T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1936.1 | do you have chips on the table? | SGOUTL::BELDIN_R | All's well that ends | Wed Jun 10 1992 17:29 | 27 |
| I don't condone the manager's behavior, nor do I think you will find
many who would, but...
>We discussed and appointed Mr. R as spokeperson for our team to give
>feed back to the manager. By the way Mr. R and the manager cannot get
>along at all.
This seems to be a strange appointment. It suggests that Mr. R might
be the only one willing to be the spokesperson, is that true? If there
were others, then I think the team made a mistake in this appointment.
Surely someone the manager isn't prejudiced against is going to be
better able to carry the message?
If indeed the team was serious when it said they didn't want to work
for this manager, now is the time to show it. Team members, including
those who are safe, should start quietly making their moves.
Otherwise, the manager just won the pot by calling your bluff.
"If it's war, then get ready to fight!"
By the way, nothing has happened to DEC. It has always been possible
for the strong to abuse the weak. You get the justice you fight for.
Good luck,
Dick
|
1936.2 | | VICE::BROWN | | Wed Jun 10 1992 18:15 | 8 |
|
I think the point .0 was trying to make by example is:
At DEC: What is advertised & sold is NOT what is delivered.
|
1936.3 | I'll try door #2, Monty! | CGOOA::DTHOMPSON | Don, of Don's ACT | Wed Jun 10 1992 18:23 | 11 |
| Re: .0
The "Open Door" is not policy, it is LAW - and it can be found under
the sign marked "Exit".
Re: .2
Perhaps what you THINK you bought is not what was delivered.
|
1936.4 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Wed Jun 10 1992 18:57 | 1 |
| What about the Jack Smith blurb sent to all employees?
|
1936.5 | | QBUS::M_PARISE | Southern, but no comfort | Thu Jun 11 1992 00:26 | 13 |
|
Sad, indeed, as stated. Surely there's more to this scenario than
meets the screen. "Insubordination" is one of those personnel buzwords
in an employee file that constitutes a veritable "black-ball."
If I were Hu (in .0) I would be careful the open door wasn't a
trap-door, as it seemed it was for Mr. R.
Has Digital changed? I'm afraid not.
Is it best for the others in this unit to hide? I'm afraid so.
Mike
|
1936.6 | | ALOSWS::KOZAKIEWICZ | Shoes for industry | Thu Jun 11 1992 01:52 | 53 |
| Sigh...
Assuming for the minute that the scenario in .0 is the absolute truth,
it amazes me that people would not forsee the outcome of this. And
that is not to condone, but merely acknowledge that we live in world
run by humans.
> Mr. R : "Most of the team member think that you are arrogant, conceited,
> prejudiced, unfair and hard to work with. Unless you change your
> attitudes none of us can work for you."
Looks to me like the team put a gun in Mr. R's mouth and let him pull
the trigger.
Rule #1: People who would actually stay rational while at the receiving
end of frank criticism such as the above are almost certainly not
arrogant, conceited, prejudiced, unfair or hard to work for.
Relevent collory: Anyone who _is_ arrogant, conceited, prejudiced,
unfair and hard to work for will not react rationally to being told so.
This should not be a Big Suprise.
> After this, Mr. R went to the next upper management and related the
> story and the offensive word that the manager used. Well, the upper
> manager promise that he will personnally do something about it.
Rule #2: Being right when working the open door does not excuse you from
the requirement to sell your position.
Generally, one of the reasons people get to be managers or supervisors
is that they are trusted. Breaking the bonds of that trust will almost
always require more than a simple uttering of the truth. You must
persuade the middle manager that not only is the employee wrong, but that
he is wrong as well (since his trust is misplaced). Very similar to
rule #1. This is what selling is all about - leading a person to reach
the conclusion you want them to.
In situations like this, it won't be very easy. Not impossible, but
not easy at all. In many cases I would imagine the risk outweighs the
potential gain.
At any rate, I think it's naive to think that the Open Door will work
with an approach like that outlined in the base note. It's not good
enough to be right, you have to be able to persuade others that you are
right. Lacking that ability yields the same results as being wrong.
People are human and they will be defensive when attacked, and any
successful application of the Open Door will take that into consideration.
