caused
considerable upset and a counselling session.
I think it should be introduced for ALL promotions above a mid engineer
level.
|
1355.7 | new hires too | SAUTER::SAUTER | John Sauter | Thu Jan 24 1991 17:08 | 7 |
| re: .6
I think it should be used not only for promotions but also for new
hires. I would find it valuable to know, before choosing who to
interview, what the applicants scored on Digital's test for promotion
to the position they are seeking.
John Sauter
|
1355.8 | How about Promotion By Performance! | DENVER::BOYLES | Gary @ DVO (553-3486) | Thu Jan 24 1991 17:13 | 15 |
| So where exactly does "pay for performance" come into this (if at all)?
Does that mean that a Sales Rep who can sell 3x as much as the next one
shouldn't get promoted because he/she can't pass some test? What is
really important in this situation -- selling more or passing a test
(I bet I can guess KO's answer).
Did you ever think that maybe "promotion boards" are just an easy way
out for managers? Is it harder to send you thru a "board", or is it
harder to try and keep track of a person's actual performance?
Just something to think about.
GaryB
|
1355.9 | | SMEGIT::ARNOLD | Some assembly required | Thu Jan 24 1991 17:22 | 14 |
| It depends on how it's implemented, and I'm not convinced there's an
optimal way to do it. For example, some organizations have implemented
CDP as described in earlier replies; ie, the "candidate" goes before a
"board", but the board consists of a few of his/her peers, 1 or 2 of
the position being sought, at least 1 manager, and 1 or 2 people of
equal/higher position from another group. The candidate cannot even go
before this board until there is a defined position open.
If the person passes this "board exam", it's not an automatic
promotion; it then goes before the group management to decide whether
or not to actually promote, which can easily (mind you, I didn't say it
*does*) be as subjectively laden with favoritism as it was before.
Jon
|
1355.10 | See USN promotion book.... | GIDDAY::AMES | CSSE, South Pacific Region | Thu Jan 24 1991 17:58 | 17 |
| Testing may produce a objective measure of knowledge, skill,
etc. This can be used as a part of the qualification for
advancement.
Periodic evaluations should also play a part.
A review board can be used also.
The US military (Navy I'm familiar with) have such systems,
they are well documented.
Generally... you must pass the test (low gate), you are then
competing with your peers on test score + evaluation marks.
A board is the final hurdle for high level positions.
Richard.
|
1355.11 | Very tough to do fairly | SWAM2::HOMEYER_CH | No, but you can see it from here | Thu Jan 24 1991 20:12 | 42 |
| re .10
The USN does use tests for promotions, but the *big difference* is that
EVERYBODY starts at the bottom, enlisted and officers and they work
their way up one rank at a time. No one comes in and says I served in
(X countries Navy) there for I should be a Captain.
Some questions come to mind.
-Do we need our managers permission to take a promotion test?
-Does a manager have to take the person with the highest score and if
not what justification does he have to go through to get the person he
wants. Also what explaination is given to all those that scored
higher than the selected person.
-Should all scored be revealed? If not, are we just told we didn't
make the cut?
-If I can pass a test two or three levels above where I am do I get
promoted?
-Is there a time in grade requirement? In the military there is.
-How do you handle a new hire? Do they get the highest level passed?
-How many times can we re-take a test?
These are rhetorical questions!!!!!!
Tests may reveal a lot about an individual. I think it would be very
difficult to design accurate tests that would delineate between levels.
Tests could be used for a minimum knowledge level. I can already see
the "black market copies".
I would rather be evaluated on my actual track record and if I thought
I was not getting a fair shake, take it upstairs.
For those of us that have been here for some years look how long it
took to get JEC job descriptions. May be they could make tests to rate
us 1 to 5 on a PA.
As much as we may not like management subjectivity I think it is the
only way that will work. Civil service is not the answer.
