T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1899.1 | | JOET::JOET | Question authority. | Thu May 14 1992 21:53 | 8 |
| I've noticed that in say, ZKO, your status and how you're treated is
calculated by how many levels you are down from the nearest VP. In
manufacturing, it's how many levels up you are from the people who
sweep the floors.
Just another small thing, but I think it's rather telling.
-joet
|
1899.2 | My two cents worth | RAVEN1::STOGNER | | Thu May 14 1992 22:40 | 22 |
| I just spent almost 12 years in the Greenville PWB manufacturing plant.
Most of it was fun and challenging. We built a lot of boards for
Digital and to be honest had to correct a lot of designs that were either
not designed for manufacturability or just bad. We tried to be a good
partner with our Engineering counterparts but we never got any real
credit for our work. Now Digital has decided that it can not afford to
build any of its boards inside the company. All of our boards will be
purchased from outside board shops. I hope that the plan works.
My point in all of this is that I agree that Manufacturing at Digital
seems to fall at the bottom of the ladder. It's also true for a lot
of other American companies. When is the last time that you heard a
top graduate say that he/she wanted to go into the working world and
be a manufacturing engineer or any other manufacturing capacity ? This
time it's not Digital but the American culture of recent times that has
caused this problem.
Remember a service economy does not create wealth, only manufacturing
or mining or agriculture creates wealth.
Lee Stogner
|
1899.3 | status? rank? | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney in New York | Thu May 14 1992 23:24 | 1 |
| 'been down so long it loooks like up to me.
|
1899.4 | from the trenches | ANARKY::BREWER | John Brewer Component Engr. @ABO | Fri May 15 1992 00:03 | 13 |
|
What .0 describes seems to be a truism. Us folk in Manufacturing
do seem to be looked upon by some of our 'support' folks as pond
scum, and an annoyance to boot.
I can't say that I dwell on it though... work in manufacturing is
demanding and pressure packed, but there is a great deal of opportunity
to learn something new daily.
I wouldn't want to trade it (right now anyway) to 'fly a desk'
somewhere else...
/john
|
1899.5 | Issues for U.S in large | RT95::HU | | Fri May 15 1992 00:26 | 23 |
|
Re: .2
It's unfortunate for the manufacturing industry in this country,
computer manufacturing fall into the same destiny as auto, steel,
textile manufacturing etc. Labor cost, union, lack of manufacturing
automation is the main killer.
Instead, this country rely more into service industry in every sectors.
Gone with it is the better pay job in manufacturing sector.
I still believe that manufacturing is volume business.If we can't get
the volume like PC market share, then we can't afford to manufacture
it.
From company point of view, I would think everyone will pay their
respect to our manufacturing counterpart. It's whole team work to reach
the stage DEC stand now.
So long and good luck for you folks leaving DEC...
Michael..
|
1899.6 | Before/After | RAVEN1::JERRYWHITE | Hey you're pretty good - NOT ! | Fri May 15 1992 09:20 | 30 |
| I'm looking at this from a GSO perspective, and it may not reflect
DEC's overall view, BUT ...
I used to work in Manufacturing here, for 6+ years. I was dedicated
(in spurts ...), I made numerous suggestions, etc. But I always got
the feeling that since I was in mfg that it carried very little weight.
The people that actually lay hands on the product ARE the specialists,
but it's often overlooked.
The mfg community isn't empowered to make any changes. There
have been situations where an operator would *know* the process wasn't
going to yield the desired results, but their advice to engineering/mgmt
feel upon deaf ears. After a while, operators will quit making
suggestions, and DEC will lose a vital link to success.
From my experiences in manufacturing, I find that there is very little
room to grow. And it's a shame too, because there are a LOT of very
sharp people in those ranks, capable of a LOT more than what they're
doing. But, since extra duties or education are rarely rewarded,
there's little incentive to try and better yourself.
This subject is a real hot button for me. Since I moved out of mfg, I
can see a BIG difference in how managers view employees. There
shouldn't be double standards, but believe me, they're there.
I better hush before I get too excited and fall off this soapbox ...8^)
Jerry (... with roots)
|
1899.7 | Be glad they don't say GRUNTS. SECRETARIES, MANAGERS | ERLANG::HERBISON | B.J. | Fri May 15 1992 13:03 | 16 |
| Re: .0
> It seems like a small thing, but in the manufacturing building here
> the restrooms say MEN and WOMEN. In the NON manufacturing building next
> door it says LADIES and GENTLEMEN.
