T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2022.1 | | IOSG::WDAVIES | There can only be one ALL-IN-1 Mail | Mon Jul 27 1992 10:53 | 1 |
| Whats a 1....
|
2022.2 | Performance ratings | TRUCKS::WINWOOD | Life has surface noise too | Mon Jul 27 1992 11:16 | 14 |
| In the U.S. a '1' is the walks-on-water variety of contributor, I
thinks the range extends to '5' which is 'unable-to-crawl-unaided'.
Here in the UK we have E for Excellent, C for Competent and M for
managing (just about coping with work). The numbers which are
associated with the letters are growth rates. A '1' means that
the individual can expect to br promoted to VP from trainee in
around six months whereas a 5 means they may be 'given the chance
to seek other opportunities.
I seem to remember that most people are classed as C 3. Average growth
and can meet the job requirements.
Calvin
|
2022.3 | | FIGS::BANKS | This was | Mon Jul 27 1992 11:28 | 5 |
| Most of the "1"s I've met, and known well enough to discover that they were
"1"s very much deserved the rating. Some of them note, some of them don't.
Of course, I've met many 2s and 3s who work just as hard as the 1s do. (No,
I'm not counting myself in that group.) There's the crime.
|
2022.4 | | CSOADM::ROTH | Legal aid from Dewey,Cheetham&Howe | Mon Jul 27 1992 11:41 | 14 |
| .3>Of course, I've met many 2s and 3s who work just as hard as the 1s do.
.3>(No, I'm not counting myself in that group.) There's the crime.
That brings up the age-old question... are you rated on how hard you work
or what you accomplish? Superman might be rated a "1" for accomplishments
but get a much lower rating on how hard he works at it.
I once had a long debate with a manager on this very subject. He felt
that employee "A" that didn't accomplish as much but tried harder deserved
a better rating than employee "B" that accomplished more but with less
effort.
Lee
|
2022.5 | The simple answer | TRUCKS::WINWOOD | Life has surface noise too | Mon Jul 27 1992 12:02 | 3 |
| My view is to reward by RESULTS, not effort.
Calvin
|
2022.6 | There is a debate going on.... | CHELSY::GILLEY | All of my applications are VUP Suckers! | Mon Jul 27 1992 12:20 | 15 |
| Re: .-1 Some would say this is the #1 problem with American business.
Mr. Demmer (I hope that is spelled correctly) preaches that quality and quantity
is a *statistical* beast, not necessarilly related to individual contributors in
a direct fashion.
Case in point: how many software developers have been burned by things beyond
their control? Hardware engineers? Field personnel? The point is that many
*major* contributors simply happen to be in the right place at the right time.
Note that I did not say all. I have known some engineers that were absolutely
amazing in the quantity of work generated. However, they did have their bad
days.
I think both sides have merit. I also think that the basic reward system in
US industry is erroneous.
|
2022.7 | | SWAM1::PEDERSON_PA | Buy Bespeckled-Bovine brand | Mon Jul 27 1992 12:39 | 6 |
| re: .0
Perhaps the 1 performers have organizational and time
management skills that would blow some people out of the
water....thus allowing time to note.
|
2022.8 | which is better one? | STAR::ABBASI | i^(-i) = SQRT(exp(PI)) | Mon Jul 27 1992 12:39 | 11 |
| Two people went to fish, the first caught 5 fishes easily, the second
caught only one fish , although the second worked much harder than
the first.
so, which is the better fisher-person?
/nasser
oh, by the way , the first had a net available to use, the second a
long stick.. I was not sure if this fact mattered to your answer..
|
2022.9 | | DELNI::SUMNER | | Mon Jul 27 1992 13:09 | 12 |
| RE: serveral previous notes
It seems as though you're all assuming that a "1" (or a 2, 3, 4 & 5)
only "note" during their 40 hour work week, or for that matter, work
just 40 hours in a week. Not true. I know many people who "note" during
non-work hours (or during lunch).
I believe noting usually offers much more enlightenment and entertainment
than a software manual or newspaper and lends itself nicely to learning in
the relatively quiet atmosphere of ones home.
Glenn
|
2022.10 | I could talk all day on this | BASEX::GREENLAW | Questioning procedures improves process | Mon Jul 27 1992 13:28 | 28 |
| RE: .6 It is Deming with one "m".
But that is not the point. One of the main issues is what are you
rewarding, hard work or results? People respond to the stimulus so if
you are rewarding political contacts rather than good products, you will
get products that are shipped on time but don't work. (Shipping on time
is politically correct becuase the boss can brag that they can meet
schedules.) I maintain that, when the focus is on a single metric like
ship date, the results for things like quality and workmanship will not
be important and therefore less good.
This company has a single goal at the moment, Cost of Sales reduction.
Until that focus is changed, even groups that stay on budget and make
money will be cut back because the goal says that everyone must reduce
costs. Doesn't matter if you are planning correctly, the bottom line is
REDUCE. Reminds me of those eating disorders where people think they are
fat when they are long past skinny.
Back to the individual. I happen to think that results are what should
be rewarded. And what results does the company want? The line is that
the company wants us to "do the right thing." Problem with this is that
you can not measure this except by trying to identify the people doing
the wrong things. So you end up with subjective results. People never
know what is the yardstick they are measured against. Is it any wonder
that the question of what is a #1 is asked?
IMHO,
Lee G.
|
2022.11 | DEC "flex" is a 4 letter word! | HERIAM::AZARIAN | | Mon Jul 27 1992 13:37 | 13 |
| Ohhhhh, what a sore spot... DEC flex. I have seen people put into
positions SIGNIFICANTLY below what their job code was... kept at the
same rate, and manage to demoralize an entire group. How Digital
promised to save these people is beyond me (pardon me if I speak in
gross generalities). When someone makes three times more than an
existing person in that position... and doesn't show up on time and no
amount of complaints or protocol corrects the problem.... It is no
small wonder in my mind that Digital is in trouble. It has shelled out
inordinate amounts of cold hard cash on people living off the fat of
the land. These people are virtually untouchable too. They'd get 12's
on a 1 to 5 rating in my book.
Grrrr
|
2022.12 | what is a "right thing"? | CSSE::TWELSH | | Mon Jul 27 1992 15:19 | 16 |
| rewards for "doing the right thing" ..... hmmmmmm
I've developed an opinion about performance ratings at DEC; people do
get rewarded for doing the right thing, and if they and their boss
have the same subjective opinion about which things are "right" and
which are the "right" ways to do these things, then the performance
rating will be a good one -- ie, 1 or 2
however, if the boss and employee's opinions differ to any great
degree then "doing the right thing" is probably not as good an
approach to high performance ratings as doing what the documented
plan said to do, even though it may not seem "right" at the time
just a thought....
tom
|
2022.13 | Re .2 | SHALOT::ANDERSON | Ask me about my Rotisserie team | Mon Jul 27 1992 15:49 | 4 |
| > Here in the UK we have E for Excellent, C for Competent and M for
> managing (just about coping with work). The numbers which are
"M for managing," eh? I think I'll just leave this one alone.
|
2022.14 | Bottom line results are the reality in the U.S. | AUSTIN::UNLAND | Sic Biscuitus Disintegratum | Mon Jul 27 1992 16:58 | 21 |
| re: Paying for Result vs. Paying for Effort
I reluctantly share the opinion that the Corporation should pay for
results, not for effort. That is how the Corporation as a whole is
measured by the stockholders, and we, the employees, should share in
the responsibility of meeting that measurement.
However, one responsibility of a manager is to motivate the workers.
Say that a worker is making the extra effort, but is blocked from
success by external factors. The manager should be lenient with
the "results" part of the workers metric and should be responsible
for redirecting the worker so that the worker is motivated to keep
up the extra effort and is put in a position where the extra effort
will mean greater "results". It's more of an investment for future
performance rather than a reward for past performance.
Sadly, I don't think that the Corporation is much into investment in
the workers these days ...
Geoffrey
|
2022.15 | | WLDBIL::KILGORE | ...57 channels, and nothin' on... | Mon Jul 27 1992 17:20 | 5 |
|
When a manager tells you that a given raise is appropriate for either
a 3 or 2 rating, the discussion of "pay for results" vs. "pay for
effort" becomes academic, at best...
|
2022.16 | 2 cents worth | CDROM::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Mon Jul 27 1992 17:31 | 47 |
| 1's might note, but they don't let other things slide in order
to do so. They don't fail to complete the project because of
their noting, chatting, vacation, illness, whatever. The hypothetical
balance sheet of productivity/time wasting comes out in DEC's favor
even if it does so in unorthodox ways.
Some of the 1 traits I'm familiar with include
- developing innovative solutions that are presented, accepted, and
implemented and actually work to solve real problems that matter
- willingness to put in extra time or take work home when things get
difficult; willingness to be inconvenienced
- willingness not to pass the buck, but to say "I'll find a way to
solve this" and then do so
- willingness to look at the big picture and adjust priorities
according to real project needs as opposed to what one happens to feel
like doing that day
- willingness to manage projects and take responsibility for them
- willingness to sit down and produce rather than think up tasks for
other people to do
- ability to envision oneself working hard, and commit to a result
that will only be accomplished through hard work
- willingness to cut through process discussions, make decisions, and
settle down to producing something
- willingness not to whine or make excuses or say "I can't", but rather
to say "What's keeping us from doing that and how do I change it? Who
can I get to help me?"
- willingness to invest in professional development outside of work
time
- willingness to do triage when the notesfile you moderate is blowing
up, your best friend is having a crisis, and there is a customer who
needs you; ability to manage those things calmly one after the other in
an appropriate order
- never letting your manager be surprised
|
2022.17 | | IOSG::WDAVIES | There can only be one ALL-IN-1 Mail | Tue Jul 28 1992 06:30 | 6 |
|
do they read books on management-pyscho-babble as well ?
