T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2172.1 | | MAAFS1::RWARRENFELTZ | | Thu Oct 22 1992 13:03 | 1 |
| Tell them good luck in their new adventures!
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2172.2 | | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Thu Oct 22 1992 13:17 | 3 |
| Wish them good luck nothing. Ask them if they're hiring. :-)
Alfred
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2172.3 | tomorrow's competitors? | BOOKS::HAMILTON | All models are false; some are useful - Dr. G. Box | Thu Oct 22 1992 13:33 | 18 |
| Anyone care to posit how badly we may be hurting ourselves by
laying off people who will become competitors in either
the services business, software engineering, or some other
low-startup cost business?
Of the three main businesses we will be in (silicon, software,
and services), only one has high barriers to entry (silicon).
The other two depend on what is in someone's head, and what
they are able to accomplish with cheap (PC) tools and hard work.
If it's true that we're laying off good people as well as
under-performers (and anecdotal evidence would seem to support
that contention), then we may be helping to create tomorrow's
low-overhead competition.
Comments?
Glenn
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2172.4 | we pick our markets | SGOUTL::BELDIN_R | D-Day: 160 days and counting | Thu Oct 22 1992 13:38 | 12 |
| re .3
I would guess that those let go are very good in something that Digital
undervalues. Customers may still be willing to pay for it though.
Everybody wins because Digital simplifies its over complex business and
the erstwhile employees are now free of the legendary Digital overhead
and customers of each get the benefits of reduced cost and better
service.
Win-Win-Win,
Dick
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2172.5 | | MAAFS1::RWARRENFELTZ | | Thu Oct 22 1992 13:45 | 4 |
| I had a friend in church Sunday tell me his company just picked up
three of our commercial accounts and have hired one of our TFSO'd
engineers to boot to do the maintenance. Seems like we giving up on
certain markets and concentrating on others where the margin is better.
|
2172.6 | | CSC32::S_HALL | The cup is half NT | Thu Oct 22 1992 16:49 | 15 |
|
I only recognized one name in .0, but that just shows how
idiotic our downsizing has been.
Don Vickers is extremely sharp, and if a competitor's got
him, the DEC office in that area has its work cut out !
He was never politically correct, so no doubt had a target
painted on his back, but I watched him go into an account
that was "True Blue", analyze their database application,
tell them firmly that their application sucked 4 ways,
and ***they loved him*****. He opened many doors for DEC.
Steve H
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2172.7 | We don't want that business, we want *this* business ... | AUSTIN::UNLAND | Sic Biscuitus Disintegratum | Thu Oct 22 1992 18:33 | 17 |
| re: setting up future competitors
It's true that there are many ex-DEC people out there taking away
business that we used to be in. EIS management has told us privately
that it's business that we don't want to be in anymore, and that DEC
is going to concentrate on the "cream" Program Management business.
But there are some other trends shaping up as well. I've run into
several ex-DEC people who are now our customers. Companies who have
DEC equipment have been staffing up lately. A number of these new
people also seem to have borne a grudge, and are actually steering
business away from us. One of the old IBM philosophies was to never
burn bridges, because many of their ex-employees ended up as MIS
managers that IBM had to sell to. That lesson seems lost on DEC ...
Geoff
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2172.8 | | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | EIB: Rush on 17, Pat on 6 | Thu Oct 22 1992 18:40 | 3 |
| My friends at Sun tell me that among the ex-DEC employees, it's
sometimes hard to tell whether they are driven to may Sun succeed or to
make DEC fail.
|
2172.9 | | PLUGH::NEEDLE | Money talks. Mine says "Good-Bye!" | Thu Oct 22 1992 19:11 | 8 |
| The folks listed in .0 were part of the Cross-Industries EIC. The entire
Charlotte plant was closed, so people were not let go because they were bad or
good.
Thanks for posting .0. I've got a few friends on that list and it's very good
to see that they landed on their feet.
j.
