T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
2056.1 | | SGOUTL::BELDIN_R | D-Day: 225 days and counting | Tue Aug 18 1992 13:14 | 3 |
| I think that's been going thru many minds recently.
Dick
|
2056.2 | | MCIS5::BOURGAULT | | Tue Aug 18 1992 13:16 | 3 |
|
Maybe that's the idea......
|
2056.3 | Same as Wang? | MR4DEC::FBUTLER | | Tue Aug 18 1992 13:42 | 8 |
|
I heard from a "friend of a friend" that when WANG files (filed?)
chapter 11, they would be laying off with no severance package at
all due to "fincancial constraints"...
Hope we don't find ourselves in the same situation...
|
2056.4 | tips fopr managing "downsizing" | WKRP::LEETCH | US Messaging Practice DTN 432-7628 | Tue Aug 18 1992 13:46 | 21 |
| There is a good article in the Aug. 3 issue of "Industry Week" titled "Managing
Survivors - downsizing traumatizes those who remain behind as well as those who
are cast adrift". I recommend getting an issue and reading it.
In it, they have tips for managers on downsizing. I recommend reading the whole
article to establish context:
1. Don't duck the issues.
2. Be honest and quick.
3. Let the survivors grieve.
4. Share information with the survivors.
5. Give full disclosure (who, how many, will they hapeen again, etc.)
6. Pat the survivors on the back.
7. Provide ample advance notice of lay-offs (like 6 mos.).
8. Prepare supervisors and managers for the layoffs.
9. Increase managerial accessibility.
10. After the layoff, solicit employees so that they can actively shape the
post-layoff environment.
11. Have the survivors work towards achievable goals.
Bruce
|
2056.5 | | ALIEN::MCCULLEY | DEC Pro | Tue Aug 18 1992 14:04 | 19 |
| re .0 - it's already happened. The current package is not as lucrative
as the original TFSO. So the folks who were most obviously unnecessary
got the best deal, the ones who were worth keeping if things took a
turn for the better are getting a less attractive deal, and the people
who are really worth retention will be likely to get the worst deal if
it comes to that.
That seems to me to be an inevitable consequence of the way things
work, not a conscious decision by the corporation/management.
But it highlights an issue that must be resolved by the company, in
order to put this behind and get on with successful accomplishment.
How can the real acheivers be motivated to perform successfully, and to
feel loyalty to the employer, when faced with these facts of life?
That's something that needs to be addressed, and the statement
attributed to Palmer in .0 doesn't sound to me like the best solution.
Maybe it's an unfounded rumor, or maybe it was intended to motivate (in
which case I wonder about the choice of stick vs. carrot). I just hope
there's more to it than the base note reports...
|
2056.6 | No money, few jobs, what a pickle..! | BSS::GROVER | The CIRCUIT_MAN | Tue Aug 18 1992 14:15 | 13 |
| One other side effect of this all, is the fact that those who have left
DEC and will be leaving DEC in the near future, will be applying for
jobs in other companys.... many of these companys will begin leveling
off their own employment, to keep from becoming another Wang/DEC.
Those left, who might someday find themself "rightsized", will find
less money and the probability of a real small job market. This will
mean a total change in careers, for most/some.
Just something else to think about..!
Bob G. (Still hanging in there)
|
2056.7 | | FIGS::BANKS | This was | Tue Aug 18 1992 14:52 | 20 |
| Ditto, .5 and .6
The more loyal to the company you are, or the longer you try to stay for
whatever reason, the more exposure you seem to have. Already saturated job
market, ever diminishing package, more work to do before you get laid off,
and ever dwindling benefits on the way. Presumably (or at least in theory), the
people lowest in the rankings got the best deal, and all the people higher up
in worth to the company get are more paychecks, possibly over a longer period
of time.
What the heck? Maybe we should see the continued employment for a year or two
longer than the first people to TFSO as the "package" the more valuable
employees get. You just have to work a little harder for it than if you'd
gotten TFSO 1, that's all.