Were the buildings built (or redone) at the same time by the
same contractor? If not, I would call this a coincidence.
Here in LKG (non-manufacturing) the bathrooms don't have words
on the door, just the standard man-in-pants/woman-in-skirt
icons. I'm not sure if I should be upset that they don't expect
engineers to be able to read, or pleased that they expect
engineers to be able to recognize standard cultural icons.
B.J.
|
1899.8 | View From Down Here | RAVEN1::LEABEATER | | Fri May 15 1992 23:39 | 61 |
| Re: Note 1899.6 by RAVEN1::JERRYWHITE
Right on the nose 8*] Jerry!
> The mfg community isn't empowered to make any changes. There
> have been situations where an operator would *know* the process wasn't
> going to yield the desired results, but their advice to engineering/mgmt
> feel upon deaf ears. After a while, operators will quit making
> suggestions, and DEC will lose a vital link to success.
I brought this up in an AMO3 meeting today. A contract, without the
benefit of training, was assigned to inspect boards on an Orbot. The
contract, basically, wasted 8 hours. It all had to be redone. We don't
have enough trained people, so supervision (who, in most cases, do not
know enough about the area they manage) put anybody on operations. If
they'd only let another operator step in and say, "Well, we could use
this contract feeding the other line and I'll take care of this."
Management and supervision seem almost embarrased by the thought that
an operator might have a better idea. In the very literal "trenches"
where I work we once had 6 operators across three shifts. Two had
M.A.'s, one had a A.A. and a B.A., and another an A.A. - but, heh, heh,
what does an "operator" know? One quit, one was hired in finance.
Nothing rewarding down here unless, of course, you *like* hard work
and few rewards. I'm not just talking about "RAP" either. RAP tells
me managements' conscience bothers them about the inequities down here.
> From my experiences in manufacturing, I find that there is very little
> room to grow. And it's a shame too, because there are a LOT of very
> sharp people in those ranks, capable of a LOT more than what they're
> doing. But, since extra duties or education are rarely rewarded,
> there's little incentive to try and better yourself.
Absolutely. That's why we are burned. We put in a lot of unlogged hours
working on projects that make others look good. "Here," says training,
"Put together some documentation on this process." Here's Joe operator
writing detailed specifications on a process he is *married* to for 40+
hours a week and somebody up there thinks training is doing a super
job. Baloney. Operators, as a result, are either making the desk
jockies look good or getting called down when they take the initiative and
*write programs* or something similarly spectacular for their supposed
"wage class."
Remind you of anything Jerry? Don't feel bad, Ken Scheer wrote a few in
the ATC that saved DEC *loads* of $. He was supposed to get something
for it - never happened.
> This subject is a real hot button for me. Since I moved out of mfg, I
> can see a BIG difference in how managers view employees. There
> shouldn't be double standards, but believe me, they're there.
From my perspective you've got to *prove* yourself to mgmt. before
you're "accepted" as worth their time. But that is a long, hard and
*expensive* road for both of us. And, I suppose, that's the saddest
part of all.
Until we get rid of the emphasis on wage *class* and the incredible
waste of people and money created by such nonsense as AA/EEO DEC
manufacturing is going to continue to stagnate.
John
|
1899.9 | | RAVEN1::JERRYWHITE | Hey you're pretty good - NOT ! | Mon May 18 1992 08:01 | 10 |
| There are 2 reasons why folks don't move much in manufacturing:
1 - a person does not perform well on a given job, so they stay there
until they finally certify. Then they are unable to move UP
due to poor performance. They stay where they're at.
2 - a person does very well on a given job, so they are "baited" into
staying on this job, by promises of better things to come. They
where they're at.
Jerry
|
1899.10 | COntrol your own wheel | RT93::HU | | Mon May 18 1992 12:59 | 13 |
| Re: .9
I beg to differ. This is not only happen in Manufacturing alone, it's
also in SW/HW/Mkt/Sales also.
It's the same phenomenon that swamp our country/industry. It was called
life time job security before foreign competition cut into our throat
and layoff started, then worker begin to wake up.
Any individual owe themselves their future career, not their boss, not
their company if noone take care for you.
