T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2053.1 | DG,PRIME,et al | SOLVIT::ALLEN_R | It shouldn't hurt to be a parent | Fri Aug 14 1992 23:32 | 3 |
| -< What can we learn from Wang? >-
you can't make it in MA.
|
2053.2 | | KYOA::KOCH | It never hurts to ask... | Sat Aug 15 1992 10:26 | 5 |
| re: .0
WANG has stated that the early payment of salary was due to the
adoption of new payroll software. However, the same news report also
talked about the LONG delay in reporting earnings.
|
2053.3 | DEC was never run by Ken's family | TANG::RHINE | | Sat Aug 15 1992 11:14 | 7 |
| A lot of Wang's problem is that it was a family dynasty for a long time
and friends who have worked for Wang had nothing good to say about Dr.
Wang's family member who was in a high place who did a lot of damage
and little good.
|
2053.4 | Getting ahead of Change | SOLVIT::COBB | | Sat Aug 15 1992 12:09 | 57 |
|
Wang was slow to adapt to changes in the marketplace. Wang's
success was largely based on their early leadership in the
office marketplace when that market was based on selling
dedicated hardware systems to do tasks such as word processing
and so forth.
When those tasks became software applications that could run
on a number of hardware platforms and became readily available
on PC's at a very low cost, Wang rapidly lost their competitive
advantage in that market.
Since that time, they've been grappling to find another "niche"
in the market to hold on to, because with their revenue base,
they obviously can't afford the R&D investments to remain
competitive as a broad-based player in the industry. Several
other companies (DG, Prime, etc) have all been in a similar
dilemna.
What can we learn from that? We've got to be quick to anticipate
change in the market and react to it. The kind of gut-wrenching,
painful restructuring that is going on right now is a result of
not making changes fast enough. Digital has a long history of
waiting till we feel some pain before making any change instead
of anticipating the need for change and making it more proactively
rather than reactively.
If we don't change that, it can become a continuous downward
spiral that you never get out of, because by the time you've
reacted to one change its too late to correct for that one
and the next change is already on top of you.
The first massive change that has hit us over the last few
years I believe has been due largely to the impact of PC's
on many of our traditional market. We've been slow to
recognize that trend and assumed that people would continue
buying our larger systems, when in fact, in a number of
cases they could do the job a lot cheaper on PC's.
We're still reacting and trying to get caught up with the
impact of that change and the next massive change is beginning
to hit us which I believe is movement away from proprietary
operating systems towards open systems.
Hardware is already a commodity in the low-end and software
is following right behind it....in the very near future we
may see our primary competition as companies like Intel in
the hardware marketplace and companies like Microsoft in
the software space. Are we prepared to compete effectively
at that level?
I think Bob Palmer certainly recognizes that and we really
need his kind of leadership to help us get ahead of some
of these changes.
Chuck
|
2053.5 | Recommended reading? | HYDRA::GOLDSTEIN | | Sat Aug 15 1992 12:51 | 14 |
| There's a new (I believe) book out about the rise and fall of Wang
Labs; title is /Ride the Runaway Horse,/ but, sorry, I cannot recall the
author's name. Needless to say, the book is timelier than ever right
now.
A good friend (NOT in the computer industry but a PC user) has been
reading it, and gives it excellent reviews. At last report, she had
not got as far as the company's decline, though.
Just thought I'd mention it...anyone reading it? (It's certainly on my
list; would borrow hers but it's from a public library.)
Steve
|
2053.6 | I was there for the beginning of the end.. | FXO::TURNQUIST | Greg Turnquist | Sat Aug 15 1992 15:16 | 32 |
| Opinion follows:
In 83-84 or thereabouts, PC's started eating into Wang's bread and
butter word processing business. Meanwhile the steady stream of
hardware service revenues began to dry up due to 3rd party providers
and continued improvement in hardware reliability. They had a lot of
research products going, trying to find the one that would replace word
processing. When number 1 son (Fred Wang) took over from The Doctor
around 1986 or so, he basically borrowed a ton of money to keep all
those projects going (obviously, he expected that they would return to
the days of consistent 40% quarterly growth).
Well, they didn't find the product that would save them, leaving them
with lots of debt and a still-declining revenue stream. So Rick Miller
(the GE executive, not the former Red Sox reserve outfielder) comes in
and slashes the expenses. It doesn't work, so he does it some more.
Finally, the desperate sellout to IBM that would either save or kill
the company. And we all know what happened.