I don't think this was the corporate intent - to penalize those who tried harder
and hung on longer - but it does seem to be the side effect. In my more
cynical days, I'd probably have said:
It's just the company's way of saying "Thanks for a job well done".
|
2056.8 | perfect 20/20 hindsight... | SSGV01::CHALMERS | NOT the mama! | Tue Aug 18 1992 15:24 | 8 |
| re: 'packages' becoming less 'attractive'
As they used to say around WANG a couple of years ago, regarding those
people targeted for the latest layoff:
"Don't feel too bad for them...they may have caught the last lifeboat!"
Something to think about on the day WANG goes Chapter 11.
|
2056.9 | We burn bridges at our own risk! | RIPPLE::NORDLAND_GE | Waiting for Perot :^) | Tue Aug 18 1992 16:16 | 12 |
|
RE: .6 et al
> those who have left DEC and will be leaving DEC in the near future,
> will be applying for jobs in other companys....
and some of these companies may be considered 'customers' - how we
treat these people now may have a lot of influence over whether we
follow them - or serve their needs (and ours) in the future.
2 sides to every coin!
JN
|
2056.10 | There's the door, oh, and here's a dollar! | BEEMER::LAVOIE | Tom Lavoie 293-5705 | Tue Aug 18 1992 16:20 | 14 |
|
I heard quite some time ago that the current TFSO is the last.
The round of lay-offs, which will begin Q2 (October) will provide
the victim with four weeks of pay.
That's a fine how_do_ya_do!
Tom
P.S. The first TFSO was not TFSO or TFSO1, it was called TMP, and
victims (or should I say winners -- up to 144 weeks of pay!) of that
program said it stood for Too Many People.
|
2056.11 | Not 144 | SCHOOL::RIEU | Read his lips...Know new taxes | Tue Aug 18 1992 16:33 | 2 |
| I think the Maximum in the TMP days was 104 weeks.
Denny
|
2056.12 | | BEEMER::LAVOIE | Tom Lavoie 293-5705 | Tue Aug 18 1992 16:36 | 7 |
|
That's what I thought too, but the person that told me about no
more packages INSISTED it was 144. I must have a bad source of
information.
Tom
|
2056.13 | re: .10 | SWAM1::PEDERSON_PA | Buy Bespeckled-Bovine brand | Tue Aug 18 1992 17:07 | 8 |
| re: .10
Who is your source of information (no names please but
perhaps his/her level)? I find it hard to believe that
after setting a precedent of serverance packages for
"poorer" performers, that DEC would leave itself open/
vulnerable to class action lawsuits for minimal severance
of "better" performers.
|
2056.14 | | A1VAX::DISMUKE | Say you saw it in NOTES... | Tue Aug 18 1992 17:49 | 7 |
| The first package was not necessarily for "poor performance", but I
don't know what the actual criteria was.
Performance came into play sicne they started calling it TFSO.
-sandy
|
2056.15 | The long and winding road | CSLALL::BRESSACK | | Tue Aug 18 1992 17:50 | 19 |
| As an ex-WANG employee who saw four years of growth/excitement
('81-'85), followed by three years of downturn/right sizing ('86-'88),
I learned three lessons:
1. Companies with no history of layoffs do a poor job initially with
layoffs.
2. After a layoff or two, companies do a poor job with layoffs.
3. Once a company gets the "knack of it", they do a poor job with layoffs.
As WANG enters Chapter 11, you can only wonder where this long and
winding road will lead DEC.
|
2056.16 | 104 beat 52 (;<) | CSC32::ENTLER | Add Bush to the Unemployed! | Tue Aug 18 1992 17:51 | 7 |
| re: last few.
104 weeks was the maximum of the voluntary package only offered to
certain elite within Digital. Reference note 598.79 for specifics on
that package!
/Dan
|
2056.17 | So who said life was fair? | SWAM2::SCHMAUDER_PA | | Tue Aug 18 1992 18:17 | 15 |
| I don't know if all that got the first and second packages were poor
performers but I do know that in AZ the first/second packages were
given to people who for a least a year were sitting around reading and
knitting in a manufacturing plant because there wasn't any work. In my
eyes they already got their package in the year prior to the lay-off.
It seems like alot of us are getting other jobs outside of DEC and yes
even for lessor pay BUT can see the "writing on the wall".
