T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1496.1 | | COOKIE::LENNARD | Rush Limbaugh, I Luv Ya Guy | Thu Jun 13 1991 13:19 | 1 |
| No, but it sure sounds like the "new Digital".
|
1496.2 | For whom the bell tolls... | ODIXIE::SILVERMAN | | Thu Jun 13 1991 14:32 | 18 |
| Re: .0
Join the crowd! From conversations with many of my COD classmates &
others it looks like when the next axe falls it will strike COD people.
While it is ironic that one spends so much money on people only to
discard them it does make short term business sense. The relocation
and training costs are sunk costs. Long term, however, this will make
employees avoid any career risks.
It also does not help when COD funds are stripped away leaving a unit
manager with a bloated cost structure upon which he must now make a
profit on.
All I can offer is to say that no matter what happens you must feel
that you did everything possible to succeed and wish you luck.
Mike
|
1496.3 | | RICKS::SHERMAN | ECADSR::SHERMAN 225-5487, 223-3326 | Thu Jun 13 1991 15:24 | 12 |
| I have sensed the same thing. I didn't do COD, preferring to stay with
my group. I got the impression during COD interviews that the folks I
interviewed with were really trying to get some of the best people out
to the field. My skills were seldom a match for what they were looking
for as in my case they were looking for someone with even more
experience than I had. And, the impression I had was that COD was
designed with the intention of getting more expertise out there. Seems to
me that if COD met this goal it would be pretty foolish to let these folks
go. Digital will not benefit by first selecting out its expertise, moving
it to the field and then letting it go. Just wouldn't make sense.
Steve
|
1496.4 | Quick Question | FREEBE::DEVOYD | | Thu Jun 13 1991 15:46 | 3 |
| Uh, Just a quick question. What is COD? Did that come before
COE or are we working our way backwards?
|
1496.5 | | WHOS01::BOWERS | Dave Bowers @WHO | Thu Jun 13 1991 16:37 | 6 |
| re .3;
IMHO, it's been a good while since ANYTHING around this company made
sense.
-dave
|
1496.6 | For the good of the company | AIWEST::ARVIDSON | Just look at the size of those tomatos, Jack! | Thu Jun 13 1991 17:35 | 31 |
| COD stands for Career Opportunity Days. It was a corporate effort to get
expertise from the inside out to our customers. There were three 3 day
events called COD I, COD II, COD III. Sales and Sales Support managers
from the field went to MRO to interview candidates interested in field
positions. Candidates who pre-qualified with the managers, went on
interview trips to the prospective sites to interview with others, and
get a feel for the job and location. After acceptance of the position,
the employee is relocated to the new office; paid by DEC.
Last April I relocated to the San Diego office from Parker St. Overall
the whole relocation went very well. Some glitches, as might be
expected.
While I was interviewing, I had heard rumors to the effect that people
who accepted positions in the field would be targets for a layoff. I
felt that this was just a deduction from someone who 'wasn't going to
fall for this ploy'. Then, shortly after I relocated, the funds from
corporate dried up leaving DM's with the bill.
I would deduce that since:
A) expenses are an issue and the AGM's (post DM's) are footing
the bill for subsequent years relocation costs or just have
a bad taste from last years costs
B) some COD employees are still ramping up to becoming full
contributing members of the team
C) corporate is seeking cuts
...that COD people are more likely to get hit, particularly
if they aren't bringing in the revenue.
Dan
|
1496.7 | | SAHQ::LUBER | I'm schizophrenic and I am too | Thu Jun 13 1991 17:41 | 5 |
| It's axiomatic that, in any downsizing operation, the benefits package
is less with each successive downsizing stage. It's also axiomatic
that the least valuable employees, i.e., the ones that are offered the
earliest downsizing severance package, get the best package. Life's a
bitch and then you die.
|
1496.8 | COD = Career Opportunity Day | MURPHY::FARRAND | I need an unlisted number. | Thu Jun 13 1991 17:46 | 15 |
| re .4
In the past 1-2 year timeframe Digital put on a major recruiting effort
internally called Career Opportunity Day. The company marketed very
aggressively this program which required submission of resume and a
scheduling of appointments for a particular day at MRO3. Each of the
9 areas had a recruiting staff and a table (room) to interview any
interested candidate to transfer into sales and sales support jobs.
Non sales type people were encouraged to move into sales. More feet on
the street. IBM had done something very similar just before this.
COD = Career Opportunity Day
paul f
|
1496.9 | The axe HAS fallen!! | POBOX::MULLIGANR | | Fri Jun 14 1991 12:17 | 72 |
| Re: .2
The axe has already fallen on some COD people, including some who
attended the TDP training program, which lasted from five to seven
months and cost Digital a small fortune. The costs included housing,
per diem, travel expenses, relocation expenses, overtime (students in
the program were temporarily made wage class threes per federal
regulations for a retraining program), etc.. Relocation was especially
expensive for folks who had to sell houses in the depressed New England
market, and DEC had to absorb huge losses for those relocations.
Why did DEC spend so much money on this training? This company is
lacking in certain crucial skill areas, and Ultrix is one of those, so
the latter part of TDP focused heavily on Ultrix. The cost of the
program was therefore justified as an investment in DEC`s strategic
future. This seemed to make sense, as DEC is heavily committed to "Open
Systems", and Unix is a currently a big part of that environment.
Currently, many parts of the country are short on Ultrix resources, and
hiring for those resources (sometimes EXTERNAL hiring) is taking place
even as we speak. So Ultrix resources are precious, right?! Not to
some DEC managers, apparently.
Some of the folks we trained at such great expense were laid off
without even being put to work---fresh from the training program! (And
while we`re hiring for their skills elsewhere in the company!) This
huge waste of DEC`s money was matched by the human tragedy of people`s
lives being disrupted by five to seven months of training (away from
home for many), followed (for some) by uprooting their families and
relocating them to unfamiliar places, far from their friends and extended
families---only to become unemployed.
This horror story is matched by many others I`ve seen, like laying off a
successful salesperson with 19 years of service, and replacing her with
two external people. How`s that for saving big bucks and rewarding
loyalty and performance? The stories of stupidity and callousness are
to numerous to repeat. After eighteen years of service with DEC, I`m
horrified by our company`s prospects and depressed by its decline in
business acumen and moral fiber.
I sincerely hope that we can turn things around as a company, but I see
decisions which are intended to cut costs increasing costs. I see
decisions which are intended to increase account focus and control
decreasing account focus and control. I see decisions which are
intended to increase customer satisfaction decreasing customer
satisfaction. I see decisions which are intended to improve expertise
in a particular field decreasing expertise in that field. I see
decisions which are intended to increase revenue and market share
decreasing revenue and market share. In short, I see managerial
incompetence everywhere!
Sadly, the majority of us have little control over our fates. We can
only work as hard and as smart as we can to help DEC to cut costs,
increase revenue and market share, increase customer satisfaction,
increase expertise, etc., and we can only share our ideas about what
needs to be done. None of that will do any good, however, if key
decisons are made at higher levels which negate anything we can do.