Michael..
|
1899.11 | Too many chiefs? | QETOO::SCARDIGNO | God is my refuge | Mon May 18 1992 13:48 | 10 |
|
Yeah, mfg always gets the brunt of the criticism for not
"making the numbers", so who wants to be associated with that
kind of criticism all the time? The other thing (IMO) that's
a big part of mfg's demise is that too many people want to be
"chiefs", not enough want to be the workers. And, the
"chiefs" really aren't providing any leadership. Everybody's
just tryin' to protect their butts now-a-days!
Steve
|
1899.12 | half full, half empty? | MOCA::RUSSELL_D | | Mon May 18 1992 16:00 | 12 |
| I've been at GSO and at San German circuit board facilities and
actually I see better leadership at San German, the shops that are
being closed. Being here on short term international assignment has
basically cost me my job. The last time I was in Greenville I was told
that the company has no obilgation, other than to bring me back to
Greenville. There is no job, no opportunity, niche, etc. So if you
are on international assignment DEC can use that to dump you.
As far as I'm concerned with DEC manufacturing---It's not whether the
glass is half full or half empty; it's half cracked!
Dave Russell
|
1899.13 | | RAVEN1::LEABEATER | | Tue May 19 1992 20:34 | 4 |
| Last I heard DEC's getting out of manufacturing. Anybody got info on
that?
John
|
1899.14 | | RANGER::LEFEBVRE | PC's 'R Us | Wed May 20 1992 10:46 | 5 |
| Not likely.
We plan to build hundreds of thousands of PCs in Taiwan.
Mark.
|
1899.15 | | PAKORA::BHARRIS | | Wed May 20 1992 19:07 | 1 |
| And Digital has just begun to build a $400-600M semiconductor fab.
|
1899.16 | | TOOK::MORRISON | Bob M. LKG2-2/BB9 226-7570 | Thu May 21 1992 19:11 | 6 |
| Re last two: The real question is, is DEC getting out of DOMESTIC mfg, other
than IC's? IC mfg is quite different from any other mfg operation I can think
of in DEC, and it's here to stay.
If DEC does stay in regular mfg, we will have to do something to work the
issues discussed in this topic. Based on what I have read here and elsewhere,
it appears that GE has a much better environment for mfg workers than DEC does.
|
1899.18 | Degree, or not degree | DYPSS1::COGHILL | Steve Coghill, Luke 14:28 | Wed May 27 1992 12:49 | 17 |
| Re: .17
The "college degree" disease has spread to the U.S. of A. as well. I
have worked with Digital for 12.5 years now without a degree. At one
time over half our office (about 20 specialist) did not have degrees.
When I hired on I was told degrees were not an important item at
Digital. Getting results was what was wanted.
Getting results doesn't seem to count for much anymore in Digital. I
(and every other non-degree person in our unit) has been told we are
no longer promotable. Only degreed people will have a shot at a
promotion. So, to get a promotion I have to get a 4-year degree.
What pisses me off beyond belief is that my boss doesn't care what
the degree is in. As far as he is concerned, I could get a degree in
Old English Linguistics. As long as it's a four-year program he is
happy.
|
1899.19 | Only a small rathole | BASEX::GREENLAW | I used to be an ASSET, now I'm a Resource | Wed May 27 1992 13:17 | 27 |
| RE: Degrees and Manufacturing
One of the best industrial engineers I ever met did not have a degree. I
went to an Ivy League school and his partner went to MIT. Both of our
degrees said that we were Engineers but we still didn't have the talent
and ability displayed by this exceptional person. He got his training
but doing, reading, and trying as a young man so that when he started his own
company, he had the experience to KNOW what to do to produce a product.
That person was my father. When he was growing up during the Depression,
survival was the main issue, not degrees. So he went to work in the local
textile mill. It took him a long time to get to the point where he was
running a manufacturing operation and then a little longer before he started
his company.
How does this relate? Well I have seen more than one high tech company put
little or no value on experience. The general criteria used to hire and
promote is based on degrees not ability. If you do not have a mixture of
both, you will end up repeating the mistakes that experience teaches or you
will have few new ideas that new people bring into the company.
Quality people come from all over. If we pre-judge others by any criteria
before they show what they can do, we are short-changing ourselves and our
company.
FWIW,
Lee G.
|
1899.20 | two ways to go wrong | PULPO::BELDIN_R | All's well that ends | Wed May 27 1992 13:57 | 23 |
| re -.1
>How does this relate? Well I have seen more than one high tech company put
>little or no value on experience. The general criteria used to hire and
>promote is based on degrees not ability. If you do not have a mixture of
>both, you will end up repeating the mistakes that experience teaches or you
>will have few new ideas that new people bring into the company.