So, what should we learn? I think it's this: We need to start making
money in the current worldwide economic environment before we go into
debt. Easier said than done, but I believe that we can do it, under
Palmer.
Now, if KO had picked his kid to run things, I wouldn't be as sure of
that...
Greg
(Wang Labs 1982 - 1987)
|
2053.7 | Good book | BOOKS::HAMILTON | All models are false; some are useful - Dr. G. Box | Mon Aug 17 1992 12:08 | 39 |
|
Re: .5
The book is called "Riding the Runaway Horse...The Rise and Decline
of Wang Laboratories".
I finished it a couple of weeks ago, and it is *outstanding*. It
is also a sad commentary on the relationship between a father and son,
and on a once-proud company brought low because of (principally) the
father's faith in that son.
I think there are lessons to be learned. The author (sorry, can't
remember his name, but he's a writer for the Globe), points out
one or two major turning points. One was the rapid promoting
of Fred Wang to positions that many excutives felt he wasn't ready
for (or even particularly interested in). Another was a disastrous
product announcement in 1983. The company held an announcement
press conference in New York in the fall of 1983; they had *no*
products related to that announcement -- completely vaporware. It
took them almost two years to produce the products they announced
at that time.
John Cunningham, at least from the author's portrayal, was the hero
of the story. When Dr. Wang promoted Fred to head of R&D (early
1983, I think), Cunningham sold all his stock ($10M or so), knowing
as he did so that the Doctor would see it as the ultimate in
disloyalty. It turns out he sold his stock at $.10 off the peak that
Wang ever attained.
There are lots of insights into the company. One of the more important
was the sense of the Doctor's obsessive need to control the company
(hence the Byzantine Class B, Class C stock structure), and
the heavy borrowing (as opposed to offering equity to raise capital).
I highly recommend the book.
Glenn (who was there in 1979)
|
2053.8 | Founders disease can kill | GOLF::KEATING | | Mon Aug 17 1992 15:05 | 14 |
| Charles Kinney is the name of the author of the Wang book. He used
John Cunningham as his prime source, so JC does come out looking good.
I think the Wang Lesson is : When the founder shows signs of founders
disease, take h/him out of the picture. The Doctor was determined to
beat IBM (sounds familiar?), hence the disastrous Ocotber 83
announcement. Also he wanted to pass the business off to his son, a
lightweight in every respect. When i was there (l983-88), one of the
best stories was when the R&D team showed Fred a standalone PC, with
graphic user interface, mouse, etc, that would network to other
computers. Fred, then VP R&D, (circa 1983-84) killed the product, saying,
"we are the worlds best word processors, we don't need this" The R&D team
resigned en masse and went to a california company then trying to make it
big in the corporate market - Apple. People swear it was true.
tjk
|
2053.9 | What British newspapers say today | STOAT::BARKER | Jeremy Barker - CBN - Reading, UK | Tue Aug 18 1992 14:42 | 4 |
| Read in my newspaper this morning that IBM has pulled the plug on Wang and
Wang is now expected to file Chapert 11.
jb
|
2053.10 | Not with a bang, but a whimper... | SSGV01::CHALMERS | NOT the mama! | Tue Aug 18 1992 15:08 | 73 |
| <<< PEAR::DUA1:[NOTES$LIBRARY]SOAPBOX.NOTE;1 >>>
-< SOAPBOX: Not So Humble Opinions! >-
================================================================================
Note 987.0 Wang Labs goes Ch. 11 No replies
TENAYA::RAH "I can bone my own salmon" 66 lines 18-AUG-1992 12:06
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
LOWELL, Mass. (UPI) -- With its stock falling through the floor and
its debts mounting, Wang Laboratories filed for bankruptcy protection
Tuesday and said it would cut 5,000 more jobs from its already
streamlined work force.
The once high-flying high-tech company announced the filing about 10
a.m., confirming published reports earlier in the day.
Richard W. Miller, chairman and chief executive officer, said he
hoped to avoid Chapter 11 but felt the filing was the only way Wang
could finish the restructuring it needs to reverse its fortunes.
``This is a drastic step that I deeply regret,'' Miller said. ``But
it is one that is absolutely crucial to our company's survival and the
preservation of thousands of jobs. I want to stress that this action
will allow Wang to remain in business and move forward with its recovery
plan.''