DEC should have decided about packages BEFORE they started the
lay-offs. I have heard that there are many law suits against us
because of inconsistency. Not sure it this is just talk or really
true but along with the talk is that DEC has lost some of the lawsuits.
Anybody have valid information on this?
-pat
|
2056.18 | | SWAM1::PEDERSON_PA | Buy Bespeckled-Bovine brand | Tue Aug 18 1992 18:40 | 6 |
| RE: poor performers vs better performers
For note of reference, I purposely put the words "poorer" and
"better" performers in quotations because, as well all know,
the TSFO packages were not *actually based soley* on
performance. I was lacking a better term use use..
|
2056.19 | As much as possible, do what you can with what you've got | IW::WARING | Silicon,*Software*,Services | Tue Aug 18 1992 19:10 | 3 |
| The onus is on all of us to bring in the revenue and make all the future
TFSO strategy an academic exercise for the corporation.
- Ian W.
|
2056.20 | Where's the $$$'s | QBUS::T_MCFARLAND | | Tue Aug 18 1992 19:41 | 6 |
| Did DEC not take a multi-million dollar write-off for future downsizing
this past quarter? If they did, and it was reported they did, then
would that not lend to the rath of the IRS?
Ted
|
2056.21 | Globe on the first TFSO | MR4DEC::GREEN | | Tue Aug 18 1992 19:56 | 69 |
|
Digital - A voluntary severance plan
{The Boston Globe, 13-Sep-89, p. 69}
{By Jane Fitz Simon, Globe Staff}
[Reprinted without permission]
Faced with sluggish sales and too many manufacturing employees, Digital
Equipment Corp. for the first time will offer voluntary severance to
Massachusetts-based employees.
The Maynard computer maker, which takes pride in having never had a layoff,
will offer a generous "financial support package" to 700 employees on
condition that they agree to leave the company.
Digital disclosed the plan yesterday in part to quell rumors that layoffs
are taking place. A spokesman for the company said that there continue to be
no plans for any layoffs.
Digital's stock, the fifth most-heavily traded stock on the New York Stock
Exchange, closed yesterday at 99 1/2, up 2 1/4.
Company officials last month confirmed the existence of a "working document"
that calls on nine major departments to reduce head count by 25 percent by
July 1991 through transfers and attrition. If implemented, the plan would
affect an estimated 7,500 employees.
Digital is suffering from a slump in US sales. Declining opportunities,
intense price competition, and changing market demands are pressuring Digital
and other suppliers of mid-range computer systems to reduce expenses and
streamline their operations. In the fourth quarter ended June 30, the
company's profit was off 22 percent from a year earlier.
Digital's voluntary severance program is being offered to 500 employees
located at a former systems manufacturing facility in Salem, and 200 employees
based at other Digital facilities whose jobs are related to the affected
business unit. The assembly and testing that used to be done by the
manufacturing unit is now done at Digital plants in Phoenix,
and Puerto Rico, said company spokesman Jeff Gibson.
Since November 1988, 600 other employees who worked at the Salem
manufacturing operation have been placed in other jobs within the company,
Gibson said. The Salem facility, located on Northeastern Boulevard, houses
about 1,200 other Digital employees who work for other business units. They
will not be affected by the voluntary severance program.
Digital has no plans at this time to offer the program to any other
employees, said Gibson. But he did not rule out the possibility that it could
be offered to other employees in the future.
"It's a theoretical package that would be examined on a business-by-business
basis if any other group decides to pursue it," said Gibson.
The financial package is a new option in Digital's ongoing "work-force
transition," a plan to reduce the manufacturing payroll by 4,000 this year
through redeployment and retraining.
Gibson said Digital offered a similar package in 1986 and 1987 to several
hundred manufacturing employees in Arizona and Puerto Rico. But the package
has never before been offered to employees in Massachusetts.
Employees are being told of the voluntary option this week. Beginning in
October, they will have 13 weeks to decide whether or not to accept the
financial package.