(Like consolidating regions to make them larger, so that most folks
have to travel more to conduct business---now there`s a real cost
saver! Also gets managers closer to the customer, doesn`t it!)
I`m sorry that a reply which was originally intended to be
informational (COD folks already getting the axe) became a soap-box
speech, but I had to get it off my chest. I`ll go back to my job and
continue to pray for the enlightenment of our leaders. At this point,
they`re the only hope we have left, and prayer is the only tool we have
left to help them.
Good luck to us all. We`ll need it.
|
1496.10 | Amazing | ODIXIE::SILVERMAN | | Fri Jun 14 1991 12:58 | 17 |
| Re .9:
Hey, I've been with DEC two times for a total of almost eight years.
Enrolled in COD because my wife was offered a transfer from her company
and I wanted to get closer to our customers. My position was not
eliminated and a replacement was hired to fill the slot I vacated.
I have only been in my present role since February with a product that
has an 18 month sales cycle. Needless to say I have not generated any
sales. Want to guess on whether I will make it to 9 years at DEC?
While everyone here probably agrees that downsizing is necessary this
has got to be the stupidest layoff program ever implemented. Does
anyone wonder what will happen when stockholders hear of this? It
doesn't take a Rhodes Scholar...
Mike
|
1496.11 | It's a nice day for a reorganization! | COOKIE::LENNARD | Rush Limbaugh, I Luv Ya Guy | Fri Jun 14 1991 13:56 | 5 |
| The real solution .9, et al, is a surgical airstrike, using our latest
smart bomb technology, on Stow (OGO). Around 9 A.M. on any working day
would be nice, as all the conference rooms are then full of "managers"
making their latest informed decisions.
|
1496.12 | it's everywhere... | SWAM1::MEUSE_DA | | Fri Jun 14 1991 15:16 | 8 |
| Related to layoffs. To weeks ago a good friend at Unisys let me know
that they would be letting 20,000 go next year. Lots of operations
consolidated etc. Well, in VTX today Unisys made that announcment.
What a crappy industry, wave of the future..sure. Should have gone into
worm farming.
|
1496.13 | who can tell the "real story"? | LABRYS::CONNELLY | Television must be destroyed! | Sat Jun 15 1991 01:08 | 21 |
|
Not sure there is any substance in this topic to detract from, but i heard
another version of this unattributable rumor that said a significant number
of the COD placements were not technical heavyweights improving the quality
of the field but administrative types who just about broke under the stress
of having to go through a heavy technical retraining that was way over their
heads. And that if you didn't pass the training you didn't get paid for
(in addition to having a scarlet "L", as in Lay-off, pinned to your shirt).
Who was managing this program? Seems like an expensive way to go about
laying people off...surely that couldn't have been the original intent.
Somewhere buried in those old stacks of DECnewsprint handouts that flooded
every facility for a while there must be the name of the COD program
manager...can't that person speak up and tell us what's really going on?
(Moderators, feel free to delete this note without prior warning: i only
enter it to counterbalance the other notes here that seem to say COD is
causing our "best and brightest" to get relocated and then turned into
instant lay-off fodder far from home...which i hope isn't the case!)
paul
|
1496.14 | What do other companies do re: Layoff sanity? | GLDOA::MORRISON | Dave | Sat Jun 15 1991 01:15 | 23 |
| re: .3 - .12 The thing that really concerns me is not how lobotomized
DEC policy is becoming but does this reflect policies in other
companies? In short, if the season for hope in DEC is almost dead, does
it live anywhere else? On the other hand, I certainly do continue to
care about DEC's survival (how long will it with this incoherent
approach?) and it makes me very mad to think of the penny squeezing
cost-cutting instituted and driven by the same folks who would throw
hundreds of thousands away by dumping COD folks. It is wrong ethically,
moraly and is brain dead business sense. It seems to flow from a lack
of the ability to stay the course and to implement a consistent
strategy which must follow from weak leadership at some point. It would
almost appear from this and other equally senseless actions across the
company, that there is a calculated plan to pull DEC down. One can
hardly believe that but at the same time the apparent stupidity of
spending lots of money of COD folks to only dump them is equally
unbelievable. It is very hard to believe that KO and other high level
folks could be aware of this and permit it. If those in middle
management don't care or can't apply sanity to this confusion, then
those higher up must be made aware of it soon. Then again, maybe all
this steam venting is useless, and the real question remains; what do
other companies do when it comes to applying intelligence to layoff
policies. If we end up having to leave and have the luxury of choosing
our landing spot, it would be nice to know.
|
1496.15 | | RICKS::SHERMAN | ECADSR::SHERMAN 225-5487, 223-3326 | Sun Jun 16 1991 00:14 | 18 |
| My own datapoints include that I didn't get bites on the COD positions I
was looking at because they wanted more specific expertise than I had to
offer. I'm not a VMS guru or a PC guru which is what the folks I was
talking with were looking for. (I am a 'guru', BTW, just not in these
areas.) I personally know three people who went to the field, at least one
of them was with COD. All of these are very technically competent and at
least one of them was management. I'm not personally aware of anyone that
went to the field that was not brought out because of technical expertise.
This is why I feel that many (if not most) of the moves were done to
increase the technical expertise in the field.
I don't know what others have seen. But, I haven't seen anything that
indicates any kind of conspiracy to hurt the company. What I have seen
are sincere attempts to adjust and change for the good of the company
and to the benefit of individuals. Given this, laying off any of the
folks I've seen go to the field would seem grossly counterproductive.
Steve
|
1496.16 | Anyone need a used VAX 9000? | HERCUL::MOSER | It's a Girl! Anne Marie Moser 7May91 | Mon Jun 17 1991 00:10 | 19 |
| I was a COD I person and I have been in my job for close to two years now.
If there are folks who just finished training, they must be COD III.
I saw some groups go "'COD' fishin'" without any real plan for managing growth,
just snapping up some easy reqs... (COD Headcount was supposed to be funded
by corporate for some period which I think was pushing 18 months). Corporate
renegged on the alleged funding and some folks got caught with a lot of extra
headcount that they hadn't been planning to see for another year.
As the saying goes...
"may you live in interesting times!"
My prescription to get out of this mess...
"sell more stuff"
/mlm
|
1496.17 | | ODIXIE::SILVERMAN | | Mon Jun 17 1991 10:18 | 15 |
| Re .16
Exactly! These managers were previously measured on how much revenue
they generated. Revenue was limited only by a lack of skilled
technical people. These technical people were now going to be provided
and trained by corporate. A few months later business dries up,
corporate cancels funding, and management now will be measured on
profitability. Well now you have a staff composed of 2/3 proven
specialists and 1/3 partially trained COD people. Whom do you as a
manager cut?
While I am sure there are washouts the predominant cause of COD people
being terminated is due to the afformentioned business changes.
