T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1768.1 | It might be a question of what is honorable | GIAMEM::JLAMOTTE | twenty-eight and counting down | Sat Feb 15 1992 17:14 | 14 |
| Companies institute policies for a variety of reasons. I think the
tone of the base note is simplistic and it is anecdotal.
I have not noticed people sitting around...there is to much work to
sit. I have heard folks talk about the what if's...what if I stay,
what if I leave.
I know there are some folks that got jobs right away, but there are
folks out there that have been out of work for over two years.
This process isn't easy...I personally think the company and the
employees are trying hard to do what is right and get on to the
business of making the best computers on the market.
|
1768.2 | TELL IT LIKE IT IS!!!!!!!!!!!! | EJOVAX::JFARLEY | | Sat Feb 15 1992 17:25 | 11 |
| Truthfullness and honesty should be the absolute byword starting
from "THE IVORY TOWER" down. We are all mature adults, we know things
are bad out there. Let's be honest about impending lay offs, get a
definite answer on early retirement, and really find out what we will
producing/selling to bolster the company. Why do we have to be treated
like "mushrooms"????? I do not like the "game playing" that is going
on. If you are going to do it, then do it so I can get on with my life
and carreer.
IMHO
John
|
1768.3 | | BAGELS::REED | | Sat Feb 15 1992 17:38 | 14 |
|
Re .0
For what it's worth dear noter.... There are GD few folks in
this neck of the woods that are finding jobs after DEC within
six months, many (many!) are still looking after a year. College
Grads with great experience. See, around here we've had Prime, DG,
Unisys, Wang, IBM, and many itty-bitty outfits putting people out
on the street.
I'm dammed glad I work for DEC, but if worse comes to worse, I'll
be glad it was DEC that let me go, just because of that "bonus".
|
1768.4 | gimme a break! | CSC32::K_BOUCHARD | Ken Bouchard CXO3-2 | Sat Feb 15 1992 20:01 | 13 |
| Just my little input: In most states (maybe every state,I don't know) a
person who has been laid off is not eligible for unemployment until
his/her compensation from the employer has run out. That means that a
person who got the maximum buyout and can't find a job for whatever
reason,can't collect unemployment for at least 77 weeks. Not
surprisingly,states like that. States like that so much,that they just
might offer some tax breaks to a company with a policy of decent
packages.
Don't get me wrong! I'm sure DEC isn't laying people off for tax
breaks,this is still a people company. But,in my opinion,there is more
than one reason for "generous" packages.
Ken
|
1768.5 | | CFSCTC::AHERN | Dennis the Menace | Sun Feb 16 1992 09:44 | 16 |
| >Just what does Digital Equipment Corporation owe its employees?
>I believe that it should all come down to 'a fair days work for a fair
>days pay'.
I think you have something backwards here, but assuming you meant to
say that DEC owes its employees a fair day's pay for a fair day's work,
I submit that it's not such a simple equation. Many employees chose
to work for DEC, and continue to work for DEC, more because of the
quality-of-[work]life than because so many hours equals so many
dollars. In the past year there has been some erosion in the non-$
compensation areas, yet people continue to go the extra yardage when
the effort is called for. Right now, most people are working
hard to turn things around, but if it ever gets down to "another day,
another dollar" then we will have lost it completely.
|
1768.6 | | LABRYS::CONNELLY | NH Write-in Jimmy Carter '92! | Sun Feb 16 1992 10:51 | 45 |
|
"What does Digital owe its employees" in what sense? Legally? Morally?
There should be one answer to the former. I'm sure there are as many
answers to the latter as there are opinions about morality (in other words,
this is the rathole variant of the question).
One thing that would make it fairly easy to answer the former would be if
Digital had some sort of basic "contract" that stated its requirements of
employees and what obligations it agreed to take upon itself if those
requirements were met. In the last year or two, however, it seems as though
the company has moved away from such a position, by adding a proviso to the
Policy and Procedures that says they are only guidelines and are subject to
interpretation by management and should in no way be taken as legally
binding on the corporation.
I'm sure this was probably done at the behest of someone in the Legal Dept.
that was interested primarily in protecting the company from lawsuits. But
it does have negative implications. Personally i'd rather see the company
commit to a fairly simple contract with employees that states what the
general expectations for employees are, including those of managers to
their reports, and what the company will make a best effort to ensure as
compensation (salary, benefits, quality of worklife, etc.) when those
expectations are met. To a large extent that will be market-driven.
