T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1493.1 | Modern Morons | COOKIE::LENNARD | Rush Limbaugh, I Luv Ya Guy | Tue Jun 11 1991 14:29 | 9 |
| My group had the same problem in TTB.....even had to put up signs.
You can try yelling at them and embarassing them, but usually these
kind of people are too ignorant for that to work.
Try unplugging the headset and put it in your drawer.
As far as using a terminal is concerned....that's a real violation of
privacy, not to mention security. I'd report the clown to Security.
|
1493.2 | Who empowered you to decide for everyone else | CANYON::NEVEU | SWA EIS Consultant | Tue Jun 11 1991 16:30 | 57 |
| I can sympathize with both parties having had an office near a confer-
ence room and having traveled to numerous other sites for meetings.
The general problem is the lack of availability of phones and terminals
in the vicinity of conference rooms. Do you really want a sales rep to
fail to return calls because he can not use a phone in an unoccupied
office! If the person needs a terminal or a phone, which is not
otherwise in use, to conduct ligitimate business for this corporation,
who are you to deny them that right! Since when is the phone or the
terminal the exclusive property of any individual or group within the
company. The attitude which says I have my office and my resources and
you will leave them alone is not conducive to the team work necessary
to deliver solutions to our customers. This does not excuse people
being rude and failing to ask to use something which is obviously not
paid for by their cost center. The obvious but rarely provided
solution is to have a designated area in the building with phones and
terminals to make business calls and check electronic mail when you
are away from your local site. Then the people who now have signs
saying don't use my stuff can put up signs directing people to the
site support location and its phones and terminals.
Isn't there another note in here discussing the use of conference rooms
by people from other sites.... Some people seem to reinforce the atti-
tude that its us against the rest of the company, we had to fight for
our space, our terminals, our phones, etc... and we aren't going to
spend any of our budget making it easier for other groups to do their
work. The NMS will probably reinforce this behaviour as each group
tries to cut its expenses so that it can show a profit. Some buildings
have eliminated phones in the lobby and hallways which were used by
visitors to make business calls (and probably personal calls as well)
in the cost cutting fervor which has struck a few managers. These are
often the same places were signs state that you are not to use phones
in individual offices for any purpose, so how are you to conduct
business away from your own office, leave the building to find the
nearest public telephone (:-<), violate the possible privacy of a
person who is nowhere in sight (:-<), or ask around until you find a
kind person who hasn't been instructed to tell you take a hike (:->).
Exactly what do you gain by making it difficult for other Digital
employees to conduct their business, and why do you think you should
be rewarded for doing so! If the information on your terminals is
so sensitive it can not be seen by other digital employees, then I
certainly hope you take the precaution of blanking out the screen
every time someone walks by or steps in to say hi, of course your
productivity might be less than desirable. I would work real hard
to have the conference room moved, or to have the facility provide
the phones and terminals close enough to the conference room to
eliminate the need for conference room users coming to my office to
use the phone. Isn't it cheaper to stick a few phones in the confer-
rence room or a cubicle just outside the conference room, then to have
people wandering about the building trying to find a phone to use?
If we keep trying to save money by making it harder for people who
are not part of our group to do their job, will the corporation save
any money in the process?
|
1493.3 | | CVG::THOMPSON | Semper Gumby | Tue Jun 11 1991 17:05 | 39 |
| There is a conference room right outside my cubical. Other groups
use it a lot. They also help themselves to our phones quite often.
The sign management hung on my phone suggests they use the
phones in the conference room or the lobby that are provided for
them.
If people have asked I have never turned down a request to make a
DTN call on my line. Outside calls bother me a bit more. I would not
like to see a sales call go unreturned because someone could not
use my phone *but* I'd also hate not to be able to do my job because
my CC ran out of money paying other peoples bills.
And people using my phone when I'm not here is not my big gripe. It's
those people who come in, make themselves at home and then expect me
to wait outside my own office while they finish their leisurely call.
As for:
> who are you to deny them that right! Since when is the phone or the
> terminal the exclusive property of any individual or group within the
> company.
Not exclusive property but in general people who pay for something
get to say how it's used. My management pays for my phone and money
that someone else spends means less for us to do our job. Perhaps
we need an easy cross charge method to allow people to use other
peoples phones. This would go a long way toward keeping the finance
people happy and also help make people aware of the value of other
peoples resources.
The one area that we as a company should still do a lot more on
is making visitor terminals more available. I can easily live without
a phone at a different site if I can log in to check my mail. I
generally pause my workstation when I leave my desk even for a minute.
But if people ask I have often let them set host from my system
while I was there. That actually seems more reasonable then asking
for the phone.
Alfred
|
1493.4 | | SMOOT::ROTH | From little acorns mighty oaks grow. | Tue Jun 11 1991 18:07 | 11 |
| About 2 years ago planning was underway for the facility move at my site
here in the Field. I made a suggestion to the facility manager to include
a small room with a couple of terminals and phones so that employees
visiting from other facilities would have a place to check mail and make
calls.
The suggestion was not acted upon because such a room didn't 'fit the
mold' of how facilites are designed- in essence, it had not been done
before so it could not be done now. Catch 22.
Lee
|
1493.5 | | PSW::WINALSKI | Careful with that VAX, Eugene | Wed Jun 12 1991 00:32 | 9 |
| I have not seen this problem at ZKO. We have both DTN phones and terminals
in every lobby. That may contribute to it not being a problem. I think part
of it may also be cultural. I would consider it the height of rudeness to use
somebody's office terminal without asking permission first--you never know when
you might be disturbing some rather elaborate test environment that the person
may have spent hours or even days setting up. If you only use terminals for
mail, notes, etc., the perspective on such things might be different.