I vote no. :-)
I think promotions should be based on actual observed performance.
|
1355.12 | And these are rhetorical answers | SMEGIT::ARNOLD | Some assembly required | Thu Jan 24 1991 22:03 | 41 |
| re .11, as I understand it where it's implemented:
> -Do we need our managers permission to take a promotion test?
Yes, your manager acts almost as a 'sponsor'.
> -Does a manager have to take the person with the highest score and if
> not what justification does he have to go through to get the person he
> wants. Also what explaination is given to all those that scored
> higher than the selected person.
There is no 'highest score'. It's basically pass/fail, and in either
case, the 'candidate' and manager are notified of the area(s) in which
the board felt more work/expertise/knowledge was needed.
> -Should all scored be revealed? If not, are we just told we didn't
> make the cut?
See above.
> -If I can pass a test two or three levels above where I am do I get
> promoted?
No, you can only 'test' for the next level up.
> -Is there a time in grade requirement? In the military there is.
Yes; time in grade depends on your level; lower levels have less time
in grade required, higher levels have higher requirements.
> -How do you handle a new hire? Do they get the highest level passed?
Not yet determined as far as I'm aware.
> -How many times can we re-take a test?
As many as required to pass, I think. There was talk about having a
minimum time between tests if one fails; 6 months comes to mind, but I
don't know what the final outcome of that decision was.
Jon
|
1355.13 | | CALS::THACKERAY | | Thu Jan 24 1991 22:07 | 8 |
| I see absolutely no reason why someone should obtain a manager's
"permission" to take such a test.
I can see plenty of potential abuses of such a rule.
Down side wins, bad rule.
Ray
|
1355.14 | option for Performance Review input? | LABRYS::CONNELLY | House of the Axe | Thu Jan 24 1991 23:02 | 23 |
|
Rather than a testing "system", what is needed is incorporating a section
into the standard Performance Review for "Skills Demonstrated". The mode
of demonstration could be either by on-the-job performance or by submitting
standard test scores. What this could reveal is:
1. underutilized individuals (i.e., people who have skills that
they are not using on their current job but that are
considered to be valuable to the company)
2. transferrable skills for "accelerated training" candidates
(e.g., i'm a TOPS-20 system programming heavy, my skill
in this regard is no longer needed by Digital, but the
likelihood of my being able to be quickly trained as a
VMS system programming heavy should be high)
3. skills that are not needed, hence indicating that i should
consider a career shift and training on skills that are
in fact needed
My guesstimate is that a Performance Review should be based 50% on
Performance Vs. Goals/Duties, 30% on Job Content Value (are my duties
actually valued by Digital), and 20% on Demonstrated Skills.
paul
|
1355.15 | It CAN be a good thing... | VMSNET::WOODBURY | | Fri Jan 25 1991 00:04 | 24 |
| Re .8:
While a sales rep. who sells 3x as much as the next one is valuable,
there are other factors, like how much risk he exposes the company to in
the process, that count as well. Where there are objective criteria that
are important to assessing someones ability to do a job, they should be
used. If the objective assesment shows a significant weakness, it is
likely to help both the individual and the company if that weakness can
be strengthened.
Re others:
There are potentials for abuse in any system. When CDP was presented
to me some time ago, I was worried about exactly those problems. Testing
will neither help nor hurt that part of that problem by itself. The
review that will go with implementing a testing/formal review system,
while not a cure all, is more likely to reduce the problem than make it
worse.
When the new program is presented to you, there is some chance that
it will be by someone outside of your normal chain of command. If that is
the case, there is also a good chance that that person is empowered to
check things out and make recomendations. Talk to that person. If done
carefully, it could get you out of a real tough situation. (If done badly,
it can get you into an even tougher situation...)
|
1355.16 | Einstein tested poorly | MRKTNG::SILVERBERG | Mark Silverberg DTN 264-2269 TTB1-5/B3 | Fri Jan 25 1991 08:12 | 17 |
| some people are good at testing.....
some people are good at doing......
some people are good at both.....
some people are good at neither.....