Mike
|
1496.18 | Not a rumor! | POBOX::MULLIGANR | | Mon Jun 17 1991 14:48 | 31 |
| re: .13
I am aware of three recent layoffs. None of those was related to
performance. In one case, the person was laid off right after
finishing training without having had a single field assignment. This
person did not flunk any training, nor did either of the two others to
whom I refer. All had been in the field too short a time to prove or
disprove themselves in that arena, although all had proven themselves in
a very long and intensive training program. It is true that wash-outs
from the training program were not paid for and were subject to rapid
"downsizing", but my .9 note was not referring the them. The persons
to whom I refer all passed their training with flying colors (and they
WERE graded stringently). Furthermore, it would have made no sense for
the company to expend all those bucks (BIG bucks) on a program like
this if was going to be a staging area for rejects who would then
receive even more big bucks from a transition package to leave the
company.
No, this was not a conspiracy to hurt DEC, nor was it a calculated plan
to ease out "weak sisters". It was a good idea which was botched by
incompetence. DEC has become very good at developing good concepts,
then fumbling the ball in the execution of those concepts. Nobody is
making these stories up. They are real, and it won`t go any good to
ignore them and hope they aren`t true. What we need to do is to take
notice of things that go wrong, determine why they went wrong, and
eliminate the causes. In many cases, that probably means a different
downsizing target---some of the decison makers!
|
1496.19 | Where do you want to be when you get laid off? | LRGFMT::FIELDS | | Mon Jun 17 1991 21:19 | 29 |
|
It reminds me of a "Far Side" cartoon somebody in the office
modified to reflect the same feelings expressed in this note.
The cartoon is titled "COD" and in it is a fishbowl with a huge
plume of smoke and flame rising out if it. Outside the fish bowl
stand 3 fish on the table looking at it saying "Thank goodness we
all got out on time, of course, now were equally screwed". The
fishbowl is labeled "Corporate DEC", the fish standing on the Table
are labeled "The Field"
To me this cloud has a silver lining to it. I came out to
California with COD III, and since the first formal lay-off
announcement in January I have felt vulnerable to it. BUT!!!!!!!
I realized that getting laid off may be a fact of life, and If
I have to face it where do I want to be. In Massachusetts with
the highest unemployment rate in the country? Or in the Silicon
Valley where I can take my PC Integration skills elsewhere. My wife
is a COD/TDP'er and believe me the layoff thought has come across
our minds alot, but if she didn't take the move she would have
been bought-out probably during the first couple of passes.
Now at least, we each feel that we have a chance of getting a new
job if our current ones go away. In the future when the economy
is going in the right direction I will look into moving back,
on my own finances if I have to.
Bill
|
1496.20 | | ASICS::LESLIE | Andy Leslie | Tue Jun 18 1991 00:12 | 21 |
| These are indeed sad, bad times. No-one seems to have correctly
forecast the true effects of the recession upon DEC, along with the
rest of our industry.
It remains the responsibility of our company officers to try and ensure
DEC's survival and, through increasingly desperate times, we all are
going to see increasingly desperate measures such as those described in
this topic.
Sure, there are screwups going on. There are also some definitely good
developments in all areas of the company, including products and sales.
I guess we all have to work to minimize the screwups and maximize the
revenue, because that's the way we'll get out the other end of the
tunnel with the maximum number of people still here.
I'm very sorry for the people leaving this company because of our
difficulties - indeed I may yet be one, along with other readers here,
there are no guarantees on any of our jobs.
- andy
|
1496.21 | Good intentions, bad implementation. | DPDMAI::GUYER | | Tue Jun 18 1991 01:56 | 16 |
| Someone asked how other companies do it. They do it in the simplest
and fastest manner possible. They just look at where they are heavy
and cut. No retraining programs ( except IBM, and I don't thing they
laid them off after they trained them), no relocations. Just cut where
you need. It's actually better for the company and more humane for the
people.
The irony here is that DEC was indeed trying to be a better company to
it's employees. We do it all the time. I have seen DEC make more
messes out of trying to be the nice guy than you can believe. The real
problem is in implementation. The ideas were good, but there was no
real plan, no communication, no buy ins. It was let's try this and see
what happens. I can tell you we have lost a lot of business for the
same reason. We are our own worst enemy. In sales they say they spend
more time selling to DEC than to the customer. It is absolutely true.
We need to fix that first before we will get out of this slump.
|
1496.22 | Were we all so lucky????.. | CANYON::NEVEU | SWA EIS Consultant | Thu Jun 20 1991 20:06 | 15 |
| Re. 19
Maybe your happy DEC relocated you to Silicon Valley, and maybe with
two incomes you may even be able to afford your new home there without
DEC's paychecks.... But I don't think the folks re-located to
Oklahoma or Washington State will share in the golden economy of
Silicon Valley... Yes, the Massachusetts economy is in shambles and
most other places present a better opportunity, but without contacts or
very large demand for your specific skill set, you will find just
keeping food on the table an interesting exercise in your new found
home. I know I had a better network in the east, then I do in Phoenix
and opportunity is often only as good as your network.
|
1496.23 | surely isn't Kansas--just GSG
| FRYE::CASEY | | Tue Jun 25 1991 15:06 | 16 |
| Guess I'm one of those "partially trained" COD II folks mentioned a few notes
back. Since I relocated to Maryland via COD on 04/01/90, I've been trained to:
- Support these database engines & layered products on VMS: dBASE, Rdb,
Ingres, Informix, Oracle, Sybase.
- Support these on U*IX (mostly SCO & ULTRIX): Ingres-ULTRIX/SQL, Informix,
Empress, Oracle, Sybase.
- Manage a VMS VAX, including tuning and demonstrating these
products: DECdecision, DECtrace, RdbExpert, DECwrite, DECpresent, and
all the VMS performance and tuning software.
GSG no longer needs the above, so I'm in the "at-risk pool" of people--5 of
the 8 who relocated via COD, including the 1 woman and 2 blacks who came. We'll
be "downsized" from DEC on July 8th.
|
1496.24 | Does not compute | PNDSCM::MORSE | | Tue Jun 25 1991 15:41 | 22 |
| Regarding, .23, assuming no other issues such as performance issues,
I just can't believe someone with your skills is at risk. If there
is a method to the madness, I don't see it. I wish I could offer
some job leads. I can only hope that we don't see these talented
ex-DECies out there selling Oracle against us!
Is it me or is this whole "right sizing" process taking on a more
and more surreal air to it?
-> "DO the right thing" by going to the field (COD), just to be laid
off?
-> "More feet on the Street" = more feet in unemployment?
-> Sales support and EIS people in strategic areas such as database,
Unix, etc... being laid off?
-> Digital wants to be player in SI, but lays off its project,
technology and industry expertise that its invested in over the
past 3 years.
This is difficult to understand.....
|
1496.25 | not performance - we're just not good old boys
| FRYE::CASEY | | Tue Jun 25 1991 17:02 | 10 |
| No, performance isn't it. One of us has 12 years with DEC, is a solid 2
performer, and has 4 certificates of merit from field service for his work
with external customers. In January, I was nominated for Information Management
Partner (that's database); in April, my performance review had mostly 1s and
2s, after 12 months with the group and 7.5 years with DEC.
They just don't believe they need what we know.
