T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1837.1 | | BTOVT::ROGERS | SERPing toward Bethlehem to be born. | Thu Apr 02 1992 14:48 | 5 |
| "And what," he asked disingenuously, "does .0 have to do with The
Digital Way of Working?"
Curious_in_Vermont
|
1837.2 | Looks relevant to me. | TRACTR::LEVY | | Thu Apr 02 1992 14:51 | 15 |
| We're in the throes of our own SERP today. I saw several parallels
in the basenote to the way Digital is heading.
I believe that much of the talent that is now being "TFSO'd" or "SERP'd"
away from the major corporations of today will be the innovative
drive of new and younger companies tomorrow.
It would behoove the TFSOing and SERPing company to ensure friendly
leave-taking because the employee leaving today will be tomorrow's
customer.
Just MHO.
Janet
|
1837.3 | | PBST::LENNARD | | Thu Apr 02 1992 16:38 | 3 |
| .0 is really interesting...but there's a continuing typo. Everytime
it should say "DEC", he writes "IBM". People should really be more
careful.
|
1837.4 | BINGO | PBST::CABLE | | Thu Apr 02 1992 17:13 | 11 |
|
re:1837.3
Dick,
You hit the nail right on the head.
... .0 could be used to accurately describe most of the companies
in America today.
|
1837.5 | | LABRYS::CONNELLY | Read My Lips: NO Second Term! | Thu Apr 02 1992 17:43 | 21 |
|
> IBM's new performance appraisal system actually
> determines which employees are most expendable by rating them, along a
> curve, according to their usefulness to the business and how well they
> do their job. The 5 to 10 percent with the lowest rating every year
> are put on 30 days' notice. Improve or be dismissed.
What is wrong with this (other than that 5-10% is probably too high a number
if this is done on a yearly basis)? Don't we complain that there's no rhyme
or reason to DEC's layoffs and that the "deadwood" stay well-protected? It
sounds as if IBM is at least trying to face up to the problem.
> For many, this presents a Catch 22. IBM's full employment policy
> means some departments are underutilized, leaving many employees
> without meaningful work that would allow them to earn a high ranking.
> Meanwhile, other workers are doomed by overwork.
This makes it sound like IBM must discourage people transferring on their own
initiative within the company. Otherwise those two problems SHOULD cancel
out, no?
paul
|
1837.6 | Sorry Charlie ... | NEBR::HARRISON | Knee High By The 4th of July | Thu Apr 02 1992 20:18 | 27 |
|
RE .0
> As a semiconductor design engineer, I was too specialized to
> qualify for many jobs outside of IBM, and too long in the corporate
> cloister to be seen as a desirable recruit. But retirement was a more
What a cop-out !
These three line beautifully illustrate this individual's problem ... not with
IBM, but with him/herself. Everyone owns their own career path ... and to
recognize when personal technical or business obsolescence creeps in (as
clearly stated above). Re-educate, retrain, find that next position before the
current job is gone.
I fully recognize that even individuals who are leading edge are caught in
re-organizations, down-sizings, etc. However, it's just THOSE individuals
who rebound to the next pursuit.
This person was betting on mother BLUE for protection, not on his/her
own responsibilities towards continuous personal improvement.
-Bob
|
1837.7 | | SANFAN::ALSTON_JO | | Thu Apr 02 1992 22:11 | 6 |
| re .6
At the almost inevitable risk of getting beat to death by
compassionate souls like yourself, I would submit that job hunting and
life is not always so simple.
John Alston
|
1837.8 | PRO and PRO | LUDWIG::LOGSDON | | Thu Apr 02 1992 22:55 | 32 |
| I find myself agreeing with both the base note and .6. Me thinks that
part of the problem is they both need each other and have forgotton the
fact. We need ambitious, self serving, self motivating people to move
ahead and talented, loyal, protected, people to work for, with and
finally produce the product that will make both sucessful.
If .6 had his or her way the following could happen and maybe it
should:
Company ABC is making computer XYZ. The team that makes XYZ started
it in 86, raised it to a fine mature line and finished product in 2
years and has been making money for ABC and of course themselves. But
ABC has been planning the next generation known as the NOP. ABC takes
a few XYZ people to start NOP but they can,t afford to dilute their
experienced mature line so they start hiring for NOP to be trained by
the few people from XYZ who have also been to trainning.