IMHO, testing might be of value in the larger context of overall
performance measurement, but is certainly not the MAJOR factor. I'm
somewhat suspicious of testing as people get to know exactly what
they will be tested on & how to max the test; also the administration
usually leaves a lot to be desired, what with our constant people
churning & strategy shifts.
Mark
|
1355.17 | | 7R7NET::EIDSON | Let them have Panocha | Fri Jan 25 1991 11:49 | 4 |
| If the methodology of testing can't be equally applied to the remote
employee in Missoula, Mt as well as the engineer in the CSC the the
system is BAD!!
|
1355.18 | no big thing | KEYS::MOELLER | No energy policy ? go to war. | Fri Jan 25 1991 13:00 | 6 |
| As a sales support consultant I in the field, I fully expect to have to
go in from of a peer review board whenever it seems appropriate for me
or management to move toward my promotion. A test would be refreshing,
because at least that's something relatively objective.
karl
|
1355.19 | Let's fix this problem concurrently with the layoffs | DDIF::RALTO | | Fri Jan 25 1991 13:16 | 170 |
| Let me tell you what I have seen in my eleven+ years working for Digital:
1. I have seen people get promoted, who did not earn a promotion,
by comparing their performance against the job descriptions
involved, and/or by evaluation and consensus of their peers.
2. I have seen people NOT get promoted, who did indeed earn a promotion,
by comparing their performance against the job descriptions
involved, and/or by evaluation and consensus of their peers.
3. I have seen people get unearned promotions only because they whined
and nagged their supervisor until they got what they wanted.
4. I have seen people get unearned promotions only because of their
friendly personal relationship with the supervisor.
5. I have seen people get unearned promotions, who knew they were
unearned, and then subsequently bragged to their peers about how
they had ripped off "the system".
6. I have seen people get unearned promotions only because of their
personal relationship with higher-level individual contributors
in their field, who persuaded the supervisor involved to promote
the person.
7. I have seen people get unearned promotions only because they had
spent a long time at their current level.
8. I have seen people who had earned promotions NOT get a promotion
because their supervisor had been unable to get a promotion to
the level in question while the supervisor had been an individual
contributor.
9. I have seen people who had earned promotions NOT get a promotion
because their supervisor had come from a different field and didn't
understand the job descriptions in the employee's field, wouldn't
bother to learn them, and the manager refused appeal.
10. I have seen people who had earned promotions NOT get a promotion
because the supervisor had come from another company and didn't
understand Digital's job descriptions and promotion policies.
11. I have seen people who had earned promotions NOT get a promotion
because the supervisor had been at the level in question while they
were an individual contributor, and was sure that no one in their
group was as good as they were.
12. I have seen people who had earned promotions NOT get a promotion
because they had been improperly and incorrectly "black-listed"
by another supervisor in the organization.
13. I have seen people who had earned promotions NOT get a promotion
because they had been through three reorgs in three years, getting
a new supervisor each year, each of whom wiped the slate clean and
made their employees start over in their career plans.
14. I have seen people who had earned promotions NOT get a promotion
because the supervisor refused to use the job descriptions as a
basis for promotion, saying that they did things in their own way.
15. I have seen people who had earned promotions NOT get a promotion
because the supervisor would not use the employee's deliverables
and performance over the previous 1-2 years as evidence of performance
at the next level.
16. I have seen people who had earned promotions NOT get a promotion
because challenging assignments to make them even more promotable
were taken away from them and given to "political favorites" within
the group.
17. I have seen people who had earned promotions NOT get a promotion
because they were either "political outcasts", didn't pal up to
the supervisor as much as others in the group, or similar situations
of simply not being "liked" by the supervisor.
18. I have seen people who had earned promotions NOT get a promotion
because there were already "too many" people at the higher level
in the group.