I think one of the most common things that people seem to want is simply
"good management". This means a certain level of fairness, consistency
and competence. Maybe we should be benchmarking overall management
practices of well-managed companies to see how far short we're coming up
now, and what needs to be done to correct problems. Examples of things
that i see management being knocked for in this conference are: lack of
communication, allowing local (in whatever sense) politics to take
precedence over the global needs of the company, setting unclear or
conflicting priorities, dragging out decision-making to the detriment of
employee morale and team spirit (with things like our famous "perpetual
reorganizations" and more time spent on redefining roles and organization
structures than on ensuring that necessary work gets done), etc.
Maybe we should look on these as quality problems and just grit our teeth
and try to address them using known quality techniques. To some extent
the problems of Digital management are probably endemic to American
industry as a whole, so maybe we need to look at how the best non-American
companies work as well as how quality American firms work.
Is this rocket science? I doubt it.
- paul
|
1768.7 | | 16BITS::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dog face) | Sun Feb 16 1992 12:00 | 13 |
| re: .0, Dave
While I agree with the fact that it is unreasonable for people to be
"looking for" a decent package, etc., the fact that reasonable TFSO
arrangements are available from DEC is one of the few things that still
separates DEC from a lot of other companies letting people go these
days. In a life before DEC, I was once layed off with a statement of
"Your check for this week's pay will be in your mail at home next
week." Not even a handshake. I think the fact that DEC is willing to do
better than that has a lot to do with keeping people around. DEC
hasn't turned into Wang or DG yet.
-Jack
|
1768.8 | Digital owes the same thing it expects... | TPSYS::BUTCHART | TNSG/Software Performance | Sun Feb 16 1992 18:06 | 16 |
| re .0
> I believe that it should all come down to 'a fair days work for a fair
> days pay'.
Gee, and I thought a lot of complaints in this conference had to do
with short term thinking... Now we're reducing it to one day at a
time?
Companies that expect to be around for the long run need to get
considerably more from their employees than one days work at a time.
And vice-versa, of course. But the kind of loyalty needed to build a
company that will last is not bought with "a days pay", but with
considerably dearer coin.
/Dave
|
1768.9 | | MU::PORTER | Patak's Brinjal Chutney | Sun Feb 16 1992 18:07 | 31 |
| Morally, I think DEC tends to owe more than a "fair day's pay
for a fair day's work".
Your phrasing implies sympathy with the hire-em-fire-em
attitudes which are more commonly seen in assembly-line
jobs. Along with that attitude goes ideas which treat
workers as interchangeable cogs ("resources", as we
say in the New DEC), and to which the workers quite
reasonably react by doing precisely what their jobs
require and nothing else.
Me, I don't want to work like that.
DEC in the past has been a place where people have been
willing to put in more-than-necessary-effort, in part because
they're nerds and dweebs (like me), but also because company
culture implicitly promised that it would look after its
employees.
Fairly obviously, DEC can't afford "jobs for life" for all
its employees - the economy is in such a parlous state that
even politicians recognize it (sometimes). And certainly,
we got ridiculously fat in the '80s. But to claim that
DEC owes no more than "a fair day's pay for a fair day's
work" would be a shameful about-face on the company's
previously-espoused values.
Now maybe I'm reading more into what you wrote than you
intended. But you certainly implied that DEC's responsibility
to us workers should end as soon as we walk out of
the factory gates, oops, I mean office doors.
|
1768.10 | | MU::PORTER | Patak's Brinjal Chutney | Sun Feb 16 1992 18:09 | 2 |
| Hmm, .8 said what I wanted to say .9, only he
said it much more succinctly.
|
1768.11 | Honesty comes first | SICVAX::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney in New York | Sun Feb 16 1992 21:19 | 8 |
| I agree with .6 and characterize this as a muddle sorting out legal,
moral, short-term, long-term, etc. semantics around "owe".
I'll concede that it's not within Digtal's ability to succeed in the
marketplace. That's too uncertain.
What is within Digital's ability is honesty, consistency, and equity,
the latter two being consequences of the first quality.
|
1768.12 | What is a fair days work...? | BONNET::BONNET::SIREN | | Mon Feb 17 1992 03:51 | 20 |
| In the beginning of industrial era workers were needed to work 12-14
hours days. It took generations to improve the situation to the status
where western world was some years ago.