:-)
Winton
|
2022.18 | ex | STOKES::BURT | | Tue Jul 28 1992 09:07 | 37 |
| .16 is what i'm talking about! (whew! what a note!) Especially the
last line: "Never letting your manager be surprised." If 1's are
capable of doing all that .16 laid out and more (or in cases where it's
less), then why does a 1 have a manager and not be the manager/VP? I
for one would want to follow under the direction/discipline/guidance of
a 1 than a 0 ( isn't that right? if a 1 is high and 5 is low and 1 is
always working for someone, then following the number line, 0 comes
before 1 so in essence most people work for 0's instead of who they
should really be working for.)
If we start rating appropriately and I agree to rate on the results one
produces, then how many results does one need to produce in a given
year to maintain a 1 status? Where is the line drawn for employee A
producing X results and employee B producing Y results? Both result
sets are of high quality and provide the potential to produce money,
maybe even 1 result did produce money. Now, do we rate the employee
that actually produced money a 1? and all others 1.5?
The way our reviews are designed with allotment for enormous amounts of
management-pyscho-babble as time and space will allow (we know there's
more than enough space on those "forms", time is limited), ANYONE could
justify an employee's 1 rating.
I believe it all boils down to maintaining a quota and helping your
clique. If someone is a 1 in their manager's eyes, then that manager
should humbly step down and let that person take over (unless of course
that manger isn't a 0 but has recieved a 1 also).
Reviews should be broken down into a block structure with little space
for babble (babble can alwyas be provided separately and copied to the
employee and his/her personnel file) and rated on potential, quantity,
quality, and results for each block of an employee's performance with
numerical ratings for each block and averages taken the the overall
average provided and voila! employee is a ___, please merit
accordingly.
Reg.
|
2022.19 | Takes one to know one | WMOIS::HOLEWA | And then, the cook was goosed. | Tue Jul 28 1992 09:28 | 13 |
| re: .16
OK, I'll fess up. I was rated a one on my last review, second one of
my 10 year DEC career. I'd like to think that I do "consistantly and
significantly exceed most major goals blah, blah, blah" and if someone
choses to define those things as in reply .16, thank you. That makes
me feel good. BUT, as far as walking on water and "should be the next
VP" Nooooooooooooooooo thank you.
I also believe that I'm `only' a 3 and should work to hard and smart to
get the job done, results - absolutley the bottom line however I get
there.
|
2022.20 | works:hero <-> fails:insubordinate | JOET::JOET | Question authority. | Tue Jul 28 1992 09:28 | 7 |
| re: .16
Maybe it's me, but most of the "1" qualities mentioned seem primarily
to be behaviors that will "get the job done" when the person's manager
provides no value or does things that actually hinder the person's work.
-joe tomkowitz
|
2022.21 | | SCAACT::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts is TOO slow | Tue Jul 28 1992 10:13 | 4 |
| re: .18 I disagree with just about everything you said, but don't have time
to go into it now.
Bob
|
2022.22 | | AKOCOA::TOMAO | Totally legal!!! | Tue Jul 28 1992 10:52 | 16 |
| RE several back regarding DECFlex.
There were/are MANY of us who performed jobs several levels ABOVE our
salary also. I was getting paid 'low end' Department Coordinator wage
class 2 while performing wage class 4 jobs! I was even turned down for
a job that I was performaing already for several months because they
would have had to bump my salary too far just to get me into the range.
So while your growling about the few (or many) goof offs who take no
pride in anything they do - including a second chance at life at DEC -
think about the few or many of us who had the rug pulled out from under
them and grabbed the brass ring of oppportunity and busted butt at ALL
assignments!!
Joyce
|
2022.23 | | CDROM::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Tue Jul 28 1992 11:06 | 21 |
| > If 1's are
> capable of doing all that .16 laid out and more (or in cases where it's
> less), then why does a 1 have a manager and not be the manager/VP?
Good point. In my opinion, the answer is sphere of influence. A
person may be a profoundly good problem solver in a relatively small
sphere of influence, say one project, technical manual, or product
subsystem. That same individual contributor may have no talent for or
interest in managing a group or looking at the really big picture from
a vp level. (The peter principle says that the excellent individual
contributor will be pressured to move "up", though.)
Keep in mind that .16 is just one person's opinion/observations. I'm
not a manager and never wish to be, so I don't have that perspective at
all. I would not expect others to necessarily agree with what I wrote
in that note.
I was surprised to get several messages from people who wanted
permission to forward it around. I wrote back and said that it is
probably much more applicable in engineering or writing than in
"influencing" type jobs.
|
2022.24 | What was your rating? | WBCKIT::LANIER | | Tue Jul 28 1992 13:05 | 2 |
| Regarding 0. I am very curious as to what your rating was last time.
|
2022.25 | Who would know? | MR4DEC::FBUTLER | | Tue Jul 28 1992 13:40 | 66 |
|
(Slight FLAME ON)
I rarely participate in notes conferences, but this is a subject
that I believe is one of the roots (if not THE root) of our current
situation. Presently, we have no way to objectively rate our own
work force. At least two things fall out of this: 1) If we can't
objectively rate our people, we can't help our people improve their
skills, and 2) When we do fall on hard times, we are forced to
reduce headcount based on function as opposed to performance.
Let's take a general look at the overall rating system. To my
knowledge, an employee may be rated a 1,2,3, or 5 (4's were
eliminated quite some time ago.) A manager cannot rate an employee
as a 5 without substantial backup, which means that most "poor"
performers must be rated as 3's, which is currently defined as
"meets job expectations". NOT! There are 1's out there, but they
are few and far between, so that means that the bulk of our 100,000
employee base is rated as 2's or 3's. I don't think this is a
broad enough range to represent the overwhelming majority of
our workforce with. The line between a 2 and a 3 is very grey and
very broad, varying widely from group to group.
(In the past, managers have been told that they had too many 2's,
and were forced to change some 2's to 3's in order to make
salary plans work.)
(most Flame OFF)
The result: No consistency in the measurement of performance,
WHICH ALSO MEANS no consistency in rewarding that
performance.
Couple this with the latest revelation in performance reviews
where an employee is asked to author their version of their
review "for comparison with the manager's version". What really
happens with most of the folks I know is that they are asked to
forward their copy to the manager, and with varying amounts of
wordsmithing, it ends up being the "final" copy. I don't know
where this plan originated, but IMO, it's a joke.
So. How do we fix it? I think there are several ways the system
could be improved. 1) Broaden the range (1 - 10). This would
allow for rating within a catergory. i.e. if 4-6 indicated meeting
job expectations, than 4 could indicate a good positive attitude
and skill set proficiency, while 6 may indicate that someone is new
in a job, is still on the learning curve etc. 2) Get peer
involvement. This adds a lot of depth to the material supporting
the review. Some managers do this now, but I don't think it's
a requirement.
Of course, NONE of these suggestions will make any difference if
a manager REALLY SHOULD NOT BE A MANAGER (but they're probably
rated a 2 or a 3, so who would know?) There are many managers I
have dealt with over the years who had no real interest in
management. They "fell" into it due to time in grade, or fealt
they had to take a management position due to social/peer pressure.
Many of them were good people, believed in the company, AND WERE
LOUSY MANAGERS.
O.K. I've said my two cents on the subject.
Jim
|
2022.26 | | USPMLO::JSANTOS | | Tue Jul 28 1992 13:41 | 8 |
| I would love to see individual groups rate each other in an open forum.
No pay figures have to be disclosed, but we should be given a chance to
view who is getting what, understand why they are getting what they are
getting and have input to what we think our fellow employees are
should get and why. IMO, secrets should only be kept if someone can
explaine why. Anyone should be able to explain why someones pay
couldn't be disclosed, but its very difficult for me to understand and
others to explaine why a fellow employees rating needs to be kept quiet.
|
2022.27 | a cynical view of some reviews | STUDIO::HAMER | content with the verdict of time | Tue Jul 28 1992 14:17 | 32 |
| There are three things about performance numbers in this discussion
that bother me and make me concerned about their use as criteria for
you-know-what.
1. Digital seems hell bent on reducing complex questions to a number.
That way, we don't have to think or to judge or to understand. We only
have to apply policy. "Cut all the threes," or however it gets played
out is, at the root, a cop out, a symptom of inability or unwillingness
to make hard decisions about people and the business based on study,
analysis, thought, knowledge, and experience.
2. Take 100 random Digital employees and all their performance
reviews/evaluations (assuming they had received them, which is another
issue) and cut the rating number off the bottom. Next put the reviews
in one pile and the rating numbers in another pile. Now try to match
the rating with the review. Betcha can't. Many of the reviews I've seen
in the 12+ years I've been here are virtually interchangeability.
Without extensive reading between the lines, extrapolation, guesswork,
intimate knowledge of what **really** was being said, or being present
when the review was given the prose is unhelpful.
3. Political disconnect. For example:
Review: You're a jerk. Rating:2 Political comment: "what's
your problem? I 'gave' you a two"
Review: You're great! Rating:3 Political comment: "Don't worry
about the Rating, it's the
evaluation that counts."
And, of course, as has been mentioned in both cases the raise is the
same.
John H.
|
2022.28 | one-on-one is the only management that works | SGOUTL::BELDIN_R | D-Day: 245 days and counting | Tue Jul 28 1992 14:38 | 8 |
| As soon as a company gets so big that it tries to systematize its
performance ratings and turn them into a number, its too big to survive
much longer. I've come to the conclusion that nobody on this earth
knows how to manage well an organization without face to face contact.
That goes for businesses, colleges, cities, or anything else. We
humans only work when we have human contact with each other.