19. I have seen people who had earned promotions NOT get a promotion
because the supervisor could only promote a certain number or
percentage of their people into a certain level per year, and
some deserving people are left behind year after year.
20. I have seen people who had earned promotions NOT get a promotion
even after exceeding expectations on all of the tasks which were
previously established as the supervisor as being "necessary and
sufficient" for promotion to the next level.
21. I have seen people who had earned promotions NOT get a promotion
because the supervisor refused to consider corrective action for
past inequities even when they were acknowledged by the supervisor.
22. I have seen people who had earned promotions NOT get a promotion
who were by all measures outperforming everyone in the group who
were already at the next level.
23. I have seen people who had earned promotions NOT get a promotion
because the supervisor was an expert as creating "revisionist
history", changing the events and sequence of events so as to
support their decision.
24. I have seen people who had earned promotions NOT get a promotion
because they were not given a promised challenging assignment
when it came up because they were on vacation and the supervisor
seized the opportunity to give it to a "more favored employee" instead.
25. I have seen people who had earned promotions NOT get a promotion
even though they had performed at a significantly higher level on
an assignment than the supervisor had done when the supervisor had
the same assignment (and had been promoted for it!).
26. I have seen people who had earned promotions NOT get a promotion
because their current challenging assignments were taken away from
them by management as retribution for declining other "good soldier"
but otherwise worthless assignments.
27. I have seen people who had earned promotions NOT get a promotion
because they are intentionally kept in the same dead-end assignment
or project year after year.
28. I have seen people who had earned promotions NOT get a promotion
even though their project leader had written substantial review
input supporting the employee's performance at the next level,
and the review input was ignored because the supervisor admittedly
didn't "like" the employee's personality.
29. I have seen people endure year after year of the same kinds of
inequities as described above, in some cases many different varieties
of the same ones simultaneously.
30. I have seen people, discouraged and demoralized, give up and "drop
out" of the "system", working at far less than their potential at
their current level, but finally beaten and unwilling to chase the
carrot yet again.
31. I have seen people leave their chosen career specialty, at which they
were successful and helping Digital to be successful, because of
these constant career setbacks.
32. I have seen entire previously-successful groups decimated by massive
attrition due to these failures of management, with the subsequent
ripple-effect impact on their organizations and on Digital as a whole.
There's more, but that's enough for now.
Is this good for Digital?
I am indeed for some form of testing. I believe that the current
"arbitrary and capricious" situation, where promotions and non-promotions
are left to the whim of the individual supervisor who (in my experience)
is not held accountable for the subsequent trail of human debris,
is at least partially responsible for the current condition of this
corporation and for high-tech corporations as a whole.
Like others have proposed in this topic, I would combine testing with a
peer review board, a minimum time-in-level requirement, and a firm list of
quantifiable and confirmable accomplishments that MUST be completed prior
to being qualified for the next level. And once the testing, peer review
board, and accomplishment list all qualified/disqualified someone for
promotion, the process should make it pretty damned difficult, if not
impossible, for the whim of the supervisor to override it either way.
Let's get some discipline, formal process, and accountability into this
situation before it's too late... if it's not already too late.
Chris
|
1355.20 | | JAWS::PAPPALARDO | A Pure Hunter | Fri Jan 25 1991 13:50 | 5 |
|
Testing for promotion is a good idea but, if a test is of the
Traditional kind..........it's objective will be false.
|
1355.21 | Opinions... | EEMELI::RAJALA | Just try me | Fri Jan 25 1991 15:19 | 12 |
| Testing is quite a good idea, but how can we make sure that everybody
will be examined in same way. I mean in different countries, in
different languages etc.
Everyone is expert in some areas, how can we estimate their expertise
to other employees, who don't do same jobs, because there is no need to
have two exactly same kind of employees in one place.