--PSW
|
1493.6 | I guess I was on a differnt floor | HGOVA::MELADAMS | | Wed Jun 12 1991 02:51 | 34 |
| PSW,
I spent the last 2 years working at ZKO and it was a big problem
for us.
I think that the key work you used was rudeness. I very clearly
remember being asked by a member of another group (not from ZKO) if he
could use the phone. It was a very polite request and I helped him
find a office where he could use the phone. The person was very
reasonable in his mannor and use of the phone.
HOWEVER, it then became a free-for-all with the others in that
group. They were noisy to the extent that those in the adjoing cubes
could not work. They started conducting their conversations in the
aisles around that cube. When I asked them to hold it down, they
became quite rude. I escalated the problem to my manager and he
recieved the same treatment.
BTW, the first line is always that this is DEC and these facilites
are everyones. Well I agree with an earlier reply, it may all be DEC
property, but we were paying the bills out of our cost center not only
for the office mentioned but for the conference room as well.
Our solution was to make sure that that group's manager was
notified and to refuse to let them use the room again.
To me it is simple, it is all how you treat each other, it is not
who pays the bill.
And at the risk of catching a lot of heat here, I will generalize
and point out that the majority of the problem I saw like this came
from members of the same function at DEC.
Mel
|
1493.7 | My office has "MY" name!! not open house | SPCTRM::REILLY | | Wed Jun 12 1991 10:26 | 19 |
| I would not allow anyone in my office without my approval first....I
don't care who they are, My office has "MY" name on it....My phone
Desk and anything else in there is MINE (until I'm told otherwise
by my boss). If we were to allow anyone in these areas as RE:2 suggests
then why bother having offices.....I allowed a Dec person to use
my phone once (he said it was a quick call) I had to go do somthing
at the time. I came back in 10 min. and he was still on the phone,
I had people trying to get hold of me(hmmmm maybe that's why my
name is listed with that phone #????) Then he ask if I could leave
because it was a private call......I kindly told him no and that
I needed my office back to do work.....I work in Security and I
know that many people "DO NOT" log off there systems and "DO NOT"
lock there desk......They often times leave Confidential material
on there desk.....To many time things come up missing....If there
are not enough phones at a certain site, then that's a problem between
that persons mang. and the site.....not mine.......If you find somebody
in "YOUR" office let your security dept. know about it.........
Bob
|
1493.8 | | BUNYIP::QUODLING | Cooooiiiieee, cobber... | Wed Jun 12 1991 10:36 | 7 |
| Have security (to give it credence) put a notice in the conference rooms along
the lines of anyone entering offices, using telephones and or terminals
without expressed permission, will be escorted from the building. Also point
out the public terminals/phones in this memo.
q
|
1493.9 | Design Issues | WHOS01::BOWERS | Dave Bowers @WHO | Wed Jun 12 1991 11:11 | 21 |
| As noted a few back, the underlying problem is one of design.
Conference rooms in DEC facilities are designed as though they were for
the sole use of the adjacent work group, with virtually no thought
given to the needs of "visitors", whether from other facilities or
just from the other end of the building. What sort of needs?
1. Phones. Enough phones to permit essential calls to be made during
breaks.
2. Terminals.
3. Some place to hang coats.
4. A secretary/receptionist to take phone messages and provide meeting
support.
Perhaps we need to distinguish between smaller conference rooms, which
might be the "private property" of a particular group, and the larger
conference facilities. The latter should be grouped into a facility
conference center with the above issues addressed. It would certainly
reduce the sort of difficulties being discussed in this topic while
making things a good deal more pleasant for visitors.
-dave
|
1493.10 | | KOBAL::DICKSON | I watched it all on my radio | Wed Jun 12 1991 11:29 | 12 |
| MKO2 on the other hand, being built primarily for marketing (at the
time), has a telephone in just about every conference room.
In ZKO every conference room has the phone jack on the wall, but
no telephone plugged into it. (Bring your own?)
Also in MKO no group owns its own conference room. They are *all* in
the on-line reservation system, except for a few that you have to
reserve in person from the conference-room people (typically the
very large rooms). This probably also means that calls made on those
phones get charged to the conference-room group, not what ever cost
center is near the room.
|
1493.11 | It was Catch 22 all right | ISLNDS::GASKELL | | Wed Jun 12 1991 11:50 | 8 |
| When I was a secretary this used to happen all the time. AFter
being bawled out once or twice for leaving a dept. phones ringing
while someone used my phone, without my permission, I gave my group
a choice. I could be quiet and polite and let the "cuckoo" use my
phone and the dept. phones would have to take their chances, or I
could be direct and rude and disconnect the "cuckoo" by putting my
finger on the phone rest and nicely ask them to leave. However,
if that "cuckoo" complained I didn't want to hear about it.
|
1493.12 | Have your management work it. | ULTRA::SEKURSKI | | Wed Jun 12 1991 13:24 | 18 |
|
I used to work on a project with export controls as a consequence
much of the code and associated documents were off limits to
unauthorized people whether they were DEC employees or not.
Both the facility and security were very accomodating when it
came to our security needs. When we started having the problems
.0 described the facility put phones and signs up in a nearby
lobby.
I guess the best thing to do is have your management contact
facilities, make your needs known and have security enforce it.
Mike
----
|
1493.14 | Oh, to have anything that was MINE | KYOA::MIANO | John - NY Retail Banking Resource Cntr | Wed Jun 12 1991 15:53 | 2 |
| Boy is it easy to tell who in this discussion works in the
field and who doesn't!
|
1493.15 | | BUNYIP::QUODLING | Cooooiiiieee, cobber... | Wed Jun 12 1991 16:04 | 8 |
| Actually, I have worked both in the field, and in "engineering". We didn't
have a problem of this sort in either location.
