T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1429.1 | it's all smoke and mirrors ... | RICKS::SHERMAN | ECADSR::SHERMAN 225-5487, 223-3326 | Mon Apr 08 1991 12:29 | 34 |
| I'll take a stab at it.
According to TAHD, a stovepipe is "a pipe used to conduct smoke from a
stove into a chimney flue." I believe the analogy goes something like
this. If you want to observe how the fire is burning in a stove you
can open up the stove and stick your hand in. But, sticking your hand
in would mean that you might get burned. Another way is to observe the
smoke coming out of the chimney. If it is black, white or clear, you
can get some idea of how the fire is doing. More, you can do more
careful analysis of the gases to see how efficiently the fire is
burning. There is little heat in the smoke that comes out as the heat
was pretty much lost in the stovepipe, which is good because you don't
want to burn yourself. But, you will be gathering information that
only indirectly tells you how much heat is being produced since the smoke
coming out is relatively cool. It is possible that the smoke
you get indicates that the heat output is fine, when in reality the
fire could be out or the house could be burning down.
Now, instead of a stove, think of a field operation. Instead of fire,
think of business in the field. Instead of smoke, think of reports.
Instead of a stovepipe, think of the hands that a report needs to go
through. Instead of it being you that's watching the smoke as it comes
out of the chimney, think of upper management. Instead of a house,
think of the business as a whole. In other words, with "stovepiping"
upper-management can think that all is going well when in reality the
business is dying, the company is feeding on itself or whatever because
the indicators are being messed with on the way to the top. The fault
lies both with those who along the way remove the heat from the reports
and with upper-management that does not want to get close to the heat.
Just my opinion.
Steve
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1429.3 | Raze the roof! | DORIOT::DMCLURE | Don't worry; be a pea | Mon Apr 08 1991 13:26 | 18 |
| re: .1,
Thanks for the stab - that clears up the terminology pretty well
for me. I suppose you could even add that relying on the look of the
smoke alone is additonally hampered by the various pollution [damage]
control filters through which the smoke must travel before it is visible
to a stovepipe manager.
My only remaining confusion with this metaphore is to wonder
what will happen when the stove pipes are removed (i.e. what is to
prevent the workers who stoke the fires and funnel the smoke from
suddenly axphixiating on all the smoke which no longer has a way out?).
I think that in addition to merely removing stovepipes, maybe
we also ought to be razing the roof entirely! Either that, or switch
to solar energy.
-davo
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1429.4 | Pointers to other stovepipe discussions | DORIOT::DMCLURE | Don't worry; be a pea | Mon Apr 08 1991 13:27 | 11 |
| A directory/tit=stovepipe *.* also yielded the following notes:
DLOACT::RESENDEP 13-MAR-1989 749.12 Abolish the stovepipes!!!
SCARY::M_DAVIS 13-OCT-1989 818.250 STOVEPIPES
SDSVAX::SWEENEY 13-OCT-1989 818.251 Stovepipe, defined
SVBEV::VECRUMBA 20-AUG-1990 1160.9 stovepipe = don't work together
COUNT0::WELSH 22-NOV-1990 1273.18 Product stovepipes
CALS::DIMANCESCO 1-MAR-1991 1377.45 Remove the Stovepipe
DENVER::GRAY 11-MAR-1991 1377.53 STOVEPIPE
-davo
|
1429.5 | | ESCROW::KILGORE | DECintact - the 'other' TP Monitor | Mon Apr 08 1991 14:10 | 26 |
|
Interesting. In reading this note and replies, plus the bibliography
thoughtfully provided in .4, I come up with five definitions of the
term "stovepipe" that vary in differing degrees:
o a process of filtering information to the point where it is
content-free
o an organization that is functioning at cross purpose to another
organization
o an organization that does not cooperate with other organizations,
except at the highest levels
o an organization that does not see the internal workings of other
organizations
o products (specifically software) that have negative impact on other
products
The question then becomes, which is the right definition? Are they
all correct in their respective environments (definitive stovepipes)?
