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2135.1 | todays Union Leader article | SALEM::BERUBE_C | Claude, G. | Tue Sep 29 1992 09:08 | 88 |
| Reprinted without permission from the 29-Sep-1992 edition of the NH
'The Union Leader' newspaper.
New Digital Chief Plans $1B in Cuts
From AP and Staff Reports
Maynard, Mass, -- The incoming president of Digital Equipment Corp.
reportedly plans to cut cost by $1 billion and overhaul the firm's
operating procedures in an effort to speed product development and
delivery.
Robert Palmer, who officially takes the reins of the ailing computer
company on Thursday, outlined the changes in a 14-point initiative
distributed to employees and in internal memos, according to the
industry newspaper PC Week.
The newspaper reported that changes include:
- Cutting cost by $1 billion;
- trimming assets by another $1 billion;
- Combining the firm's hardware engineering groups into a single unit;
- Putting Digital's separate networking products into one network
communications groups; and
- Creating individual business units that have more autonomy.
The memos also indicate that Palmer wants to increase the
accountability of all employees, and better coordinate the firm's
products, and increase customer satisfaction twofold to threefold in
fiscal 1994.
Company officials confirmed the existence of the memos, but would not
comment further.
"This was a work in progress. they are confidential documents, and
they are without context," said Mark Fredrickson, a Digital spokesman.
But analysts said the changes were necessary for the $14 billion
company which has been struggling to reverse a series of heavy losses
and chart a new direction.
"The plans simply articulate what has been clear for some time," said
Laura Conigliaro, an analyst with Prudential Securities Research in New
York, "It's clear Digital has to ... reformulate some of the things
it's been doing to put itself into fighting shape."
Palmer, 53 succeeds Digital co-founder Kenneth Olsen, who abruptly
announced in July that he was stepping down. Olsen, who helped launch
the company in 1957, had come under fire as Digital's fortunes tumbled
and he tried to reshuffle its management and product lines.
Digital has eliminated more than 20,000 jobs in recent years and
analyst have estimated it may cut up to 15,000 more. It posted a $2.8
billion net loss in the last fiscal year and is expected to post losses
for the next several quarters.
The company reported 7,240 employees in New Hampshire as of July 1,
down from 7,580 a year earlier.
Palmer has pledge to revamp the way the firm operates, but has not
projected how many jobs might be cut. he is scheduled to offer a
preview of the changes Thursday.
Conigliaro called Digital "a traditional computer company that had
built up a large infrastructure based on the premise that business
would continue as it has in the past."
But in recent years the industry had gone from being mainframe-driven
to desktop-driven, and Digital failed to keep up, she said.
"This company was in danger of becoming an anachronism," Conigliaro
said. "The industry was changing and going in one direction and
Digital was staying in the same direction. It has to make monumental
changes."
A Digital spokesman in New Hampshire last night declined to comment.
But George Whelton, chief executive officer of Hollis-based Windsor
Communications, a Digital vendor, said he's "very bullish" on Digital
in light of the moves mentioned in the news reports.
"Digital is going to be a much stronger company," Whelton said. "I'm
totally convinced Digital will be a stronger company a year from now."
The move follow earlier downsizing cutbacks and will bring Digital's
operation closer to the bone, he said. "Do you save the company?
that's essentially what Robert Palmer is doing. He is making the tough
choices," Whelton said, describing Palmer as "courageous."
Some people wonder if Digital is following Wang's path to bankruptcy.
"Digital is no Wang." Whelton said, noting that Digital has good
networking products and a good, strong services business. Digital also
has good borrowing power, he said. "They are in a very good cash
position."
Whelton offered a history lesson: "Digital's heroes of the past
invented mini-computers. Digital's heroes of today invented the alpha
chip. Digital's heroes of the future are going to invent change. The
Palmers and the people who restart and re-energize the company are the
heroes of the future."
What's traumatic about the change, especially in southern New
Hampshire, according to Whelton, is the human factor -- jobs lost. "I
have friends who are losing their jobs," he said.