The package provides an allowance based on years of service. Employees with
up to two years of experience will get 40 weeks of pay. Those with three to 10
years will receive 40 weeks, plus three weeks for each year between three and
10 years. Employees who have worked from 11 to 20 years will get 64 weeks of
pay, plus four weeks of pay for each year served between 11 and 20 years. The
maximum award is 104 weeks of pay.
For those who accept the financial support package, Digital will maintain
medical, dental, and life insurance coverage for one year. There will also be
a limited acceleration of any restricted stock options employees may own.
Outplacement assistance will be available.
Gibson said that employees who do not opt for the program will be expected
to look for other positions in the company while efforts are made to retrain
them. There are manufacturing positions available elsewhere in the company, he
said.
Digital expects several hundred employees to accept the financial package,
Gibson said. The company employs 125,800 worldwide, with 33,600 in
Massachusetts.
|
2056.22 | Not Voluntary across the board | MIMS::BAINE_K | | Wed Aug 19 1992 10:19 | 11 |
| This package was only offered to select groups - such as the Printing &
Circulations Services (P&CS) folks out of Northboro. It sure wasn't
offered to anyone in my group (Low End Systems). I knew one man who
had been with DEC for over 15 years - he got his 77 weeks of pay, took
a month off to go to Hawaii, and then went to work for one of the
printers he had used while working for DEC! Granted, he couldn't do
direct business with DIgital for 6 months, but his new firm found lots
of other clients for him to work with. He had it made in the shade!
Kathleen
|
2056.23 | Too complex for simple answers. | CASDOC::MEAGHER | Term limits for Bush & Quayle | Wed Aug 19 1992 11:07 | 18 |
| I think Digital employees should reflect on the fact that the U.S. economy has
declined markedly in the last three years. Look how low the interest rates are
now--if they were that low in 1989 home sales would be jumping through the
roof.
Sure, the company was three or four years too slow to realize that it had too
many employees, and we can fault it (who's the "it"?) for that. But if you were
listening to the politicians, the economic pundits, etc. in 1989, you too might
figure that one big, generous layoff would take care of the overstaffing
problem, and that future "growth" (ha) would keep the rest of the employees
around. The economic gloom-and-doom people were correct, but who listens to
them?
I don't recall much discussion in this notes file in 1989 about the problems
the company was having and what to do about them. Why is everybody so wise in
retrospect?
Vicki Meagher
|
2056.24 | Packages will go the way of the Titanic's life boats | SUFRNG::REESE_K | Three Fries Short of a Happy Meal | Wed Aug 19 1992 14:17 | 70 |
| Talk about mixed emotions, I was one of those folks eligible for the
"TMP" :-) The criteria was not performance; our group's function was
being phased out to Colorado Springs. To the best of my recollection,
transferring to CXO was not offered as an option (to continue doing
work for the group that was picking up the function). It was voluntary
as far as accepting the package; the other option was finding another
job within DEC - 2 years ago that was still not too difficult if you
had a good track record as a worker-bee.
Since I had over 10 years with DEC, my package wouldn't have been
chump change, but while I was mulling it over *friends* who were with
Remote Sales Support kept coming to me and telling me to apply for
a spot for their new "SW Services & Licensing Team". Silly me, I
decided to stay.....oh well. Guess I should have taken my
cue from my DM, UM and 2 peers who took the package :-(
The base noter expressed what I've thought for some time; especially
after seeing the last package diminish from the one offered last
year.
I'm no legal expert and I'm sure there are many "legal eagles" looking
at the situation now; but we've had a lot of people try to volunteer
since that first round and were told the package was for people who
did not want to leave, i.e. if you're not happy with your job, quit!
If folks band together in some sort of class action suit, DEC might
wind up losing more money than if they just allowed people who wanted
this package to take it.
My first job was in a law office and I can remember when I was a
licensed insurance agent for a LARGE company; female agents were
not paid commission, nor did they receive the same benefits as the
male agents. I can remember thinking to myself before I quit, that
the company was prime fodder for a class action suit. It took about
5 years, but I eventually read in the papers where the female agents
nationwide banded together and nailed that insurance company good.
I realize DEC's situation is slightly different, but it isn't all
that different. DEC has set a precedent with the packages....this
can come back to haunt DEC. The big gotcha here probably would be
that if DEC goes the way of WANG; what would be left to liquidate to
satisfy a class action judgment?