And more importantly, when a high ranking member of a corporation
demands the elimination of stovepipes -- what's supposed to happen?
|
1429.6 | | TOPDOC::AHERN | Dennis the Menace | Mon Apr 08 1991 14:44 | 3 |
|
Stovepipes are for those who would blow smoke up their own chimneys.
|
1429.7 | stovepipe effect example | SMOOT::ROTH | From little acorns mighty oaks grow. | Mon Apr 08 1991 15:17 | 31 |
| Here's an example of the 'stovepipe' effect when different groups march
to different drummers- sales wanting to put new superior products into
customer hands and the SPS group wants to maintain old ways because
they are more profitable.
In a stovepipe world each group maintains its narrow view of what is best
for itself with little regard of what is really best for the customer and
makes them happy.
Stovepipes are indeed a contributor to what is ailing within our
corporation.
Lee
<<< WYNDE::PUBLIC$DISK:[PUBLIC]CONDIST.NOTE;1 >>>
-< Consolidated Software Distribution on CD >-
================================================================================
Note 50.12 FEB91 AD CONDIST in "jewel boxes" 12 of 14
KYOA::KOCH "It never hurts to ask..." 12 lines 18-MAR-1991 21:11
-< Trying to sell CDROMs with no help... >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
I created a memo to the local SPS organization to give me access to
the database for all contracts. I suggested we sell every customer an
Infoserver 100, a VT1300, and CDROM for docs and distributions.
Boy, did I catch an earful. I was told this is impossible because of
the revenue generated by the sale of hardcopy documentation and tapes.
I was told it would seriously damage the revenue stream of the SPS
organization and in no uncertain terms would they make the database
available. So much for the environment...
|
1429.8 | Wouldn't it be great . . . | CAPNET::CROWTHER | Maxine 276-8226 | Mon Apr 08 1991 15:19 | 16 |
| I have always thought of stovepipes as any vertical cut of an
organization chart. All 5 of the definitions in the previous note
would hold in one or more circumstances.
There are inherently 2 problems with "stovepipes"/Org charts:
1) The customer is nowhere represented!
2) Work doesn't get accomplished vertically, but rather
horizontally!
If the stovepipes were removed, self-interest should decrease and
horizontal teaming should increase. The purpose of each organizational
structure in Digital should be to enhance the environment in which
work is done, not to measure its own goodness to the exclusion
of all other organizations.
|
1429.9 | Stovepipes as I See Them From the Ground Floor | STOHUB::DSCGLF::FARLOW | Software Sells Hardware | Tue Apr 09 1991 10:43 | 40 |
| Think of a stove pipe as a pipe that goes from the bottom floor of a
building to the roof with no openings (inputs or outputs) anywhere along
the way. Now think of multiple pipes running from top to bottom. They
are completely seperate from each other with no integration between them.
In the field I see these stovepipes as our different organizations. Sales,
EIS, DCCs, Administration, etc. These are separate organizations. The local
office EIS specialists report to the EIS manager. The EIS manager reports to
the EIS District manager who reports to EIS VP at the top of the EIS empire.
The same is true for the other organizations. Now at the local office level
it is apparent that there is no formal integration of these organizations.
They have their own goals, metrics, career paths, terminology, ways of
thinking and some animosity toward other organizations.
So, each stovepipe ends up doing their own thing and can even work at cross
purposes of what the other stovepipes (organizations) are doing. When there
is a conflict how does it get resolved? Since there is no common managment
across the organizations until the very top (roof) conflicts are very difficult
to resolve. Cross organizational activities are extremely difficult to
coordinate. Much relies on informal relationships and other things.
How can you eliminate this? Stop the pipe at the ground floor. Put one
manager in charge of a local office. EIS, Sales, Sales Support, DCC,
Adminstration all report to this one manager. This manager is responsible
for results in all areas. Now each organization has goals that cause them
to work together. Conflicts are easily resolved at the local level.