Sources report a parking lot outside the Drake Beam Morin career
counseling center in Nashua is crowded with vehicles these days,
whereas a few weeks ago it was nearly empty.
Digital is sending employees who are being laid off or taking early
retirement there to help them find new careers.
|
2135.2 | | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney in New York | Tue Sep 29 1992 09:08 | 3 |
| What's different _in the content_ about this plan from previous plans?
A "business unit" is still a fuzzy term.
|
2135.3 | | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Tue Sep 29 1992 09:42 | 8 |
| I agree with Pat, I don't see much new here. I still believe that
most of our problems are "people" problems. Not numbers of people
so much as attitude of people (managers *are* people aren't they?)
I'll start getting my hopes up after major changes in management in
the couple of layers below Palmer happen. And not just bird cage
rattling either.
Alfred
|
2135.4 | real change begins with managerial rif | SGOUTL::BELDIN_R | D-Day: 183 days and counting | Tue Sep 29 1992 10:28 | 4 |
| I'm with Pat and Alfred. We need to take the birds out of the cage,
not move them around.
Dick
|
2135.5 | "Business unit"=profit centre | CHEFS::PARRYD | | Tue Sep 29 1992 11:51 | 14 |
| It's not the term that's fuzzy but people's thinking about it. It has
got to be a profit centre. If you're smart enough to be able to manage
the accounting and systems for cross-charging, you might be able to
manage a business unit within a matrix organization. It has to be said
though that people are usually not that smart. In which case the logic
is that you set up a separate company and handle inter-company
requirements through contracts, sales/purchase orders and the like.
It's been done before too. ICL, a U.K. systems shop, set up a separate
business unit for the retail EPOS market about seven years ago. They went
from nowhere to number one or two in the U.K. market and a significant
player internationally. And they faced up to all the issues such as
having a separate, dedicated sales force, and engineering, and
manufacturing, and services etc.
|
2135.6 | | MIMS::PARISE_M | Southern, but no comfort | Tue Sep 29 1992 17:00 | 5 |
|
Would someone please explain how to cut $1 billion in assets.
And also why a company would want to?
Thanks.
|
2135.7 | Boston Globe says... | FRITOS::TALCOTT | | Tue Sep 29 1992 17:07 | 6 |
| ...
Analysts said the proposed $1 billion in cost-cutting would come from
employees' salaries and the $1 billion in asset reduction would probably come
from reducing inventory through the speeding of manufacturing turnaround time.
Trace
|
2135.8 | idle assets lose money | SGOUTL::BELDIN_R | D-Day: 183 days and counting | Tue Sep 29 1992 17:18 | 10 |
| Some assets make money, others are idle. I expect they want to cut the
idle ones. The JIT hypothesis mentioned in .7 is one way except that
we haven't yet simplified the material flows enough to make it
feasible quickly. $1b will take some significant doing, a lot more
than the talk we're used to. Our inventory excesses are the results of
inconsistent systems, uncoordinated operations, informal and inadequate
planning. Lots of cloth to cut a solution from. Problem is to find a
tailor with strong scissors.
Dick
|
2135.9 | Asset A/R Reduction | CTOAVX::OAKES | Its DEJA VU all over again | Tue Sep 29 1992 17:40 | 7 |
|
Accounts receivables is perhaps the largest Current Asset of the
Corporation. In order to meet the Days Sales Outstanding goals for
the coming fiscal years it will mean a reduction in the $1Billion
range.
KO
|
2135.10 | | FORTSC::CHABAN | Pray for Peter Pumpkinhead! | Tue Sep 29 1992 18:00 | 13 |
|
Questions:
How big are our payroll expenses? This $1B reduction in payroll
expense translates to how many rolling heads?
Also, must all the expense reduction be payroll? Let's get rid of
the waste like those stupid cassette tapes we send to the field.