It seems to take a lot less to fall back now when world and
technologies are radically changing again. We are already required
to work considerably more than 8 hours a day while others are loosing
their jobs. This is especially true in information technology indus-
tries. And in this too, Japanese are giving the model. If we want to
maintain our values in Digital and in western world in general, we
need to think really creatively, not only to copy Japanese models.
In here we can see an analogy with what a western computer expert said
from Russians some years ago: "As long as they copy us, they will stay
behind us".
I believe that we have lost our values and we have not found the new
ones and thus we do not know what to do.
--Ritva
|
1768.14 | It makes long term sense! | AKOCOA::GRANFORS | Define Storage Area HEAD_GAMES | Mon Feb 17 1992 11:47 | 16 |
| I don't view it so much an issue of "what does Digital owe it employees" as
what makes good business sense. My belief is that DIGITAL intends to continue
to be a major player in the computer industry for generations to come. Although
there is a current downturn that is very difficult to manage through, the
top management at DIGITAL believes that eventually DIGITAL will come out of this
a stronger and wiser company. It also believes that its most valuable asset
will continue to be its people.
Although we are currently oversized, eventually DIGITAL will have to start
hiring again if it continues to be a major player 10, 20, and 30 years from
now. In order to attract the most talented people in the future, it will be
necessary to demonstrate that DIGITAL values its employees in good and bad
times. When the top people of the year 2000 are all being courted by IBM, HP, and
DEC, it will be in DIGITAL's best interest to be able to stand on their
excellent record of treating people in a manner that will compare favorably
with the other major players.
|
1768.15 | Is it too much to ask that they play by the rules - | DENVER::GRAY | THERESE | Mon Feb 17 1992 12:06 | 8 |
| Digital owes us a true attempt at being the company our policies and
procedures say we are. On paper (or on-line) Digital sounds just like
the kind of company I want to work for.
In reality, it seems that we are currently putting more and more
distance between what we say and what we do.
My two cents.
|
1768.16 | NO UNEMPLOYMENT! | GLDOA::LAETZ | | Mon Feb 17 1992 15:46 | 4 |
| Someone said that you cannot get unemployment. I this true?? Anyone
know for sure?
Jolene
|
1768.17 | | BAGELS::REED | | Mon Feb 17 1992 15:52 | 6 |
|
You cannot get unemployment immediately. After your "package"
runs out, you can/will get unemployment.
FACT!
|
1768.18 | You get what you reward | HAAG::HAAG | Dreamin' on WY high country | Mon Feb 17 1992 20:56 | 21 |
| Dave,
Frankly I think most people have not struck on the importance of your
topics title. Our perception of the answer to that question drives our
efforts and turns us into what we are and what we contribute to the
corporation. In a nutshell, measurements/rewards/punishment drive
behavior. And in the last couple of years I have seen some pretty
stupid actions performed by otherwise intelligent people based entirely
on what they felt (real or otherwise) DEC would do (or not do) for
them.
And right now I don't think the vast majority of the people in this
corporation have a clue of what to expect from DEC in the next
six months, year, or whatever. So while we may view DEC from many
different perspectives we must also realize that DEC doesn't owe us a
single thing beyond what is required by law. Not lifetime employment.
Not a package. Nothing. For better or worse. Times change.
The wars rage on, and on, and on....
Gene.
|
1768.19 | | ROYALT::KOVNER | Everything you know is wrong! | Mon Feb 17 1992 21:31 | 21 |
| Somehow this thread reminds me of an old Tom Lehrer line:
"Life is like a sewer - what you get out of it depends on what you
put into it."
This applies to both the company and the employee.
Yes, Digital owes its employees only what the law requires. Conversely, we owe
Digital 40 hrs per week of competent work, and we are free to look for another
job any time. Some people will always put in extra effort, no matter what the
company does, and some will put in the bare minimum (or less). But in general,
you get what you pay for.
A good "package" can help in the long run. While it might not make people work
harder, it could help keep people the company wants to keep from jumping ship
for the first rowboat that passes by, knowing, that should they get pushed
overboard to lighten the ship, at least they'll be given a rubber raft. After
all, you don't want the people manning the pumps to abandon ship.
And for those who want to go, well, if there are enough of us to man the pumps,
I'd say, give them their raft. For now, I'll just keep pumping. From down here
in the bilges, I don't see any islands to escape to. Just sharks.
|
1768.20 | enquiring minds...... | NECSC::ROODY | | Tue Feb 18 1992 10:01 | 55 |
| re - a bunch
Maybe a sidebar to this note is "What do Digital employees owe
themselves?". And in retrospect I wonder if people aren't expecting DEC
to make up for a lack of delivery by themselves to this question.