Coordination is easy to achieve because there is a common manager that
wants to make it happen. With integration of offerings and customer service
becoming critical to survival, we can't afford to continue to have stovepipe
organizations with responsibilities, metrics and goals that are unrelated to
Digital's success.
Of course there would no longer be a need for so many managers of separate
organizations or the extra overhead of the different empires. Because of this
don't expect it any time soon :^).
Just my opinion,
Steve Farlow
|
1429.10 | Why stomp stovepipes when you can rebuild the factory? | TOOK::DMCLURE | | Tue Apr 09 1991 11:47 | 57 |
| re: .9,
> In the field I see these stovepipes as our different organizations. Sales,
> EIS, DCCs, Administration, etc. These are separate organizations. The local
> office EIS specialists report to the EIS manager. The EIS manager reports to
> the EIS District manager who reports to EIS VP at the top of the EIS empire.
Ok, so we "stomp out" the Sales, EIS, DCC, and Administration
stovepipes (to name only a few) and instead force reports to be
funneled through a regional (as opposed to a functional) management
chain but then what? Don't you simply end up with a different stovepipe
configuration? Sounds like yet another rattling of the birdcage to me...
especially since the notion of eliminating empires also seems to directly
contradict the move to return to Digital's product lines.
People complain that there is no common vision in this company,
that there is no coordination amongst organizations, that there is
too much self-interest and not enough cooperation. Yet, we are also
emerging from one of the most coordinated, cooperative, and centrally
focussed periods in Digital's history! Recall that the past decade
has included the notion of "one company, one system", where for years
everything was extremely VAX-focussed. The 80's replaced the older
product lines business structure with a single, centralized, coordinated
and cooperative product focus.
Now that Digital is returning to the product lines business
structure, you can expect that the level of cooperation and coordination
between the various organizations within Digital (assuming there ever
was such a thing) will be reduced - not enhanced! Organizations are
now once again being pitted against each other in direct competition
- as opposed to cooperation. Is this bad? Not necessarily. Is the
movement in Eastern Europe and Asia from that of centrally-planned
economies to free market economies bad? Again, not necessarily.
Maybe Digital is too large of a corporation to try to coordinate
everything from a central committee. Perhaps a free market internal
structure is precisely what can save Digital. The problem always
revolves around exactly how such an intra-corporate free market system
might be designed. There need to be enough hooks to allow intra-
corporate entrepeneurs (intrapreneurs) the freedom to start their
own make-it-or-break-it businesses within the corporation. There
would need to be a real monetary system to replace the current
"funny money". There would need to be a means of taxing such intra-
preneurs to support the corporate body (much like the federal
government is supported by federal tax money).
There would need to be many such changes in order for such an
internal free market system to work, but one advantage Digital
has in its favor is a desparate need to change coupled with state
of the art computing resources with which to implement such a change.
Instead of stomping out stovepipes, I think the real message should
be one of building a new factory.
-davo
p.s. One such proposal for how such a free market might be implemented
on-line is outlined in the note #1024 discussion.
|
1429.11 | Please just a short Rat Hole | AUNTB::BOYD | | Tue Apr 09 1991 12:44 | 10 |
| RE: .7
In North Carolina I have been in a number of meetings that have had
Digital Customer Service Account people recommend that a customer buy an
Infoserver 100, VT1300, and CDROM just as your note mentioned. This
provides not only cheaper media but puts it where the customer needs
it.
I think there are good Digital citizens around who do care about the
Customer and I take my hat off to them! Sorry about the Rat Hole but
good news can be hard to find.
|
1429.12 | RE: .10 - I think the "old days" don't apply here, ... | YUPPIE::COLE | Profitability is never having to say you're sorry! | Tue Apr 09 1991 19:01 | 16 |
| ... in that the old product lines ALSO controlled their Sales forces.
Not so with NMS (saw a video yesterday with TLA for New Management System!),
and the Sales force is cut free of the product or services groups. They sink
or swim by their business savvy, smart purchasing and pricing choices, and
selling skills. Product and services groups succeed by efficient production,
added value, and pricing that is competitive with LIKE UNITS in the industry.