Don't blame the part of the organization that you are not in as the culprit for
what is basically inadequate management.
q
|
1493.13 | Make the user account for it | CANYON::NEVEU | SWA EIS Consultant | Wed Jun 12 1991 20:52 | 38 |
| My intent in challenging the assumption that anyone or any group
has total control of resources (telephones, terminals, conference
rooms) simply because their group budgets for them is to make peo-
ple realize that it is not any individual group's success that we
have to worry about but Digital's success.
Rudeness in any form is not acceptible behavior, and using another
person's office without seeking permission and/or asking them to
leave their own office because a call is personal smacks of the
height of rudeness. I personnally avoid using the secretaries'
phones for the reason mentioned in an earlier reply. I always
attempt to find the public phone(s) but am often forced to seek
an office which is unoccupied because the facility has no phones
set up to accommodate visitors. I usually seek out a secretary
to direct me to an unoccupied office.
The facilities people and security can certainly help provide
the services that visitors need, if the building tenants make
them aware of the need. To expect that as a visitor, I can
influence whether terminals or phones will be available for
my use is not realistic. In facilities which have major
conferencing centers and lots of outside customer visits, DEC
has invested in setting up terminal rooms and banks of phones.
MKO2, ZKO1, MRO3 etc... have pretty much solved these problems
or at least provided the facilities to solve them (you never
can prevent rudeness and unprofessionalism completely).
Unfortunately, some sites which are used for internal meetings
either are not aware of the needs of visitors and/or are cost
cutting at the expense of the corporation instead of the group.
If a group of people where taking unfair advantage of resources
paid for by my cost center, and/or otherwise behaving in an un-
acceptible manner, I would take it up with their management and
have my financial person cross-charge them for anything which I
felt I could justify. These people could then explain the budget
impacts of their behaviour to their upper management.
|
1493.16 | mine is mine and yours is ours | RICKS::SHERMAN | ECADSR::SHERMAN 225-5487, 223-3326 | Thu Jun 13 1991 00:54 | 15 |
| This sounds like the classic, "What's mine is mine (I am empowered
to keep my cost center expenses down) and what's yours is ours (You
need to support me because it's for the good of the company)."
Just as we can't give away our services to our customers, we are going
through a phase where we can't give away internal support to each
other. My vote is that if somebody wants to use facilities that your
cost center is paying for and they have no intentions of working a
mutually beneficial deal, get their cost center number or yank them
off. If what they are doing is really all that important, they won't
mind having their cost center pay for it. It's all Digital's
equipment. And, Digital pays for use of its equipment with cost
centers. That's how it's supposed to run anyway.
Steve
|
1493.17 | I thought this was 1 company | AUNTB::REAMS | POSITIVE WIZARDS CREATE THEIR FUTURE | Thu Jun 13 1991 09:13 | 13 |
| Ref: .16
< ......we are going through a phase where we can't give away internal
support to each other.. My vote is that if someone wants to use
facilities that your coct center is paying for and they have no
intentions of working a mutually beneficial deal, get their cost center
number or yank them off......>
Heaven help us!!!! if we can't provide support to each other, without
expending resources, just to recapture "funny money", we are in deeeeep
trouble. If I ever heard someone who reports to me make a statement
like the one in .16, we would head straight to a counseling session..Do
not pass go. Do not stop for coffee. Teamwork category on Performance
Appraisal = 5.
|
1493.18 | | ALIEN::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Thu Jun 13 1991 10:15 | 31 |
| > -< I thought this was 1 company >-
The door swings both ways, you know. There have been instances shown where
the 'owner' of an office has suffered from lack of access to their office.
That has happened to me on numerous occassions. That impacts MY work and
the person usurping my office is NOT the team player!!!!!! Person A needing a
resource should not expect to just waltz in and take it. Person B may very
well have much better use/need of the resource. I think it quite distasteful
that you would consider this as not being a team player and that you would drag
a person into 'counseling' for this.
>If I ever heard someone who reports to me make a statement
> like the one in .16, we would head straight to a counseling session..Do
> not pass go. Do not stop for coffee. Teamwork category on Performance
> Appraisal = 5.
You would then have no objection to my bringing 20 people by your office
someday to use the phone, regardless of what use you might have for it?
They would all be Digital employees. And being a team player, you should have
no objection, right? After all team players give their all for the team, even
if their own play suffers, right? Oh, and you would not mind having your cost
center add an RA82 disk on your system for my use, would you? The cost is only
'funny money'.
Basically, a line has to be drawn somewhere. There is a point where Person A's
use of Person B's resources negatively impacts Person B's work. That is not
team playing on Person A's part since the team suffers. Asking for use of the
resource FIRST and not assuming you can just take it is a much better approach
to solving this sort of problem. Wouldn't you agree?
-Joe
|
1493.19 | | VCSESU::MOSHER::COOK | Stormtrooper of Death | Thu Jun 13 1991 10:30 | 6 |
|
Then there's the marketing group which is moving into MR01. They want
40 foot trees planted in front of the cooling tower because it
looks "unsightly".
*sigh*
|
1493.20 | Wrong target | AUNTB::REAMS | POSITIVE WIZARDS CREATE THEIR FUTURE | Thu Jun 13 1991 11:38 | 9 |
| Ref: .18
I wasn't defending the practice of abusing the use of host facilities.