Al
|
1936.9 | | USPMLO::JSANTOS | | Thu Jun 11 1992 10:46 | 36 |
| When people in this note are writing " Digital hasn't changed"
what do you mean by that? Over the last few years this company had
changed drastically, IMO. Does Digital still value its people? Of
course, but how can a person deny that this company has changed? People
have been layed off, people have taken SERP, in some cases because they
had a fear that they would be let go anyway and new policies are being
written to insure our bottom line will be as strong as possible, in
some cases at the expense of the people in our system. I'm not saying
its not for the good of the company and for the survival of Digital i'm
just saying things have changed. I honestly can't say I beleive in the
open door policy and I never really have. If you work for a bad manager
your in a bad situation and you have to deal with it by copeing or simply
move on. The quote about the "exit door" I find disturbing and it shows
no value given to the employee in .0 - would you make the same comment
to the person who is responsible for creating the Alpha chip? It amazes
me in this company these days when a person uncovers a problem or
raises an issue that others see them as the problem or see something they
did as creating the issue. I also tend to think there is more to this
issue than has been written because of the process that has to be
followed before someone is forced to terminate, but I definitely see a
attitude in this company that I have never seen before and it scares
the heck out of me to think "I feel like I'm working for a union" where
people simply do what they are told when they are told to do it and
could care less about the work or their fellow employees. I know - the
manager in this case is a fellow employee also, but they are not in
here looking for an outlet to vent their frustration and gain support
needed to simply move on with the work that needs to be accomplished.
My comments in .0 are - after all I've written I still feel this is a
great company, but as anything else it depends who is in charge. In
your case you might think you have a bad manager and no outlet to vent,
but I really wouldn't reccomend doing anything drastic. This is a very
large company and lots of opportunity still remains if you look for it.
As far as the manager - if they are as bad as you say hopfully some of
the powers at be in your site will realize it, if they haven't already,
and deal with the person. As far as the person who was terminated, its
not your issue and their may be things that your not in-tuned to..
|
1936.10 | DECcastes | CGOOA::DTHOMPSON | Don, of Don's ACT | Thu Jun 11 1992 11:55 | 23 |
| My comment on the "exit door" stands... If you choose to oppose a
manager, you are almost assuredly choosing departure.
To answer the base note's title question:
**GENERALLY** There are two kinds of people in this company - worker
bees, and managers. Worker bees are supposed to do things. Managers
are not. The basic difference between the two is that managers know
absolutely everything about everything, and are privy to business
accumen that the owrker bees can not possibly even conjure up. If
you've ever seen a peer promoted, you may have noted the *amazing*
acquisition of knowledge that occurred.
Further, because they know everything, managers are never wrong - to
suggest that the bottom one COULD be wrong is to suggest that the
person who put her/him there may have been less than perfect which is
to suggest...
The moral of the story: Don't go through any open doors unless you
have another offer and your lawyer has been prepaid.
Don
|
1936.11 | I think I worked for the same person! | DPDMAI::TERPENING | | Thu Jun 11 1992 12:12 | 12 |
| Regarding the base note, It sounds like the same jerk I worked for when
I was out west. I chose to leave and have no regrets. I do miss the
west coast and the fine people I worked with and someday hope to
return.
The old saying "what comes around goes around" is true. The bonehead
manager was TSFO'd 10 months after my departure and left no friends
behind.
Before taking on a manager remember two things, its a suicide mission,
and managers protect managers, they have to or become targets
themselves.
|
1936.13 | my understanding, in general ... | INDUCE::SHERMAN | ECADSR::Sherman DTN 223-3326 | Thu Jun 11 1992 12:39 | 43 |
| re: a couple back
Actually, the difference between workers and managers is as follows:
Workers are supposed to do lots of smart things. It's okay to do
something stupid every once in a while, so long as they can prove
they do lots of smart things.
Managers are supposed to avoid doing anything stupid. It's okay
to do lots of smart things every once in a while, so long as they
can prove they haven't done anything stupid.
Problems arise for workers that prove that managers do stupid things. This
is because it conflicts directly with manager agenda. Managers get the
big bucks and stick up for each other partly because of how difficult it
is to prove that they don't do stupid things. Same thing goes for
lawyers, doctors and so forth.
It is generally easier to show that a stupid thing was done than that lots
of smart things are not being done. So, the proof that a worker has to
offer against a manager tends to be simpler than the proof that a manager
has to offer against a worker. If proof were all that mattered, there
would be an imbalance between the workers and the managers, favoring
the workers when a manager did something stupid. But, systems are
usually set up to balance this inequity, which is why politics plays such
an important role in settling management disputes. Politics can, in
fact, completely overrule any proof that may exist, which is why, in my
opinion, Open Door Policy exists.
As to the base note, the workers apparently felt that since they had
proof of their manager doing something stupid, they were free to use
this proof against the manager. Their mistake was in assuming that the
proof would be sufficient against the manager and, as other notes have
pointed out, they did not take steps to address the politics that
surely would work in favor of the manager.