This can happen in two ways.
1) Hiring decisions made by little people with nothing but a degree
after their name and no understanding of business.
2) Hiring decisions made by good people without degrees who are
overimpressed by the people who have them.
I've seen them both in Digital, but 2) is the saddest because of the
implied lack of self-esteem.
The fact is that we've lost the common sense of two decades ago.
That's the saddest fact of all.
Dick
|
1899.21 | | SA1794::GUSICJ | Referees whistle while they work.. | Wed May 27 1992 14:32 | 35 |
|
re: degrees
Maybe this should go in the 'Old Dec' note, but the old DEC never
placed a lot of emphasis on a degree. When I started 15 years ago
here in manufacturing, degrees were at a minimum. DEC used to have
a program (don't know if it still exists) where they took a tech's
practical experience from work and after a time of moving through the
ranks would elevate him/her to the 'rank' of engineer. I used to see
this happen all the time back then, but I haven't seen it happen in at
least 5 years. In fact, I knew of one plant manager that said that
this program was worthless. He would not promote anyone to engineer
by the 'experience' program. You had to have graduated with that
sheepskin to merit. And to make matters worse, it didn't count if you
went to school and earned that degree while still working fulltime.
I am constantly reminded of that old commercial featuring Abe
Lincoln trying to get a job at an agency and the director asks Abe if
he has a degree. Abe replies that, "I've done a lot of reading and
studying on my own." whereby the director repeats, " You ain't going
nowhere without that sheepshin." I guess that's pretty much how DEC
views many of its employees with years of experience now.
DEC used to take a great deal of pride in people with a lot of
experience within MFG., but I've seen them place a lot more emphasis
on that education in recent years. In many manufacturing sites, they
will reguard the newly hired college grad's opinion higher than the
floor worker with 10-20 years of experience. That's not to say that
education or continuing education isn't important, but somewhere we
still need to count 'experience' as something more than just a piece
of paper on a wall that thanks us for 'x' years of service.
bill..g.
|
1899.22 | Giving 'em the third degree ... | HELIX::KALLIS | Pumpkins ... Nature's greatest gift. | Wed May 27 1992 15:09 | 21 |
| Re degrees:
Degrees are slowly becoming the white-collar equivalent of a union card. This
is unfortunate two ways:
1) Degrees, per se, merely show that a person has been able to survive school
for 4 (or 2) years. Many schools' courses aren't necessarily applicable
for thwe job desired (nor is the employer always that concerned about what
a candidate picked up in school [as long as it isn't communicable :-D]); and
2) Many innovators didn't have a formal degree. Perhaps the ultimate example
of that was Thomas A. Edison.
Don't misunderstand: I'm not against degrees (I have one myself); I'm against
their existence being used as a major criterion for employment.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
As a postscript, some schools' courses are years behind the curve, even if in the
correct discipline. Sometimes it's as easy to start fresh as to have to relearn
things.
|
1899.23 | Kelvin was degreed? | MOCA::RUSSELL_D | | Wed May 27 1992 16:31 | 21 |
| Re: degrees
I think it's more important to look for people who have a track history
of success rather than degrees or 'x' years of experience. If you've
got a degree you do have a "leg up" because you come out of the
university with some proof of success. I've seen fossils with and
without college who were given advancement after they failed; the
company hoping that they would do less damage as they were moved up.
Successful people realize their own shortcommings and will not hesitate
to solicit help when faced with problems which are better handled by
another successful person with different talents. One of the problems
I see here is that there are enough unsuccessful people in authority
that those whose ideas we should be adopting are not in the majority.
Consequently, we are given the average of 20 wrong answers and pray
that this average is the right answer. In all probability that answer
isn't the worst alternative, but nowhere near the best. As we downsize
shouldn't we be keeping the success stories, weeding out the failures,
and adding outsiders who have a history of success? It's not a matter
of degrees, it's a matter of survival.
DAR
|
1899.24 | Not when fools rule! | TOOK::SCHUCHARD | Lights on, but nobody home | Wed May 27 1992 17:00 | 7 |
|
Good lord folks - you're asking the modern manager to employ a sense of
judgement. That's just not professional you know! Professional's have
idiot cards they can check off on. Much like public education - we
don't measure people, we count pedegree's.
geez....
|
1899.25 | | PLAYER::BROWNL | It won't rain for long... | Thu May 28 1992 05:39 | 20 |
| I started work in England in 1973, as a operator on a Honeywell 120.