I believe that one should ask permission before utilizing resources
assigned to others. I WAS attacking the attitude that "we can't give
away internal support to each other". In order for any interlinking
organizations to be successful, there must exist a mutual willingness
to unilaterially sacrifice for the good of the overall success.
|
1493.21 | do you think the company *wants* people to be helpful? | CVG::THOMPSON | Semper Gumby | Thu Jun 13 1991 11:45 | 15 |
| Questions that this topic brings to mind. When is the last time
you or someone you know was rewarded for doing something not in
their job plan to help someone in an other group? When have you
taken time from doing what you are paid for and reviewed on to
help someone else and gotten a thank you from *your* boss?
Lots of people do go out of their way to help other people. This
usually means they take a hit on their review. Or at least don't
get any credit for it. After a while and a few poor raises some
people tend to get very narrow in their focus. It's hard to blame
them. If upper management *wanted* people to go beyond their jobs
to support the company then stories of such actions and their rewards
would be wide spread.
Alfred
|
1493.22 | Did I detect a note of bitterness there | SMAUG::GARROD | An Englishman's mind works best when it is almost too late | Thu Jun 13 1991 13:25 | 8 |
| Re .-1
You wouldn't be thinking of EASYNOTES.LIS by any chance would you...
I think it is all wrong when people are not recognized for doing useful
things outside their group; provided of course that they continue to
get their own tasks done.
Dave
|
1493.23 | DCO's implementation | NEWVAX::PAVLICEK | Zot, the Ethical Hacker | Thu Jun 13 1991 14:07 | 33 |
| re: no room for "visitor terminals"
I hadn't really thought about it until this discussion started, but our
facility (DCO) has an interesting solution to this problem. On the
wall outside of the main first floor conference room (the one most
likely to be used by large meetings), there are a series of three
indentations in the wall. Each indentation contains two STANDING
cubes (no chairs; desk at the height appropriate for a standing
individual). Each cube contains a phone and a VT100 terminal.
The use of a standing cube is quite good, in that it allows the person
to do what needs to be done, but it prevents them from getting too
comfortable and tying up the resource for an extended period. The
VT100s keep the cost down as well as emphasizing the fact that these
plain-jane cubes are for reading MAIL and such; not for developing
software or what have you...
I don't remember what was there before these cubes were installed, but
it couldn't have been more than closet space. So, there is no need to
dedicate a full room or even some cubes to visitors. It is only a loss
of some storage space.
Now, on the second floor, the second largest conference room has no
such terminal access outside. Being in one of areas near this
conference room, I have seen many DEC visitors come into our area to
use phones. Most succeed in finding an unoccupied cube without much of
a problem. But I have witnessed people who have made a nuisance of
themselves by using the secretary's phone, or by talking so loudly that
others around them have a difficult time working, or even by
rearranging items on a person's desk to accomodate papers needed for
their phone call. We can do without this sort of behavior.
-- Russ
|
1493.24 | What you measure is what you get | NEWVAX::PAVLICEK | Zot, the Ethical Hacker | Thu Jun 13 1991 14:37 | 21 |
| re: .22
> -< Did I detect a note of bitterness there >-
> You wouldn't be thinking of EASYNOTES.LIS by any chance would you...
Makes no difference. The issue of if-it's-not-in-your-job-description-
it-ain't-worth-beans has appeared many, many times in recent years.
> I think it is all wrong when people are not recognized for doing useful
> things outside their group; provided of course that they continue to
> get their own tasks done.
Seems like this attitude is destined to become even more rare
(extinct?) in the days to come. Most people seem eager to "make their
numbers" and not a whole lot more (of course, when the "numbers" don't
place a _real_ emphasis on "teamwork", what can you expect?)
Sadly,
-- Russ
|
1493.25 | | RICKS::SHERMAN | ECADSR::SHERMAN 225-5487, 223-3326 | Thu Jun 13 1991 15:02 | 12 |
| re: a few back
Sorry. I just can't accept my rejection of the "mine is mine and yours is
ours" dogma as meaning that I need to go for counseling. Sure, we are
all on the same Digital team, but my team is clearly defined within my
cost center. I just can't see the justification for stealing from one
cost center to benefit another. If there is justification for
cooperation then there is justification for sharing expenses, funny
money or not. It's not honest, nor the "right thing". The need for
corporate teamwork cannot justify compromising my integrity.
Steve
|
1493.26 | Charge the CC for the call . | BAGELS::RIOPELLE | | Thu Jun 13 1991 16:22 | 18 |
|
Sounds like the phone system needs the capabililty for the user
to enter a code to un-lock the phone if :
1) they're not there during normal working hours
2) and after hours.
I'll bet that most salespeople use the phones in peoples office
because they can't dial outside numbers, only DTNs. Well why cant the
phone system be able to accept the cost center of the person making the
outside call, maybe the badge #, and their extention, and possibly a
password, and then the cost of the call is billed to their cost center
with a handling charge or something. That with a company wide policy on
a designated/consistant spot in each building for telephones and
terminals could be implemented.
Its would al
|
1493.27 | *RUDE* Interruptions | MYGUY::LANDINGHAM | Mrs. Kip | Thu Jun 13 1991 18:33 | 28 |
| It's part of this Company's culture, I guess. Sorry... I am replying
without reading all 26 replies first.
I'm a secretary. The scenario is this: I'm on the phone with my boss,
who's traveling, between flights, and is dictating a rather urgent memo
which I am recording in shorthand.
A woman approaches, stands around, comes into my cubicle, stares, looks
impatient. I think, "I don't think this person is here to see my
boss..."
The woman eventually "gets into my space." I have to interrupt the
dictation, put my boss on hold to find out what this impatient woman
wants.