By the way I don't believe in paper tests, when someone is tested for
managerial skills. Also if someone is in technical way very good in his
work, I don't believe he is very good in managerial way. He or she can
be but in most cases he isn't.
|
1355.22 | Petrarchan Sonnets in Iambic Pentameter? | SKIVT::ROGERS | Damnadorum Multitudo. | Fri Jan 25 1991 15:45 | 13 |
| re .1
> I have been taught that the Chinese civil service system was excellent,
> and that this was because they used competitive examinations for
> promotion.
FWIW Department: I believe that the core of the Chinese Imperial Civil Service
exams involved writing poetry on a selected topic in a particular classic
verse style. The system worked because it guaranteed that the only applicants
who could advance were mandarins with a formal, classic education. The old boy
network with a vengeance!
Larry
|
1355.23 | It's been a rough week | WHOS01::BOWERS | Dave Bowers @WHO | Fri Jan 25 1991 17:27 | 25 |
| And how, pray tell, do we pay for the immense Corporate Career Testing
department that will grow up to administer this idiocy? Uniformly
designed and administered tests, applicable to hundreds of job descriptions
simply beg for a massive Digital-style matrix-managed cross-functional
BUREAUCRACY!
Besides, even if you pass the test, you're manager still has the option
to promote or not. And do you really think there won't be some way to
promote a "key resource" whose specialized skill set leaves him unable to
pass some cockamamy test but who is still either highly valuabler to the
company (or who is the boss's favorite yea-sayer)?
Also, if you truly believe that first-line management is that screwed up;
that promotional policy is totally unfair; that neither management nor
your peers can be trusted to judge fairly the quality of your work; why
do you still work here?
This isn't a "Digital - Love it or leave it!" note. It's really honest
request for information. Why would any capable, sane individual continue to
work in that sort of an organization? If I felt that way about my immediate
management, I'd be long gone!
-dave
|
1355.24 | | BEAGLE::WLODEK | Network pathologist. | Sat Jan 26 1991 15:39 | 16 |
| "few hours with strangers should not decide about your future life"
was one of my friends comment on boards and tests.
The new TCD ( in Europe, Technical career development) focus rather
on developing skills then testing. This was also goal of now abandoned
boards, but the board event psyhodrama took over the show very often.
Bad thing about it is that it's not bound in time and requires lots of
different peoples' time. With recent focus on short term we have less
time to do long term time consuming coaching.
Passing tests on a very well defined subject is fine as a part of
an evaluation. But it would be crazy if it was the only or even
important part of evaluation. What really counts in our jobs is
ability to learn fast and getting things done.
wlodek
|
1355.25 | SAT? GRE? GMAT? INK-BLOTS? | CTOAVX::HEALTHCARE | | Sat Jan 26 1991 22:41 | 8 |
| Testing?
The real test is when the customer buys!
Those that fail the test are the ones who take profits away from the
company! Ceiling fixtures, (OVERHEAD) take profits away.
Testing is a smoke screen, to cover the non-doers.
|
1355.26 | Look at the opportunity!!! | GRANPA::JFARLEY | | Sun Jan 27 1991 12:14 | 24 |
| I realy think that this is a great idea. Just think of the whole new
department that could be set up.
1. VP in charge
2. 12 world regional managers
3. 144 local area managers
4. 288 local admin people
5. 576 local test writers
6. 576 local test scorers
7. 576 local test review boards
8. National appeals review committee
9. Worldwide appeals review committee
Yes we really need this now!!!! Testing of people will really solve
all of our future needs. Take experience, dedication, salesmanship,
customer care, honesty, integrity, and hard work, throw all of this
out in the trash can and base our future success on test scores?????
Somebody better get a wake up call. The days of doing the right thing
seem to gone forever, replaced by rocket scientists who can't put their
shoes on the right feet. Why do all the ivory tower people seem to be
always sitting on their assetts.
My 2 1/2 cents worth
John
|
1355.27 | Set policy/smokescreen=on | CTOAVX::HEALTHCARE | | Sun Jan 27 1991 14:46 | 26 |
| Testing?