Back in those days, a Computer Science degree was almost unheard of.
Employers used Aptitude Tests as a means of deciding whether or not a
person was suitable for computer-related work. In order to take such a
test there was a minimum requirement of some 'O' Levels, (a series of
exams in discrete subjects such as Maths, English (Language and
Literature), French etc, taken at about 16). On the basis of this, and
a further selection on individual characteristics, I was launched into
the world of Computing. So were many others, selected purely on raw
ability and interest.
How many of our Computing degree-holders in this day-and-age can say
that? Too many I know have the qualifications, but lack any real
talent.
Half the problem of course, is that fact that a manager devalues his
own degree if he does not insist those around him have to also have one
to be of worth.
Laurie$No_Degree.
|
1899.27 | dumb | SMURF::GRADY | Short arms, and deep pockets... | Thu May 28 1992 09:32 | 15 |
| IMHO, a manager who dictates a four year degree as an unqualified
preresquisite for promotion, is probably lazy or not very bright, or
both. Purging themselves of this arbitrary bias should be a
prerequisite for THEIR further promotion, or for that matter, for their
further employment by Digital.
There are some jobs that, by law, require a degree. My physician, for
example. That's not what I'm talking about. Anyone who excels
sufficiently at their current position as to be capable of fulfilling
the additional responsibilities of a promotion, should be promoted.
Ask some of our most Senior V.P.'s I believe we still have a few with
no four year degrees. Apparently K.O. has no such prejudice.
tim
|
1899.28 | | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Thu May 28 1992 09:34 | 37 |
| > The following is a redraft of 1899.17 "suggesting" that I delete any
> references that infer a difference in the respective environments
> in Manufacturing and elsewhere in the organisation.......
Well, we'll see if things work any differently in the US.
I'm part of an engineering organization located in a manufacturing
facility. We're here mainly because we needed the room and power for
our lab. Also because at the time we moved in there was CPU building
going on here and we did some of our testing on rotational inventory.
In any case, about 8 years ago we moved in. The manufacturing people
had desks out on the floor. Many without cubical walls at all. It was
noisy and dirty. Engineering management built a very nice space walled
off from most of the plant with a state of the art lab. We got cubicles
with walls nicer then the walls of the cubicles of the people in
manufacturing who had cubicles. We put in carpeting and built nice
conference rooms. The manufacturing people called our area the Pink
Palace."
When asked why we got such relatively plush quarters the answer was
simple - our management was willing to pay for it. Now a days more
and more of the plant has been converted to offices. And the offices
that manufacturing people have are pretty much the same as what the
engineering people have. It was never a matter of manufacturing v.
non-manufacturing in my opinion. It was always a matter of management
being willing or unwilling to provide a good working environment.
Managers of different groups have different priorities and goals. They
are going to spend their money in ways to meet those goals. Managers
depend on making their people productive. In some cases that means
spending money of things that make the work easier. In manufacturing
that often means equipment rather then environment. In engineering
there are often fewer tools needed so management is freer to spend
money on making the environment better.
Alfred
|
1899.29 | | DCOPST::POOLQ::BRAKE | | Thu May 28 1992 09:58 | 50 |
| Trying to draw some parallel between the subject of the title of this
note and the degree theme, I think, perhaps, we need to stand up,
stretch, wipe the crust from our eyes and take a look at manufacturing
as it stands today. Look at manufacturing in DEC and then look at
manufacturing in Japan (or Japanese style manufacturing).
The traditional American manufacturing style has been dictated by cost
rather than quality, by upper level management decisions over
production line logic and, in many cases, by people who learned the
wrong methods from the wrong textbooks.
Contrast this with the Japanese method where total input is required;
from janitors to VP's, from inspectors to managers. Everyone's input is
valued.
As one who has gone through the program Bill alluded to a few back, I
have seen manufacturing in DEC go down the tubes in too many plants. I
have seen managers staff departments with degrees as a prerequisite and
other managers who try to hire based on experience and potential. I
have worked with some great engineers who have a degree and I have also
worked with some degree'd engineers who have been the most closed
minded, arrogant people I have ever met.
In defense of the degree, in order to obtain a BS, one must learn the
methodology of going about solving problems. They are exposed to many,
many tools. If used properly, they can be a very valuable asset in good
industrial or manufacturing engineering.