I always swore I'd never compete against this company, but after the
severance and unemployment run out...BUT NEVER ORACLE, Heaven willing.
|
1496.26 | 'tis a silly place | COOKIE::SIMON | | Tue Jun 25 1991 17:05 | 20 |
| re: .-1
My own personal favorite, per my own situation, is that a personal
situation is requiring me to locate to a partiular (unnamed, to protect
the guilty) district area in the northeast. An EIS manager, with whom
I have had 2 interviews, wants to bring me on board as an "opportunity
manager" (business development; doing bids and proposals, etc.) but
can't get his boss to OK a slot to do business development, despite the
fact that minimal/no relocation would be required, I'm an internal
hire, etc.
Last time I checked, based on places I've been before and from running
my own business, that if you don't have anyone doing business
development, you very shortly won't have much business. It sounds like
the philosophy is still to "wait until the customers break down our
doors to do integration work for them" rather than what seems to be
reality: it's a tough climate out there and someone needs to be
bringing in the integration business or we'll shortly be seeing TFSO 5,
TFSO 6, TFSO 7, ....
|
1496.27 | reference correction | COOKIE::SIMON | | Tue Jun 25 1991 17:08 | 1 |
| .26 should refer to .24, not .25; notes collision.
|
1496.28 | Life outside of Digital | VIA::SMEGOL::COHEN | | Tue Jun 25 1991 17:21 | 7 |
|
Good experience with relational databases and/or system management
(either VMS or U**X) are very desirable skills to have. DEC's loss
will be another company's gain. I know that doesn't make your
situation any easier.
Bob
|
1496.29 | thanks for the good words | FRYE::CASEY | | Tue Jun 25 1991 17:46 | 4 |
| Thanks for the words of encouragement. Those in our own group who'll remain
(mostly the U*IX-only folks) rarely speak to us anymore. That includes our
cost center mgr, who did the recruiting in MRO. I try to remember that, if
this package is like the last, we can come back in just 2 years.
|
1496.30 | | SWAM1::PEDERSON_PA | i got caught in a gravity storm | Tue Jun 25 1991 19:05 | 3 |
| re: .29
...but would you *want* to come back?
|
1496.31 | "Would you believe..." | AIWEST::ARVIDSON | Just look at the size of those tomatos, Jack! | Tue Jun 25 1991 20:02 | 14 |
| RE: <<< Note 1496.23 by FRYE::CASEY >>>
What's GSG?
Are you telling us...
...that no one in your unit/district has sold a VAX w/VMS over
the past year?
...that the installed base of VAX/VMS customers have hummin' machines?
...that none of your customers have any databases?
...that, maybe, you are a less senior redundant resource? Someone
else, who's been w/the group longer, has this expertise?
This doesn't jive.
Dan
|
1496.32 | | FRYE::CASEY | | Wed Jun 26 1991 10:01 | 37 |
| Re .30: Yeah, I'd like to come back. Out here in the "field" isn't "my
Digital," the place that gives to charities, values differences, sends
Ken-Olson-signed letters when your father dies and does what it can to enable
its people...you know, all that stuff that makes us different from Wang and
its layoffs. That Digital makes some pretty hot hardware and darned elegant
software and is becoming a decent systems integrator, too. If that Digital's
still around somewhere, I'm still dumb enough to want to work there.
Re .31:
>What's GSG?
GSG=Government Systems Group. My piece of it = Government DCC, Technical
Services. Until 3 weeks ago, we put together the hardware/software solutions
for Government bids estimated at, usually, $50million or more. 4 of our folks
won the PCLAN bid for DOD that was written up in "Digital Today" 2 weeks ago.
>Are you telling us...
> ...that no one in your unit/district has sold a VAX w/VMS over
> the past year?
Right. Only VMS bid was to NASA and the results aren't in yet. Everything
else architected/bid was U*IX-DOS. Under reorg, the DCC's only emphasis on
VMS will be in health care support, but even Digital Standard MUMPS now
is ported to ULTRIX so that will likely start to skew away from VMS.
>...that the installed base of VAX/VMS customers have hummin' machines?
>...that none of your customers have any databases?
Philosophy here is "after it's sold, someone else will support."
>...that, maybe, you are a less senior redundant resource? Someone
> else, who's been w/the group longer, has this expertise?
Hard to tell. But it looks like the expertise will be bought from SWS ACES
if it's needed.
|
1496.33 | re: .32 | SWAM1::PEDERSON_PA | i got caught in a gravity storm | Wed Jun 26 1991 11:33 | 15 |
| re: .32
"coming back"....I'm in the field, too, and was part of
COD I. In talking with some friends from back east, the
whole "direction", atmosphere and "family feeling" there
USED to be with DEC is long gone. I've noticed this feeling
since coming to the field (and thought it was just because
I was away from the GMA), but even the GMA folks are feeling
the same thing I am.
I, too, miss the "old DEC". Having been with DEC 14 yrs, I've
seen a lot of changes and downturns. The business climate during
those times seen to remain positive....but for the last 3 yrs,
there's been an *awful* lot of negative waves, bad decisions,
etc.....this is a self-fulfilling prophecy.
|
1496.34 | Another COD casualty... | SAHQ::SULLIVAN | | Wed Jun 26 1991 12:11 | 40 |
| Like the basenoter, I left a secure job (at T and N in Littleton, MA)
to relocate (to the Proposal Design Resource Center in Alpharetta, GA)
thinking that I was helping the company as well as myself. Now, I also
am "at risk."
I hit the deck running here, contributing to a successful DEC proposal
to McNeil Consumer Products in Penn. a few weeks after relocating.
Since then, I have worked on several winning proposals. Everyone with
whom I have worked has been very pleased with my performance. Several
letters of commendation have been sent to my manager(s).
My performance is not the problem -- my "function is being downsized."
Unfortunately, my skills are not technical. I have been a writer and
editor for 17 years with DEC, and have a broad knowledge of our
products and services, but I am not a technical expert in any one
field. I feel that the ability to communicate clearly in writing is
almost as important to successful selling as having the right products,
but apparently those who make the decisions do not agree.
So now, not too many years from retirement age, I find myself forced
into the job market. I am not terribly optimistic about my chances,
judging from what I've heard from other mature job seekers.
Ironically, when I was in the process of relocating, a couple of people
said to me, "What would prevent you from going through the relocation
and then quitting DEC after a few months?" And I naively replied, "Oh,
I wouldn't think of doing that. I have a real commitment to DEC, and
feel very loyal to the company." Well, I guess it doesn't work the
other way around.
If the rumors are true (and most of them have been), July 8 will be the
day. In the meantime, I'm going on vacation next week and hope I can
completely forget about DEC and what has happened to it in the last few
years.
read this, pl
|
1496.35 | Re: .34 | SAHQ::SULLIVAN | | Wed Jun 26 1991 12:15 | 4 |
| The last line of .34 is not a plea to "Read Me" but an inadvertent
leftover that should have been deleted.
Anne
|
1496.36 | Is There Not ONE Good Manager Left?? | COOKIE::LENNARD | Rush Limbaugh, I Luv Ya Guy | Wed Jun 26 1991 13:13 | 33 |
| My God, how sad! If this is really what's happening to good Digital
people, then I hope we don't make it!