She wants to know if she can use the "terminal" in the empty cubicle
(which belongs to my group).
Knowing that it's not a "terminal," but a workstation that needs to be
booted, I replied, "No, I'm sorry..." and attempted to return to my
boss and dictation.
She persisted, and really got rather upset... and didn't even seem to
understand when I said it was a workstation, not a terminal.
Grumble.
|
1493.28 | | CSSE32::VERGE | | Fri Jun 14 1991 17:56 | 17 |
| My group has had the experience (in a previous site) of having
folks in meetings use the phones and terminals, and walk away
with papers that were on our desks. The papers were later discovered
in the conference room where they were left.
Folks asked to use the phones; then made personal long-distance, loud
calls that lasted over 1/2 hour.
These actions are rude and unnecessary.
This is where the line has to be drawn. I'm trying to resolve
a problem, and the person borrowing the phone in the office next
to me is laughing and joking with a friend . . .
Borrowing a phone to make a call isn't a crime, and I think
most folks wouldn't mind IF THEY WERE ASKED and if the
time used was reasonable.
|
1493.29 | | PSW::WINALSKI | Careful with that VAX, Eugene | Fri Jun 14 1991 21:54 | 22 |
| RE: .27
In that situation, I would be very tempted to put my boss back on line and have
the boss explain to this person: (1) that the terminal/workstation can't be
used and (2) why interrupting dictations in this rude manner is not a good
idea or a good use of anybody's time.
RE: .21
> When is the last time
> you or someone you know was rewarded for doing something not in
> their job plan to help someone in an other group? When have you
> taken time from doing what you are paid for and reviewed on to
> help someone else and gotten a thank you from *your* boss?
Actually, just this week, in my salary review. I listed several such things
under "unplanned commitments" in my review input, and it was written up
positively in the review. The management of some groups has a wider outlook
than others, I guess.
--PSW
|
1493.30 | Sing it, Aretha! | MYGUY::LANDINGHAM | Digital Services for Channels | Sat Jun 15 1991 11:05 | 39 |
| Well, that's an idea... But when you have a person who is in between
planes, at an airport, and I've just read a very urgent mail memo to
her... it's kind of tough to ask her to pause from her dictation to
help me to tell someone else to GO AWAY! (Actually, I'm very capable
of doing so, but what makes it difficult is the urge to respond to her
in the same rude manner as her's.)
That woman's behavior was my point, though. Generally, I've seen this
behavior alot before. I've wondered if it's a company culture
attitude, if it had something to do with peoples' attitude towards
administrative help ("she's a secretary, I can interrupt her"), or
what. I can honestly say that the pushy, rude behavior displayed by
some people will get them absolutely nowhere.
BTW: I've been known to "go out of my way" to help people before. I
probably would have done the same for that woman, had the cir-
cumstances been different.
Group norms in each organization are different. I came from one
environment in a building where "corridor" conversations were frowned
upon. Group discussions should be held in an office or a conference
room. The atmosphere was very professional, and you could get your
work done without loud conversations going on in the hallways, corridors,
or over cubicle walls.
In contrast, I'm in a different type of building now, and hallway and
corridor conversations ARE the norm.
In the same vein, norms from one group to another can change
dramatically. To further complicate the matter, we then have to con-
sider each employee's personal makeup. (What are his/her norms?
What does this person consider rude behavior?)
Perhaps more people will listen if these issues are given more attention.
Treat the person you come upon with the same RESPECT that you would
want to be afforded.
Rgds,
marcia
|
1493.31 | | ASICS::LESLIE | Andy Leslie | Mon Jun 17 1991 23:42 | 9 |
| I've been on both sides of this. There are facilities that provide
Easynet access terminals in the lobby (like ZKO) and there are
facilities that are SO hostile to visitors that I've been taken aback
by the vehemence of their "go away and don't bother me" response.
Generally, I have found "I'm 3000 miles from home, may I call my kids?"
works okay. SOmetimes not, though...
- andy
|
1493.32 | We're all on the same team | COUNT0::WELSH | What are the FACTS??? | Tue Jun 18 1991 04:46 | 58 |
| re .5:
Paul has a point here. There is indeed a "cultural gap". Engineers
tend to have a very intimate relationship with their systems, similar
to an artist's easel and paints, or a musician's instrument. By
contrast, field people (especially sales) tend to think of "terminals"
as interchangeable, and use them solely to access ALL-IN-1 (which
moreover a lot of them think is just mail). In fact, the latest
idea in some field offices is to provide, say, 50 desks and terminals
for 150 employees. The expectation is that 100 will be out visiting
customers at any given time. Personal stuff is put in carts and
stored; these can be wheeled out when necessary.
To be fair, sales people extend hospitality to visitors; yesterday
I was at a sales office and my host waved me to an empty desk on
arrival. It belonged to one of his colleagues, but by calling IS
I was immediately able to access a "guest" account through which
I could SET HOST to my own system.
There is also a distinct difference in "mindset" between at least
four different classes of employees: engineers, technical field
people, sales people, and managers. Engineers are used to an
"undisturbed" environment because they are doing "individual
contributor" work most of the time. Those of us from the field
who understand this know, for example, that an engineer should
be contacted through Notes or (if urgent) by mail, never by
phone. However, sales people almost always work in a team
environment (not always, I know). This involves chatter, hustle,
and give-and-take.
re .21:
However... when all's said and done, we all have to work together
and that means taking the time and trouble to understand colleagues
and their different styles of working (a clear case of "valuing
differences"). And Alfred has really got a valuable point in .23 -
I cannot say that the company culture encourages cooperation. Quite
the contrary: for the last ten years I have heard more and more of
"we can't help them, it's not on our plan/budget". Culminating,
no doubt, in the thoughtless, immature and irresponsible behaviour
of the people described in this note.