-Ed
|
2135.11 | assets = $11b+ | MRKTNG::SILVERBERG | Mark Silverberg DTN 264-2269 TTB1-5/B3 | Wed Sep 30 1992 15:34 | 19 |
| The assets as of the end of June 1992 (end of FY92)
Cash = $1.337B
Accts. Rec. = $3.594B
Total Inventory = $1.614B
Prepaid Expenses = $ .353B
Deferred Taxes = $ .223B
Land = $ .373B
Buildings = $1.872B
Leashold Improvs = $ .593B
Machy & Equip = $4.835B
Other = $ .594B
Less Depr, etc = $4.103B
--------
Total = $11.284B (down from $2.875B in FY91)
Looks like we've got a few places to look for $1B in reductions
Mark
|
2135.12 | | AKOCOA::JMORAN | When Money Speaks The Truth is? | Wed Sep 30 1992 15:41 | 17 |
| Re: Payroll Expense
In the US Field org. Payroll represents approx 60% of your expense. If
you are going to cut costs then payroll must be part of that equation.
The problem is that to effectively do this Digital must change the way
it goes to market and conducts its business. If that doesn't happen
then Digital will not be able to maintain it's revenue streams causing
more cost reduction measures and the spiral will continue.
The individual salesperson in the US is not as productive as a
salesperson in the UK (as an example). Therefore unless major systematic
changes take place then just asking the sales people to sell more will
not help. While allot of activity and talk about changes are taking
place I have not seen much in the way of results. Hopefully within the
next few months these results will crystallize.
John
|
2135.13 | | SQM::MACDONALD | | Wed Sep 30 1992 17:09 | 12 |
|
Re: .6
Assets which aren't currently employed in generating revenue
consume resources just in keeping them maintained. Imagine what
it must cost us each year in taxes, utilities, maintenance for
facilities that aren't producing income.
Steve
|
2135.14 | nice theory, until you have to deal with the world | SA1794::CHARBONND | in deepest dreams the gypsy flies | Thu Oct 01 1992 03:52 | 9 |
| re.8 One problem with JIT is vendors who don't take it seriously.
(And some internal groups are the worst offenders.) JIT says,
I want just enough, exactly when I need it. Most vendors say,
screw you, you'll get what we give you, when we give it to you.
So, you end up with too much, because they don't want to hold
it back, or too little, which causes you to over-order by way of
compensation.
Maybe we need to change 'JIT' to 'JED' - Just Enough, Dammit!
|
2135.15 | But it has to show up somewhere else... | HEAVY::THOMAS | | Thu Oct 01 1992 04:47 | 6 |
| And of course, if accounts receivable reduces by $1B, something else
increases by $1B. It could show up either as increased cash or appear
that we made $1B more in revenue (or both, depending on how the
accounting is done).
Mel
|
2135.16 | | METSYS::THOMPSON | | Thu Oct 01 1992 05:49 | 5 |
|
I think he means plant closings, in the talk yesterday he talked of
a plant in "Greenville, South Carolina" (hope I heard that right) that
had been sold off. I think it's more of that type of exercise.
|
2135.17 | | MLCSSE::KEARNS | | Thu Oct 01 1992 08:12 | 34 |
|
re: .3
I agree about the management problems; this is a major hurdle for DEC.
One of the problems that has caused this has been few career paths in
the past. Many viewed the paths as managerial or technical. If you were
at the end of the line technically (this is a common misperception) or
just tired of the technical grind go for a management position. In my
opinion there are too many people that became managers for the wrong
reasons.
I don't know how many times I see technical folks hang it up and go
into management. Only problem is they still need to deal with technical
staff or the like. So they then buffer themselves from this with more
managers. This has happened. Now it will come to a stop. But, even if
managers aren't technically-minded anymore they are crafty. They will
realize that they can't add layers of management between them and the
grunts anymore. Now they can really get creative. I see them drop staff
like a hot potato and become <insert creative title> managers,
essentially individual contributors again. Problem is they lost their
technical edge long ago, or if they do want it again they push out
those that stuck with a technical career path. Or let's take the noble
concept of teamwork, this can get distorted even more. Managers will
create teams of engineers and ICs and "empower" them with everything
from project strategy to peer reviews. This actually may be good for
ICs but what then is the responsibility of management?