Miller said Wang would continue to service its customers while it
restructures its debts and operations. He predicted the company would
emerge from Chapter 11 as a ``smaller, more focused and more competitive
company, with revenues of about $1.4 billion compared with $1.9 billion
now...''
Miller also said the company would cut its work force from its
current level of 13,000 to about 8,000.
Wang also reported its long-awaited fourth-quarter results, which
normally would have been posted in July. It reported a net loss of $116.
3 million, or 68 cents a share, compared to a net loss of $314.5
million, or $1.88 per share, in the same quarter last year.
Its net loss for the year was $139.2 million, or 82 cents a share,
compared to $385.5 million, or $2.31 a share, for the previous year.
``For the past three years, in the face of recession and continuing
upheaval in the industry, we have fought to bring Wang back from the
brink of bankruptcy,'' Miller said. ``We came very close to making it.
We simply ran out of time.''
Miller said Wang's quarterly revenues have essentially stabilized
between $460 million and $500 million over the past six quarters. But,
he added, the company could not handle the cash drain from restructuring
charges totaling more than $1 billion.
Wang was founded in 1951 by Dr. An Wang, a Chinese immigrant who
invented the magnetic computer memory. The company was a major player in
the high-tech industry, but began slipping in the mid-1980s.
The downfall came when the industry shifted away from the
minicomputer and proprietary systems that Wang offered toward smaller
personal computers or open systems that accommodate varied vendor
technologies. By the late 1980s, Wang began reporting heavy losses.
An Wang, who died in March 1990, hired Miller two years ago. Miller
previously ran General Electric's consumer electronics business.
His management team was able to retire $575 million in debt, as it
accepted heavy restructuring charges. It also launched a new Office 2000
strategy for growth, but resources and cash flow at Wang were
insufficient to avoid Chapter 11, Miller said.
Wang still hopes that Office 2000 will help it reinvent itself as a
software and services company, he said.
Rumors of a bankruptcy filing were rampant on Monday.
Wang Class B stock, traded on the American Stock Exchange, which had
fallen 24 percent on Friday, shed another 87.5 cents -- or 53.8 percent --
Monday to close at 75 cents a share.
The crunch was brought on by Wang's failure to meet conditions for a
$75-million cash infusion provided for a year-old agreement with
International Business Machines Corp.
The Wall Street Journal said Wang could have received as much as an
additional $75 million under the deal with IBM. But IBM said that
because Wang had not met terms of the accord, it would not go beyond its
initial $25 million stake.
IBM purchased $25 million of Wang convertible debt in June 1991 under
an agreement in which Wang agreed to market two IBM product lines.
|
2053.11 | Another one bites the dust... | SMEGOL::COHEN | | Tue Aug 18 1992 15:17 | 8 |
|
It sure looks like IBM made out like a bandit on this one...
For $25 million, IBM picked up most of the remaining WANG installed base.
This, it appears, wasn't worth an additional $75 million however.
Bob Cohen
|
2053.12 | | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Tue Aug 18 1992 15:17 | 32 |
| DowVision Test - Not to be forwarded outside of Digital
-< Wang Labs, Chapter 7 -2-: To Prepare New Plan In A Few Weeks >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Copyright � Dow Jones & Co. 1992
Source: Dow Jones News Service
Headline: Wang Labs, Chapter 7 -2-: To Prepare New Plan In A Few Weeks
Time: Aug 18 1992 1326
Story:
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. -DJ- Wang Laboratories Inc. (WANB, WANC) Chairman Richard
W. Miller said that the company considered filing a Chapter 7 liquidation
among other options.
He said ''we've considered everything, but we concluded that Chapter 11,''
was the best way to preserve jobs, customer relationships and technology.
Miller said ''I don't think breaking up and selling pieces of the business
is in anyone's interest.''
He said ''We believe we've exhausted the opportunties for a sale or a
merger.''
Miller said he remains pleased with the relationship with International
Business Machines Corp. (IBM) and said sales of IBM computers by Wang
salespeople ''are building.''
He said that Wang management will have a new business plan prepared within a
few weeks, but he said that the length of time the company remains under
Chapter 11 court protection ''is not in our control.''
Miller said ''I'd guess the time will be measured in months.''
1:26 PM
categoryIndustry I/CPR
categorySubject N/BCY N/HIY
categoryMarketSector M/TEC
categoryGeographic R/MA
categoryCompany WANB WANC
|
2053.13 | is it any wonder? | CARTUN::MISTOVICH | | Tue Aug 18 1992 16:30 | 16 |
| I ran into a friend of mine who left Wang just over a year ago. She
said she reached the end of her rope when:
1. she hadn't had a raise in more than 2 years.