COD is/was another example of the super-hyped, high-visibility,
Corporate-funded fiasco that we are so good at. The now defunct
Target Sales Force being another example. I think we truly believed
that all we had to do was put enough feet on the street, and the good
old days would magically reappear. BTW, IBM has had exactly the same
experience with their massive move of resources to the field....zero
additional revenue.
BTW, what's the isssue with the blacks and the woman? Why even bring
it up? You're not remotely suggesting that they should have some form
of special consideration, are you?
What's forcing these ill-advised lay-offs is the mindless
implementation of the New Management System (Management?). Managers
are looking ONLY at business they feel really comfortable with, and
then staffing and budgetting just for that. NMS will kill us. Who's
gonna take a chance, and keep valuable resources around? Not our
average manager, that's for damn sure.
BTW, IBM has not yet had any form of involuntary separations. They
are depending much more on the voluntary/early retirement route. I
cannot understand why we don't do the same.
Finally, I see a report this morning saying that DEC may take a $750M
write-down for FY91, and move the 9-10,000 numbers previously mentioned
up to 15,000. It's absolutely amazing! We're committing Corporate
suicide exactly on the DG/Wang model.
Well, at least I feel better now.....no, I don't. I really feel like
crying.
|
1496.37 | | WAYBAK::LEFEBVRE | Blessed are the cheese makers | Wed Jun 26 1991 13:34 | 4 |
| It would be interesting to see what response future programs such
as COD get in light of these developments.
Mark.
|
1496.38 | Minor nit | NEWVAX::PAVLICEK | Zot, the Ethical Hacker | Wed Jun 26 1991 15:05 | 10 |
| re: .32
> ... the place that ... sends Ken-Olson-signed letters when your
> father dies...
FYI: This happens even in the field. I got a KO letter when my father
died a couple years ago.
-- Russ Pavlicek @DCO
(who works in the same office park as you do, if I'm not mistaken)
|
1496.39 | | COOKIE::LENNARD | Rush Limbaugh, I Luv Ya Guy | Wed Jun 26 1991 15:20 | 6 |
| re .37 ...... One would hope that any future corporate wet dreams
like COD would get the response they deserve...might one suggest
"studied indifference"?
What ever happened to that great Zereski-sponsored upheaval to
reevaluate everyone in the field?
|
1496.40 | It happened... | NEWVAX::PAVLICEK | Zot, the Ethical Hacker | Wed Jun 26 1991 17:40 | 9 |
| re: .39
> What ever happened to that great Zereski-sponsored upheaval to
> reevaluate everyone in the field?
As far as I know, everyone in our district (at least) had new
performance appraisals done. So, I think most people were "upheaved".
-- Russ
|
1496.41 | it happened in April--but results weren't factored in
| FRYE::CASEY | | Mon Jul 01 1991 10:59 | 7 |
| Our managers in the Government DCC were told that they had to re-evaluate
everyone who hadn't had a review in calendar 1991. Reviews had to be done
by, approximately, April 15th. One manager reviewed his 20 people; the other
still has done nothing.
Upshot: The reviews had nothing to do with deciding who'd be axed on July 8th.
A number of 4 performers remain; several 1 and 2 performers will go. Go figure.
|
1496.42 | Does Ken know? | DPDMAI::GUYER | | Wed Jul 03 1991 13:04 | 3 |
| Can Ken really be aware of what is happening at this level? If he is,
he's not the guy I thought he was. If he's not, someone should tell
him. I can't believe he knows.
|
1496.43 | this is a very long morning
| FRYE::CASEY | | Mon Jul 08 1991 12:00 | 40 |
| At 11:45 this morning, I'll get my--do we say "exit" or "layoff" or "fired"?--
interview. We knew, implciitly, that this would happen this morning.
But, no, we weren't sure until our manager's secretary came around at 9:30 or
so to tell us when our interview was scheduled today.
Here's a quick profile of the four people who'll be let go from the Government
DCC this morning:
- We all came via COD II. The first, 14 months ago; the last, 7 months ago.
Wives gave up their jobs "up north" for the move; children changed schools;
a baby was born in Virginia, far away from the mother's family.
- We have a combined total of 51 years with Digital.
- None of us made the relocation because our pre-COD jobs had been eliminated.
- We have a total of 7 university degrees, 5 of them in engineering.
- We include 1 Electronic Publishing Partner, 1 very senior networks/comm
engineer, 1 storage design engineer with 20 years' Digital experience,
1 Information Management Partner.
- On our last (April 1991) performance reviews, we got mostly 2s, a few 1s,
a couple of 3s.
- As a group, we don't have many non-Digital friends in the Landover area yet,
because we've worked so many nights and weekends trying to succeed.
I'm the one single person of the four. Now wishing fervently that I hadn't
believed the COD promises and left my mother, sister, brother-in-law,
godchildren, and friends in Massachusetts to come to Maryland. I've learned
a lot, technically, in 14 months and that should make it easier to look for
a new job. But I've also learned, I think, some limits to commitment. For
better or worse, the new employer will be just that. And when he asks for a
year-plus salary freeze, believe that I'll start looking somewhere else.
Digital's taught me that loyalty is emphatically a one-way street.
|
1496.44 | | LABRYS::CONNELLY | Television must be destroyed! | Mon Jul 08 1991 12:07 | 10 |
| re: .43
> - On our last (April 1991) performance reviews, we got mostly 2s, a few 1s,
> a couple of 3s.
How is this possible with only four people? Or does each person's review
contain multiple numbers?
paul
P.s. good luck
|
1496.45 | I read it this way... | SANBDO::GRANT | Give me a VAXstation 9000 | Mon Jul 08 1991 13:02 | 5 |
| > - On our last (April 1991) performance reviews, we got mostly 2s, a few 1s,
> a couple of 3s.
I believe the noter meant that each person got mostly 2's on the various
areas of their goal sheet, a few ones, etc.
|
1496.46 | it's all part of the plan | JUPITR::BUSWELL | We're all temporary | Mon Jul 08 1991 13:42 | 14 |
| re.43
be glad they gave you a ride to Maryland.
You could be here with your friends and family all looking
for the same few jobs!
Remember the goal is to cut head count without killing Ma.
So first you move them to other states/then you lay them off.
Good luck.
buzz
|
1496.47 | Farewell Digital | ODIXIE::SILVERMAN | | Mon Jul 08 1991 17:52 | 9 |
| First they came for my neighbor and I did not complain, next they came
for my friend and I did not complain, now they come for me and there
was no one left to complain.
So far two out of four COD people in my group have been TFSOed. I am
waiting for them to get around to me either in the next few minutes or
Tuesday. What a waste.
Goodbye, Mike
|
1496.48 | what has this company turned into..? | AUNTB::RICCI | | Tue Jul 09 1991 09:44 | 18 |
| I am waiting for them to come for me.... I am in a sales office of
15 people (winston salem NC) and had 3 COD people walked out yesterday.