Dick
|
2022.29 | why not do it as a tests? it is most fair this way | STAR::ABBASI | i^(-i) = SQRT(exp(PI)) | Tue Jul 28 1992 15:17 | 36 |
| I think reviews should be based on graded exams, this is how it is
done in schools, and worked well for hundreds of years, so why
re-invent the wheel?
for example, a software engineer, will , at time of his/her review,
go to closed room, with a terminal, and a debugger, and asked to
code a program to solve a certain problem.
you come and check on them after an allocated period of time, say 3
hours. the are allowed to bring in only one manual with them, of their
choice.
you take the program they wrote, grade it, and that will be the
performance they get, the grades should be A,A-,B+,B,B-,C+,C
for more advanced people, like principle and consultant engineers, the
tests will be harder, and they have to write documentations too. and it
must be closed manuals and closed notes. I think a consultant should pass
without the help of a manual.
for managers , we test a manager by putting them in a room, and let a group
of highly paranoid employee with the manager alone in the room, you
disconnect telephone lines to the room, and monitor the progress on a
close caption screen , monitor how the manager handles the situation ,
and if they can control the employees in a graceful manner.
Iam sure we can organized tests the check the compatibilities of
any type of worker in the corporation.
this way of doing it is better, because it is fair, every one gets
the same test, same time to do it in, and it test the actual skills
needed to do the job.
thank you
/nasser
|
2022.30 | | MCIS5::VIOLA | | Tue Jul 28 1992 15:30 | 10 |
| > for managers , we test a manager by putting them in a room, and let a group
> of highly paranoid employee with the manager alone in the room,
nasser,
Where would you possibly find a group of paranoid employees around here? :^)
Marc
|
2022.31 | | ELWOOD::LANE | | Tue Jul 28 1992 15:38 | 16 |
| > I think reviews should be based on graded exams, this is how it is
> done in schools, and worked well for hundreds of years, so why
> re-invent the wheel?
>
> for example, a software engineer, will , at time of his/her review,
> go to closed room, with a terminal, and a debugger, and asked to
> code a program to solve a certain problem.
This may work in situations where all the answers are known long beforehand
but how do you test someone who's inventing the answers?
> this way of doing it is better, because it is fair, every one gets
> the same test, same time to do it in, and it test the actual skills
> needed to do the job.
...and we wind up just like the post office.
|
2022.32 | | CSC32::J_OPPELT | I like it this way. | Tue Jul 28 1992 15:46 | 10 |
| re .29 -- tests
That would force DEC to create another layer of overhead -- the
employee testing group.
-------------
my group has some of the best review processes I have encountered.
After a review, I know what I need to do to get to the next level
in ratings, or to get to the next job level.
|
2022.34 | Numbers issue or process issue . . . | CAPNET::CROWTHER | Maxine 276-8226 | Tue Jul 28 1992 16:40 | 7 |
| Is it the rating system or the process that is the problem? If you
knew that your review was made up of input from your peers, your
customers, your suppliers instead of just your manager, would it make a
difference?? If you knew where you stood in relation to your peers
would that make a difference? If it were a team process instead of 1-1
would that make a difference?
|
2022.35 | Throw out the WHOLE THING | MR4DEC::FBUTLER | | Tue Jul 28 1992 17:11 | 10 |
|
I think BOTH parts of the process are broken. The number scheme
needs to be changed or eliminated, and the input process has to be
changed. I don't see any way that we can really increase our
competitiveness and efficiency without knowing what the strengths and
weakenesses of our workforce are. Everything else that we are seeing
is like watching a blindfolded kid trying to hit the Pinata (sp?) at a
party, i.e. expense controls, downsizing, etc. Not that we don't need
these things also, but they are peripheral to the main problem.
|
2022.36 | performance ratings do not always equate to performance | CUPTAY::BAILEY | Season of the Winch | Tue Jul 28 1992 17:29 | 14 |
| RE .25
I have to tell you that you are misinformed if you believe that the 4
rating was eliminated quite some time ago ... I got one in February,
and for reasons that had nothing to do with my job performance (but
that's already been covered in another note).
The problem with these ratings is that they are entirely subjective,
and your manager is the SOLE source for that subjectivity. Therefore
two employees who are performing at the same level, but for different
managers, can end up with entirely different performance ratings.
... Bob
|
2022.37 | | ZEKE::ECKERT | All dressed up to go dreaming | Tue Jul 28 1992 17:55 | 9 |
| re: .29
> I think reviews should be based on graded exams, this is how it is
> done in schools, and worked well for hundreds of years, so why
> re-invent the wheel?
This process may have been *used* for hundreds of years, but what makes
you think it works, much less works well?
|
2022.38 | Oh well.... | SUFRNG::REESE_K | | Tue Jul 28 1992 17:59 | 40 |
| .25
Jim:
You spelled it out better than I could. Our group has implemented
a practice that at first glance seemed like a good idea, but in
seeing it practiced, caused me a lot of concern. Before a team
member is to have a PA our manager sends out a memo asking for "peer"
review on the individual to receive the review. As I said initially
this seemed like a good idea, (but I thought it would be a better
idea if management had some idea as to how individuals were
performing). My main concern was about someone who was a good worker, but
not a people pleaser. Personalities DO clash and my initial gut re-
action was "what if someone does a hatchet job on a peer because of
_name difference of opinion here_. When I broached this question at
the time I was told that we shouldn't provide any negative input that
we weren't willing to share to an individual face-to-face. <--- Sounds
great on paper, but it has been my experience most people are unwilling
to do this, but will definitely write a negative peer review on
someone.
No one is perfect and some people seem unwilling or unable to cut
someone else slack or give them credit for good work and accomplish-
ment......personality conflicts have come into play and this concerns
me because this is someone's living we're playing with.
My preference would be to NOT have it mandatory to do peer reviews;
but my PA is impacted if I don't submit one when asked <---- yes, they
have the secretaries keeping track and checking off. I'm usually of
the opinion if you can't say anything good about a person, don't say
anything at all....so I do a lot of generic "reviews".
It's kind of ironic though, I received a 2 and a promotion with my
last review, the bucks were terrible because I was already a quarter
into the salary range for my new level, (probably because of my years
of service) :-( A co-worker who had received a 3 on their PA was
upset at the 3 rating, but then said "oh well, a least a got a pretty
good raise and named the amount". I almost fell out of my chair :-(
|
2022.39 | my answer similar in context to that of right honorable senator | STAR::ABBASI | i^(-i) = SQRT(exp(PI)) | Tue Jul 28 1992 18:11 | 20 |
| ref .37
> re: .29
>> I think reviews should be based on graded exams, this is how it is
>> done in schools, and worked well for hundreds of years, so why
>> re-invent the wheel?
> This process may have been *used* for hundreds of years, but what
> makes you think it works, much less works well?
as the right honorable senator from (I forgot which state the right
honorable senator was) , he said, "Democracy is not perfect, but it is the
best thing we got".
I heard this in TV not long ago, I thought It was good, It was
a program late night, where 3 honorable senators were sitting discussing
the matter of what is the best system to use.
/Nasser
|
2022.40 | review = salemanship | CTOAVX::BUCKLEY | ski fast,take chances,die young | Tue Jul 28 1992 18:53 | 25 |
| > (In the past, managers have been told that they had too many 2's,
> and were forced to change some 2's to 3's in order to make
> salary plans work.)
I was once told I was a 2 in my PA and when the paperbook can back from
personnel, it had a 3 on it... I was told we had too many 2's...
> Couple this with the latest revelation in performance reviews
> where an employee is asked to author their version of their
> review "for comparison with the manager's version". What really
> happens with most of the folks I know is that they are asked to
> forward their copy to the manager, and with varying amounts of
> wordsmithing, it ends up being the "final" copy. I don't know
> where this plan originated, but IMO, it's a joke.
In 12+ years at DEC, I have had ONE manager write my review. I have written
EVERY other PA and my proposal to become a consultant. Now that I'm in the
field, I save all of the mail messages from salespeople and customers that said
"great job" and attach them to my review :^)
I once didn't have a manager for 9 months and had to ask the IS manager WHO
my supervisor was so they could sign my review in time to make personnel's
deadline. Maybe the lack of a manager explains why my portion of a late project
was the only piece done on time!
Dan "who reads notes after hours or when his private cluster is rebooting"
|
2022.41 | System designed to fail | BIGUN::BAKER | Something living in my limousine | Wed Jul 29 1992 01:01 | 18 |
| Any system that has no mechanism for feedback and continuous
improvement is bound to be a failure.
I have found the review system to be confrontationalist in the extreme.
The salary plans are worked out in say November. Ever try to
redistribute the kitty when everyone performs on a major project the
following year? Try divvying your 2*1s and 3*2s to a team that performs 6*1
and the money apportionately the same way, to reward some you have to
shaft others..
John
|
2022.42 | An incoherent system, inconsistently applied | DTIF::RALTO | It's all part of the show! | Wed Jul 29 1992 10:26 | 22 |
| The system was destined to fail at the exact moment some joker
decided that there had to be a "normal distribution" of 1's, 2's,
3's, etc., in an organization, regardless of an individual's actual
performance with respect to their job description. Subsequently,
beyond simple failure, it was destined to crash and burn when some
(other?) joker decided to tie salary increases to the "grading" system
using a bizarre mechanism that, for example, would permit a "2"
performer to get a zero-percent raise.
And then, the system became a satire of itself when some (other?)
joker decided to tie the performance ratings into layoff criteria.
So, for example, someone who has consistently gotten "2" for years
and who has been promoted, and, relatively new in their position,
gets a "3", is now a prime candidate for layoff.
There are several notes throughout this conference where we've
dissected this absurd system, and most people (including many
supervisors I've had the misfortune to encounter) still don't
understand it.
Chris
|
2022.43 | | FIGS::BANKS | This was | Wed Jul 29 1992 11:36 | 13 |
| Just an anecdote, albeit a true one:
A friend of mine got a review a few years back from his supervisor. It was a
1. When the review got to the next level of management, it was downgraded to
a 2. Why? Well, if he was a 1 performer, they'd have to promote him, and he
wasn't in the plan for a promotion that year.
He got both his "1" and his promotion the following year, and knowing both
the person involved and the management chain, I have no reason to disbelieve
this story.