For example, How many Digital workers of any age could find work at a
comparable salary to the Salary they make now *if* they were only 31 years
old again? How many 31 year old Digital employees could make the same
money they are making now if they lost their current job? (I only ask
this to remove any potential arguments over age discrimination, that's
important but is masking a broader problem - do people have skills that
are of value to others?). Would this topic exist if the answer to these
questions were "YES!".
The answer to this may not just depend on the lack of economic leadership
we see today, or on the devaluation of skills in the job market (a certain
result of same). Maybe a good portion of this is due to a lack of real
current day skills (and no, unfortunately, having designed the PDP-11 or
Rainbow does not necessarily mean you have any current marketable skills)
people possess.
How many Digital workers of any age take classes on a regular basis to
prepare them to either do their current job better or understand the job
that people under them or next to them do on a day to day basis? How many
actually have a goal for their next job and are working towards gaining
the skills to perform it? (A personal note: I've seen people who are
almost constantly in training who don't seem to learn, or who are only
after the piece of paper, and aren't really trying; this isn't what I
mean)
How many Digital managers could do the jobs of the people who work for
them or even understand those jobs? And yes, I realize this isn't an
absolute requirement, in some cases it's expected (tech support is a good
example); in some cases that is.
And yes, a lot do, but are they the ones who are worried?
And these are all questions because methinks the answers are different for
every person. I realize many good people can end up in the wrong place at
the wrong time with a good toolkit and still be out of work for a while. I
also wonder where this "Digital owes me..." attitude comes from.
And how about one last question to really stir things up?:
Does having participated in the development of a highly successful early
product or technology, such as the PDP, DECnet or VAX, entitle a worker to
an annuity benefit in perpetuity, regardless of current performance, and
regardless of any perks they may have received along the way (e.g. Stock
Options and Grants)?
Now back to your regularly scheduled discussion.
|
1768.21 | Get a real job | MSDSWS::RCANTRELL | | Wed Feb 19 1992 08:41 | 20 |
| regarding the last three notes:
These people have said all that can be said! What the company "owes"
its employees is nothing. We can seeking a job at Digital, not the
other way around. Personally I think the packages are very generous of
the company to help its people get back on their feet should they be
TFSO'd. Of course, those of us who have been fortunate enough to stay
may think otherwise,but the ones who have been let go really appreciate
it.
Regarding -.1
Being at the "30" age I can speak from experience that what DEC pays
its employees is very competitive. Thats why most people want to stay
where there at. If you consider what we are doing (Sitting here
voicing our opinions on the many notes files that we seemed to have
created instead of being out in the field earning DEC some money), I
think that ALL of us are paid very well.
Rick
|
1768.22 | 10 more years | CSC32::MCDEVITT | | Wed Feb 19 1992 09:16 | 12 |
| I have to tell the person that wrote last input. I did not come
looking for a job at Digital, they came after me and managed to
talk me into the job. I have never regreted going to work for
DEC. They have treated me good.
I give DEC a good days work for a good days pay. That is what I
owe DEC.
I would like to get another 10 years with DEC, so if they want
to get rid of me, I want top dollar from them.
Bob
|
1768.23 | ! | ELWOOD::LANE | | Wed Feb 19 1992 11:52 | 4 |
| re .22
I'm tempted to go absolutly ballistic in response to this... this...
Heck with it, I've got work to do.
|
1768.24 | Thank goodness for reply .14!!! | CSC32::SCHONBRUN | | Wed Feb 19 1992 12:06 | 6 |
| I find it amazing how unsophisticated most of the replies
in this note really are!
I think the only reply that hit the target is .14
I don't know who he/she is but thank goodness the company
has at least one person who understands how our business
works!
|
1768.25 | Let it all hang out | CSC32::MCDEVITT | | Wed Feb 19 1992 12:10 | 7 |
| re.23
Don't hold it back friend. Let it all hang out.
Maybe you could let us know what you do for DEC?