Some people may test
brilliantly, but may not be able
to empty a boot filled with pi$$,
even if the directions were written on the soles.
Get real, experience is the best teacher, the test is,
can you bring in the bucks for the corporation?
I suggest, instead of tests, make peopel carry a number.
1-What they save the company.
0r
2-What they bring in thats profitable.
Remember, a company has two-2 real functions:
Make things
and
Sell things
All other operations are fluff!
The ability to be profitable is everybodies job, testing will not
identify profits, it will only generate expenses.
Therefore: Save some money or make some! Pick one and do it well!
|
1355.28 | you CAN get there from here | CULT::CONNELLY | Mysterious Truth! | Sun Jan 27 1991 23:48 | 23 |
| re: .-1,.-2
Gawd, why does any suggestion for change always bring out the worst-case
scenario doomsayers?
Testing should NOT be the sole determinant for performance measurements
or promotions. It should be an OPTION for the employee to demonstrate
competence in skills that they are not given the opportunity to demonstrate
as part of their assigned work. There are folks at lower SRI levels who
have decent skills, but their management buries them in dead-end work where
they never have the chance to demonstrate those skills. Give them a way
out of this! Skills are valuable to the company, but the company can
hardly be expected to take advantage of them if it doesn't know they're
there due to bad local management practices. (And, on the other, you
can't be expected to believe every computer operator who says "I'm a C
programmer!" because they wrote a "hello, world" program once.)
It seems to me that any time a suggestion to do something different gets
introduced here, we bury it under a torrent of knee-jerk negative reaction:
it's always "that won't work!", rather than "there might be some variation
of this idea that would be workable--let's brainstorm what that might be".
paul
|
1355.29 | Create your own Job | ODIXIE::LAMBKE | Quality is free | Mon Jan 28 1991 11:10 | 19 |
| re: .25,.27
Indeed, the point is, what is your contribution?
According to recent discussions with US Sales Support, CONSULTANT I
and CONSULTANT II people still have their best shot at a promotion if
they create the opportunity for themselves by developing multi-million
dollar business. Field slots for CONSULTANT III are not created unless
there is a BUSINESS NEED for the position.
How better to get promoted than to create the position yourself?
RE: testing
Tests have been proven to only measure your ability to take tests.
The discussion about Testing has been going on for two decades - how
many of you have gotten your CDP (Certificate of Data Processing) or
CCP (Certificate of Computer Programming)? And how has it helped?
|
1355.30 | TESTS? YEAH!!!!!! | RAVEN1::DJENNAS | | Mon Jan 28 1991 12:12 | 15 |
| I am hoping our executive management read these notes, because digital
can really improve if we institute tests not only for promotion but
for hiring just like IBM and HP. Mind you these tests are only valid
when used in a relative mode, i.e. the competence tests are administered
to a number of candidates, with an offer extended to the candidate
with the top score. Naturally there are other factors which come
to mind when making the final selection. These tests need not be of
specific content, but should focus on generic and hypothetical
scenarios which portray situations likely to occur on the job.
This is a very efficient way to remove incompetence from our ranks.
I am all for it!!!!
Franc.
|
1355.31 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Mon Jan 28 1991 13:32 | 4 |
| Nobody has addressed the equal-opportunity aspect of testing. If you're
going to have tests, you'd better make provisions for blind, deaf, learning
disabled and non-native-speaking employees. You'd also better not have
tests with a cultural bias.
|
1355.32 | | MU::PORTER | sickie | Mon Jan 28 1991 17:00 | 13 |
| re .30
Yeah, I had to take one of those stupid "programming aptitude
test" things 14 years ago when I applied for a job with IBM.
They used to be called "IQ tests" until that got to be a
dirty concept.
The only thing such tests tell anyone is that they tell the
would-be employee that he/she ought to have more sense to
apply to a company that deals in such mumbo-jumbo.