They were looking for me but I am on vacation. I am attempting to stave
off the process...don't know why..other than there are other
departments hiring my skill. I was part of the TDP which was 9 months
long including the extended Ultrix curriculum and internship. I was
hired with the expectation that I would not be able to contribute
before Q1 of 92. I was, however, finding ways to contribute. The work
station business (we are a 3 member team) made our numbers for the
year... My previous job is solid and theyare hiring more.. I spent 17
years in this company and am morally outraged that they would pull me
1000 miles from home, took a beating on my house, took alot of short
term loses, and now am being cut. I thought we had a 2 year commitment.
I have drafted a letter to KO and will enclose my clock tower badge.
This company once prided itself on doing whats right...even built the
company on it as one of its 17 basic principles of operation...
bob 'who dosen't know who this company is anymore'
|
1496.49 | What is the Q1 "package" for the unlucky? | CADSYS::HECTOR::RICHARDSON | | Tue Jul 09 1991 11:14 | 18 |
| Ugh, some pretty grim stories in this note! I know a couple of other
people affected by this who have not chosen to tell there stories here,
also - makes me wonder how many COD people have been cut?
Can anyone say if the Q1 "package" for the unlucky folks getting tapped
this week is the same deal as the one for last quarter? Or is it less
generous? The Globe had an article last week that said that DEC was
supposed to make an announcement to its employees yesterday about
layoffs for the new fiscal year, but no one here (HLO) heard anything,
not even my boss, so maybe whatever the current "package" is was only
announced to those immediately impacted??
I really wish this company was not making it up as we go along - even
in organizations that have not been cut much (we have gone from 92
people to 87 people here in the last fiscal year) people are very
nervous, and it is impacting productivity.
/Charlotte
|
1496.50 | | VCSESU::MOSHER::COOK | Harvester of Sorrow | Tue Jul 09 1991 11:24 | 8 |
|
> The Globe had an article last week that said that DEC was supposed to
> make an announcement to its employees yesterday about layoffs for the
> new fiscal year,
Yep, about 2,000 people got an "announcement" yesterday.
/prc
|
1496.51 | KISS OF DEATH | POBOX::MULLIGAN | | Tue Jul 09 1991 13:11 | 21 |
| COD and TDP appear to have been the kiss of death for many DEC
employees and their families. My husband and 4 other COD/TDP
people in his unit alone were given their walking papers yesterday.
One year ago next Monday I was saying good-bye to my husband for
5 months as he journeyed back East to retrain for his new position
in Sales Support. It was a tremendous sacrifice to be separated for
all those months but we were under the false impression that it was
good for my husband and good for Digital. In retrospect it was only
good for the Princeton Park housing people, the car rental people,
the airlines and any other groups who Digital spent money with to
train and relocate all those COD/TDP people. Because they spent a tone
of bucks......
If I sound bitter and disappointed it is because I am. I have lost
faith in this company to "do the right thing".
I'm not sure if there are any COD people left to read my message but
I'm not sure if those that are left are the lucky ones or not.
(The package was the same as TSOF2 and TSOF3).
|
1496.52 | "It's true... I read it in the newspaper!" | ESCROW::KILGORE | I am the captain of my soul | Tue Jul 09 1991 13:29 | 24 |
|
FWIW, the following comes from that controversial internal publication,
digital today, dated yesterday, "Questions answered about downsizing":
Q: COD moved lots of people into field positions. Have the number of
COD participants been adversely affected?
A: COD employees have not been disproportionately impacted.
Of course, the following is also quoted from the same article:
Q: Why weren't we given an opportunity to find other jobs in other
organizations?
A: We have made the decision that we would have a common announcement
date for each employee and that everyone would have equal
treatment to look at opportunities outside the company.
Say whu-ut??
(Prediction: the 8-July publication will become a collecter's edition
for many of the "proportionately affected"...)
|
1496.53 | Accepting a new position wasn't a choice? | AIWEST::ARVIDSON | Just look at the size of those tomatos, Jack! | Tue Jul 09 1991 15:50 | 32 |
| RE: COD and all that
As I described in an earlier note, I'm a COD transplant. Cross-country
in fact, Marlboro, MA to San Diego, CA. I take some exception to
thoughts and opinions related here by other COD folks.
Regarding a disproportionate number of COD people being let go, that's
to be expected. For example, before I accepted the new position,
I considered:
- the state of the company: voluntary separations were happening
and I deduced that involuntary separations were around
the corner
- new job: my MA job was secure, my new job would be insecure
because it is a job with new tasks and responsibilities
that I would have learn and quickly become proficient
in, I'd be lowest on the seniority list, etc.
- new manager: I interviewed the manager more than the position.
This person was critical to my staying w/the company
and making it in my new position. If I couldn't trust
the persons guidance there was no sense taking the job.
After throwing all of this into the 'risk equation', my wife and I
decided to take the risk. We chose the danger.
The exceptions to the above are the COD people who took DCC jobs, these
jobs were questionable to begin with.
Regarding the people who stated they were extracated from their jobs
and homes, are they saying that it wasn't their choice to move? They
had no say in the matter?
Dan
|
1496.54 | Yes, but... | BOSACT::CHERSON | inquiring minds want to know | Tue Jul 09 1991 18:01 | 16 |
| >The exceptions to the above are the COD people who took DCC jobs, these
>jobs were questionable to begin with.
You're reading into the govt. DCC case, for the most part COD was transfer to
district sales and sales support.
>Regarding the people who stated they were extracated from their jobs
>and homes, are they saying that it wasn't their choice to move? They
>had no say in the matter?
Of course they made the choice, but it was misinformation that led them to that
choice. UM's took all these people in because there was 18 months of corp.
funding. Those managers who are responsible planned for the post-corp. funding
peiod, those who were irresponsible didn't, but it wasn't their heads who
rolled yesterday.
|
1496.55 | No corporate funding... | SANBDO::GRANT | Give me a VAXstation 9000 | Tue Jul 09 1991 21:18 | 7 |
| In our district the corporate funding was removed after the COD
hires hit the field. Since some unit managers were influenced in
their decision by the 'free' labor idea, losing the funding didn't
help the situation.
By the way the above represents an opinion since I'm not a unit manager
and wasn't involved in the hiring process.
|
1496.56 | The risks were known? | ACESMK::WILLIAMS | | Wed Jul 10 1991 09:22 | 27 |
| I recall the COD process when the ISWS organization in Merrimack
disbanded and was merged with IM&T. Many of the 60 or so people went
to COD and interviewed for field positions. I also recal their
comments after the interviews in which they were told that some of the
positions were being funded through July 1991 but that beyond that,
there were no guarantees.
I have to say that these folks were informed of the risks and that the
guarantees were just not there. Many of these people were positioned
to make a choice as to whether they would take the chance in the field,
knowing the risks, or taking a "safe" job. I agree with the noter who
states that the risks were known, for the most part. I hate to sound
insensitive to those who have been on the receiving end of the
cutbacks, but the risks were there and were known.
When taking on this type of interview, it is important to ask the right
questions also. Perhaps some of the folks, who are now surprised by
the cutbacks, didn't ask the right questions. I do know that most of
the folks I am acquainted with did.