So, IMHO, the successful product groups, ie the ones still in business
by FY93, will have developed cooperative tendencies simply because they did a
lot of similar things that made them successful and gravitated toward each
other.
RE: .11 - I read a similar story in this or another conference about a Sales
person trying to get a list of SPS customers from CS in order to pitch a deal
like that, and was flat told to shove it - too much profit in the old way!
That yours, too.?
|
1429.13 | Stovepipes and management fantasies to eliminate them | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney in New York | Wed Apr 10 1991 08:56 | 28 |
| re: .10 The only evidence that "product lines" are returning is that
people are talking about product lines returning. The clock is not
turning back to 1980 in any case.
"Stovepipes" are not abstractions. They are the visible teams of 25
second basemen that, when you need a second baseman, you negotiate with
the second baseman manager. Groups in the field in Digital has always
had vertical functional management. Stovepipes mean a sales rep spends
14 days of a 21 day period for preparing a proposal, locating and
begging for technical resources. Stovepipes are costing us sales
and destroying accountability. Failure gets blamed on the
_understandable_ lack of resources.
What are needed are real teams with each position filled by someone
with the rights skills, discipline, and focus.
The fantasy management we've been hearing about for so long was going
to take measures of profitability down to the customer level and
empower sales teams. Real power and real accountability.
The fantasy management we've been hearing about for so long was going to
make the business units show a profit or go out of business.
So do you sales reps out there feel new empowerment?
Have any BU's been so unprofitable that they have been shut down? No?
Great, I'll look forward to seeing that all the BU's are profitable in
the Q3 earnings.
|
1429.14 | Nostalgia for the product lines | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney in New York | Wed Apr 10 1991 09:11 | 13 |
| 1980-era product lines back in headquarters _thought_ they controlled
the sales force. The sales force for several years was not managed:
essentially entrepenurial and chaotic. But that didn't matter because
there was sufficient growth and a basically simple product set to take
orders for. Technical support from many product lines was good and from
others non-existent. "Sales management" then was simply a matter
making sure that sales calls were being made and paperwork was in
order.
Only after the end of the product line period and the company
repositioned itself away from competing with Data General, Prime, and
Wang and competing with IBM did the idea of a professionally managed
sales force providing a full range of products and services.
|
1429.15 | DCC supports many accounts | HERCUL::MOSER | Eastern Discrete DCC... | Wed Apr 10 1991 10:35 | 18 |
| > <<< Note 1429.9 by STOHUB::DSCGLF::FARLOW "Software Sells Hardware" >>>
> -< Stovepipes as I See Them From the Ground Floor >-
>How can you eliminate this? Stop the pipe at the ground floor. Put one
>manager in charge of a local office. EIS, Sales, Sales Support, DCC,
>Adminstration all report to this one manager. This manager is responsible
>for results in all areas. Now each organization has goals that cause them
>to work together. Conflicts are easily resolved at the local level.
I don't get it... DCC's are not a local resource, they are a resource
supporting an industry composing many accounts all over the country. How would
having a manager looking after local results help me do my job? I support
accounts all over the country... A local manager would make decisions based on
his locality and would not see the forest for the trees... I think I
understand what your getting at, but I think you also need to understand that
all resources are not tied to a geography or to an account.
/mlm
|
1429.16 | Stoves are here to stay | SAHQ::HICE | Forget Elvis, bring back Bob Marley | Tue Apr 16 1991 17:36 | 14 |
| Stovepipes will always exist within Digital as long as:
- Creativity is stifled and not rewarded
- Turf Protection supercedes customer measurments
- Managers hire in their own image
- Measurments between organizations are skewed
Despite talk to the contrary, 'Bird Cage Management' must continue to
exist by definition. As long as added value cannot be easily
quantified, shaking the cage only changes the perches, and not the
birds. Forever will the rift between ABUs, IBUs and the Field exist,
and as long as that rift is present, we will continue to do the wrong
things time and time again. Believe it or not, I am an optimist. But
the cold, icy spectre of reality can quash optimism every time.
|