Bob
|
1768.26 | | WUMBCK::FOX | | Wed Feb 19 1992 13:02 | 5 |
| re .23
Note he said "if they wanted to get rid of me", not "when I feel like
leaving" or something to that effect. I'm not crazy about the
attitude, but it's not as bad as some said here in the last week
or so.
|
1768.27 | Confusion abounds! | SAHQ::HUNTER | | Wed Feb 19 1992 17:24 | 9 |
| As an employee AND a stockholder, DEC owes me the effort to run this
company in the most efficient manner possible!
In my opinion, they are not doing that!
Can I leave? Absolutely!
Do I want to leave? I don't know! THAT IS THE PROBLEM, many of us
simply do not know anymore.....
|
1768.28 | I.M.N.S.V.H.O. | ELWOOD::GROLEAU | SOMETHING VERY IMPRESSIVE | Thu Feb 20 1992 09:54 | 24 |
|
_ OWE _ =
To be in debt to.
To be obliged for.
If a person has been compensated _OWE_ should not apply.
Re: 22 A ?
Did they offer you a job for life ?
As you can see.................
Pro. DEC.
Dan
|
1768.29 | Loyalty should be a 2-way street. | ELWOOD::BERNARD | | Thu Feb 20 1992 12:19 | 27 |
|
As a long time employee finishing up 24 years with DEC, I have seen
a ton of changes and thousands of people come and go. I have an opinion
concerning what I think DEC owes its "dedicated and loyal" employees.
There are many of us who have attended 10 year, 15 year, and 20 year
dinners and rapidly approaching 25 years. At each of those dinners I
remember hearing Ken Olsen or Jack Smith tell us how it was people like
us who made Digital successful, and that we were appreciated. Jack
Smith has frequently told one of his favorite stories about how he
arrived in Westminster one Saturday morning at the end of a quarter
in a blinding snowstorm. He was astounded to see the parking lot full
and people buzzing like bees to "make the quarter" No doubt there were
some there strictly because they were making extra money, but over the
years that scene was repeated lots of times. People who worked in
Westminster, Westfield, Springfield, the Mill to name a few all
remember that we made a huge contribution to the success of DEC.
There are folks around who have doing a good job for this company for
many years and I think that DEC owes them the same loyalty that they
have shown the company. DEC should bend over backwards to see to it
that those loyal and dedicated people are not the victims of what
appears to be a helter-skelter, shoot-from-the-hip layoff policy.
Now this idea may not appeal to some of the more recently hired
employees but long term service, dedication, and loyalty should
mean something.
My 2 cents.
|
1768.30 | the new world disorder | BIGJOE::DMCLURE | Just say Notification Services | Thu Feb 20 1992 13:40 | 17 |
| re: .29,
> Jack Smith has frequently told one of his favorite stories about how he
> arrived in Westminster one Saturday morning at the end of a quarter
> in a blinding snowstorm. He was astounded to see the parking lot full
> and people buzzing like bees to "make the quarter" No doubt there were
> some there strictly because they were making extra money, but over the
> years that scene was repeated lots of times.
In the new digital it is apparently ok to be "there strictly because
they were making extra money" just as it is ok for digital to transition
people strictly in order to make extra money. It's all just business
after all, nothing personal right? That's the American way...
-davo
p.s. ...the American way to hell in a handbasket that is...
|
1768.31 | | SAURUS::AICHER | | Thu Feb 20 1992 13:51 | 12 |
| If all it came down to was a fair day's work for a fair day's pay,
I'd be contracting again and DEC would be paying me up to twice
what I'm making for my services.
Unfortunately the big reasons for being a Digital employee,
what they call a "permanent" job and good benefits,
are dwindling.
DEC benefits by getting loyal, tireless workers.
What does DEC owe its employees? Everything.
Mark
|
1768.32 | | FIGS::BANKS | Vice President in charge of VMSMail | Thu Feb 20 1992 14:23 | 7 |
| A manager (not at DEC) once told me that it was pointless and dangerous to be
more loyal to your employer than he is to you. (Interestingly, it was his way
of telling me that perhaps my loyalty to him was misplaced, but I still think
it's good advice.)
Right now, I'm not really sure how loyal DEC is to me. Perhaps this explains my
on again/off again loyalty towards the company.
|
1768.33 | | SQM::MACDONALD | | Thu Feb 20 1992 15:02 | 20 |
|
Re: .29
A story worth repeating.
No one comes to work on a Saturday in a blinding snowstorm for
money. They come because the company does the same thing for
them when they need it. That has nothing to do with pay. What
you describe is loyalty and you can't pay people to be loyal.