I s'pose there wasn't any long term harm done by this, but it sure doesn't
sound like a working system to me.
|
2022.44 | Been through that one.. | AKOFAT::SHERK | Ignorance is a basic human rite. | Wed Jul 29 1992 11:53 | 12 |
| A similar thing happened to me. After my first year I was reviewed and
got a straight 2. ie a 2 in each area discussed. After my manager
submitted it she got back to me with some "bad news." Although the
rating stood there would not be a raise based on a 2 since it had
not been in the plan and it would have to be made up the next year.
By the time the next year rolled around I had a different manager.
Someday, when I'm feeling particularly bitter I'll calculate what
that little end around cost me...
Ken
|
2022.45 | | RAVEN1::PINION | Hard Drinking Calypso Poet | Wed Jul 29 1992 12:38 | 5 |
| Been there.....done that.
Sdp
(more times than I care to remember)
|
2022.46 | I'm confused | DYPSS1::COGHILL | Steve Coghill, Luke 14:28 | Wed Jul 29 1992 14:36 | 19 |
| I don't understand the payraise matrix at all anymore. From '85 to
'91 I got pathetic raises at long intervals (worked out to less than
1%/year). I was a consistent 2 performer during this time (I'm a SWS
Consultant I).
This past year I was downgraded from a 2 (per the appraisal
calculations) to a 3. I get what I consider a very good raise
shortly thereafter.
Note: I happen to know that my previous raises were well below
spend plan and my suspect last raise was slightly above the
spend plan.
I am not sure how to take this. My PA sharply critized me, and thus
causing the downgrade, as having too much of the "old DEC" in me,
and being unwilling to conform to the the "new DEC" (I still haven't
figured out what the new DEC is yet and my boss can't tell me, but I
don't fit the mold). But doesn't my payraise indicate I must be
doing pretty OK?
|
2022.47 | I think we've all been through it... | MR4DEC::FBUTLER | | Wed Jul 29 1992 15:00 | 28 |
|
There is no end to the horror stories in this arena...My personal
favorite occurred several years ago when I was one of two people
assigned to provide technical support to a government program that we
had won. It was a 3 million dollar program which Digital had bid at a
$350K loss in order to favorably position the company for future
business. We were failing terribly in the delivery and the customer
was on the verge of holding us in default. The two of us jumped into
the program and commuted weekly to D.C. for 4 months. We found
solutions to the problems, regained the customer's confidence and they
booked slightly over $29 million dollars in PROFITABLE business with
DEC. The total time on the project was slightly over 8mos which was
the major portion of my review period. 1 month after I returned from
the assignment, I was reviewed and rated a 3 with a raise that was 2%
below the "spend" figure. My manager's reasoning was that the work I
had done had taken place in D.C. so he "didn't have much of an
understanding of anything I had done there" even though HE had made the
assignment. It was ludicrous. I had no expectations of being regarded
as a hero, but I believed (and still do!) that I had done an excellent
job for the company, and was proud of that. None of the letters from
the customer OR the internal field people were attached or even
mentioned in the review.
Anyway, maybe of Palmer is serious about being more communicative and
fixing some of the problems enough of us will bring this up to get some
visibility????????
Jim
|
2022.48 | new DEC | SGOUTL::BELDIN_R | D-Day: 244 days and counting | Wed Jul 29 1992 15:44 | 12 |
| re Steve
>and being unwilling to conform to the the "new DEC" (I still haven't
>figured out what the new DEC is yet and my boss can't tell me, but I
>don't fit the mold).
Your boss can tell you, but is afraid to. New DEC means you lie to
keep him happy. :-( Stay the way you are, at least, I like you better
this way. :-)
Dick
|
2022.49 | Not just me ?! | POLAR::COCKWELL | | Wed Jul 29 1992 15:47 | 16 |
| ...gee, and I thought it was just me ! I never look forward to review
time, it hardly seems worth the pain .. but it can really screw your
career.
Has anyone been asked to provide input on their manager for their
review ??
I never forgot the words of my first manager at DEC during our
discussion on the merits of my review, "Just remember that its my
perception that matters, not others" and this after I had some solid
thank you letters etc. .. and he DID have a different perspective.
Most of the input from my peers, they usually show me anyway and what
goes in is certainly not what shows up on my review, a few changed
words can change the entire context.
Anyway, I'm feeling tired now .. my review is due.
|
2022.50 | PA's are weird | CIPSC::CHASE | Field Troll at Mushroom Central | Wed Jul 29 1992 16:54 | 13 |
|
Yeah, after about 9 years with mother DEC I still can't figure out
reviews. When I was with sales support in Houston, I had one that
lasted 6 hours; (I think he was trying to outlast me 'cause I know
I was trying to wear him down).
The last one was interesting. It simply didn't happen. No review
of goal sheet, no meeting, no signing of anything, no drawing up of
a new goal sheet. ZIP.
But a few weeks later I get about a $30/week raise, which is crappy,
but still a raise.
Go figure.
|
2022.51 | No 4's or 5's | SPECXN::BLEY | | Wed Jul 29 1992 17:52 | 8 |
| If there are "supposed" to be so many 1's, 2's, 3's etc., does this
mean that since all the 4's and 5's got TFSO'd, that a 2 and 3 is now
a 4 or 5?
If we got rid of the dead weight, then there should be no 4's or
5's....
|
2022.52 | | WLDBIL::KILGORE | ...57 channels, and nothin' on... | Wed Jul 29 1992 18:28 | 10 |
|
RE .25, .36, existence of 4 rating:
You're both right. In the depths of DEC's past, there was a legitimate
4 rating. Around the same time DEC was becoming Digital, management
decided that the 4 was just too difficult to deal with, so it went
away. Within the past two years or so, when management realized that
3-rated no-ops were more difficult to handle than the 4 rating, it was
reinstated.
|
2022.53 | | CSC32::J_OPPELT | I like it this way. | Wed Jul 29 1992 19:15 | 31 |
| In my group we are very serious about peer input. If a co-worker
is not pulling his weight, or if I am aware of something that
my manager is not aware of (positive or negative), I'm gonna
make it known to management.
Mincing words on PA inputs is a disservice to my group, to the
peer, to me, to DEC. In my group the person getting his PA
selects two peers to provide input. The manager selects two
others, and unsolicited PA input is also welcome. If management
always got minced words, there would be no value in peer PA
inputs. As it stands, if I give a glowing input on a peer, my
management can count on it being accurate because they have seen
tougher PA inputs from me too. (A positive comment on peer inputs
for me was my candor.)
In some ways peer input is more important to me than what my
manager sees. Peers are the ones I have to work with. Peers
are my barometer to my performance. I want to know what my
peers think about me. I want to know how they view my performance.
I want to be able to straighten out problems before they fester
into tragedies. I don't want minced words on peer inputs for
me.
Peer input is only one part of PAs in my group. Self-evaluations,
customer letters, management statistics, attainment of job plan
goals, all these carry weight.
I like the PA process in my group. It relies on more than just
your manager's impression of you. There is plenty of supporting
data if you are a top performer, and a lesser performer cannot
hide behind BS at review time.
|
2022.54 | And don't forget... | NEWVAX::SGRIFFIN | DTN 339-5391 | Wed Jul 29 1992 22:51 | 4 |
| > Mincing words on PA inputs is a disservice to my group, to the
> peer, to me, to DEC.
....the customer
|
2022.55 | tales from the crypt | SHALOT::ANDERSON | Bon noyade! | Thu Jul 30 1992 10:52 | 13 |
| After I'd been at DEC for a few months, my first manager took me
out to lunch one day (I really didn't see her very much other-
wise). We went to a nice restaurant, talked about Scrabble, the
house she and her husband were building, A Prairie Home Companion,
and she picked up the check. Later, she informed me that that
had been my first PA. It was a nice lunch, but ...
Another boss once told me outright that if I wanted to be a "1"
I had to be a workaholic. No, it didn't matter that I might
get the same amount of work done in 40 hours as the workaholic
might do in 60 -- the workaholic just had to be rewarded somehow.
-- C
|
2022.56 | | UTROP1::SIMPSON_D | just call me Lazarus | Thu Jul 30 1992 13:48 | 12 |
| This emphasis on 1s and 2s is, I think, an American phenomenon. In my
previous group only one person was rated a 2, and everybody else a 3.
You'll just have to take my word for it that as a group we were of high
quality.
Is there a conflict here? No. We simply operated under a different
set of assumptions. A 1 really boiled down to a management failure.
If you're really that far ahead of your job requirements then you
simply shouldn't be at that level. A 2 meant you were ready for
promotion. There was no shame in a 3, and there could legitimately be
4s (for someone in a new job, for example. A 4 simply means needs
development to meet requirements).
|
2022.57 | Yes! | STOKES::BURT | | Fri Jul 31 1992 08:33 | 4 |
| .56 Here, here! Someone that agrees with me! The real logical
solution.
Reg.
|
2022.58 | | TOHOPE::REESE_K | | Fri Jul 31 1992 14:49 | 36 |
| Joe:
I admire your openness in saying you won't mince words on a peer
review, but do you also spell it out to the individual being
reviewed face to face?
When peer review was implemented for our team it was stressed that
one was not to put negative info into a review if we were not willing
to face the co-worker directly also. I tried this a few times at
first; basically I was told to take a hike, mind my own business....
whatever. A few other co-workers who were less tactful than I, found
themselves in verbal shouting matches....this is not professional
behavior IMHO. This has happened more than once and working rela-
tionships have deteriorated. When the "chop-ees" asked to see the
peer review (when informed there was negative input from their peers);
they were not allowed to see who wrote what.
I think peer input is a definite plus in the technical area; but an
assumption is being made that *all* people have the ability to be ob-
jective, this hasn't proven to be the case. As I said, I'm aware
of some real hatchet jobs that have been done on one peer by another
based simply on personality conflicts, I'm sorry, I have a problem
with this.....especially if the person getting chopped up is a very
competent worker. When I say I became aware of the situation, it
wasn't from the person who got nailed, it was from someone who
basically said "here's my chance to nail the SOB".