Now if .6 has his/her way all the people in running XYZ would see the
hand writing on the wall for end of life XYZ and quit, retrain and get
on with self and to hell with ABC and XYZ. But the fact is they are
loyal, like what they do and have done. They are ready
to do their best to the end. But they have been out flanked by a
changing market with less protection and NOP is the future...for now!
I,ll admit to being an old timer like the base note and have many of
the same feelings. I would like to understand many of the changes
that have taken place. One that stands out more than most is peoples
"Motives" in what and why they do things. We have always needed
"all for one and one for me" we just have alot more of it now.
Dennis
|
1837.9 | re-6 nobody is any good!! | EJOVAX::JFARLEY | | Thu Apr 02 1992 22:57 | 6 |
| re-6. Sounds like BS coming from a typical "manager type" who has lost
all perceptions of reality and what real life is all about. Is this a
blast from the "IVORY TOWER" boys?? Either crap or get off the pot
EHH!! If re-6 gave out PAs everyone in his eyes must be a 4.
IMHO
John
|
1837.10 | | HOO78C::ANDERSON | I hate quotation; R W Emerson 1849 | Fri Apr 03 1992 02:54 | 19 |
| Well it's a bit like working for the government really, you get a job
for life. If you are not used to selling yourself at interviews than
you may well lose all self confidence and end up like the author of the
basenote convinced that there is nothing else that you can do.
Not that long ago I was watching a chat show on TV. They were
interviewing a managerial type who had been fired (I dislike the
euphemism "lay off") and was moaning on about how could someone of
his age find work.
Next on was a fairly well known actor who was well into his sixties. He
really tore into the guy, pointing out that when ever a show closed or a
film ended he was out of work and had to go out and find a job. He said
that the longest job he had ever had lasted six months.
So I suppose that working for IBM has sort of institutionalized the guy
and he is now incapable of an independent existence.
Jamie.
|
1837.11 | I believe it's called a "conflict of interest" | COMICS::BELL | Hear the softly spoken magic spell | Fri Apr 03 1992 06:24 | 22 |
|
Re .6 & co
So that means that the people who flit from job to job (and are thus very
familiar with job-spotting, interview technique, training unrelated to the
work in hand) are the only ones worthy of sympathy if they get chopped while
the people who work 100% on their current job (exhibiting what used to be
called "loyalty" and "reliability") are to be treated with a "serves you
right for being so short-sighted".
Ever stop to think that some of the company's low productivity (and its
current situation) might just be connected with the lack of continuity,
the lack of responsibility and the lack of overall quality that this attitude
encourages ?
[ BTW, the actor vs long-service guy doesn't wash ... it's a real apples
and oranges comparison. Actors don't wait until the run finishes before
looking for the next show - you read the stage papers in the dressing room
and call up your agent to make sure they still know you're alive - see how
your manager likes you reading Computer Weekly during a customer visit ].
Frank
|
1837.12 | | HOO78C::ANDERSON | I hate quotation; R W Emerson 1849 | Fri Apr 03 1992 06:29 | 8 |
| Our manager goes mad if we are sitting reading anything other than a
manual when the customer's visit.
However if you don't like the comparison with actors how about using
contractors instead? They do the same jobs as us but are forever on the
move.
Jamie.
|
1837.13 | a small tip to fellow employee, glad to help | STAR::ABBASI | i^(-i) = SQRT(exp(PI)) | Fri Apr 03 1992 07:31 | 22 |
|
>Our manager goes mad if we are sitting reading anything other than a
>manual when the customer's visit.
That is Jamie, i'll give a good trick you can use to get around this,
pick one of those big orange manuals we have plenty of and put the
thing you *really* want to read inside the manual, make sure the edges of
the magazine dont show up, slide the magzine down if they do, and when
your manager is around the room, just raise up the manual up a little
just in case.
in school days, i always put my micky mouse magazine inside my
text book and read it during class, it always worked for me really
greate. i dont see why same idea wont work now .
i also agree with the last few about the IBM and DEC comparisons, i
tink it is really good ones.