2. people around her were being laid off and their work was all being
dumped on her.
3. Richard Miller gave himself a $300K bonus immediately following
IBM's cash infusion.
After she found another job and gave notice, her management asked her to
reconsider. She suggested that they make her an offer. Then -- get
this -- they said they wanted her to commit to staying at Wang _before_
they made her an offer. Right.
Mary
|
2053.14 | What can we LEARN? | RIPPLE::NORDLAND_GE | Waiting for Perot :^) | Tue Aug 18 1992 16:43 | 7 |
|
OK, a lesson learned?
From my AYSO coaching days: The coach(es) can't win the game, but
they sure can lose it!
|
2053.15 | I know there are dumb managers, but really! | SGOUTL::BELDIN_R | D-Day: 225 days and counting | Tue Aug 18 1992 16:56 | 6 |
| re .13
Mary, if it weren't you telling this story, I'd check the length of my
legs to see if one was longer than the other.
Dick
|
2053.16 | cutting costs isn't enough you have to up income | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Wed Aug 19 1992 10:09 | 7 |
| Wang dropped from over 30,000 people to around 12,000 now. An other
5,000 are to leave soon. They're in Chapter 11. Obviously cutting
people to save costs is not going to save a company unless significant
work is also done to increase revenue. That is the lesson of Wang for
Digital today. I'm sure there are others.
Alfred
|
2053.17 | Some sad news from a reputable source... | SSGV01::CHALMERS | NOT the mama! | Wed Aug 19 1992 11:22 | 21 |
| Bumped into a WANG personnel staffer this morning. She mentioned that
not many employees were surprised by the Ch 11 filing, and that most
people were proceeding on the assumption that they would be laid off.
To that end, many people have been stockpiling their vacation time,
hoping to use the extra money to tide them over as they looked for new
jobs.
HOWEVER, one of the consequences of the Ch 11 filing (or as an interim
step leading up to it), was that WANG seized/cancelled/took/eliminated
(choose your own verb) all accrued vacation time! This step alone has
done more to anger the employees than all the other doings at WANG.
This accrued vacation was a large part of people's safety net, and now
it's gone. No word yet as to whether it will somehow be restored.
She said that if she learned one lesson during the whole time of WANGs
troubles, it's that when push comes to shove, the company cared more
about the bottom line than it did about the individuals. Remember, this
comes from someone who's been good enough or connected enough to have
survived all the turmoil and cuts at WANG over the last several years.
|
2053.18 | | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney in New York | Wed Aug 19 1992 11:52 | 2 |
| Rather it seems that "caring about the bottom line" can too little and
too late in Wang's case.
|
2053.19 | Lost vacation time should be expected | ERLANG::HERBISON | B.J. | Wed Aug 19 1992 12:25 | 52 |
| Re: .17
> HOWEVER, one of the consequences of the Ch 11 filing (or as an interim
> step leading up to it), was that WANG seized/cancelled/took/eliminated
> (choose your own verb) all accrued vacation time!
It is unfortunate that employees stockpiled extra vacation time
in case of a Chapter 11 filing--they obviously didn't understand
bankruptcy. Wang owes money to a large number of people and
organizations, and doesn't have enough resources to pay them.
The employees are owed vacation time, but they must now get in
line with the banks to get back a portion of what they are owed.
I've know of other people who were the victims of bankrupt
companies, and when my Wang employee friends mentioned concern
about Chapter 11 my response was `take your vacation time'. A
friend of my wife worked at a company without maternity leave,
an employee needed to accumulate sick time if they wanted time
off to have a baby. This woman had saved sick time for years
and was eight months pregnant when the company went bankrupt.
The good news: Pay for days worked after the bankruptcy filing
is protected under bankruptcy law. Wang issued pay checks
earlier than usual last week, and was nice enough to warn
employees to cash the checks quickly.
> She said that if she learned one lesson during the whole time of WANGs
> troubles, it's that when push comes to shove, the company cared more
> about the bottom line than it did about the individuals.
I think she is being unfair. Wang had two options--close down
the company or reorganize under bankruptcy protection. If Wang
had closed down the vacation time would be lost along with all
jobs. Under reorganization, the employees will have a chance
to get paid for some of their vacation time when other debtors
are paid, and Wang hopes to keep providing jobs for some of its
current workers.