I still think there needs to be more management involvement in day
to day business, then there wouldn't be as great a need for someone
(sometimes self-appointed) to point out the errors of others. MBWA
does have merit, as long as the manager doesn't spend the entire day
walking around :-)
|
2022.59 | | WLDBIL::KILGORE | ...57 channels, and nothin' on... | Fri Jul 31 1992 15:39 | 23 |
|
Peer input to a review is a wonderful idea.
Expecting peers to justify their input face-to-face with the reviewee
is an example of management wussing on their responsibilities.
I'm a manager, doing a review on Bob. I ask Mary for input, and she
says Bob lets some things fall through the cracks. I ask for
examples, verify them, and then during the review I say, "Bob, you
tend to let some things fall through the cracks; for example..." There
is no need to involve Mary; having accepted her input and verified it
independently, I am taking responsibility for the review. I am doing
the "management thing".
Now do it the other way. During the review I say, "Bob, you tend to let
some things fall through the cracks." Like what?" "Well, Mary says..."
The review then degrades into a shouting match between the two, while
I sit back and wait for the dust to settle. In effect, I have placed the
responsibility for at least part of the review on Mary's shoulders. The
logical extension of this process is that I construct a review entirely
of peer input; I can then shrug and say "Hey, these aren't *my*
opinions!"
|
2022.60 | re .58 | CSC32::J_OPPELT | I like it this way. | Fri Jul 31 1992 16:21 | 22 |
| While it is not a policy in our group, it is a standard practice
to copy the peer on the input I send to the manager. I always
do it.
When I point out a negative situation, I also make a point to
point out a positive way to correct it, and suggest (in the
PA input) that the peer incorporate that change into his/her
job plan for the next year. This changes the negative report
into something positive to work on, and draws the focus from
the negative behavior to future plans for improvement.
Perhaps what I do really *IS* mincing words, though I don't
see it that way. I want the people I'm going to be working
with to be the best they can be so that when I need their
support on a project/problem I can count on quality assistance.
In pointing out problems and possible corrections (most times
the correction is a suggestion of what *I* would have done
differently in the same situation) I help to build a stronger
team around me. I ask nothing less of others doing peer
inputs on me.
Joe Oppelt
|
2022.61 | open communications | WSINT::HOUSE | Kenny House - MLO5-2/E45 - DTN 223-6720 | Fri Jul 31 1992 17:20 | 10 |
| RE: Peer review ...
Whenever I'm asked to provide input on a colleague's preformance, I
send the draft to him/her before I send it to the manager. Maybe I've
been working with some very good people, but no one's ever had a
problem with what I wrote, Once he/she lets me know it's OK to send it
on, I do.
-- Kenny House (who realizes he's been very fortunate to have worked
with these people)
|
2022.62 | | TALK::JARVIS | Next Unseen, The Infinite Voyage | Mon Aug 03 1992 22:26 | 14 |
| This is an interesting note to follow. Interesting in that I was just
watching (last week) an interview with Dr. Demming, including his
comments on grading people. He felt it was the wrong thing to do. He
said it labels people as winners/losers and that is wrong. He said w/l
should only be realized when you're playing cards, or backgammon, etc.
He said the entire school grading system is wrong. He said (I hope I
get this correct) "grading people doesn't get you quality people". If
you paid those people 50 times their salary, you'd still get the same
quality of work from them.
Geez, I wish we'd listened to this man when he was younger before he
went to Japan. There were lots of other good comments he made as well.
Anyhow, back to your regularly scheduled program...
|
2022.63 | | RAVEN1::B_ADAMS | Wats'a Glen? | Mon Aug 03 1992 23:03 | 7 |
|
I watched that interview as well...interesting guy this Demming
dude..yeah I know, he's a Dr.
Wish alot of people would listen to him...like DEC!
B.A.
|
2022.64 | how else is it supposed to happen? | STAR::ABBASI | i^(-i) = SQRT(exp(PI)) | Mon Aug 03 1992 23:27 | 16 |
| well, I dont think Grading people is the best thing either, but
how else do you suggest to reward?
example, in school, you do a test, grade it. a test is one of best
indication available to give you an idea about ability of the 'worker'.
plus, if there are no tests and grades there will be little motivation
to work hard.
I personaly love tests and being graded (Iam weried), but a test and
a grade is a challenge, and getting a good grade is the reward.
so, if no grades, what is the alternative?
/Nasser
|
2022.65 | | RAVEN1::PINION | Hard Drinking Calypso Poet | Tue Aug 04 1992 01:47 | 15 |
| Well, Nasser as you know, school and DEC can be quite different
regardless how much it may seem like kindergarten at times. And as
long as we have Humans giving out the rewards (money) and the grades
(reviews), they're gonna screw it up. Not all, but I don't know many
people who have been happy with their raise in quite a while. I'd
suggest for a manufacturing environment, that groups get rewarded on an
equal basis, i.e. the group does well and everybody gets the same/good
percentage. I think this is the best way to promote the teamwork
neccessary in this type of environment. And believe me, when we're all
getting the same raise, peer pressure has a way smoothing out some of
the proverbial wrinkles. Now outside of manufacturing, your guess is
as good as mine....
Sdp
|
2022.66 | Reviewer's privilege | COUNT0::WELSH | If you don't like change, teach Latin | Tue Aug 04 1992 04:54 | 8 |
| re .60,.61:
For the reviewer to copy the peer with criticism sent to the manager
is one thing.
For the manager to reveal the identity of the reviewer is quite another.
/Tom
|
2022.67 | What is the value of a PA? | ICS::DONNELLAN | | Tue Aug 04 1992 08:35 | 7 |
| I'm inclined to agree with Demming; I suspect that the entire
performance appraisal system has minimal impact on people's
productivity. Maybe the opposite is true; the mere existence of it
holds people back for fear of reprisal and therefore we are robbed of
the ideas that could actually improve things. I've often wondered how
many people are positively motivated by the prospect of a good PA once
or twice a year.
|
2022.68 | Theoretically, I see the light. The Practice is harder! | IW::WARING | Simplicity sells | Tue Aug 04 1992 09:14 | 8 |
| We were having a talk about Deming this very morning - and it broke when I
had to answer a phone call from Israel. Deming seems to be against financial
metrics on people too.
So, does your favourite Japanese company not discharge its budget
responsibilities down the line? How do they ensure that they have a competent
and well executing salesforce?
- Ian W.
|
2022.69 | RESULTS OR EMPLOYEE | WMOIS::RIVETTS_D | Dave Rivetts, WMO, USCD, 241-4627 | Tue Aug 04 1992 11:57 | 12 |
| RE: .64
Is grading a test in school evaluating a person, or evaluating a
person's results? With a True or False, or a multiple choice type test
it is easy for anyone to evaluate the results. An essay exam is not so
easy. DEC's employee evaluation system is an essay exam with no right
or wrong answer. For example; how does one quantify the difference
between someone who "Sometimes" exceeds job requirements, and someone
who exceeds job requirements "Most" most the time.
Dave
|
2022.70 | Testing improves nothing | STUDIO::HAMER | ain't no luck, I learned to duck | Tue Aug 04 1992 12:38 | 3 |
| You don't fatten a sheep by weighing it.
John H.
|
2022.71 | on testing and fat | STAR::ABBASI | i^(-i) = SQRT(exp(PI)) | Tue Aug 04 1992 12:41 | 5 |
| <<< Note 2022.70 by STUDIO::HAMER "ain't no luck, I learned to duck">>>
-< Testing improves nothing >-
> You don't fatten a sheep by weighing it.
but if you dont weight it you dont how fat is it?
|
2022.72 | How else do you reward? | HUMAN::AICADD::MARTY | | Tue Aug 04 1992 16:39 | 33 |
|
Re: .64
>> plus, if there are no tests and grades there will be little motivation
>> to work hard.
I disagree with this. Just look at the pay system we have in place
now. Is this really pay for performance? The difference between a
good performer and a poor performer is a matter of a few percent.
Do you really believe this motivates hard work? At DEC, the people
who work hard are motivated by achievement, pride in their work and
respect of their peers.
The pay system should reflect the goals and strategies of the company.
If you want stellar individual performance, then that is what you
reward. If you want to benefit from teamwork, then teamwork is what
you should reward.
To answer your question "how else do you suggest to reward?", one
answer is to reward a team's accomplishment. For this to be effective
though, the team must really have control over it's work. Pay could
also be linked to the performance of the company.
While I don't believe the current grading system is effective,
(Count the number of managers you know who treat it as a chore,
rather than a serious part of managing), performance appraisal
can be very useful. However, it should be a continuous, educational
process involving your peers, not a point grade associated with a
raise.
Marty
|
2022.73 | good hiring makes easier evaluation | SGOUTL::BELDIN_R | D-Day: 239 days and counting | Tue Aug 04 1992 16:59 | 10 |
| If a manager could determine at interview time that the prospective
employee is "achievement driven", then he could avoid hiring anyone who
isn't. That would make his later task of evaluation easier. But, by
doing a poor job of interviewing, he condemns himself to a worse job of
performance evaluation.
In particular, he should avoid hiring anyone who thinks tests and
grades are all that motivate people to work hard. :-) (just kidding)
Dick
|
2022.74 | Roll your own or do as best you can in a vacuum! | IW::WARING | Simplicity sells | Tue Aug 04 1992 17:11 | 7 |
| Re: .72
> The pay system should reflect the goals and strategies of the company.
Ah! And therein lies the problem. Please ask any two people to recite the
goals or strategies of the company!
- Ian W.
|
2022.75 | right on! | SGOUTL::BELDIN_R | D-Day: 239 days and counting | Tue Aug 04 1992 17:16 | 17 |
| re .74
>Ah! And therein lies the problem. Please ask any two people to recite the
>goals or strategies of the company!
Which company? The European Digital, Manufacturing Digital, Sales
Digital, Engineering Digital, Finance Digital, IM&T Digital, ...