As a fairly regular visitor to ZKO, I hope that neither I nor my
fellow CASE Partners have been guilty of this sort of thoughtlessness.
Software Engineering is the engine-room of this corporation, and I
would sooner spit in church.
To end on a positive note: things are looking up in my small
part of the universe. Peter Morse has just taken over as Director
of Sales and Marketing in the UK, and his initial speech on Friday
night indicated that he intends to fix a lot of these problems
right away. He went out of his way to stress that everyone in the
subsidiary is on the same team, and that no artifical barriers
should be allowed to obstruct our cooperation. He specifically
instructed managers to see that this didn't happen. We all left
the meeting feeling a lot better.
/Tom
|
1493.33 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Tue Jun 18 1991 14:19 | 16 |
| Before some pseudo-conscientious dope flames Andy for calling his kids:
Business Expense Effective: 01-DEC-90
Section: 5.11
Additional Reimbursable Items
Telephone
The company's tie-line network or credit cards should be used to
reduce the cost of long distance calls. Long distance calls should
not be placed through hotel desks due to the significant surcharges
which are often added, especially when overseas. Personal calls may
be allowed when the employee is away over extended periods of time.
Employees are expected to use good judgment concerning the frequency
of such calls.
|
1493.34 | | LESLIE::LESLIE | Andy Leslie | Tue Jun 18 1991 18:21 | 5 |
| Common sense, too.
But thanks for posting -1, John.
- andy
|
1493.35 | Some suggestions from both perspectives... | MEMORY::LEBLANC | Ruth E. LeBlanc | Thu Jun 20 1991 16:56 | 82 |
|
Interesting topic; we've had similar discussions in the DEC Secretary notes
conference. Unfortunately for us, as secretaries, we tend to fall victim
to this kind of behavior more than our WC4 counterparts. I've had people
come out of conference rooms asking me to make copies, order coffee, and
one woman (at 7:30 in the morning, when I was working on a critical
deadline) asked me to TYPE HER PRESENTATION for an 8:00 meeting! It's not
always easy when we want to Do The Right Thing for Digital, but also need
to do our own jobs. Unfortunately, continuous interruptions stop me from
doing my job. Moreover, I could theoretically get grief from my manager if
it appears that I've been making an excessive number of outside phone calls
(and he probably wouldn't want to hear that they weren't *my* calls...).
Some ideas for "victims" of rude visitors:
--If the problem is a continuous one, work with your Facilities Manager to
see if alternate arrangements can be made (e.g., terminals outside of
busy conference rooms, phones put in them, etc.).
--If someone asks for the phone, refer them to the reception area where
phones are typically available. Or, if there is a vacant office,
welcome to use the phone there, but ask that they put any outside calls
on their own telephone credit card [if a business call, they can submit
the bill to Petty Cash later for reimbursement].
--Terminal usage is sometimes more difficult. I got into trouble once
for letting The Vice President's Secretary [!] set host from my
account to her system during a meeting break!!! My systems folks
warned me that it was a security violation to allow such access and that
it was grounds for termination. No kidding. So...if someone asks for
access to my system now, I merely advise them that it's a security
violation and I wish them well in finding someone who will allow it.
--If you find that some groups tend to abuse the room's neighbors on a
regular basis, don't let them use the room anymore. When I maintained
a conference room, I kept notes on people who used the room and either
stole things from it, continuously forgot to cancel it (thus leaving
it booked so others couldn't use it), or other rude things. If
one group overstepped those bounds too many times, I simply refused to
book it for them in the future.
Suggestions for off-site meeting goers:
--If you need to make outside business calls, call your secretary via
DTN and ask her/him to forward you to the outside number. That puts
the bill where it belongs. If you can't do that, put the call on
your personal credit card and put through a Miscellaneous Procurement
Voucher later.
--If you know you'll need a phone (for a conference call or the like) or
an office, ask the person arranging the meeting AHEAD OF TIME to help
you with your accommodations. I've often arranged for "break out rooms"
or "visitors' offices" when I've known ahead of time that people will
need terminal or phone access. I've also arranged for visitor accounts
to be set up on VMS so people can set host to their own machines.
--Make sure you know your system dial-in or group TSN information. That
way, you can gain access to your system without setting host from a
local account.
--If at all possible, use 'public' phones (reception area or other
designated visitor areas).
--If you do need to use someone's office, ask a secretary to help you
in finding one where you won't disrupt others. S/he will often
know of vacant offices, ones whose owners are travelling, etc.
--DO NOT go into an office without asking!!! If a person just stepped
away for a while, s/he may have left confidential information on the
desk or within eyesight.
--If you approach someone who looks busy (secretary or not), go find
*someone else* to help you.
As for Alfred's comment (.21): Yes, some people *do* get recognized for
helping others. I've helped folks and have received letters of thanks from
those whom I've helped, as well as mention in my performance review from my
own manager. Being courteous isn't a hard thing to do. Who knows? Maybe
those whom you've helped will return the favor some day. It's always
worked for me that way.
|
1493.36 | | ALOSWS::KOZAKIEWICZ | Shoes for industry | Fri Jun 21 1991 22:40 | 33 |
| re: -1
>--If someone asks for the phone, refer them to the reception area where
> phones are typically available. Or, if there is a vacant office,
> welcome to use the phone there, but ask that they put any outside calls
> on their own telephone credit card [if a business call, they can submit
> the bill to Petty Cash later for reimbursement].