..got to go, coffee time..
byu,
/nassser
|
1837.14 | | HOO78C::ANDERSON | I hate quotation; R W Emerson 1849 | Fri Apr 03 1992 07:45 | 5 |
| Actually Nasser as long as I am industriously typing on a keyboard
everyone thinks that I'm working, whereas in reality I'm writing
something completely useless, like this.
Jamie.
|
1837.15 | | PBST::LENNARD | | Fri Apr 03 1992 12:40 | 20 |
| I have to react to the actor analogy. In the Yew Ess of Ay, you are
dead meat in terms of employability of you are 50 or over...and you
get some pretty nasty feedback even at 45 or over. The stories of
over-50, highly qualified executives, layed off for years are too
numerous not to have credibility. 500 resumes with about 6 responses
seems to be the standard.
Face it people.......if you are over 50 in this country, there is
severe, on-going age discrimination. I know you may find this hard to
believe, but even Digital does it!!!
When the Target Sales Force closed down there were about 120 of us put
on-the-boat. After a year of full-time, heavy-duty internal job
searching five of us still did not have jobs. All of us were over 50!!
Personnel, of course, absolutely denied that age discrimination could
be part of the cause.
There will always be a demand for old actors as there are plenty of
roles where they are required. Not so in our MBA/Yuppy-Driven/High
Tech world.
|
1837.16 | where does it most exist? | STAR::ABBASI | i^(-i) = SQRT(exp(PI)) | Fri Apr 03 1992 14:06 | 11 |
| This age discrimination, is that only in private industry only?
I get the feeling it is , Iam thinking of academia, I dont think it
exist there, I've seen old professors going around, and they are
well paid and respected more for there knowledge and experience.
some full professors, who have been around for long time, are like
head of companies, you have to make an appointment with there secretary
days ahead just to ask them a question or two.
thank you,
/Nasser
|
1837.17 | TENURE | ICS::CROUCH | Jim Crouch 223-1372 | Fri Apr 03 1992 14:23 | 5 |
| Nassar, I believe that is called Tenure. Something you don't
see in the real world.
Jim C.
|
1837.18 | | CIS1::FULTI | | Fri Apr 03 1992 14:44 | 9 |
| re: .17
> Nassar, I believe that is called Tenure. Something you don't
> see in the real world.
I wonder if age discrimination was the root cause of TENURE...
- George
|
1837.19 | | DPDMAI::FEINSMITH | Politically Incorrect And Proud Of It | Fri Apr 03 1992 14:50 | 11 |
| There is one big difference between internal job hunbting in IBM and
DEC. After spending 11 years in IBM, I have a pretty good idea how its
works, and unlike DEC, if you want to look around the corp. in IBM for
a different job (unless they changed it since the end of 87), you
basically had to have your current manager's OK before you could even
interview. And he could lock you into your current group forever (they
claimed that after a period of time locked in, you could escalate your
complaint, but that often got nowhere). At least here, you can look
around.
Eric
|
1837.20 | same in DEC | STAR::ABBASI | i^(-i) = SQRT(exp(PI)) | Fri Apr 03 1992 14:54 | 6 |
| Here in DEC you can look around allright, but you are not supposed
to talk to another manager without first telling your current
supervisor or manager know what you'r doing. it is in the green
book in VTX iam sure.
/nasser
|
1837.21 | | DPDMAI::FEINSMITH | Politically Incorrect And Proud Of It | Fri Apr 03 1992 14:56 | 5 |
| Its one thing to have to "notify" your current manager. Its quite
another when your current manager can stop you from even looking
around. IBM's favorite buzz word was "critical skill".
Eric
|
1837.22 | comparing with EDS | STAR::ABBASI | i^(-i) = SQRT(exp(PI)) | Fri Apr 03 1992 15:12 | 10 |
| in EDS, internal transfer worked like this, you fill up a standard
form of your skills, your geographic preferences etc.. send the form to a
central department, they put your input into a central database that is
accessed only by managers from all over , if a manager is
interested , they call you and go from there, if you are good, you'll
get many calls during the day from all over, and you go from there.