Every department seems to think its a law unto itself. :-(
That's why KO couldn't pull it together, too many organizations thought
THEY were Digital.
Sadly,
Dick
|
2022.76 | | WLDBIL::KILGORE | ...57 channels, and nothin' on... | Tue Aug 04 1992 17:43 | 12 |
|
.74> Ah! And therein lies the problem. Please ask any two people to recite the
.74> goals or strategies of the company!
And to square the hypotenuse of the problem, ask any two people to
explain the salary review system.
Side note: The top priority in salary reviews last year was "equity".
Those who were high in their range because of previous stretches of
good performance may have taken a hit this past year so that others
could catch up. Think about it.
|
2022.77 | Measurement helps you succeed | COUNT0::WELSH | If you don't like change, teach Latin | Wed Aug 05 1992 05:44 | 20 |
| Measurement is not a good motivator - I agree that it acts the
other way, to demotivate. Especially since, as often pointed out,
it is not done well.
However, measurement has a vital role to play - simply in giving
feedback. Imagine reading one of those "programmed texts" or
following a computer-based instruction course. You read some
material, do some tests to evaluate your comprehension. Depending
on whether you get the tests right or wrong, the system then
either moves you on to the next material to be learned, or takes
you through a remedial section which teaches you the material
on which you couldn't answer the questions, but slower, one
step at a time. Eventually you get it right, and you move on.
Feedback loops are a fact of life. Why shouldn't they exist in
business? But it is a cardinal rule that individuals should not
be judged, praised and condemned, still less rewarded or punished
on the basis of such measurements. The results are counterproductive.
/Tom
|
2022.78 | hwere to from here? | STOKES::BURT | | Wed Aug 05 1992 08:24 | 53 |
| Okay, we're gathering some really good ideas here and sound
input/problems with the current system. What do we do to fix it? Who
will listen?
I for one find that the review process is way too tedious and time
consuming. My supervisor (if he wants it) requests input from my peers
and/or customers either of whom I've worked closely with over the
course of the year. That's good, that's what should be done. Now my
supervisor hjas to take all this input, my own version of my review and
his comments and state tabulating/documenting the results.
This turns into an approx 6 page book (sometimes more) that has gone
through numerous revisions because before it could be shown to the
employee (me), my manager and personnel (and who ever else wants to be in
the review process) has to review it to make sure it's pc and non
offensive and non defamatory and eventually end up adding their own
comments which take away from my reviewer's comment who actually has
the 1 on 1 contact with me.
Now we have to schedule a conference room for 4 hours because that's
about how long it takes to read the review, interpret it and discuss it
and find out where I am supposed to go from here.
just like the length of this reply, why does so much emphasis have to
be placed on explaining/justifying the rating one gets? We have pay
scales yet everyone still appears to complain that they aren't paid
fairly. Why not cut to the chase and "grade" people numerically so
that once it's all calculated and averaged out, one knows where they
stand numerically and this number dictates how much they will be
rewarded?
Soemthing like this:
(for and example, albeit a simple one, but one that can be used for all
portions of the review)
_____ _____ _____ _____ _____
HOUSEKEEPING: | 1 | | 2 | | 3 | | 4 | | 5 |
|---| |---| |---| |---| |---|
MARK APPROPRIATE BOX
COMMENTS: blah-blah-blah for no more than 3 lines
________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________
Too impersonal? Maybe a little, but at least there's little room for
double speak jibberish (is that an example?). The math would not lie
and all (employee, supervisor/manager, personnel) would know where one
stands and what needs to be done to improve. One feels there needs to
be more justification? type it up and add it to the employee file so
it's on record.
MPO,
Reg.
|
2022.79 | | WLDBIL::KILGORE | ...57 channels, and nothin' on... | Wed Aug 05 1992 09:47 | 12 |
|
Re .78:
Excellent try, but it will never work.
If you make the process that objective, your overall rating would have
to match the sum of your accomplishments to date, as listed on the
review. However, we all know that your overall rating was actually
determined by guesswork, up to eleven months prior to your review.
There has to be a lot of subjectivity in the review process so that
the outcome can match that guess.
|
2022.80 | | STOKES::BURT | | Wed Aug 05 1992 11:54 | 19 |
| I missed the smiley face, but I assume that was light hearted intended.
Just another one of my points: where is the boss? shouldn't the boss
be more visible and informed of what you're doing? We have to fill out
very extensive labor tickets and then weekly status reports and then a
major monthly consolidation. All that personal input along with what
everyone says about others in their weeklies and monthlies as well as
requested input from others/customersand end of work/project documentation
on completion of task as well as weekly staff calls and daily
visits/talks about the work load should be more than enough for any
supervisor/manager to make an objective analysis or one's year in
review process and "grade" them accordingly.
(phew! what a runon! no anger at anyone, just still questioning why
the system doesn't work and we still need to further bog it down with
glorified rhetoric. Our process isn't just redundant, it's so invloved
it's lost which requires the lengthy review process)
Reg.
|
2022.81 | Digital wouldn't know a real manager if it saw one! | SGOUTL::BELDIN_R | D-Day: 238 days and counting | Wed Aug 05 1992 12:06 | 12 |
| The whole business of systematically rating employees and deciding
bureaucratically what raise (if any) to give them, whether to keep them
on the payroll, or give them a promotion etc, demonstrates how little
Digital trusts the judgement of its managers. Maybe that lack of
trust is justified, but the rules show that managers are probably more
seriously mistrusted than any other class of employee. If you trust a
manager, you don't make rules for him/her, you let them do the job they
were hired for.
imho,
Dick
|
2022.82 | | FIGS::BANKS | This was | Wed Aug 05 1992 12:15 | 10 |
| The lack of trust in .81 is the reason why an ex-coworker, a "2" performer, went
for two years before seeing any such reward. Why?
Well, the "plan" was done just before he was hired into the company. Since he
was unknown, 'cause, well, they didn't know him when they did the plan, they
planned for a "3" performer. When a year went by and his review came up, he
got the planned review. It wasn't until later that he got his due.
I don't know whether to blame that on the manager or the system, or both for
supporting each other.
|
2022.83 | It ain't the process that's at fault . . . | CAPNET::CROWTHER | Maxine 276-8226 | Wed Aug 05 1992 13:39 | 6 |
| re .82 - You blame the manager!!! They is a very simple process in
place to change the amount of money being given someone at review time
and the rating isn't even checked! ANY manager can fill out the form
and in fact this year we were told that we could hold back money at the
COST CENTER level for just such unplanned activity. I get very tired
of managers blaming the "system" instead of fighting for what's right!
|
2022.84 | | WLDBIL::KILGORE | ...57 channels, and nothin' on... | Wed Aug 05 1992 14:33 | 33 |
|
re .83:
I can't agree completely with your header -- any system that preaches
pay for performance and then dictates that 20% of the people will not
get salary adjustments in any give year has at least one basic conceptual
flaw.
However, thanks much for the information on CC reserviors for unplanned
adjustments. Data like that helps people know what the system is
supposed to do, which is a basic prerequisite for determining when, and
at what level, it's not working.
I believe that much of the frustration expressed with the system stems
from the fact that for individual contributors it is so shrouded in
secrecy. For example:
o It is a fact that raises and promotions for the entire following year
are decided each November; why is that not widely understood?
o If there is a slush fund for unplanned salary adjustments, why is that
not known?
o If the date of your next review was determined last November, why were
you not told then, rather than waiting and sweating for a few months
after you though it should be due, wondering what was going on?
o Many factors were allegedly considered in your planned salary
adjustment; why are these factors not explained to you when
you receive that adjustment, rather than handing you a letter and
leaving you to try to determine, with virtually no data, whether the
adjustment was appropriate?
|
2022.85 | | BSS::C_BOUTCHER | | Wed Aug 05 1992 14:49 | 18 |
| re: .82/.83
From my perspective, .82 does have it right. November is only a "plan"
and exceptions can be made at any time throughout the year. When
managers blame "the system", what they are saying is they are too lazy
to fit for an exception to the plan. Holdouts, though, in the plan,
are not supposed to happen, but they do in most cost centers I have
worked in. Otherwise, you need to take money from someone else that is
scheduled for a raise later. It comes down to the fact that you have a
pot of money to work with and in most cases, that is all you will get.
There have been cases, though, where if you provide adequate
justification, you can get more money from your Area of maney that
might have been held over.
In any case, the compensation system is less than perfect, but it
carries far too much of the blame for employee salary issues. A manager
CAN work within the system to insure an employee is properly
compensated for the job they do.
|
2022.86 | | BSS::C_BOUTCHER | | Wed Aug 05 1992 14:50 | 2 |
| re: .85 "fit" should say "Fight". I gotta start proof reading this
stuff ... sorry.
|
2022.87 | do we all work for the same company ??? | CUPTAY::BAILEY | Season of the Winch | Wed Aug 05 1992 15:28 | 30 |
| After reading these replies I have to wonder if I'm working for the
same company as some of y'all. In what used to be ESDP, which was
recently DCD until it merged with CUIP to become IDC, we have always
been told that there was no relationship between salary reviews
and performance reviews, that the former was based on where in the
salary range you were, and was accounted for in the annual salary plan,
while the latter was determined by your job performance (and your
ability to be PC). Salary increases and performance reviews were not
even given to the employee at the same time ... theoretically we were
supposed to be given performance reviews annually, while a salary
increase could happen anywhere between 12 and 24 months (longer if you
were a questionable performer). In practice, I know some people who
went three or more years without a pay raise. Now that we've
"reorganized", I have no idea what the "policy" is ... I suspect no one
else does either.
Like most other things at Digital, there is no bona fide corporate
policy on this subject, and in reality it's left up to your managers to
do it however they see fit. If you have a fair minded manager, or one
who sees his people as something other than "resources", you get
equitable treatment, both with your performance assessment and your
salary planning. If you have a manager who's primarily interested in
what the bottom line on his cost center spreadsheet looks like, you
probably won't. IMO - most of Digital's troubles stem from this little
bit of corporate culture. We're like a team of horses all trying to pull
the cart in different directions ... too little progress is made for the
effort, and if we're not careful we're going to tear the cart apart.