I have seen excellent managers that don't play these games, that
keep their technical edge, who formulate strategies, meet with
customers, take care of staff, solicit opinions of workers, etc.
I just hope Bob Palmer can see through the shenanigans of the many
and promote the few managers which have the right qualities.
And more importantly we need to make sure that people aren't forced
(or feel pressured) into management roles.
- Jim K
|
2135.18 | Bob Palmers 1b$ saving is by value chain anaylsis as already published in this conference ? | CLADA::PAH | Paul Harrison | Fri Oct 02 1992 12:20 | 6 |
| Hi,
I believe the 1b$ cost reduction is also the aim of Bob Palmers value chain
analysis group. 1b$ reduction in assets would equate to approx 10,000 people.
with regards
Paul
|
2135.19 | another view of asset reduction | SHIRE::GOLDBLATT | The Spectator | Fri Oct 02 1992 13:01 | 11 |
| 1b$ in assests reduction could also be obtained by reducing AR by that
amount and that would not require eliminating employees but rather the
introduction of customer satisfaction as the revenue recognition event
rather than the currently-used function-dependent and not
customer-dependent events.
Instead of eliminating employees this would motivate them to work for
the benefit of the company. If you were the business manager, which
option would you choose ?
David
|
2135.20 | Wait a minute! | HOTWTR::GARRETTJO | | Fri Oct 02 1992 16:28 | 3 |
|
How does reducing AR yield a reduction in assets? The only way I can
think of is to write them off as bad debt.
|
2135.21 | like pulling teeth! | SGOUTL::BELDIN_R | D-Day: 87 days and counting | Fri Oct 02 1992 16:30 | 4 |
| You reduce AR by getting customers to pay their bills on time. Dentist
experience is often useful. :-0
Dick
|
2135.22 | Then you spend the money | BTOVT::SOJDA_L | | Fri Oct 02 1992 17:02 | 7 |
| >> You reduce AR by getting customers to pay their bills on time. Dentist
>> experience is often useful. :-0
This reduces AR but how does it reduce assets. You credit A/R and
debit cash -- net assets remains the same.
The only way to reduce assets is to then spend the cash.
|
2135.23 | Use AR reduction to reduce debt.. | WR1FOR::BOYNTON_CA | | Fri Oct 02 1992 17:53 | 10 |
| Reducing AR (an asset) reduces total assets if the cash freed from
quicker collections is used to reduce existing debt or, in our current
situation, to put off the need for increased debt.
Reducing the need for additional debt and avoiding the interest expense
that goes with it, is behind the urgent cash conservation actions being
pushed in the corporation.
Carter (CPA hat on)
|
2135.24 | right on ! | SHIRE::GOLDBLATT | The Spectator | Sat Oct 03 1992 11:49 | 23 |
| The most important impact of the AR reduction is in the increase of
customer satisfaction and in Digital's image in the market. The AR
reduction, in my opinion, is secondary to these.
Bringing about the AR reduction as I suggested has the most useful
effect of getting many parts of this company to work TOGETHER
for the benefit of Digital, rather than working independently for the
benefit of their own, non-company-beneficial metrics.
If the managers of Digital want to reduce assets, AR reduction is the
most business-beneficial way to do it IMHO. From Wallstreet's point of
view, it would also increase ROA (if we had any returns !).
I hope that the managers of Digital are not so short-sighted as to
think that, automatically:
reduction in expenses = decrease in employees = Digital's business
advantage
I also hope they are convinced that this company will not succeed
without effective business management !
David - European Capability Manager of IEM and CCOO services
|
2135.25 | AR is not the inverse of Cash | HOTWTR::GARRETTJO | | Mon Oct 05 1992 13:56 | 16 |
|
Admittedly, we are dealing in the land of opinions here so I will
offer yet another, in response to the last few...