In summary, I can feel the pain that these folks are experiencing. I
can also imagine how I would feel if I were on the receiving end of the
current economic woes. Perhaps I will be some day. I guess I'll have
to take the responsibility for my own actions if it does happen. It's
not over yet.
D_W
|
1496.57 | IMHO | SCAM::GRADY | tim grady | Wed Jul 10 1991 12:22 | 16 |
| I think it's a shame that some COD people are being let go after only a
short time in their new, relocated field positions.
I think it would have been more humane either to exempt them from the
layoff, or to offer to move them back - to put things right, as it
were. Shipping them off to a remote location and then bagging them a
year later just doesn't sound fair. It takes a couple years to recover
from a move, and it can take that long to establish yourself in a
totally new organization. Whether they knew the risks or not, and I
sincerly doubt that they really did, I don't think they're getting a
fair deal.
BTW, I'm a field Sales Support person, for the past six years, not COD.
tim
|
1496.58 | Not told everything... | ESGWST::GERBERG | | Wed Jul 10 1991 13:29 | 39 |
| I have to respond to .56's note...
I accepted a COD position during COD III. I moved across the country
for a job that as it turned out, didn't remotely resemble the job I
accepted. We were never told anything about the 18 months of corporate
funding. I didn't ask because how should I have known to ask? I have
never in the past had to ask about who was paying my salary. I did ask
about the security of my job before I accepted it so I did realize that
I was taking some sort of gamble.
As it turned out, the COD position for me was intolerable and I have
fortunate enough to find a different position within Digital. But, I
have tremendous sympathy towards everyone in COD... so much was not
told to us... so much changed within months of starting our new jobs...
those in my old group were here at most 6 months before we had to be
reviewed for this series of layoffs... of those 6 months, at least 4
months were spent in training...so after 2 months of real work, we were
evaluated against a new process of goal sheets... not only did we not
have a chance to prove our worth...we were guinea pigs for this new
process of goal sheets... and those of us in COD who came from
Corporate out into the field never had a clue as to what goal sheets
were... For instance, I was working as a Technical Writer in MA, I came
out into the field to work in a proposal center... now as a writer, you
would think that your writing skills would be what is evaluated as part
of judging your ability to do your job...nothing was mentioned on my
goal sheet in relation to my writing ability....my ex-boss relied on 2
months of gossip to come up with my review..
To say the least, I am extremely grateful that I have managed to be
hired back in an engineering environment...But I will help anyone in
COD fight or express their feelings of abandonoment and poor treatment
by Digital... the company has been doing poorly, that is true, but
those of us who chose COD positions took personal gambles without
having been told everything about these positions...
As it has been said many times already... the Digital that we once knew
is no more...
Judy
|
1496.59 | | ALOSWS::KOZAKIEWICZ | Shoes for industry | Thu Jul 11 1991 01:56 | 21 |
| re: .54
In rough terms, approximately half of the COD transfers were to DCC's.
Of the remaining 50%, approximately half of those landed in New England
districts.
As far as corporate funding goes, it was pure backpedalling from day 1.
The original agreement was no expense and no budget for 18 months for
anyone transferred through COD. That was immediately interpreted to
mean only COD hires above BOD headcount. After a couple of months,
it was changed again so that only expense relief was granted; DM's were
expected to carry full budgets for people who were supposed to be
learning new careers.
There is no question that culpability lies both with those who invented
the process without demanding solid business plans for using the people
and the hiring managers who applied no discretion in hiring way above
what their business could support.
Al
|
1496.61 | | ASICS::LESLIE | Andy Leslie | Thu Jul 11 1991 03:44 | 3 |
| Well, the basenoter's VMS account can still receive mail....
- andy
|
1496.62 | Not all CODs | SCAM::KRUSZEWSKI | Z-28 IROC & Roll in FLA | Thu Jul 11 1991 09:13 | 11 |
| From an another view, the COD people that were moved into our sales and
support organization were for the most part very talented and hard
working contributors. The problem we had, not anymore after Monday, is
management went wild with this idea of "free" bodies for 18 months. We
took on more people than we had business, the economy went in the can,
and the rest is now history.
Interesting to note our accounts group lost a total of 9 people only
three of which were COD.
Frank
|
1496.63 | How many? | AYOV27::ISMITH | Off to Severance City | Thu Jul 11 1991 09:31 | 6 |
| There are lots of disturbing stories here of people being evacuated to
the sticks before being dumped, but it is hard to get a feeling for the
numbers involved. Any guesses? Of course it shouldn't be happening at
all, but what is the magnitude of this debacle?
Ian.
|
1496.64 | Comment from a non COD person | CIMNET::MCCALLION | | Thu Jul 11 1991 09:48 | 19 |
| I hestitate to enter into this discussion. You all are aware that
managers who have the power,position or what ever it's called to put
you on the list of the ones to be let go, are reading this particular
note carefully and are taking names.
NO, I don't know the manager's name. I do know a person from COD, that was
let go the other day and that the manager mentioned his participation
in this note.
My comments: The cost that DEC paid for this COD person in the
15months he was involved totaled more than 250K. To have spent that
kind of money for what resulted in him working 6 months and then
letting him go seems so unbeleavable to me. I have known him for over
17 years.
BUT, hey, seems the headhunters in his area are telling him he was
severly underpaid and that there are many opportunities for him TODAY.
If he had been let go here, there are no jobs...
Murphys Law: His wife was let go from her non-DEC job on Tuesday.
|
1496.65 | Maybe it was a good idea at the time | AUSTIN::UNLAND | Sic Biscuitus Disintegratum | Thu Jul 25 1991 06:05 | 15 |
| I think that COD was a gamble that both Digital and the employees
lost out on. DEC spent tons of money to relocate and retrain people
in attempts to stave off layoffs that *could* have started two years
ago. Then DEC laid some of them off anyway, causing personal hardship
and yet more expense to the company. I truly sympathize with those
in the COD wringer who were conned in one form or another; many were
never told that lots of risks were involved, and that DEC could and
would change the rules after all the agreements had been struck.
Perhaps it would have been better if DEC had simply started the layoffs
sooner without attempting the COD programs. Certainly Wall Street
would have been pleased ...
Geoff Unland
|
1496.66 | Good story line... Loosier Implementation | CANYON::NEVEU | SWA EIS Consultant | Thu Jul 25 1991 14:51 | 19 |
| I think the most distrubing aspect of doing COD was that it enticed
people from positions in which they performed well at and were not at
risks of being laid off from into positions where they were not fully
prepared for and now are highly at risks to being laid off from.
The program cost Digital millions, created disruptions when qualified
employees left positions they knew how to perform and performed well in
because they accepted the challenge to contribut more to the company in
a new role. Unfortunately, their training never allowed them to con-
tribut to the level expected and management's grab for free resources
reduced the opportunity to contribut effectively. Now that management
is not being effected but the loyal Digital employees who attempted to
help their company by moving to the field are no longer here to contri-
but to Digital's success...