As for the bottom line: The employees did much better than the
stockholders--the employees claim for vacation time has a higher
precedence than the stockholders claim to anything.
IT would be much better for everyone (the employees, the
stockholders, the customers, and the taxpayers who help cover
unemployment benefits) if Wang had continued to be successful,
but it was too late to save Wang in August 1992. Some of the
problems result from bad decisions made a decade ago (e.g.,
promoting Fred Wang up through the corporate ladder) and some
were beyond the control of Wang (the current state of the
economy).
B.J.
|
2053.20 | Isn't vacation considered wages? | MUDHWK::LAWLER | Employee says 15000 analysts must go! | Wed Aug 19 1992 13:21 | 15 |
|
I thought employee wages recieved priority over other creditors
during a bankruptcy? (And court decisions have upheld vacation
time as deferred wages.)
Can wang really sieze vacation time, or is it simply frozen until
a court approves the payment plan, at which time it would be repaid
ahead of other creditors?
Either way, that's a really _low_ trick to pull...
-al
|
2053.21 | | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney in New York | Wed Aug 19 1992 13:31 | 5 |
| Wages are first in priority. Pensions are protected by a law called
ERISA.
Benefits, vacation and fringes come later in priority in bankruptcy
court.
|
2053.22 | Clarification re: WANG & accrued vacation | SSGV01::CHALMERS | NOT the mama! | Wed Aug 19 1992 14:22 | 28 |
| RE: Last few
Unfortunately, I hadn't made clear in my note that she and I discussed
the fact that accrued vacation time was on WANGs books as a liability,
and such was/is, in effect, frozen...either until the courts sort
things out or forever, whichever comes first. Feeling rather
pessimistic this morning, our conversation took the tone of "It's gone
forever..." In re-reading my note, the verbs used to describe WANGs
actions leave something to be desired, hence this clarification.
In any event, regardless of whether or not they ever see their vacation
money again, the fact remains that these folks who will likely be let
go over the next few days/weeks/months have lost the immediate use of
that vacation 'money' to help tide them over while hunting for a new
job. That's a tough blow to take, especially after having survived the
turmoil at WANG over the last few years. I don't think many people
realized that their vacation time was, in fact, at risk during Ch11.
In addition, people seemed to be more focused on the consequences
of a layoff rather than the consequences of Ch 11. Had they understood
it, perhaps they would have used up whatever time they could before
yesterday. Even so, they still would have lost the monetary benefit
of a vacation-time payoff.
As far as her comments that said company before people, I agree that
it was purely an emotional remark, but understandable given the
circumstances.
Freddie (husband of an ex 10+year WANG employee)
|
2053.23 | | TOPDOC::AHERN | Dennis the Menace | Wed Aug 19 1992 15:01 | 9 |
| RE: vacation pay
From today's Boston Globe:
"A few hours after filing for Chapter 11 protection, Wang's lawyers got
the go-ahead from Judge Hillman to use about $5 million to pay benefits
owed employees, including commissions, bonuses, expenses, vacation and
medical benefits."
|
2053.24 | Thanks for the update! | SSGV01::CHALMERS | NOT the mama! | Wed Aug 19 1992 15:17 | 5 |
| RE: .23
That's good news...I hope that they were given the 'official' version
of this info as soon as they arrived to work this morning. I'm sure
there were a lot of folks who had a sleepless night worrying about it.
|
2053.25 | Like to buy the book on Wang | BONNET::CHERDO | | Thu Aug 20 1992 05:07 | 3 |
| Do you kow who is the publisher of this book ?
Bernard.
|
2053.26 | | SA1794::CHARBONND | Bush in '92 - Barbara! | Thu Aug 20 1992 08:20 | 2 |
| What can we learn from Wang? Well, ya gotta wonder how many Wang
employees are still bickering about their car plans...
|
2053.27 | | FSOA::JHENDRY | John Hendry, DTN 297-2623 | Thu Aug 20 1992 09:50 | 5 |
| Don't know the publisher, but it's widely available in any decent US
bookstore. I don't know if you're overseas or not, so I don't know if
that helps you.
John
|
2053.28 | In the Digital library | CASDOC::MEAGHER | Term limits for Bush & Quayle | Thu Aug 20 1992 11:34 | 25 |
| >>> Don't know the publisher, but it's widely available in any decent US
>>> bookstore. I don't know if you're overseas or not, so I don't know if
>>> that helps you.