This is quite wrong and against policy. Digital pays the phone
bills, not individual managers. Credit card calls cost Digital more
than direct dialing. It is expected as a normal part of doing business
that Digital facilities will pay for the business calls of visiting
Digital employees.
>--Terminal usage is sometimes more difficult. I got into trouble once
> for letting The Vice President's Secretary [!] set host from my
> account to her system during a meeting break!!! My systems folks
> warned me that it was a security violation to allow such access and that
> it was grounds for termination. No kidding. So...if someone asks for
> access to my system now, I merely advise them that it's a security
> violation and I wish them well in finding someone who will allow it.
God gave me a brain and Digital pays me to use it. Rules make sense
only insofar as they serve a legitimate business purpose. Computer
systems and security policies are in place to support the business
needs of the corporation's employees; not vice-versa. This manager has
little tolerance for the mindless application of policies where they
clearly don't make sense. Anyone who got my secretary in trouble for
doing a sensible thing would find themselves in plenty of trouble with
me.
Al
|
1493.37 | two wrongs make a right | CSC32::S_MAUFE | a stopped clock is right twice a day | Sat Jun 22 1991 11:22 | 13 |
| <<< Note 1493.36 by ALOSWS::KOZAKIEWICZ "Shoes for industry" >>>
>> This is quite wrong and against policy. Digital pays the phone
>> bills, not individual managers. Credit card calls cost Digital more
>> than direct dialing.
now this is wrong! I asked the telecom here in Colorado Springs ( and
believe me, with 1000+ people living on the phone 8 hours/day they know
their stuff) whether I should call customers using my AT&T SDN card,
or use the 2nd (digital) line at home, and they said SDN is cheaper than
direct dial from a domestic line.
simon
|
1493.38 | | ALOSWS::KOZAKIEWICZ | Shoes for industry | Sat Jun 22 1991 14:48 | 9 |
| re: -1
That very well may be for calls placed from OFF Digital premises, but
there is no way you can convince me that it it cheaper to place a
credit card call from a Digital phone (on Digital premises) than it is
to dial direct! It makes no sense at all.
Al
|
1493.39 | | ASICS::LESLIE | Andy Leslie | Mon Jun 24 1991 04:06 | 10 |
| .35 Seems predicated on stopping people being able to communicate and
doing their business (DEC's business).
There should be a middle path whereby people aren't rude to each other.
As to threats of termination if you allow someone to use your account
to set host elsewhere, this is sheer balderdash and whoever made that
threat would be asked in clear terms to show the P&P that says this.
- andy
|
1493.40 | One opinion about being secure...... | SENIOR::HAMBURGER | Carvers are on the cutting edge | Wed Jun 26 1991 15:10 | 28 |
| <<< Note 1493.39 by ASICS::LESLIE "Andy Leslie" >>>
> As to threats of termination if you allow someone to use your account
> to set host elsewhere, this is sheer balderdash and whoever made that
> threat would be asked in clear terms to show the P&P that says this.
Andy,
There is not a P&P that applies to this concept, but the Corporate Security
Standard 11.1 does talk to this issue. It is a document nearly 50 pages
long and covers many, many aspects of Computer Security within Digital.
Part of that document addresses the users responsibility to Digital as it
applies to using their account. It does not specifically say "you will be
terminated for sharing your account" as noted above, but it does take a
conservative view of keeping your account private and secure. Business
needs can be exceptions that cause us as account holders to vary from the
standards, but it must be documented and accepted by various levels
of management.
What does this all say? If you use and abuse your account, you will be
held responsible for that abuse. It is frowned upon to let someone set host
from your account to their machine. But common sense allows us to be
cooperative and help out fellow employees who need asistance when we can.
This is strictly my interpretation of what I read in the Security
Standards, your mileage, and that of Corporate Information Security may
vary.......
Vic H
|
1493.41 | This can be done in a manner that doesn't violate security policy | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Wed Jun 26 1991 20:41 | 8 |
| When someone wants to use my account to set host, I log in and run the
following command file (which is only secure _after_ the system name has
been typed, due to the use of "inquire").
$set nocontrol=y
$inquire hostsys "System"
$set host 'hostsys'
$logout
|
1493.42 | Us vs Them! | SCAM::KRUSZEWSKI | Z-28 IROC & Roll in FLA | Wed Jun 26 1991 21:34 | 17 |
| re: .14
I was wondering when someone was going to point that difference. In the
field people visit and use "your" stuff all the time. I have visited up
on the mountain myself many times and have been in the position of
needing a phone or a terminal and been made to feel like I was from SUN
or IBM.
Regarding this idea that things are mine... grow up and join the world.
I agree people should ask and receive permission, but this concept of
it's mine and you can not have it is childish. Visitors use my office
all the time, and yes even field people have customer and company
sensitive things, but I am not going to get bent out of shape over a
person using my terminal or phone for company business.
Frank
|
1493.43 | | BRULE::MICKOL | If you think of losing, you've lost | Thu Jun 27 1991 00:15 | 9 |
| And with the way some Account Groups are going to provide global support, we
will have support people flying in from somewhere and they will need a place to
work. They may need to use someone's office that may be at training or on
vacation. It's better for the company to do that than have an office and
workstation sitting idle until the remote support people need them.
Of course the people that borrow the offices and equipment need to be
sensitive to the people whose office they are using and leave them as they
found them.
|
1493.44 | It's MINE until I leave... | SPCTRM::REILLY | | Thu Jun 27 1991 10:19 | 19 |
| I agree with most folks that they should ask to use your office
space, and that the needs of the "company" need to come first. However
this doesn't always happen. Who determines what is more important
the person who stopped in to use "MY" terminal while I went to get
coffee or me who needs to get "MY" work done???????