You can only get that by treating them the right way. If all
Digital owes us is pay at the end of the day then the game comes
down to sell what we do to the highest bidder. It ain't personal.
It's business. Loyalty is personal.
Digital ought to remember a simple saying: What goes around comes
around.
Steve
|
1768.34 | | WUMBCK::FOX | | Thu Feb 20 1992 15:18 | 13 |
| re .33
> Digital ought to remember a simple saying: What goes around comes
> around.
There's another one that seems to be true more often than not
in industry: "Nice guys finish last".
I'd rather have DEC alive, than have it try to keep everyone
happy while it slowly runs itself out of business - or taken
over by someone far more bottom-line minded than what we
have now.
John
|
1768.35 | nice guys finish first - bad guys don't get to play very long | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Thu Feb 20 1992 15:28 | 13 |
| > There's another one that seems to be true more often than not
> in industry: "Nice guys finish last".
My experiance runs the other way around. I don't do business
with companies that treat me badly. And companies that treat
their employees badly seldom if ever treat their customers any
better.
Managers who treat their people poorly get poor performance in
return. Managers who take care of thier people get taken care
of by their people.
Alfred
|
1768.36 | | SQM::MACDONALD | | Thu Feb 20 1992 15:40 | 19 |
|
Re: .35
>Managers who treat their people poorly get poor performance in
>return. Managers who take care of thier people get taken care
>of by their people.
Yes, and extended, you could say that companies that take care of
their employees get taken care of by their employees.
The number of employees is not the reason we are in this mess. At
most it is a symptom. The root cause is that we cling desperately to
old ways that aren't serving us well anymore. That is dragging us down
faster than having a few too many heads.
Steve
|
1768.37 | More Info? | FREEBE::DEVOYD | | Thu Feb 20 1992 16:26 | 14 |
|
Re: .36
> The number of employees is not the reason we are in this mess. At
> most it is a symptom. The root cause is that we cling desperately to
> old ways that aren't serving us well anymore. That is dragging us down
> faster than having a few too many heads.
I am interested in your thoughts on this. Would you care to expand?
|
1768.38 | | SQM::MACDONALD | | Thu Feb 20 1992 16:50 | 22 |
|
Re: .37
Certainly.
I think that many people believe that if we simply get rid of 20,000
people we'll be fat, happy, and competitive again. It just ain't so.
If we lay off 20,000 people and ....
o continue to dissatisfy our customers
o continue to be difficult to do business with
o continue to be technology rather than market oriented
o continue to follow the processes that brought about this mess
o continue to believe we're somehow unique
o continue to measure things that don't matter
o ....
then we'll just go down the tubes 20,000 heads lighter.
Steve
|
1768.39 | | WUMBCK::FOX | | Thu Feb 20 1992 16:50 | 20 |
|
> My experiance runs the other way around. I don't do business
> with companies that treat me badly. And companies that treat
> their employees badly seldom if ever treat their customers any
> better.
I've never seem a corrolation - and few are in a position to
prove your statement. One would need to work for as many
companies as one does business with - or at least a statistically
substantial amount. I'll also say that anyone who has worked
for that sort of number is not an average employee, and couldn't
give a representative opinion.
> Managers who treat their people poorly get poor performance in
> return. Managers who take care of thier people get taken care
> of by their people.
I agree, but if DEC refused to let employees go, the people would
feel they were being treated poorly when asked to take a cut
in pay, or something to the effect, to make up the difference.
John
|
1768.40 | If I were in charge... | GOLF::WILSON | | Fri Feb 21 1992 09:44 | 14 |
| re: 1768.34
>> I'd rather have DEC alive, than have it try to keep everyone
>> happy while it slowly runs itself out of business
Who says the two have to be mutually exclusive? Is there no way out
of this mess without continuing to value the asset that once made this
company great? It seems to me that happy, appreciated, and motivatd
employees are what is needed to put this company back on its feet.
You don't get that from employees who are constantly in fear of
getting the golden handshake, as many DEC employees have been for
going on two years now.
Rick
|
1768.41 | | WUMBCK::FOX | | Fri Feb 21 1992 10:27 | 27 |
| re: .40
>>> I'd rather have DEC alive, than have it try to keep everyone
>>> happy while it slowly runs itself out of business
>Who says the two have to be mutually exclusive?
Show me any company the size of DEC that *hasn't* done this when
faced with similar circumstances. In fact, not many have been
as generous as DEC. Most defense, auto and other heavy manufacturers
use massive layoffs - and they don't drag it out like DEC does.