The book is in the Digital library. I accessed this info using VTX DLNCATALOG:
Title: Riding the runaway horse : the rise and decline of Wang
Laboratories
Author: Kenney, Charles C
Type: Book Year Published: 1992 Record: 78948
Subjects: United States; History; Computer industry; Wang, An; Wang Laborator
ies, Inc
Sites: LKG,MRO1,NIO
Call No.: HD9696.C64 W364 1992
Publisher: Boston : Little, Brown, c1992.
Edition: 1st ed.
Collation: 323 p. [8] p. of plates : ill. ; 24 cm.
Notes: Includes index.
|
2053.29 | Thks for publisher name | BONNET::CHERDO | | Thu Aug 20 1992 12:32 | 5 |
| reply to .27 and .28
Thank you.I am in France, will try to get this book.
Bernard.
|
2053.30 | | ACOSTA::MIANO | John - NY Retail Banking Resource Cntr | Thu Aug 20 1992 14:56 | 8 |
| RE: <<< Note 2053.26 by SA1794::CHARBONND "Bush in '92 - Barbara!" >>>
> What can we learn from Wang? Well, ya gotta wonder how many Wang
> employees are still bickering about their car plans...
It's not post-it pads and car plans that got us into deep do-do.
John
|
2053.31 | | SALSA::MOELLER | Partner is NOT A VERB. | Thu Aug 20 1992 17:55 | 9 |
| >It's not post-it pads and car plans that got us into deep do-do.
Absolutely right. It's years of myopia and non-decisions by highly
paid yet unqualified members of unqualified committees.
Fire everyone above the rank of unit manager. Don't say 'then the
company will be leaderless'.. we are now.
karl
|
2053.32 | | TOPDOC::AHERN | Dennis the Menace | Fri Aug 21 1992 00:38 | 4 |
| On the news this evening it was mentioned that, despite the bankruptcy,
some 500 Wang employees are going to Hawaii for a week as a reward for
meeting sales goals. The total tab is several million dollars.
|
2053.33 | | MIMS::PARISE_M | Southern, but no comfort | Fri Aug 21 1992 01:31 | 4 |
|
Sounds like something we'd do. In fact, they can even call it....
"All Hands On Wang."
|
2053.34 | | ELWOOD::KAPLAN | Larry Kaplan, DTN: 237-6872 | Fri Aug 21 1992 09:14 | 4 |
| The way I heard it, they were already in Hawaii "celebrating" when the
bankruptcy was announced.
L.
|
2053.35 | Recollections, not quotes from todays paper | SENIOR::HAMBURGER | Life is a Do_It_Yourself project! | Fri Aug 21 1992 09:50 | 24 |
|
An article from the Worcester MA Telegram this AM about the Hawaii trip
was that it was cancelled last year due to problems with the hotel being
unfinished, but that it was scheduled for this year. Wang spokeperson said
that the trip was part of the total compensation package for their top
salespeople and the trip was basically bought and paid for long ago, before
Cptr 11 was a reality. To cancel it in light of the current fiscal crisis
would have lost them millions. One estimate said the trip was costing $7M
but a review by Wang said that was grossly exagerated. They did not give
a revised estimate of the cost.
My opinion, yes, they would have lost the booking cost of the trip had
they cancelled it now, but their fiscal woes started LOOONNNGGG before they
booked this trip.....why did they do it in the first place?
Does this sound like anything we do within Digital??? Can you say, COE
kids?
I was twice a winner of the SWS Excellence awards in the past when
business was good and cash was in a positive flow, but today I'm not sure
it is a good idea....seeing it in print for Wang only leaves a question in
my mind of what it would look like with the name Digital replacing Wang....
Vic H
|
2053.36 | | SYORPD::DEEP | Bob Deep - SYO, DTN 256-5708 | Fri Aug 21 1992 10:38 | 21 |
| For the last time, folks.... COE is bought and paid for by the Sales salary
plan! It is, just like at WANG, IBM, HP, SUN, and etc., part of the
compensation package, and held back from the salary of those individuals
who compete for it. It is a carrot... a goal to shoot for.
No one is putting up an additional $x million to send people to Hawaii.
They are withholding $x million from the salary plan, and redistributing it
on a yearly basis to that years top performers.
It is an incentive system that works very well (in general) for the Sales
organization. There are some problems with other organizations where the
selection process is polluted by politics.