My understanding of Open Door Policy is that it is by no means a way to
counter politics. Rather, it is a way for any workers to become involved
in the politics of management. Otherwise, there would be no means for
countering politics regardless of proof. But, to use Open Door Policy
without paying attention to politics is folly.
Steve
|
1936.14 | Pending legal action? | VAXWRK::HARNEY | Common man: Homo Ignoramus | Thu Jun 11 1992 15:03 | 4 |
| I would think that if .12 is correct, then this shouldn't be
discussed in this notesfile, no?
\john
|
1936.15 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Thu Jun 11 1992 15:09 | 8 |
| If there is a suit pending before the court, it would be unwise for either
party to discuss it because their words could be used in a trial to impeach
their testimony.
If you are not part of the suit, then the fact that a suit is involved should
not deter you from discussing the issue.
George
|
1936.16 | I'm not under oath here | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney in New York | Thu Jun 11 1992 16:11 | 8 |
| I don't want to be an alarmist, but if one wanted to demonstrate to a
jury any attitude at Digital from "all managers are great" to "all
managers are evil", the text could be obtained in this conference under
the discovery process.
The general attitude towards employee relations at Digital matters as
much as the circumstances in the specific case and the written
policies. You could even call it "the corporate culture"
|
1936.17 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Fri Jun 12 1992 02:55 | 11 |
| If I were on a jury I'd hardly be surprised to hear that some employees
thought management was great while others complained. I'd be surprised to find
anything else. In any case, it's not clear that either side would benefit from
making that claim.
In a discrimination suit, the plaintiff wants to prove that management
discriminates on ethnic or religious grounds while the company wants to prove
that they do not. Neither side cares one way or the other about the exercise of
"the G.I.'s right to gripe".
George
|
1936.18 | more than just gripes | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney VMS/WNT/XOU... | Fri Jun 12 1992 09:12 | 7 |
| If you were on a jury, you might be surprised to hear that a company
maintained electronic records of allegations of incidents of
discrimination and allegations of a pattern of discrimination and did
nothing about it that was obvious.
This VAX Notes Conference has such material and several others do as
well.
|
1936.19 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Fri Jun 12 1992 16:24 | 10 |
| I think we are talking about two different things. I was attempting to answer
the question of who is required to remain silent on a case in a more general
sense. There may well be things about this case that make it too sensitive for
DECies to discuss.
But in general, parties not involved in a suit may talk about that suit.
That's why groups like Court TV and CNN are allowed to cover cases that are in
progress.
George
|
1936.20 | | TEXAS1::SOBECKY | It's all ones and zeros | Mon Jun 15 1992 13:11 | 21 |
|
re .0
Let's see if I have this straight...
o One of your managers asked your team to give her input as to how she
could improve her management..
o You appoint as team leader someone who "cannot get along" with
the manager..
o Your team leader opens up by saying that most of the team thinks
that she (manager) is arrogant, conceited, prejudiced, and hard
to work for...
o Team leader eventually gets fired for subordination..
What do these facts have to do with your (inappropriate) title?
|
1936.22 | can't prove your charges | MOCA::BELDIN_R | All's well that ends | Mon Jun 15 1992 14:32 | 15 |
| re .21
The manager in question may be prejudiced, may be discriminating
against minority employees, and may be replacing them with other people
she prefers. All that may be true, but your version of the incidents
can never be used as evidence of the situation. It is hard to prove
prejudice, hard to prove racial, ethnic, or gender discrimination. As
soon as the kinds of mistakes in common sense as shown in .0 appear,
the manager can hide behind them. The point is that you (and the fired
employee) have very little chance of making your charges stick. You
had very little before the encounter and now you have less.
Sorry, but that's the way it is.
/rab
|
1936.23 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Mon Jun 15 1992 15:13 | 7 |
| Was Personnel involved in any way with this problem? In the past when I've
had problems I've found personnel to be very helpful. Also, my girl friend
worked in the legal department for a time and they are very much oriented
toward protecting the rights of minorities. Did you contact either personnel,
corporate personnel, or the legal department about any of this?
George
|
1936.24 | | USCTR1::JHERNBERG | | Thu Jul 02 1992 17:14 | 5 |
|
Curious, don't you think......the basenote has been removed?
Curious but certainly not surprising....sigh.....
|
1936.25 | | ASICS::LESLIE | Argh! Where's my security blanket? | Fri Jul 03 1992 02:25 | 5 |
|
Almost certainly this was done by the basenotes author. DOn't get too
paranoid.....
- andy
|