I think the DEC system is more flexible for the employee.
/Nasser
|
1837.23 | It's just different, now... | CSC32::S_HALL | Gol-lee Bob Howdy, Vern! | Fri Apr 03 1992 15:14 | 34 |
|
On continuously looking vs. loyalty to the firm...
First of all, in the volatile environment that is
the computer industry now ( and likely forever ),
companies are liable not to hire people "for life."
I figure the odds of retiring from a given high-tech
company are very low. It'll be "boom and bust",
hire and fire from now on.
This means that the skills required to stay on
in a corporate, bureaucratic organization are
very different from the ones required to actually
make a good living, now.
Folks that want to get ahead will HAVE to flit from
job to job, with an eye on the next opportunity all
the time. They know that in the next economic downturn, or
after the next cancelled government contract, their
employers will cut them loose.
Why remain loyal, when no such loyalty exists from the
employer ?
The new high-tech employment model will be increasing
numbers of contractors and self-employed folks on
varying-length assignments.
Any gold watches we want will come out of our own
wallets.
Steve H
|
1837.24 | Re: .5 | STAR::PARKE | True Engineers Combat Obfuscation | Fri Apr 03 1992 15:19 | 12 |
|
>This makes it sound like IBM must discourage people transferring on their own
>initiative within the company. Otherwise those two problems SHOULD cancel
>out, no?
It is, sadly, in many cases true. My stepfathers wife works for them. A friend
of hers was threatened with firing when they looked at another department to
transfer out of their current posision (NOT under duress). 6 months later that
facility was shut doen and that friend was NOT offered a transfer to somewhere
else within the corporation as most others in the facility were.
|
1837.25 | | INDUCE::SHERMAN | ECADSR::Sherman DTN 223-3326 | Fri Apr 03 1992 15:25 | 3 |
| I think the "boiling frog" lesson applies here ...
Steve
|
1837.26 | Don't waste your time, you aren't going anywhere.. | NECSC::ROODY | | Fri Apr 03 1992 18:04 | 14 |
| Well, I'm sure you can find a number of people in DEC who would claim
that they have been "frozen" into their jobs by mgmt because they are
too valuable to lose; at least for a period of time.
I won't name anybody specific, but I have seen cases where manager x
puts the political squeeze on manager y, and all of a sudden the hiring
process stops (as in "sorry, we really don't have a position for you
afterall") or moves very slowly. Usually, this happens when both
report up to the same v.p., and product/project delivery is at stake.
It certainly isn't the rule, or policy for that matter, but *it
happens.
|
1837.27 | wasting people = wasting $$$ | LABRYS::CONNELLY | Read My Lips: NO Second Term! | Fri Apr 03 1992 20:35 | 30 |
|
re: .24
Well in that case the "psychological terrorism" scenario does sound more
accurate. If you're in a non-productive group and you can't leave it but
can only wait to get put on the "bottom 5%" list, the company certainly
seems to be endangering your sanity. (And, as has been mentioned, the
old Reaganesque "vote with your feet and leave the company" line doesn't
recognize any sort of long-term "investment" of employee in company and
company in employee.)
re: .26
> Well, I'm sure you can find a number of people in DEC who would claim
> that they have been "frozen" into their jobs by mgmt because they are
> too valuable to lose; at least for a period of time.
I've seen it threatened but rarely pulled off successfully. In reality,
claiming anyone other than the manager of some critical project as being
a "critical resource" should not be easy to defend.
If each individual supposedly owns 80% of career planning for themselves,
managers should still own 80% of providing the right skill mix for their
organizations and reskilling their people to newer technology when the
required skill mix changes. That's for the good of the company! And if
managers see the need for the work that the organization does decreasing
over time, they should make sure they keep their people grounded in reality
about that. Again, for the good of the company and that "reciprocal
investment" mentioned above.
paul
|
1837.28 | Treating People Fairly/Honestly | HAAG::HAAG | Dreamin' on WY high country | Sun Apr 05 1992 15:03 | 345 |
| I thought I would repost this here lest it be very much buried in my
metrics note. It's very applicable to this topic as well and is, IMHO,
dead on what's wrong with this company. It's rather lengthy and starts
out a little slow. But it's well worth the 5 minutes to read. The
higher ups could learn a great deal by practicing what this note
preaches.