The most common goal for reducing assets is reducing inventory. This
is usual stated as a goal of increasing inventory turns, which can
only be achieved by reducing inventory (in either manufacturing
components or finished goods) or increasing sales.
Reducing AR is generally not a tactic for reducing assets. It is
usually done to improve the cash position of the enterprise, as stated
in the last few. The goal is usually "to reduce short term
debt" or "to improve cash on hand". Neither of these goals reflect an
improvement in the asset position. In fact, the former reduces
assets, while the latter has no effect.
|
2135.26 | Here are the costs: | HOTWTR::GARRETTJO | | Mon Oct 05 1992 14:01 | 8 |
|
I forgot to mention that reducing AR will result in lost sales, because
of stricter credit terms.
Reducing inventory of finished goods will usually result in lost sales
as well, because of stockout conditions. Reducing manufacturing
component inventory can also cause lost sales because capacity to
produce finished goods is reduced.
|
2135.27 | | TOMK::KRUPINSKI | Repeal the 16th Amendment! | Mon Oct 05 1992 14:52 | 23 |
| re .26
I'm in the middle of reading Peter Senge's book, "The Fifth
Discipline". One of the points he makes is that almost all
businesses go through cycles of boom and bust, and many
companies limit their growth during boom years because during
the bust years they either retrenched their capacity or at least
did not approve plans for new capacity, and then, when the boom
re-appeared, they did not have sufficient capacity to meet demand
quickly enough. He gives a few example of this, and then spends half
a page talking about a company with, early in it's history, occupied
a small part of a huge building. The company was persuaded to rent
a huge part of the building, and six months later, all the space
was being productively used. That company, Senge relates, went on
to amazing stretch of uninterrupted growth, which he attributes to
the maintenance by the company of reserves which allowed commitment
of capacity so as not to limit growth. The company? Digital Equipment
Corp. I think that also accounts for KO's reluctance to lay people
off - he wanted them around so that in the next boom period, he'd
have immediate capacity to deal with demand.
Tom_K
|
2135.28 | | PEEVAX::QUODLING | OLIVER is the Solution! | Mon Oct 12 1992 02:04 | 76 |
| The biggest problem that I see with the "14 point plan" is that they
are all catch-ups. Nothing is there to put us ahead. Cut this out, trim
that down, make that smaller. How about some agressiveness in our
outlook...
re . variety...
Why, why, why, this damn paranoia about cutting the number of
employees...
We met the being of a recession, along with everyone else in the
industry, on a roll. Some bright Spark, convinced the powers that be
that we have a poor revenue/employee ratio, and that the only way to
remedy that, was to cut the number of employees. Whoa back,
buckwheat... How about attacking the other side of the equation. Try
increasing revenue... Can we do it, of course, we can. Look at the
PCBYDEC business, which has gone from non-existant to the largest Mail
order computer business in the industry in under 12 months. Look at the
potential... Weaker Competitors are falling by the wayside... How about
a BU to go out and target picking up Wang and DG business which is just
begging for a path out of the doldrums that those vendors are in.
We have laid off off thousands and thousands of dedicated individuals,
to what end...
In many cases, because the cuts were numbers and not business
based, we have canned extremely profitable organizations/people. IN
virtually every "transition" scenario that I have seen, it hasbeen a
case, of "snip, snip, snip" and then march the people out of the
door... I have yet to see one situation, where the person leaving was
asked to brief a replacement on their current portfolio of activities,
or even pass on their current files to a replacement. The thousands of
person-years of effort that has been simply abandoned is downright
stupid...