I'm dealing with a SW licensing issue right now that goes against
how we've done business for as long as I've been doing SW licensing.
The memo that spelled out the new rules stated they came about because
one account team made an exception to policy for a large project/opp-
ortunity; thereby setting a precedent. Other accounts found out about
it, so now if anyone asks if they can do blah blah blah, we can't refuse
them....a precedent was set.
I am looking at the writing on the wall, although I do have to squint
thru the bifocals a little more, but I am keeping my eyes open for an
opportunity with another company <-- getting new bifocals so as not
to miss anything :-) I really do enjoy the content of my job, but as
I've discussed in the note on disability, I really can't afford to
hang in here too much longer because quite frankly a full blown cardiac
episode would probably make it impossible for me to pass a physical with
another company or perhaps get private insurance.
Younger, more highly technical people are being hired away by
customers in droves. Wonder how long this can happen before it has a
major impact on DEC's ability to sell SW consulting services?
I do know the words to Nearer My God to Thee (for the person who
asked in another note :-) :-)
Karen
|
2056.25 | good career move Bob | AIMHI::GILLIS | Webb Wilder:Idol of Idle Youth | Wed Aug 19 1992 17:57 | 5 |
| re .22
You got that right...good ole B.C. made out like a bandit ;')
|
2056.26 | How about bumping rights? | USCTR1::LALLYN | | Thu Aug 20 1992 10:34 | 8 |
| Re 2056.5
What makes you think that the people staying are worth keeping more
than those whose work has gone away. Suppose I could do your job better
than you can; should I have bumping rights?
Lou
|
2056.27 | Natural tendencies | MLTVAX::SCONCE | Bill Sconce | Thu Aug 20 1992 13:13 | 20 |
| .26> What makes you think that the people staying are worth keeping more
.26> than those whose work has gone away.
There is a natural human tendency to blame the victim whenever we are
confronted by painful emotional issues. It's especially hard to keep
an equanimous outlook when some people are destined to be survivors
when others will have gone away.
Hence the tendency (sometimes seen in this conference) to assume that
anyone being laid off must have been deadwood, must have been less
worthy than ourselves. A similar kind of survivors' remorse seems to
occur after true mortal disasters -- it's tough to cope with walking
away from a plane crash which killed most passengers, for instance.
Not unrelated (IMO) is a tendency to assume that workers are somehow
responsible for the current state of the company, when demonstrably
it was strategic decisions which got us here. (That's what KO said
at ZKO, anyway.) It would be less painful in a way if workers WERE
responsible, since then there'd be some measure of things workers
could do to influence their own destiny.
|
2056.28 | message to BP... | DIEHRD::PASQUALE | | Thu Aug 20 1992 13:46 | 11 |
| re:. - back a few......
i sent a message to Bob Palmer approximately 3 weeks ago regarding the
downsizing pain that we are going through. I attempted to articulate in
my own terms what staying on here with the prospects of future layoffs
without a package would do to the psyche. I also took a stab at
offering a potential solution. I haven't heard anything back from him
to date. I suppose I ought not to expect I would or should for that
matter but it sure would be nice if someone would at least acknowledge
its receipt.
|
2056.29 | it was probably a complete waste of time | CUPTAY::BAILEY | Season of the Winch | Thu Aug 20 1992 14:22 | 9 |
| >> it sure would be nice if someone would at least acknowledge
>> its receipt.
Don't hold your breath ... I sent a memo to one of our VP's about a
business issue a couple of years ago. To this day I don't even know
whether or not he ever even received it, much less read it.
... Bob
|
2056.30 | Don't blame DEC, vote in Nov. | BALZAC::BULMER | Just whinging away | Fri Aug 21 1992 07:31 | 27 |
|
> I also took a stab at offering a potential solution.
I wish I had seen your solution to this dilemma. Really, what can
Digital possibly do differently? Initially offer a small package and
increase (or at least keep equal) following packages until layoffs
are no longer needed?
Digital did only what it could do: give as generous a package as
possible with available funds. We are running out of cash. The packages
have to be smaller.