... Bob
|
2022.88 | Don't let managers snow you . . . | CAPNET::CROWTHER | Maxine 276-8226 | Wed Aug 05 1992 15:32 | 17 |
| re .84 - the process I was talking about did not include the philosophy
only the mechanics.
I have been a manager at DEC for many years. I have always discussed
as much salary plan information as I could, I have held meetings with
my staff on what the process is. This last salary planning pass, we
experimented with the team doing a great deal of the planning.
Interestingly enough, no-one wanted to know what anyone else's salary
was, which made the exercise much more difficult, but everyone could
have known if they wanted to. We did joint ratings, and used
percentages rather than dollar numbers. I made VERY FEW changes to
what the group worked out.
I will say again - managers can have very broad latitutde - but it's
work to not follow the "guidelines"/rules/whatever.
|
2022.89 | | RAVEN1::PINION | Hard Drinking Calypso Poet | Thu Aug 06 1992 01:59 | 11 |
| So in response to my own .65, what do you all think about an across the
board raise given say once a year or whatever interval business needs
dictate? I think it would do wonders to increase our ability to work
together.
I know I would be a much happier employee had I received a raise
at regular intervals rather than the 5 raises I've gotten in 8 years
with only one review being less than a 2 performer. Not to even mention
that one of them was because of a promotion and two of them were not
worth getting!
Scott
|
2022.90 | 3 hip-hoo's for my group! | STOKES::BURT | | Thu Aug 06 1992 09:01 | 17 |
| That doesn't sound quite so unreasonable, however I think I would make
it across the board w/?% p/rating. Meaning all 1's = x%, 2's = y%, 3's
= z%; 4's + 5's = 0%.
And, like someone else said performance rev's and salary adj's don't
neccesarily need be given at the same time, but the pay increase should
reflect what you were rated- not where you are in your pay range.
1's should recieve faster succession thru the ranges/levels than 2's;
2's faster than 3's; 4's would have to make a change in rating to go
anywhere and repetitve 5's would go.
BTW: my supervisor and manager(s) are doing a wonderful job; we may
have our disagreements at times, but these are some of the DEC upper
echelon that others could take a lesson from.
Reg.
|
2022.91 | | UTROP1::SIMPSON_D | just call me Lazarus | Thu Aug 06 1992 09:08 | 5 |
| The problem is that managers have a salary pool and they have to divvy it up
more or less equitably. They can't necessarily relate it to your PA. It's
just as unfair to give a 1 the x% increase if it takes too much out of the pool
so you can't give the 2s and 3s their y% and z% increases as well, as it is to
deny the 1 the percentage they're supposedly due.
|
2022.92 | | LURE::CERLING | God doesn't believe in atheists | Thu Aug 06 1992 09:33 | 24 |
| re: .87
> we have always
> been told that there was no relationship between salary reviews
> and performance reviews, that the former was based on where in the
> salary range you were, and was accounted for in the annual salary
> plan, while the latter was determined by your job performance (and your
> ability to be PC). Salary increases and performance reviews were
> not even given to the employee at the same time .
Section 3.03 of the Orange Book
Job performance is assessed at least once per year. Because job
performance plays a key role in a salary review, a performance
review needs to occur before the salary review.
----
Granted, they are not the same, but it only makes sense that the
performance review should precede a salary review. Therefore, they are
related.
tgc
|
2022.93 | | WLDBIL::KILGORE | ...57 channels, and nothin' on... | Thu Aug 06 1992 10:37 | 6 |
|
.91> They can't necessarily relate it to your PA.
Can you establish a relationship between your statement and DEC's much
touted "pay for performance"?
|
2022.94 | | UTROP1::SIMPSON_D | just call me Lazarus | Fri Aug 07 1992 06:20 | 6 |
| re .93
> Can you establish a relationship between your statement and DEC's much
> touted "pay for performance"?
No, because 'pay for performance' is crap and everybody knows it.
|
2022.95 | | SQM::MACDONALD | | Fri Aug 07 1992 09:48 | 9 |
|
Re: .94
W. Edwards Deming would agree with you. One of his 14 points is
that pay for performance eventually brings about the opposite of
what its intention is.
Steve
|
2022.96 | | MLTVAX::SCONCE | Bill Sconce | Fri Aug 07 1992 11:39 | 8 |
| .95> W. Edwards Deming would agree with you. One of his 14 points is
.95> that pay for performance eventually brings about the opposite of
.95> what its intention is.
So would Peter M. Senge. His first "law of the fifth discipline":
Today's problems come from yesterday's "solutions".
|
2022.97 | Deming is an academician; reality ain't that way | DEMING::CLARK | Wheels of Confusion | Fri Aug 07 1992 11:57 | 9 |
| so, what's the alternative? In every organization I've belonged
to there have been 'the drivers' who have a glimpse of the big
picture and struggle to drag the organization forward, and there
have been the people who know how to generate reports nobody needs
anymore but they keep doing it because that's what their job plan
says that's what they're supposed to be doing. And often the
difference in pay level is a few percent, certainly no more than
10%. You can't pay everybody the same. It destroys initiative.
Look at the ex-Soviet Union.
|
2022.98 | a manager's nightmares are made of these | SGOUTL::BELDIN_R | D-Day: 236 days and counting | Fri Aug 07 1992 12:29 | 33 |
| re .97
Let's take this as a case, assuming there are two persons working in
the same job classification for the same manager, who have the
following characteristics:
a) Technically gung-ho and business-wise, self-promoter, a "reacher"
who sometimes causes some snafus by his eagerness to embrace change,
has recently designed a program that will make this department 20% more
productive.
b) Emininently reliable and predictable, knows his limits and doesn't
try to exceed them. Never causes a problem, but his work is being
replaced by the new automated system that a) is designing.
Each of these persons is valuable in his own way. Each has some
liabilities which the manager must deal with. The manager is faced
with three kinds of decisions.
1) Only x$ of money in the budget for raises. How to divide it between
a) and b)?
2) Manager is promoted, is asked to recommend one of the two as his
replacement. Which one?
3) One employee must be terminated to comply with tops-down headcount
constraints. Which?
If you think these questions are tough, you've never been a manager.
These are the *easy* ones.
Dick
|
2022.99 | | SQM::MACDONALD | | Fri Aug 07 1992 16:56 | 25 |
|
Re: .97
> Deming is an academician; reality ain't that way.
I doubt the Japanese would agree with you nor would Ford Motor,
Xerox, or Nashua Corporation to name a few. Deming has a very long
list of corporate clients whom he has helped and whom all agree
that his advice has helped them turn around. He has more hands
on experience helping corporations turn around than you and me
will ever have combined.
Second - reality is that he's right. The people who generate reports
etc. are often very capable of being top performers. The problem
is not with them, but with an organization that is paying them
to do work which produces no benefit. More often than not such
workers would gladly do something more useful but the resistance
to change in the organization prevents it. Witness the many cases
where companies have instituted suggestion programs and they failed
because the many employees who willingly and enthusiastically suggested
changes saw that it went nowhere.
fwiw,
Steve
|
2022.100 | Read the book! We can learn a lot from it! | IW::WARING | Simplicity sells | Mon Aug 10 1992 04:57 | 33 |
| There's some excellent backup to this discussion in "Deming Management at
Work" by Mary Walton, ISBN 1-85251-120-6. Chapter 8 is all about "Doing
without performance appraisals". Selected quotes from this chapter include:
"A statistical study of the old system showed that 75% of the 1600 people it
covered were in the top two categories ... the task force concluded that
without a forced distribution, ratings systems would always become top
heavy over time".
"The Navy consultants found that supervisors sometimes avoided low ratings
because they required documentation. Moreover, giving a high rating was one
way of promoting a poor performer out of their jurisdiction".
"Rather than performance appraisals ... a company could base employees pay on
market rate, seniority and the company prosperity. He once had skills and
responsibility on the list, but later concluded that they figured into
market rate and besides, could create measurement problems".
"But surely, people always wanted to know, in the interest of fairness there
had to be some way to reward overachievers or to encourage underachievers,
Deming readily admitted there were such people. If performance were viewed
as a control chart, the work of most people would be within the upper and
lower limits within the system ... Dr Deming suggested if s/he is outside
the limit of variation on the good side, there is rational basis to predict
that s/he will perform well in the future; s/he deserves recognition (but
it didn't necessarily have to take the form of money".
"Merit rating rewards people that do well in the system. It doesn't reward
attempts to improve the system. It discouraged risk taking and innovation.
Employees tended to play it safe".
Excellent bedtime reading!
- Ian W.
|
2022.101 | Having revisited .0, a few more stats from the book | IW::WARING | Simplicity sells | Mon Aug 10 1992 05:03 | 10 |
| There's also a quote from a GM manager that says that 80% of people always
think they're in the top 30% of the performance range. They termed this the
80/30 rule.
Another rule is the 85/15 rule; an individual can only make 15% of the
difference through personal effort; the other 85% relates to characteristics
of the "system" in which they operate. A lot of the JP&R metrics I see
encourage "lone ranger" types; we should spend more time focussed on the
team effort.
- Ian W.
|
2022.102 | a modest comment | MOCA::BELDIN_R | D-Day: 233 days and counting | Mon Aug 10 1992 09:22 | 17 |
| re .100
>Moreover, giving a high rating was one way of promoting a poor
>performer out of their jurisdiction".
I've often wondered what percent of the people giving ratings, whether
in school or in business, really understood the system.
I advocate flunking the best students so you have the pleasure of their
participation in class and promoting the worst by the mid-term exam.
The same goes for employees, never give an exceptionally good
evalutation to a good worker, save it for the bum you want to pawn off
on somebody else. I also assume that this methodology has been used by
most of my managers. What else would explain my mediochre ratings?