What has been shown, time and again, is that we too often get down
the rat-hole of having differing parts of the corporation, working
against each other. These so-called business units, should follow in
the model of Sun and Apple. Let's break out the Field Hardware
Maintenance organization into a seperate company (as it has always been
reasonably profitable in it's own right). Let's get Software out on
it's own, Like Apple's Claris. And instead of just laying people off,
let's canvas the potential departee's for some signs of enterpreneurial
skill. The South Pacific Region (Australia/NZ) recently dropped around
300 people from it's workforce to bring it down to around 1250 people.
It spent around $35M to do so. Sheesh, give me $35M, and my pick of
300 talented and experienced professionals, and I'll turn it into $100M
in two years. A number of people lost in that transition, are now
making almost obscene amounts of money, picking up business, that DEC
can't cope with through downsizing, or didn't regard as being worth the
enterpreneurial effort.
This all still gives the perception that senior management think we are
in an uncontrolled Death spiral.
.27 really sums it up, to my way of thinking. We are still trying to
spiral down, while the rest of the industry is recovering, and laughing
at us... One of the biggest problems that still exists in DEC, and I
don't think that Palmer has even acknowledged it, is that we have a
middle management organization that takes everything literally. There
is a sad dearth of creative interpretation of corporate edicts.
Remember the old "Post-it Note" ban... We actually paid people to
calculate how many thusands or whatever, we spent on Post-it notes. But
where was the bright person, who could take that, walk into 3M and say,
"We buy 1 Million post-it Pads at $3. a piece, retail. We'll pay you $x
(less than 3 mill) to drop ship n cartons or pallets of same to each of
our facilities... We could have survived that trauma, with bargain
priced post-its, if only we had more creative management...
Repeat after me, folks... "We are a big corporation. We can weather
small recessions. We can take market share from our competitors. We
don't need to go out of business. The recession is over. Grow the
company. Stop the paranoia. We can make money. We can do a win-win
situation here..."
q
|
2135.29 | waste of talent | KYOA::CASTELLO | | Tue Oct 13 1992 15:14 | 25 |
| re: .28
BRAVO q!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
I agree 100% that we can be profitable again without losing good
people. I can't get it out of my mind with all of this downsizing
that DEC is giving away a LOT of brainpower to the competition and
most of those who were forced to leave have no qualms about "sticking"
it to DEC when they get hired by one of our competitors!!!
I wouldn't either.......Regarding taking marketshare, I almost puked
when I read this weeks DIGITAL TODAY front page article in which the
author reveled in the thought of going after small and medium sized
business to sell our products and services. The article treated the
idea as REVOLUTIONARY. For years the larger customers have been
buying less and less and we in services have been suggesting to sales
that DEC should be selling to small/medium companies but were always
told that it was unnecessary..that DEC makes 90% of its profits from
10% of its customers.....I hope that Bob P pushes harder for DEC to
"pound the pavement" more and make ourselves visible to all size
companies! In the past, whenever I put in a sales lead from a local
"mom and pop" shop for a small system or PC, the lead disappeared into
oblivion with excuses that its a waste of time. Too bad...we can use
all the sales we can get now and good hard-working people have to lose
their jobs.......
/bob
|
2135.30 | | PEEVAX::QUODLING | OLIVER is the Solution! | Tue Oct 13 1992 20:14 | 25 |
| re .-1
thanks...
Re selling to small business... A Sales Manager told me the story
recently, of how he went out with a sales rep to talk to a remote but
important customer with a reasonable amount of hardware. That done,
they said to the FS engineer that looked after this rural area, "what
the hell, any other customers worth talking to... Our plane doesn't go
for n hours". They wen't to a local customer that had been happily
running his 11/34's for several years. Gave him Systems and Options
Catalogs, talked to him about new technology, and so on. Didn't think
much more of it, until the Sales Manager rang a few weeks later to see
if the guy had any questions.
He did, he wanted to know where to send the order for the 6000 based
cluster to replace his PDP11.
I can think of hundreds of Customers out there, that saw Digital to be
an innovative and responsive provider of technology solutions in the
80's. Nowadays, we are too damn stupid to follow up on a lot of those
customers to bring them into the 90's.
Peter Q.
|