Wanna know whether I can program? Well, ask me about programming,
for pity's sake.
|
1355.33 | Getting testy about the subject... | NEWVAX::DOYLE | Warm fuzzies delivered daily | Mon Jan 28 1991 17:39 | 18 |
| The concept of testing brings out the worst in me. I opposed it
very strongly when I went to some technical training and was
expected to take a pre- and a post-test. Believe it or
not, the test results were used to measure the INSTRUCTOR!!
(Of course, little things like employees without prerequisties
or who didn't want to learn would be HER fault :-)) For those who
say, "Give it a chance, don't assume the results will be
incorrectly applied", I think people find ingenious ways
of misusing test scores.
In short:
o I don't want another metric to meet; another number
that is substituted for my real value to DEC
o My test is EVERY DAY, EIGHT (nine, ten, eleven...) hours
a day. I meet my customer's needs and I pass. How do
you measure that??
|
1355.34 | it's in YOUR hands | FSTTOO::BEAN | Attila the Hun was a LIBERAL! | Tue Jan 29 1991 11:58 | 33 |
| When I wanted to advance from T5 (Field Service) to a Support Engineer
(T7), I was told to enroll in the Technical Career Development Program.
I did so, and sat there for *months* while nothing happened.
It suddenly occured to me that my career development was going to
stagnate unless *I* did something about it. I learned that Digital was
not going to advance me. I had to advance myself. Like many other
things in life, control over this was in my own hands. Digital was
offering me a tool to use (the TCDP and boards) but were not going to
force them down my throat.
As soon as I realized this, *I* made things happen. I studied, I
requested interviews to prepare myself for the board, and I steered my
own ship. In Feb, 87 I went to the boards in Houston...and passed with
flying colors (at least thats what I was told).
As others have noted, passing the board furnished me with a "license"
to a specefic job in F.S. I interviewed and when an opening came up,
competed with others for the same opportunity. Passing the board did
not GET the job... but it opened the door for it.
I say this to point out that we often fall into the trap of sitting
back and waiting for someone else to "give" us our
promotions/advancements...when, in fact, a LOT of that is in our own
hands.
I support the board of review procedure, because it provided me with a
tool, and incentive, and specific goals, which drove me to improve
myself, and to make myself noticed by those in a position to help.
It doesn't "just happen"... we "make it happen".
tony
|
1355.35 | | RAVEN1::DJENNAS | | Tue Jan 29 1991 12:14 | 5 |
| RE: 32,33
Don't argue with Success, IBM stock value is twice DEC's!!!
|
1355.36 | Do I know you? | AKOCOA::CORMIER | Get Here | Tue Jan 29 1991 12:33 | 10 |
| Sorry this is late but I've just logged in after a few days absence.
RE: .19
It's funny but I'm sure I don't know you. Yet after stating everything
that you have seen regarding promotions, I'm sure that you work in our
department!
Linda
|
1355.37 | What's the meaning of relative stock price? | ULTRA::HERBISON | B.J. | Wed Jan 30 1991 09:34 | 15 |
| Re: .35
> Don't argue with Success, IBM stock value is twice DEC's!!!
If success is related to the stock price, Digital shouldn't
worry about productivity. Instead we should immediately
institute a 1-for-10 reverse stock split. That would drive
the price up tremendously and make us successfully beyond your
wildest dreams.
If you are concerned about the total value of outstanding stock,
IBM is far ahead of Digital and even being massively successful
in all our endeavors won't let us catch up in the short term.
B.J.
|
1355.38 | Message to Moderator(s) | THEBAY::WIEGLEBDA | Allons � Lafayette | Tue Aug 27 1991 21:57 | 9 |
| Could the moderator change the title of this to:
"Promotion by Testing"
This might give us a chance to find it in the future with "DIR/TITLE".
Thanks,
- Dave
|
1355.39 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Wed Aug 28 1991 16:09 | 4 |
| Re: .38
Done.
Steve
|