Dick
|
2022.103 | | ICS::CROUCH | Subterranean Dharma Bum | Mon Aug 10 1992 09:27 | 6 |
| re: .102
Sounds like an excellent example of the Peter Principle.
Jim C.
|
2022.104 | | GRIM::MESSENGER | Bob Messenger | Mon Aug 10 1992 13:04 | 16 |
| Re: .95
> W. Edwards Deming would agree with you. One of his 14 points is
> that pay for performance eventually brings about the opposite of
> what its intention is.
This is so counter-intuitive that I refuse to believe it without overwhelming
proof.
Say there are two companies, A and B. For a given job (software engineer,
say) A pays its top performers 30% more than its bottom performers. B pays
the same to all its software engineers regardless of their performance. The
average pay is the same at the two companies. Won't the top performers leave
B and work for A, and won't the bottom performers leave A and work for B?
-- Bob
|
2022.105 | Money does have a positive affect!!! | GUCCI::RWARRENFELTZ | | Mon Aug 10 1992 13:51 | 27 |
| re: 104
I agree with you Bob, from personal experience.
At a former employer, our department could receive, on a quarterly
basis, up to a 10% incentive of our quarterly salary if we met certain
criteria as set up by our Senior Managers. Our direct manager had 20%
incentives and our Area Controllers (DEC DM's) had a 30% incentive.
All of our goalsheets were exactly the same, just the amount of
incentive was different. As we would enter the third month of each
quarter, there was ALOT of emphasis, from the controller down, to make
sure we were doing everything to meet our incentives.
Personally, my wife and I planned several vacations or special
purchases to coincide when we would receive our incentive check. This
was a DEFINITE motivator for me personally and professionally plus our
goalsheets as set by Senior Management did not conflict with the
metrics of another internal organization.
By the way, I was affected by a downsizing and did not relo to their
main office out of town. I came to DEC from there with my severance.
Second guessing, I should have relo'd.
fwiw,
Ron
|
2022.106 | Too bad for intuition, eh? | TPSYS::BUTCHART | TNSG/Software Performance | Mon Aug 10 1992 13:55 | 30 |
| re .104
>This is so counter-intuitive that I refuse to believe it without overwhelming
>proof.
That's probably because you are only looking at the direct affects.
Most systems start to break down when they create undesirable secondary
behavior that eventually overwhelms the intended behavior.
The recent Sears automotible repair scandal is an excellent example of
an unintended side affect of a reward/punishment system.
"Pay for performance" is a bit tricky, and can have some bad side
affects. For instance, it sometimes appears in practice to work as
"pay for visability" instead of actual results. There's little reward
for being an unsung hero, so there's a bias towards going for lots of
small, highly visable projects that are obviously technically
challenging. Few people get to be heroes for maintenance and
incremental improvement, or for being a valuable but quiet contributor
to a large effort.
In the worst case, the system creates a bias towards creating
unnecessary projects and results in products whose functionality
overlaps, splits and confuses the market. At the same time, it
shortchanges the steady, long-term efforts needed to improve the
existing products. (Sound familiar to anyone???)
/Butch
|
2022.107 | Hire the best | SGOUTL::RUSSELL_D | | Mon Aug 10 1992 14:04 | 12 |
| I think some of the problem revolves around the quality of the
manager(s) making rating decisions. I think a manager who is truly a
"1" performer will make it his/her business to know who is deserving of
rewards/increases/kudos/etc. The problem comes when a manager who
actually is a "4" performer trying to rate an employee who is in
reality a "1" performer. The "4" manager actually thinks he is a "1"
or a "2" and really doesn't comprehend why this employee isn't more
like s/he is. The answer is just to hire and keep the top 10% of the
average population, then even the poorest performer is likely to be
better than any competition! (I don't know how you do this though)
DAR
|
2022.108 | Right: it's the SYSTEM which counts | MLTVAX::SCONCE | Bill Sconce | Mon Aug 10 1992 15:20 | 15 |
| The skill of the manager certainly enters into it. But that's far from all;
only a superman could continue over the long run to reward performance that
was best for customers and the company if that performance is not what the
manager's manager likes to see.
As .106 correctly observes, it's the systemic effects, not the direct effects,
which eventually dominate. That's what Deming and Senge are talking about.
CALLING the written policy "Pay for Performance" in no way indicates what the
actual process ends up delivering. Not globally (the good of customers/the
company). Not even locally (witness the orthogonality between "performance
appraisal" and the way salary planning is actually done).
Come to think of it, can anyone come up with other examples of policies whose
names and actual effects are unrelated, or perhaps even contradictory?
|
2022.109 | As the twig is bent... | CGOOA::DTHOMPSON | Don, of Don's ACT | Tue Aug 11 1992 11:49 | 29 |
| re: .108 and the threads leading thereto...
**ALL** organizations are a reflection down of their leader(s), hence
the problem of secondary behaviour.
Under the Watson's, IBM was a reflection of evangelists. (Had
technology not been the religion for these men, something else would
have taken it's place.) Currently, under those who 'grew up' under the
Watsons, it is a reflection of insecurity, self-doubt and a lack of
vision and purpose.
Digital, on the other hand, reflects:
a) on the positive side:
- a desire for technical excellence
- a love of the product
- the yen for toys;
b) on the negative side:
- technical arrogance
- a belief that selling (or any kind of commerce) is somehow dirty
- the desire to play alone or in a close-knit clique
- fear (and mistrust) of strangers
There are more characteristics to both organizations, and the persons or
group of persons in charge, but the concept follows through. This is
why, at this juncture, Digital resembles a hot-air balloon with no more
propane (slowly sinking, with the pilot throwing people out instead of
ordering more fuel) and IBM is akin to the Hindenburg (don't get
caught underneath!).
|
2022.110 | Why people keep saying that? | STAR::ABBASI | I spell check | Tue Aug 11 1992 11:56 | 13 |
| > - technical arrogance
I heard this phrase on more than one occasion , but is it really
true?
I, for one, not like that, and many of the Engineers around here , if
not all of them, are kind, modest, gentle, open minded, reflective
on new ideas and conceptions, and quite considerate too..
so, where does this precipitation come from? I say It is an illusion,
and it is not true.
/Nasser
I spell checked
|
2022.111 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Tue Aug 11 1992 12:11 | 3 |
| > so, where does this precipitation come from?
Like all precipitation, it comes from above.
|
2022.112 | ..."presumptuous claims" - Webster | CGOOA::DTHOMPSON | Don, of Don's ACT | Tue Aug 11 1992 12:28 | 17 |
| Re: .110
Put simply, IBM has marketing arrogance: They make crap and believe
they can sell it.
Digital has Engineering (Technical) arrogance: They make good stuff
and believe people will put up with crap to buy it.
The moral (if any) Noone will come to your door, no matter how good
your mouse trap UNLESS they know you have it.
Don
(I can not spell check - I don't even know how to copy things from the
top half of the notes screen. I am amused that people think you're
rude because you are not a perfect typist. How very rustic of them.)
|
2022.113 | | SHALOT::ANDERSON | Feeling empowered now, boy | Tue Aug 11 1992 12:47 | 5 |
| >> so, where does this precipitation come from?
>
> Like all precipitation, it comes from above.
And falleth like the gentle rain from heaven, no?
|
2022.114 | | JANUS::BERENT | Anthony Berent | Tue Aug 11 1992 13:05 | 14 |
| re: technical arrogance
As someone new to Digital I see a strong assumption that the way
Digital does things is the best in the industry. In some ways (e.g.
the e-mail system) it probably is. In others I don't think it is.
Where technical arrogance comes in is that no one seems to want to look
outside to see what can be learnt from the rest of the industry. I
don't see how we can make the cost savings we need to in Engineering
unless we fix this.
Anthony
N.B. I have seen a degree of this attitude everywhere I have ever
worked; but it is stronger in Digital than in most.
|
2022.115 | Bob Palmer on pay for performance | GRIM::MESSENGER | Bob Messenger | Thu Aug 13 1992 19:04 | 52 |
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Edition : 2640 Thursday 13-Aug-1992 Circulation : 7835
VNS COMPUTER NEWS: [Tracy Talcott, VNS Computer Desk]
================== [Nashua, NH, USA ]
Digital - Bob Palmer discusses computer industry trends, investment strategy,
management principles and pay for performance
{Livewire, Worldwide News, 12-Aug-92}
Addressing the U.S. Field, President- and CEO-Elect Bob Palmer talked about
computer industry trends, changes to expect inside Digital, and his management
philosophy, including the importance of pay for performance and metrics that
motivate teamwork and customer satisfaction. The following article summarizes
his remarks in that August 11 Digital Video Network (DVN) broadcast.
[text removed]
Pay for Performance
"I would like to be able to identify the real contributors and ensure that
there are adequate reward and compensation systems to recognize those people
who are really carrying the enterprise. That means we have to revise our
performance review system to ensure that all employees -- of whatever
background or diversity -- have an equal opportunity to demonstrate their
skills and be compensated for those skills. At the same time, we need to keep
investing in those skills, which is how we'll maintain the vitality of this
enterprise.
"Incentive compensation will begin with the U.S. sales force and gradually
spread to other groups as we become sufficiently knowledgeable about how to
implement it. We expect to be able to introduce this program starting in
January. We have not yet worked out all of the details, but the objective is
to have metrics and rewards that encourage the delight of our customers.
"We have to make it in everybody's best interest for the customer to be
satisfied -- for the equipment and the solution to be installed and operated
as the customer intended and on time. By changing our metrics, we can cause
the right behavior -- teamwork and customer satisfaction.
"As we make these changes, we will undoubtedly make mistakes. Physicists
talk about the 'law of unintended consequences.' You introduce a change, and
it leads to behavior that you hadn't anticipated. As we move ahead, if you see
behavior that is not consistent with the value systems of this company, make
sure your management listens to your examples of how the metrics are not in
sync with our intentions; and we will change them. With your help, we will
eventually craft a system and an environment that everyone feels is optimum."
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