Every other group in Digital can establish similar awards. Engineering can
take $x million from their salary pool for FY93 and award the top x% with
top end workstations, for example.
Regardless of how you distribute the pool of money, the value is a constant.
Bob
|
2053.37 | These guys must be golden. | CASDOC::MEAGHER | Term limits for Bush & Quayle | Fri Aug 21 1992 11:16 | 7 |
| I think any Wang salesperson who can sell the company's products lately must be
doing a fantastic job and deserves more than a trip to Hawaii. In fact, maybe
Digital should try to hire these people.
I'm surprised customers are still buying anything from Wang.
Vicki Meagher
|
2053.38 | Now, if they could sell artic air to an Eskimo... | SCAACT::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts is TOO slow | Fri Aug 21 1992 11:23 | 7 |
| re: .37
I don't know. Since we don't know what the criteria are and Wang does
have some installed base, their top sales person could have sold $50K
of spares to some site concerned about parts availability, etc.
Bob
|
2053.39 | | MIMS::PARISE_M | Southern, but no comfort | Fri Aug 21 1992 11:41 | 4 |
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I thought I saw where they indentured themselves for $25 million to
sell IBM. Apparently IBM doesn't think they're such hot salesmen!
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2053.40 | Winton: where are you? | SHALOT::ANDERSON | Dictated, not spell-checked | Fri Aug 21 1992 12:19 | 6 |
| .19> As for the bottom line: The employees did much better than the
.19> stockholders--the employees claim for vacation time has a higher
.19> precedence than the stockholders claim to anything.
Hmmm, seems fair. I mean, they are the ones who actually worked
for it, aren't they?
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2053.41 | Some feel like those Golden Fleece Awards :-) | TOHOPE::REESE_K | Three Fries Short of a Happy Meal | Fri Aug 21 1992 13:37 | 12 |
| As far as awards to sales folks go.....it's nice to get them; but
the recipients also get another "award", from the IRS. The value of
award is added to their W2s.
A friend who won Dec 100, DECathalon and some other award all in the
same year had her husband begging her not to do it again. He's self-
employed and the tax hit was enormous. The company she's now with
taxes her commission checks as she receives them; works out much
better that way.
Karen
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2053.42 | curious about stock | LEDS::SIMARD | just in time..... | Fri Aug 21 1992 14:49 | 3 |
| I hear their stock is down to .75 a share...would it be a good buy?
Just curious,..
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2053.43 | On the way up, maybe. Not now... | MARX::BAIRD | Not running? NOW I'm for Perot! | Fri Aug 21 1992 15:02 | 9 |
| re: .42
>I hear their stock is down to .75 a share...would it be a good buy?
I'll sell you some. I bought yesterday at 3/8 - today 1/4....
Let see, I'll let some go for, say, 5/8? That's better than .75!! ;-)
J.B.
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2053.44 | | MIMS::PARISE_M | Southern, but no comfort | Fri Aug 21 1992 15:06 | 4 |
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At 75 cents a square foot, it's price competitive with a good grade
of wallpaper.
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2053.45 | bottom line | BEING::MCCULLEY | DEC Pro | Fri Aug 21 1992 18:25 | 12 |
| .18> Rather it seems that "caring about the bottom line" can too little and
.18> too late in Wang's case.
I disagree, I believe they've had concern about the bottom line all along.
It wasn't concern that was lacking, it was competence.
I'm sure that was shown when the Doctor gave Fred the company and then
later took the reins back because of the slipping performance.
That's what Digital can learn from Wang's fate, along with the lesson
Alfred already pointed out about the demonstrable failure of downsizing.
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2053.46 | | SYORPD::DEEP | Bob Deep - SYO, DTN 256-5708 | Mon Aug 24 1992 09:58 | 6 |
| Re:.41 (Tax hit for awards)
These awards do increase you tax liability. However, Digital also gives you a
tax adder to help.
Bob
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2053.47 | | MIMS::PARISE_M | Southern, but no comfort | Mon Aug 24 1992 11:18 | 5 |
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Wait a minute. I thought the tax adder was only to help defray the
burdensome tax bite associated with a relocation; not to ease the
pain of "fun and games" and other perks.
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2053.48 | Both | SYORPD::DEEP | Bob Deep - SYO, DTN 256-5708 | Mon Aug 24 1992 11:36 | 3 |
| A tax adder also helps defray the cost of business awards such as COE.
Bob
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