If the idea of being given one week's notice with $0.00 dollars to walk
away with scares you, don't blame Digital. Digital owes you nothing
except for your services rendered. I don't believe that the company
owes you a supplement for fidelity, faithfulness, or whatever. I
accepted a job, not an emotional engagement.
On the bright side, there is someone to blame. Someone DOES owe you
financial security and the opportunity to work. That is the government.
Our gov. should define the laws concerning the legal obligations between
company and employee, and then help us with reasonable unemployment
checks, medical, and job placement assistance. Most European countries
offer much better benefits than we do.
Above all, the government should work towards rebuilding our economy.
|
2056.31 | | TARKIN::BEAVEN | Dick B., BXB2-2 | Fri Aug 21 1992 08:52 | 9 |
| re .30
I partly agree, but am skeptical about the gov't
being the solution. After all, how the gov't pays you
what it owes you is by swiping something out of your
pocket, either by taxes or by inflated currency!
By all means, vote yer conscience in Nov.!
Dick
|
2056.32 | Who's Responsible. | CUPOLA::MACNEIL | | Fri Aug 21 1992 09:18 | 22 |
|
Re: .30
"On the bright side, there is someone to blame. Someone DOES owe you
financial security and the opportunity to work. That is the government."
I think this attitude and approach doesn't work as well as
an attitude in which people see themselves as responsible for their
own employment and financial security. The only real security is
a strong economy. While the grass may look greener in Europe, I
don't see people leaving the US to move to Europe. Especially
Eastern Europe where people looked to their governments for
security until recently.
Governmental leaders are human beings fully capable of mistakes.
I have more confidence in Bob Palmer's understanding of the economy
than in Gov. Clinton's. I think we are better off with thousands
of Bob Palmers running their individual companies to be productive
than with politicians running the economy whose measure of success
is power and popularity whatever their good intentions.
end-of-soapbox
|
2056.33 | Dump Capitalism ... and STATE CAPITALISM! | IOSG::WDAVIES | There can only be one ALL-IN-1 Mail | Fri Aug 21 1992 09:27 | 8 |
| neither bob palmer nor george bush are able to control or do better in
a New World disorder of economic depression... The very free market
solution you seem to advocate is actually responsible for the current
slide into economic chaos- Even if Bush becae a born again Stalinist,
he wouldn't be able to control the mess - it would just be US
incorporated vs the EEC, as opposed to DEC versus BULL...
Winton
|
2056.34 | My baloney has a first name, it's C-H-E-R-Y-L | BALZAC::BULMER | Just whinging away | Fri Aug 21 1992 10:18 | 38 |
|
> I don't see people leaving the U.S. to move to Europe.
I did. I work in DEC France now after 4 years with DEC in Nashua. :-)
But I won't be an "I told you so" jerk about it. As a working person,
my standard of life was vastly higher in the U.S. But I'll tell you,
non-working people in the U.S. have it really rough compared to
non-working folks here. (But of course Americans aren't going to move
here because the layoffs benefits are better!)
To get back to the original point: I don't think DEC owes any of us
any kind of package. People seems to think that some type of money
is due to them and in this note, they have stated reasons like, "I've
been with DEC for....", "I could've taken this great package and
didn't...", etc.
I personally don't find the reasons valid, but I do think that these
stem from the perfectly valid universal panic of "Omigod, how do I
pay the mortgage with no income and no lump sum settlement? I can't
be responsible, I haven't done anything! Who did this?"
Well, DEC is the easy target to blame. But geez, DEC can't pay the
mortgage either. And DEC could blame the industry. And the industry
could blame the gov't. And so on....
I was clumsily trying to suggest to stop looking for the target and
instead look at the fear itself. I think that if I knew that I would
get help from the government until I found my next job, I'd feel just
slightly relieved.
Unemployment was designed to help people between jobs. Too bad it's
got this bad rep as a haven for deadbeats and drug addicts.