Gene
<<< HUMANE::HUMANE$DUA1:[NOTES$LIBRARY]DIGITAL.NOTE;1 >>>
-< The DEC way of working >-
================================================================================
Note 1797.118 The Metrics Are Killing Us 118 of 118
HAAG::HAAG "Dreamin' on WY high country" 330 lines 3-APR-1992 20:08
-< Read the Following. It's Goodness >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
There is a LOT we (DEC) can learn from the following document. It talks
a lot about the subject of this topic. It's long, but definitely worth
reading. I encourage one and all to feel free to extract and forward it
at will. Please keep in mind this document is making the rounds thru
the mail systems on the EASYnet. IMHO, we (DEC) desperately need to
implement just about every evaluation stated in the following.
Rgds,
Gene.
************************************************************************
These notes were written by a Dupont employee who attended the Deming
seminar in February. There are many thought provoking remarks herein
regarding variable compensation for Sales, on performance management in
general, and the value of performance ratings. This is a long document,
but well worth reading.
DEMING SEMINAR
FEB 17-21, 1992
---------------
These are my notes from attending a seminar led by the
legendary Quality guru, Dr. W. Edward Deming.
There were about 600 people there including
representatives from: AT&T, Eastman Kodak, Exxon, GE, IBM, &
Merck. The session was sponsored by the Philadelphia Area
Council for Excellence (PACE) which is part of the
Philadelphia Chamber of Commerce. PACE's mission is for the
Delaware Valley to have world-renowned business success
through the teachings of Dr. Deming. PACE consists of
hundreds of organizations throughout the Delaware Valley area
including Hercules and ICI; Dupont is not a member. The
seminar was the 10th that PACE has sponsored featuring Dr.
Deming.
Key learnings from the seminar were:
* Although Dr. Deming is noted for Quality and
statistical process control, his central message is that we
must transform our approach to management of our businesses
in order to compete in the world.
* One must think of a business as a system. Following is
a simple model of key parts of a business system:
F <--------F <----------F <------------F <------------ F
! /\ ! /\ ! /\ ! !
! ! ! ! ! ! ! !
! ! ! ! ! ! ! !
V ! V ! V ! V !
A ---------> B ---------> C -----------> D ----------> E
WHERE:
A: Suppliers
B: Production
C: Sales
D: Distribution
E: Customers
F: Feedback to all parts of the system
The point is that all people in a system must think of
themselves as within a system since they can't realistically
isolate themselves from the system. The Aim (Purpose) of
the system and everyone in the system should be to work
together to optimize the system as a whole. That way everyone
wins.
* The key to improving a system is the method. It is
better to focus on a method of improvement rather than goals,
objectives or results. The numbers can be manipulated
especially in an environment of fear. He recommends companies
eliminate the MBO approach to management. A key question to
ask about improvement is: "By what method?"
* Deming recommends companies work to drive our fear.
Fear inhibits innovation and productivity.
* We must stop management tampering with the system.
Usually this is caused by lack of understanding of the
difference between special cause and common cause. This
results in management taking inappropriate action which
causes waste and lower productivity which is exactly the
opposite of what they hope to accomplish.
* Deming recommends that organizations become learning
organizations. We should create a "yearning for learning."
There is no substitute for knowledge.
* Deming recommends we create a constancy of purpose. We
need to stop short-term thinking and short term programs.
There is no instant pudding! We need a long-term commitment.
* We need LEADERSHIP not management or supervision to
accomplish the transformation. We need leaders that listen to
and serve the people.
* America is being ruined by "best efforts." Everyone
doing their best is not enough! The key is to work together
to improve the system as a whole. Deming conducted the famous
"Red bead experiment" where willing workers doing their best
produced red beads (defects) even though they were not
wanted. Deming's point is that we should not punish the
people for only doing their best; they can only produce what
the system will deliver. We must focus efforts on improving
the system.
* There is a natural distribution of capabilities &
contributions of people in a business system. The key is to
enhance and develop everyone and not destroy the will of
people to contribute to improvement of the system as a whole.