At least when it's over, it's over.
>It seems to me that happy, appreciated, and motivatd
>employees are what is needed to put this company back on its feet.
I'm sorry, but that strikes me as a little naive. DEC's problems
won't be solved by its employees running around hugging each other.
This is a business, and making money should be the primary goal.
>You don't get that from employees who are constantly in fear of
>getting the golden handshake, as many DEC employees have been for
>going on two years now.
I agree DEC is doing this badly, just as the the ER is being handled
badly. Someone needs to step up and make the hard decision and
put an end to people's concerns. I don't like to be kept waiting
like the rest of us.
John
|
1768.42 | | SQM::MACDONALD | | Fri Feb 21 1992 11:17 | 29 |
|
Re: .41
>Show me any company the size of DEC that *hasn't* done this when
>faced with similar circumstances. In fact, not many have been
>as generous as DEC. Most defense, auto and other heavy manufacturers
>use massive layoffs - and they don't drag it out like DEC does.
That doesn't mean that massive layoffs are the wisest thing to do.
If you are having trouble being competitive then just showing people
to the door only looks good in the short run. It does nothing to
address the root cause of eroding competitiveness. As you say
auto, for example, has done this for years. Did it prevent the
eroding of their market to imports?
>I'm sorry, but that strikes me as a little naive. DEC's problems
>won't be solved by its employees running around hugging each other.
Who's talking about running around hugging each other. I don't hear
people saying that at all.
>This is a business, and making money should be the primary goal.
No one is arguing against this point. They're saying the model
you support for achieving it is the path to Chapter 11.
Steve
|
1768.43 | | WUMBCK::FOX | | Fri Feb 21 1992 12:36 | 22 |
| Re: .42
> That doesn't mean that massive layoffs are the wisest thing to do.
I'm not saying it is. I'm asking if there are examples of companies
the size of DEC getting through hard times without letting people
go. I'll admit even that isn't proof it the wisest thing, but it
certainly is proof that headcount reduction is a fact of life
hard-hit companies must deal with.
> Who's talking about running around hugging each other. I don't hear
> people saying that at all.
I wasn't being literal, of course. I'm referring to the statement
which implied that making employees happy and appreciated will
solve our problems. A little naive, wouldn't you say?
> No one is arguing against this point. They're saying the model
> you support for achieving it is the path to Chapter 11.
As I would if DEC did nothing but push people out the door. It
all has to be in conjunction with a solid plan to get DEC moving
again.
John
|
1768.44 | Do disgruntled, insecure employees work harder? | GOLF::WILSON | | Fri Feb 21 1992 12:51 | 13 |
| RE: Note 1768.43
>> I'm referring to the statement which implied that making employees
>> happy and appreciated will solve our problems. A little naive,
>> wouldn't you say?
Naive maybe, but I've been accused several times of never having become
"Digitized", and from what I've seen I hope to never be. And please,
if you're going to quote me, include the entire quote. I said happy,
appreciated, *AND* motivated. Now for sure, having all three does not
guarantee success for the company. But the lack of any of the three
increases the likelihood of failure (IMO).
Rick
|
1768.45 | | SQM::MACDONALD | | Fri Feb 21 1992 13:46 | 30 |
|
Re: .43
>I'm not saying it is. I'm asking if there are examples of companies
>the size of DEC getting through hard times without letting people
>go. I'll admit even that isn't proof it the wisest thing, but it
>certainly is proof that headcount reduction is a fact of life
>hard-hit companies must deal with.
No, it is only proof that headcount reduction is what they choose to
do about being hard hit. It says nothing about whether there are
other ways to address the problem or whether it even helps.
>I wasn't being literal, of course. I'm referring to the statement
>which implied that making employees happy and appreciated will
>solve our problems. A little naive, wouldn't you say?
No, I wouldn't. I think that is what you would like me to say.
Certainly I'm not suggesting that making employees happy and
appreciated by itself solves all problems, but it sure helps.
>As I would if DEC did nothing but push people out the door. It
>all has to be in conjunction with a solid plan to get DEC moving
>again.
Do you know what that plan is or if it even exists? I've seen no
evidence that there is one.