RE:42.....I guess you wouldn't mind if while I was at your site
I stopped in where you work and used "OUR" system,phone,looked through
all "OUR" paper work "YOU" left out on "OUR" desk???????Then I can
take one of ""OUR" vans or Trailer Trucks for a spin (it says DIGITAL
on it )????? I hope when you say you let "VISITORS" use your office
that you are with them all the time??? Digital employees are not
visitors no matter what site there at(or they would sign in the
visitor logs).............Well enough of that didn't mean to go
off in a tangent...The point is that I am assigned a work area if
it was not meant for ME and open for all office doors would not
need to be locked. To think that all DECies are totally honest is
a nice thought.....but very childish.........
Bob
|
1493.45 | | BRULE::MICKOL | If you think of losing, you've lost | Thu Jun 27 1991 13:15 | 2 |
| Re .-1: There are some Digital sites where non-resident Digital employees have
to sign a visitor log...
|
1493.46 | I'm an employee not a visitor | SPCTRM::REILLY | | Thu Jun 27 1991 13:34 | 6 |
| RE:45.....I have never heard of any site that made a Digital employee
(with Badge) sign in as a visitor?????? It is my understanding that
You are authorized in any DEC facility as long as you are an employee
with this Company. If you sign in as a visitor then according to
policy you must be escorted???????? But then I haven't been to evey
DEC site!!!!!!
|
1493.47 | SOP in the Field | WHOS01::BOWERS | Dave Bowers @WHO | Thu Jun 27 1991 13:56 | 6 |
| Most field offices request visiting Digits to sign in. And yes, you do
need to be escorted to a certain extent since all external doors
(except possibly the one between the offices and the reception area)
are under electronic access control. At the old NYO facility, you
either needed to borrow a card key or go through the reception area to
use the men's room.
|
1493.48 | Sign it in ABO | DNEAST::DUPUIS_STEVE | ABC, it's easy as 1-2-3 | Fri Jun 28 1991 09:01 | 9 |
| re: .46
As a traveling Digital Employee "visiting" the Albuquerque Manufacturing
Plant, you must sign in once for the duration of your stay. It makes
sense in that if someone is looking for you, the name of the person you
are visiting is in the log and security can route the call
appropriately.
Steve D
|
1493.49 | BTO too | TYGER::GIBSON | | Fri Jun 28 1991 09:43 | 2 |
| I have always had to sign in in Burlington VT.
|
1493.50 | Well I didn't know that??? | SPCTRM::REILLY | | Fri Jun 28 1991 09:48 | 8 |
| RE.47,.48...I would imagine that this policy must be site specific???
I have never had to travel to any site out or N.E. and as far as
I knew you as long as you have a valid badge??? I can see many
cases that some sort of sign in would make sense....well another
note maybe...........
Thanks again
Bob
|
1493.51 | It happens overseas, too... | DELNI::OVIATT | High Bailiff | Fri Jun 28 1991 13:11 | 9 |
|
I've had to sign into Digital facilities, even with my badge on,
in several different facilities throughout Europe and Asia, too. The
rule does not seem to be applied where there are a sufficient number
of DEC sites leading to a lot of interplant travel, like the Greater
Maynard Area, Tokyo, Geneva, etc.
A lot of it has to do with internal security procedures and the use
of local keycards to get into various areas.
|
1493.52 | Are you sure its the visitor log! | CANYON::NEVEU | SWA EIS Consultant | Mon Jul 01 1991 21:20 | 12 |
| I signed a log when I visited Albuquerque, Phoenix, San German, and
Aguadilla facilities, but they were not visitor logs. The logs that
I signed were strictly for DEC employees and designed to indicate where
to route any incoming calls which might occur during your visit. I was
not a visitor (I was informed to not park in visitor parking). There
were at least three different logs used by security, one for visitors,
one for contractors, and one for DEC employees from other sites.
That's the reason you signed in once for each stay, rather than sign
in every time your entered or left the building as a visitor is
required to do.
|
1493.53 | | SUPER::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Sun Jul 21 1991 17:14 | 27 |
| I didn't realize people felt so strongly about this. When traveling
for DEC, and teaching, I have often stepped into an office where the
desk surfaces are cleaned off, the lights are off, and no coat or
personal belongings are in evidence, and used the phone. I have always
avoided messy or chaotic offices because I didn't want to disturb
anything, and I have always tried to use a phone in a public area if that
was possible before 'borrowing' one.
I have also always assumed that if the office's owner arrived, it was
up to *me* to get off the phone asap and find another one to use. When
people have come to their office, they seemed to appreciate my saying
"The owner of this office has just arrived, I will find another phone
and call you back". In many cases they've said "Oh, finish up your
call while I get coffee".
I think it has a lot to do with basic consideration. As long as I am
not being lazy about walking to a public phone, and as long as I treat
the occupant and neighbors respectfully and considerately, I think I'm
doing the right thing for DEC when I return important business calls
during very short breaks.
I also agree that the best situation is when your host at the site
(or their secretary) points you to a phone or terminal that they are
happy to have you use for the duration of your work at the site.
I'm sorry to hear that some people have been so rude that other people
never want to share a phone with an unknown colleague again.
|
1493.54 | Polite & Respectfull | MYGUY::LANDINGHAM | Mrs. Kip | Tue Jul 23 1991 13:51 | 4 |
| Holly,
This would be a very pleasant place to be-- all the time, if the halls
were filled with people like you!
|