* Dr. Deming strongly recommends eliminating performance
ratings and rankings of individual people. He mentioned it
dozens of times during the session. He directed people to go
back to their work places and eliminate performance ratings
Monday Morning! Some of the key reasons discussed in the
seminar were:
- Ratings foster competition within the system.
- Ratings inhibit teamwork (limit interdependence and
cooperation).
- Ratings foster mediocrity. People tend to set safe
goals they can easily meet.
- Ratings increase variability since they represent
what Dr. Deming calls management tampering with the
system.
- Ratings cause focus on the short-term. Why try to
develop something for the long-term health of the
business if one is rated on annual objectives?
- Ratings tend to destroy intrinsic motivation (joy
and pride in work).
- One cannot separate people from the system. What we
might really be rating is the results of the system
and the "style" of the person. Dr. Deming says
that since people work within a system, only 3% of
the perceived performance is due to the people and
97% is due to the system!
- Ratings inhibit risk-taking and innovation. People
are afraid to admit mistakes especially to their
bosses.
- Ratings tend to destroy self-esteem.
- Ratings cause focus on pleasing the boss vs.
pleasing the customer.
- Ratings foster sub-optimization. This means that
people are not focused on the purpose of
optimizing the system as a whole. Individuals are
more worried about "What's in it for me?"
- Ratings focus on goals and objectives without
consideration of "By what method?"
- Ratings tend to reward style not true contribution.
- An individual's "performance" really can't be
measured.
- Ratings tend to focus on quantity not Quality.
- Ratings destroy morale and joy in work.
- Judging people does not help them do a better job.
- Ranking people is a FARCE. Apparent "performance" is
actually attributable mostly to the system not to
the individual.
- Ratings don't focus on improving the system.
- Having workers doing their best is not good enough
for business success.
- The ratings system punishes people; it creates
winners and losers.
- Ratings instill fear in people (carrot & stick
approach to motivating people).
- Ratings cause people to deny their true needs
for personal growth; they don't want to admit
weaknesses.
- Ratings destroy trust between people and managers.
- Ratings cause bosses to be judges rather than
coaches and counselors.
- Ratings causes bosses to talk more than they listen
to their people because of the power inequity.
- Ratings become a label that sticks with the employee
and limits growth and development. Top rated people
don't feel like they need to improve.
- Ratings cause humiliation of people who don't get a
top rating. It causes destruction of the will to
contribute.
- Bosses don't really know what people do and
accomplish even though they argue that they do!
- There is a lack of feedback from others in other
parts of the system as to an individual's true
contribution; note those others might be outside the
company.
- Employees get blamed for faults of the system.
- You really can't measure the contribution of an
individual within a system.
* Dr. Deming held up for public ridicule the recently
announced approach of IBM with forced-ranking of its people
and dismissal of the lowest ranked people! It sounds like the
early warning signal of the demise of IBM a once leading
people-oriented company.
* An American Cyanamid representative mentioned that
their R&D organization plans to eliminate performance ratings
for the Chemicals organization. The key contact was not
present so I plan to follow up.
* Representatives of many other organizations mentioned
privately considerable resistance with eliminating
performance ratings in their companies. The key seems to be
management's unwillingness to give up something they feel is
vital. Dr. Deming really challenged their thinking.
* Dr. Deming is also opposed to incentive pay for sales
people. Many of the reasons are similar to what is discussed
above but include:
- Sales people work in a system; they don't work in a
vacuum. It's unfair and arrogant to only reward
sales people with extra pay. Many other people
contribute to the sales but are excluded. This
causes anger of the others and does not work towards
optimization of the system as a whole. The notion of
"pay at risk" for the sales people is not an answer
to the dilemma; sales incentives for sales people is
a divisive program!
- Sales incentives may cause the wrong behaviors on
part of the sales personnel, eg: they might oversell
a low profit item just to boost sales. Any attempt
to design around this can be beaten by the sales
people. After all they are clever, hard-working
people!
- Sales incentives can't truly measure contribution
to the system as a whole, eg: mentoring, developing
future markets, etc.
- Sales incentives tend to cause sub-optimization.