Steve
|
1768.46 | Can't compare DEC with the auto union | GOLF::WILSON | | Fri Feb 21 1992 14:31 | 31 |
| One other thing;
RE: Note 1768.41
>> Show me any company the size of DEC that *hasn't* done this when
>> faced with similar circumstances. In fact, not many have been
>> as generous as DEC. Most defense, auto and other heavy manufacturers
>> use massive layoffs
Are you saying that the industries you mention should be used as a model
for what DEC should do now? The American auto industry is struggling for
its very existence while the Japanese expand, so I don't know that I'd
use them or their methods as a role model.
Also, many (if not) all of the industries you mentioned are *unionized*,
which means that employees go for every red cent they can get when things
are good, refuse to do anything that's not in their contract at any time,
and *expect* to get laid off when things are bad. Is this what Digital
is going to be reduced to? Such has never been the case in the relationship
between Digital and its employees. The employees have always been willing
to go the extra mile to get the job done, willingly endure a wage or hiring
freeze for the good of the company, etc. Now we're reduced to the level
of those other industries, where we know when things are bad the company
may not be able to stand by us. That's all well and good, and may be what's
necessary for Digital to survive in today's changing environment. Just as
long as Digital understands that the special relationship that has disappeared
may make it harder to recruit or hold onto talented employees when the economy
and/or computer industry turns around.
Just MHO...
Rick
|
1768.47 | | WUMBCK::FOX | | Fri Feb 21 1992 16:04 | 33 |
| re .45
> No, it is only proof that headcount reduction is what they choose to
> do about being hard hit. It says nothing about whether there are
> other ways to address the problem or whether it even helps.
Why do we reduce headcount? To cut expenses, which are often too
high if a company if losing revenue. It doesn't take a genius
to know that removing people from the payroll will reduce
expenses.
> >I wasn't being literal, of course. I'm referring to the statement
> >which implied that making employees happy and appreciated will
> >solve our problems. A little naive, wouldn't you say?
> No, I wouldn't. I think that is what you would like me to say.
Well...
> Certainly I'm not suggesting that making employees happy and
> appreciated by itself solves all problems, but it sure helps.
What would you call someone suggesting it would then, other
than naive?
> >As I would if DEC did nothing but push people out the door. It
> >all has to be in conjunction with a solid plan to get DEC moving
> >again.
> Do you know what that plan is or if it even exists? I've seen no
> evidence that there is one.
I said *a* plan, not *that* plan, or *the* plan or my plan or
your plan or...
I'm saying reducing headcount is not the single solution.
John
|
1768.48 | | WUMBCK::FOX | | Fri Feb 21 1992 16:13 | 21 |
| re .46
>Are you saying that the industries you mention should be used as a model
>for what DEC should do now?
No. I'm saying we are being far more generous (and light-handed)
in how we reduce headcount. Other industries would have cut more
most likely, and done it without "packages".
> The American auto industry is struggling for
>its very existence while the Japanese expand, so I don't know that I'd
>use them or their methods as a role model.
Our auto industry isn't subsidized either.
>long as Digital understands that the special relationship that has disappeared
>may make it harder to recruit or hold onto talented employees when the economy
>and/or computer industry turns around.
DEC may not have the "job for life" image anymore, and if that turns
off future or current employees, fine, they'll have a hard time finding
a company that does have that image.
John
|
1768.49 | | SQM::MACDONALD | | Mon Feb 24 1992 09:05 | 31 |
| Re: .47
>Why do we reduce headcount? To cut expenses, which are often too
>high if a company if losing revenue. It doesn't take a genius
>to know that removing people from the payroll will reduce
>expenses.
Yes expenses are an issue, but I am saying that they are only
the symptom not the problem. Those expenses seemed just fine when
revenue was rolling in. Now suddenly they're the enemy. For sure
if we let people go expenses go down, but that won't do a thing about
the problem of why revenue is falling off. Revenue is falling off
because we aren't competitive. Our lack of competitiveness is
caused by the worn out old ways of doing things. A symptom of that
problem is the high expenses they are not the cause.
Again, I'm not arguing for or against layoffs, but that DEC has bungled
that so badly that many of us left have little or no confidence in the
company. So they've attempted to solve one problem and created a
bigger one i.e. very low morale. A lean workforce is of no use if
their confidence and morale are broken. What Digital has done is take
an aspirin for a brain tumor.
>I'm saying reducing headcount is not the single solution.
Fine so am I, but I and others are saying that the way of going about
the headcount reduction has created new problems that in the long run
will be more trouble than the 'excessive' headcount was.
Steve
|