And you're right, I was full of baloney about the gov't having control
over the economy. I was just inventing facts to support my theory.
|
2056.35 | Bob did respond to a message! | POBOX::SEIBERTR | Perky | Fri Aug 21 1992 10:56 | 10 |
| To the person who wrote Bob Palmer a message-
A person in my group also wrote him a message. It was not about
the layoffs it was about advertising (both of us are Marketers)
and he did respond!! We were very surprised!! It was a short little
note but at least he read it and took the time to send something back.
I hope you get a response.........I hope we all do.....
Still hangin' in there, but don't know for how much longer,
Renee
|
2056.36 | | RANGER::BOOTH | Stephen Booth | Fri Aug 21 1992 10:57 | 4 |
|
Could you post the original note and reply ?
-Steve-
|
2056.37 | bob's message | POBOX::SEIBERTR | Perky | Fri Aug 21 1992 12:39 | 4 |
| It wasn't a note, it was an All in 1. I'll have to check and
see if I still have it.
Renee
|
2056.38 | say what?! | GAZELE::MURRY | Revolution Calling | Fri Aug 21 1992 12:44 | 11 |
|
>The very free market
> solution you seem to advocate is actually responsible for the current
> slide into economic chaos
First off, we aren't in a free market, unfortunately. Second, are you
advocating a more socialist system. Judging by what happened in
the USSR and Eastern Europe, that doesn't seem to work.
|
2056.39 | message posted through Delta | DIEHRD::PASQUALE | | Fri Aug 21 1992 18:52 | 5 |
| re. 35..
Someone from the Delta program got in touch with me suggesting I
post my message to him through them. I have as of this afternoon.
|
2056.40 | what Digital owes employees | BEING::MCCULLEY | DEC Pro | Fri Aug 21 1992 19:08 | 10 |
| .30> Digital owes you nothing except for your services rendered.
Digital owes each and every employee a fair shake.
.30> Our gov. should define the laws concerning the legal obligations
.30> between company and employee,
Our government has defined some laws that codify the requirement of
fairness in the treatment of employees. Digital is not exempt from
them, quite apart from any moral or ethical obligation.
|
2056.41 | DELTA as an alternative to A1 | GRANMA::TWILLIS | | Sun Aug 23 1992 21:54 | 21 |
| Reply :39
I have sent in 5 DELTA Leads in 3 years.
1 - Became a cost saving plan within my Region.
3 - Placed in a file somewhere.
1 - May someday be responded to. I have a Lead number but, no action.
It appears that people would rather worry about being laid off than
push a piece of electronic mail a little closer home.
There are people in DELTA that DO care and thay will help if, you are
LUCKY enough to reach them.
Still believing!
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2056.42 | ex | AIMHI::KOUTROUBAS | | Mon Aug 24 1992 11:02 | 9 |
|
I feel that corperate America has the wrong approach toward
it's worker's and needs to listen more , they are the strength .
Paul
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2056.43 | | CSOA1::BACH | You are so sly, but so am I... | Mon Aug 24 1992 16:43 | 29 |
| I can't agree, in terms of DEC. I worked out of Merrimack/Boxboro/
Westboro/Maynard.
I now work in the field. There are very real differences between
the "field" and "corporate". (There is far less emphasis on Digital
as a "family" and far more on Digital as a "Business", IMO)
I think Digital did everything possible to listen and respond to
employees. They had everything at their finger tips. I even had
a weight room across the building, nurses, paid MBA (and the prof
actually taught in one of our classrooms).
Everyone needs to understand the impact on our company due to the
fact we don't realize a gazillion percent profit on our margins
anymore.
Once that profit margin decreases (dramatically) so does the ability
to keep our staff overhead. Remember each employee incurs wages
and other expenses as well as salary. These other expenses usually
amount to more than that salary.
Palmer spoke thoroughly regarding our refocus, work-definition, and
the subsequent allocation of resources.
Before a company can ask the employee's "HOW" to do the job, they need
to decide upon the work the company will do. This is what Digital is
currently doing, re-scoping/focusing on work.
Chip
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2056.44 | nibble, nibble... | BIGQ::GARDNER | justme....jacqui | Thu Nov 21 1996 09:22 | 6 |
2056.45 | I'm hearing..... | MSDOA::SCRIVEN | | Thu Nov 21 1996 20:25 | 11
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