- Sales incentives foster internal competition and
interfere with "Doing the right thing."
- Sales incentives create expectations and once
achieved may create negative feelings if managed
in what is perceived as an arbitrary way.
- Sales incentives lose incentive over time and can
demotivate.
- Money tends to be the value system in business. It's
a poor replacement for emotional valuing that people
need so much.
- Managers claim that sales incentives measure the
performance of individuals but they're really
measuring the result of the system in which the
individuals work.
- Sales incentives bring out the worst in people. They
create a short-sighted, selfish behavior focused on:
"What's in it for me?"
* Deming recommends that profits of the business be
shared equitably with all people in the business.
* He recommended that in a business downturn we take
action in the following order:
1. Reduce dividends.
2. Reduce bonuses of top management.
3. Reduce management salaries starting from the top
down to the middle of the hierarchy.
4. Workers are asked to accept pay cuts or a reduction
in force through attrition or voluntary discharge.
My personal recommendation to anyone reading this is to
try to attend a Deming seminar as soon as you can. Dr Deming
has tremendous wisdom to impart focused on what will make
business successful. Since he is 91, he won't be with us for
long. He has an amazing schedule of 18 seminars left in 1992;
if you'd like to attend one, I'd be glad to send a copy of
the schedule.
Further, I came away more convinced than ever that
eliminating performance ratings is an important part of
Dupont achieving its vision of becoming a GREAT GLOBAL
COMPANY THROUGH PEOPLE. It's an important part of creating:
DUPONT: A GREAT PLACE TO WORK
|
1837.29 | Critical skill? | COUNT0::WELSH | Just for CICS | Mon Apr 06 1992 11:19 | 14 |
| re .21:
> Its one thing to have to "notify" your current manager. Its quite
> another when your current manager can stop you from even looking
> around. IBM's favorite buzz word was "critical skill".
Sounds like what the Soviets used to do with nuclear physicists.
"Sorry, no exit visa, you have knowledge that is proprietary to
the State".
All bureaucracy is the same. "Organisation is the last refuge of
a tired mind".
/Tom
|
1837.30 | tenure | FSDEV::MGILBERT | GHWB-Anywhere But America Tour 92 | Mon Apr 06 1992 11:23 | 14 |
|
RE: Tenure
Do not confuse tenure with seniority. In academia almost all faculty
are members of a union. Most collective bargaining agreements call
for seniority to be the prime or only criteria used in any reduction
in force. Tenure is a process of appeal for a firing for cause. It
cannot be used in a RIF situation. The only difference between a
tenured faculty member and a non-tenured faculty member also
exists within the collective bargaining agreement - that is that in
a RIF situation all non-tenured personnel must go before any tenured
personnel.
|
1837.31 | | CIS1::FULTI | | Mon Apr 06 1992 11:44 | 31 |
| re: .30
I'm a little confused by your reply..
> Do not confuse tenure with seniority. In academia almost all faculty
> are members of a union. Most collective bargaining agreements call
> for seniority to be the prime or only criteria used in any reduction
> in force. Tenure is a process of appeal for a firing for cause. It
> cannot be used in a RIF situation.
O.K. I follow that last statement, so seniority is used in layoffs.
> The only difference between a
> tenured faculty member and a non-tenured faculty member also
> exists within the collective bargaining agreement - that is that in
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
> a RIF situation all non-tenured personnel must go before any tenured
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
> personnel.
^^^^^^^^^
This is what losses me..
It must not be possible then to have seniority over someone else and not
have tenure. Oh that statement must be as confusing as the one I'm quoting.
Let me ask it this way. I'm a professor with 20 years service, hence twenty
years of senority, but, for whatever reason am not tenured. My collegue with
ten years of senority is tenured, who goes first in a RIF situation?
If it is me, then seniority does me absolutely no good.
- George
|
1837.32 | Politics | VICKI::DODIER | Food for thought makes me hungry | Mon Apr 06 1992 11:53 | 41 |
| re:.28
Good note !!!
re: Critical skill/stopping transfer
I had this happen to me PERSONALLY two different ways. The first
way was the one mentioned. I interviewed for two open req's. Was told
that I was qualified and it looked good. The potential hiring manager
makes a phone call to my current manager and both req's are pulled. The
explanation given was that they decided they really didn't need the
people. Two months later, they hired two people.