Is their any wonder why those remaining question when they will be
asked to leave???
|
1496.67 | | RICKS::SHERMAN | ECADSR::SHERMAN 225-5487, 223-3326 | Thu Jul 25 1991 18:34 | 6 |
| re: -.1 Interesting. I don't think that it was planned in advance to
entice folks to take positions from which it would be easier to lay them
off. I may be doubtful of managment, but I would prefer to attribute
this to incompetence rather than nefarious intent.
Steve
|
1496.68 | Does incompetence or nefarious intent make a difference | CANYON::NEVEU | SWA EIS Consultant | Mon Jul 29 1991 16:24 | 50 |
| Steve,
I too would attribute this to incompetence rather than nefarious
intent, except for two incidents which bear on the issue.
A recruiter/manager from Atlanta told an associate
of mine during COD-3, that Digital had designed
this program specifically to disperse people out
of Massachusetts so that when they lay-offs came
as they surely would, Digital would not impact a
single local economy. The funding was specifically
designed to bootstrap some people into positions
which were pipe dreams (if they person turned the
dream into reality then they would have a job next
year otherwise they would be out on the street).
Needless to say, my associate did not accept the
recruiters offer to relocate to oblivion.
A recruiter who was not successful in filling his
positions in Los Angelos complained to me that the
program was flawed because he was looking for spe-
cific talent which he knew there was marketability
for but did not exists in the numbers he needed.
Shortly after the COD-3 event funding for training
and first year expenses got cut off preventing him
from offering people he had carefully screened the
jobs he was trying to fill.
It seems that timing (ie business that had been worked on for months
or years prior to the COD events) and/or critical skill shortages
produced positions which allowed COD personel to survive July 8th.
But many of the positions offered were highly speculative and manage-
ment was not necessarily truthful about the chances for individual
success. Managers were encourage to take the money and attempt to
grow business where none existed, and the individual contributors are
now paying for the speculation. One might fault the contributor for
getting themselves into this situation and not recognizing the risks!
I can't fault them as much as the management that led to their depar-
ture. If would have been much more comfortable with termination based
on performance (past and present), than what appears to have been ter-
mination based on assignment of the day! Some manager convinced the
individual contributor to take this job (work on this project, etc...)
and now the job no longer exists and the individual contributor no
longer works for Digital. The manager that convinced them that this
was the best thing they could be doing for Digital, of course still
has a job, maybe not as a manager but still employed by Digital!
|
1496.69 | | RICKS::SHERMAN | ECADSR::SHERMAN 225-5487, 223-3326 | Mon Jul 29 1991 16:56 | 13 |
| Well, you've got me there. I can't tell whether such actions are any
worse or better if due to incompetence or nefarious intent. It looks
like there were people in the corporation who called the situation
correctly. One wonders, prompted by what I read here, whether there
existed some agenda that was not widely known or understood. Either
way, I doubt that anything like COD (that is, a voluntary program to
displace and retrain the troops) will ever be successfully run
again because of the mistrust created in upper-level decisions and
commitment to those decisions. This is really a shame because it is
just this type of thing that Tom Peters credits IBM with as being one
reason why IBM has been able to avoid layoffs over the years.
Steve
|
1496.70 | We agree - wrong message sent | CANYON::NEVEU | SWA EIS Consultant | Mon Jul 29 1991 18:06 | 12 |
| Steve,
One also wonders why upper level management allowed the situation
to erode its ability to motivate employees to strive for what's
best for the corporation. It will take a Herculean effort to
convince people that reskilling is in their interest and attempts
to react to market pressures will be resisted for fear that getting
marketable skills is a sure path out the door. All the wrong mes-
sages in the environment we now find ourselves in. The only class
of employee apparently exempt from this foolishness is management
itself, but can even they beleive what they are told?
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1496.71 | | RICKS::SHERMAN | ECADSR::SHERMAN 225-5487, 223-3326 | Mon Jul 29 1991 21:54 | 3 |
| I agree.
Steve
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1496.72 | If deal seems too good to be true, it probably is... | SUFRNG::REESE_K | just an old sweet song.... | Wed Jul 31 1991 11:25 | 27 |
| Not all field managers jumped at the chance to take advantage of
getting a "free" body. I was speaking with a sales rep in a remote
area who had been asked to sit in on the interviewing process with
a COD person. The rep said the COD person definitely showed that
he had the ability to become a viable support person.....and the rep
was later surprised to find out that the hiring manager decided not
to make an offer.
When the rep asked his manager why he hadn't extended the offer, his
manager told him that he had observed too many past programs....where
someone would dangle a carrot and then snatch it back later. The
hiring manager said he had a bad feeling that the relocation cost
offer probably would be withdrawn.....and if this were to happen,
his cost center would then have to absorb the relo and it would have
a negative impact on his existing employees. The manager said the
COD person was anxious to make the move....but had admitted his
wife and children weren't too keen on the idea.....apparently not
everyone in Massachusetts wants to live in Florida :-)
Obviously, this was one manager whose gut instincts were correct;
he made it clear he didn't have a pipeline into any information to
back him up early on, it was just a feeling that he had at the time.
Time has proven that manager right....
Karen
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1496.73 | That's PN alright | ACESMK::WILLIAMS | | Thu Aug 01 1991 17:08 | 8 |
| RE .70
I've worked with this individual over the past 3-4 years and must
express my continued awe and his ability to focus in on the root causes
of a problem. Perhaps that's why I enjoyed working with him so much.
Keep up the good work PN.
DW
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1496.74 | Someone apparently thinks this is a non-problem | NEWVAX::PAVLICEK | Zot, the Ethical Hacker | Thu Aug 15 1991 09:02 | 16 |
| re: COD layoffs
I recently received a memo which claims that the percentage of outplaced
COD people isn't unusually large (please note that this is the claim
of the memo's author, not me).
Since I don't have permission to print the memo here, I will simply
quote from a small section:
"Only 18% of the field reductions were COD hires. This represents only
a 7% reduction of the COD placements (150 out of more than 2200)."
If I understand the statement correctly, that would put the number of
(U.S., I presume) field people "outplaced" at roughly 834.
-- Russ
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1496.75 | Tapped, go find a Job! | HSOMAI::SKIEST | | Thu Aug 15 1991 11:16 | 14 |
| Just got the word, go look for a job! I have about 30 days to relocate
in DEC. I'm a 14 year veteran, originally a Systems and Programming
Guru. Now a Sales Support Consultant since Feb 1990.
Would like to stay in sales support, but am open to all challenges
at DEC. If you know of any opportunities for a seasoned DP person
please contact me via A1 at HST Skiest or ushs01::Skiest .
HOping to be around another 14.
Thanks in advance
Alan
Resume on request
441-6035
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1496.76 | | CSC32::J_OPPELT | Royal Pane and Glass Co. | Sun Aug 18 1991 13:35 | 8 |
| There is still sporadic hiring here at the CSC in Colorado Springs.
My group (VIA -- layered product customer support) has filled all
its slots. But there are still other groups that were hiring
quite recently and may very well still be.
Contact our personnel folks out here. Try DTN 592-5106.
Joe Oppelt
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