However, if the proper attitude is not present, all the Muther
methodologies in the world won't yield good results.
I don't have a degree. I have been discriminated against by one
supervisor for this fact. I have also been rewarded richly based on my
results by other supervisors. Attitude is everything. The degree should
not be a deciding gate for qualified people to get assignments or be
granted promotions. I think it was Steve who said that the degree has
become white-collar's equivalent to the union card. I fear this trend
is becoming more and more wide-spread and that our culture is slowly
slipping away.
I need look no further than the state of mfg in DEC today to see we are
headed in the wrong direction. If we want to know how to build things
better and cheaper, ask anyone on a production line. You'll get an
earful. Some feedback is useful, other feedback may not be. But the
imagination is there. It exists. It is a resource that too many
engineers, managers and others refuse to acknowledge because of a
perceived superiority complex.
Rich
|
1899.31 | Visualize World Peas | DENVER::ZIMMERMAN | Karen Zimmerman | Thu May 28 1992 12:27 | 9 |
| I'm a manufacturing sales rep. and am very interested in the Graduate
Education for Manufacturing (G.E.M.) program that Digital offers. I'd
like to speak with people who have gone through the program - their
expectations and thoughts before, during and after the program. I can
be reached at DTN 553-3390 or 303-649-3390.
Thanks to all in advance,
Karen
|
1899.32 | I cain swim... | RAVEN1::B_ADAMS | The Mountains of Poke! | Tue Jun 09 1992 17:29 | 14 |
|
I came here five years ago with no degree, and have worked my way
up from peon to almost not a peon...which is from Production to Eng.
I have yet to get a degree in anything...if a degree means so much,
what would happen if I got my degree in Under-water basket weaving?
Would I make full fledge Eng? I should hope not...
I do know of a person who got an office job because He/She had a
degree in Geography...guess they knew where to send everything.
Oh well...back to school!
B.A.
|
1899.33 | A degree is not an end in itself... | MAY21::PSMITH | Peter H. Smith,MLO5-5/E71,223-4663,ESB | Fri Jun 12 1992 15:23 | 22 |
| To put a slightly different slant on this discussion, there are programs
to help employees get degrees. In particular, if you have made your way
to an engineering track, or if you are interested in an engineering track,
and you have a B.S. in some engineering field, look up the GEEP program.
It's a fantastic way to get an M.S. in engineering.
If you don't have a B.S. yet, there are also programs to obtain that,
but I don't think they are quite as wonderful as GEEP.
Regarding degrees being a basis for promotion, ask any GEEPer who has been
back for a while, and see what they have to say. The concensus is that
the "slip of paper" does absolutely nothing, but if the slip of paper makes
you perform better, you'll do better in the long run...
Obtaining a degree as a step toward career advancement at DEC is (as it
should be) only useful as far as it equips you to do the job you want to
do better.
On another thread of this discussion: I look forward to the day when
competence at a job or good ideas are recognized and acted on, whether
the competence/ideas are the result of a degree or the result of healthy
horse sense. We need more exchange of ideas and less politics...
|
1899.34 | What programs? | DENVER::ARAGON | | Tue Jun 16 1992 14:32 | 8 |
| re .33
> If you don't have a B.S. yet, there are also programs to obtain that,
> but I don't think they are quite as wonderful as GEEP.
Which programs are you referring to? Do you have a name of a contact?
I've been looking for such a program(s) for a while now, and was told
(by Human Resources) that nothing exists.
|
1899.35 | | GRANMA::FDEADY | | Tue Jun 16 1992 14:35 | 6 |
|
Tuition re-imbursement.... I use it myself.
fred deady
wbc::deady
|
1899.36 | GEEP | ZENDIA::SEKURSKI | | Tue Jun 16 1992 14:54 | 14 |
|
I believe you can only make use of GEEP if you're already
an engineer....
Personally, it's not worth the 12-18 month forced separation from
my family...
But if your single, hardworker and an engineer that can get
accepted to the program and the school it's a great opportunity.
Mike
----
|
1899.37 | | FSOA::OGRADY | George, 297-5322, US Retail/Wholesale SW | Tue Jun 16 1992 16:17 | 7 |
|
> I believe you can only make use of GEEP if you're already
> an engineer....
I believe it is (at least it was 2 years ago) open to any tech job
including 16 and 52 codes.
|