The second method involved trying to give me a bogus written
warning for something that turned out to be my immediate manager's
fault. I was offered and accepted a new position and informed my
manager that I was going to transfer.
In this case, the hiring manager could care less about what my current
manager had to say, since it was in two very different sections of the
company. It is however, company policy that a warning of any kind will
stop a transfer in its track (i.e. can't transfer a problem employee.)
I had given my current manager 3 months notice (the longest that
they would hold the new job open for me) so that I could train a
replacement. I also anticipated this happening, told the incoming PSA
about it, and asked if they would re-hire me in the event that I had to
quit the company in order to transfer. The answer was "Yes."
When my manager told me about the written warning, I told him that
we either stop playing these stupid games (and he can have me for the
the next 2+ months of my notice), or he could have my resignation as of
that moment. I explained to him how it was a win/win situation for me
and a win/lose situation for him. I finished out the last 2+ months and
transferred.
Sorry for rambling on but the point is that it does happen and it
is fairly upsetting when it does happen. It creates a you against mgmt.
type of scenario, which isn't in anyone's best interest.
Ray
|
1837.33 | tenure = seniority in *some* systems | PULPO::BELDIN_R | Pull us together, not apart | Mon Apr 06 1992 11:53 | 29 |
| Re: <<< Note 1837.31 by CIS1::FULTI >>>
You got it in one, George.
There are two situations that must be distinguished, though.
In some systems, tenure = seniority because the management
(read deans and department heads) have no authority to deny
tenure if you reach X years of seniority. That happened to
me. I had five years in such a system. They were then stuck
with me.
The other case is where management can give you tenure or
not, as they choose, without considering seniority. There
are some justifications for this when recruiting an
outstanding tenured figure from somewhere else. If you don't
give him/her tenure, you can't recruit him/her. Under this
kind of situation, tenure is more like "cumulative seniority"
within a collection of cooperating institutions.
Much of this is really "academic", because major universities
have such a great turnover that a RIF usually just means they
don't renew somebody's contract. Rarely do they get to the
tenured "bottom of the barrel".
fwiw,
Dick
|
1837.34 | | EBBV03::BROUILLETTE | MTSND | Mon Apr 06 1992 12:03 | 11 |
| RE -1 (and apologies for continuing this rathole)
As a former tenure track prof, you can't have 20 years and not be tenured.
At Ferris State University, if you do not have tenure at the end of seven
years, you are fired. Actually, the administration can fire without cause
for the first three years, and the faculty can vote you in or out in year four.
Hartford State Tech had a three year track.
I believe the state colleges of Vermont have a seven year track. If you have
not finished your Phd by year seven, you are out.
regards
alan
|
1837.35 | things are different outside New England | SGOUTL::BELDIN_R | Pull us together, not apart | Mon Apr 06 1992 13:09 | 8 |
| Re: <<< Note 1837.34 by EBBV03::BROUILLETTE "MTSND" >>>
Tenure is subject to contract and legal conditions that vary
from institution to institution and between jurisdictions. That
was the whole point of my note. By the way, in some
places, tenure is also given to secretaries and janitors.
Dick
|
1837.36 | Apropos of tenure... Can't resist posting this... | RDVAX::KALIKOW | The Gods of the Mill grind slowly... | Mon Apr 06 1992 21:27 | 16 |
| Quotation from Daniel Dennett, "Consciousness Explained":
"In order to cope, an organism must either armor itself (like a tree or
a clam) and "hope for the best," or else develop methods of getting
out of harm's way and into better neighborhoods in its vicinity. If
you follow this latter course, you are confronted with the primordial
problem that every agent must eventually solve:
Now what do I do?
In order to solve this problem, you need a nervous system, to control
your activities in time and space. The juvenile sea squirt wanders
through the sea searching for a suitable rock or hunk of coral to
cling to and make its home for life. For this task, it has a
rudimentary nervous system. When it finds its spot and takes root, it
doesn't need its brain anymore, so it eats it! (It's rather like
getting tenure.)" :-)
|