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2172.10 | | MRKTNG::UTRTSC::SCHOLLAERT | BP: *S*ervices, *S*ervices, *S*ervices | Fri Oct 23 1992 10:49 | 48 |
| re .6
Don "left" before the closing of Charlotte.
<<< IOSG::LIB0:[NOTES$LIBRARY]ALL-IN-1.NOTE;3 >>>
-< ALL-IN-1 (tm) Support Conference >-
================================================================================
Note 1123.0 So long ... 35 replies
BUFFER::VICKERS "and thanks for all the fish" 37 lines 25-JUL-1992 01:59
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
I am in the fifteenth year of a happy and enjoyable career
with Digital. The joy of helping customers has been the
nicest part of the career. I have decided that it is time
to move on so that I can better serve customers. I have
joined a small services company called Excellent Office
Systems. Joe Whatley, who is the chairperson of the
Application Integration Special Interest Group of US DECUS,
is the President of the company and my partner.
Excellent Office Systems has the goal of providing the
highest quality office systems to its customers. We will
focus on Digital ALL-IN-1 customers in the next few years
and evolve with our clients. We have formed partnerships
with a few customers and plan to form partnerships with a
few more. Our goal is not so much to make money but to
provide the services that will make the users of our
clients' system productive and happy. We certainly plan to
have fun doing it and believe that our partners should, too.
I am quite excited about this new chapter in my career but
am sad to leave a place like Digital where I have so many
wonderful friends. The best news is that I also have many
friends who are customers.
My addresses are
501 Gibson Street
Leesburg, Florida 34748
904-326-2873
[email protected] (Internet)
My last day as a digit is August 14, 1992 or later depending.
As always, keep the faith,
don
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2172.11 | Who really "wins"?! | DESERT::HORN | | Fri Oct 23 1992 12:07 | 21 |
| .7 very true
.5 Guess what...all that low margin business that DEC developed (which
had a higher margin in the beginning of the program...until DEC's "OVER
HEAD" was applied has a demand in the market place and is profitable.
Profitable provided the product/service has the appropriate amount of
overhead. Which get's us to one of the root causes of DEC's problems
today....the appropriate level of overhead. We have VP's who manage
VP's who manage Managers who manage Managers who manage doers. We need
about 90% less VP's and about 90% less managers. What DEC needs is a
great Pres. to give us a good, solid direction for a few VP's and
Managers to use as guidance when they guide their doers. A good doer
does not need alot of direction. DEC has alot of good doers, it also
has some poor doers. Most likely, some of those poor doers became that
way because DEC confused them with all the direction they received....
remember what they say about too many cooks in the kitchen.
I must agree with those that say we are hurting ourselves (DEC) by
spinning off employees and businesses that are profitable, however low.
We need to spin off OVERHEAD to make those businesses and employees
more profitable. Then we would have a "Win".
|
2172.12 | Is this the Digital Service Difference ?? | UTRTSC::SCHOLLAERT | BP: *S*ervices, *S*ervices, *S*ervices | Sat Oct 24 1992 12:36 | 24 |
| re .3
> If it's true that we're laying off good people as well as
> under-performers (and anecdotal evidence would seem to support
> that contention), then we may be helping to create tomorrow's
> low-overhead competition.
During the right sizing last year in Holland, 20 or 30 EIS
specialists started a Consultancy company with help of
Digital !!!!!! They got a garanteed number of years work !!!!
They even have access to our Easynet !!!! So we have all the overhead.
Because hardly anyone knows who left, they can use lots of informal
contacts throughout Digital.
And I thought Digital had Services on the top of its list.
Regards,
Jan
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2172.13 | Overhead is the symptom. Good Management is the cure. | BTOVT::PREVO | Jim 266-4215 - VIS Operations | Sun Oct 25 1992 18:20 | 22 |
| re: .11
It is sad to witness the phenomenon stated here. I believe it is a
natural course of events for a beauracracy, however. Layers of
overhead build up over the years. After a while people who go to
meetings for a living and ask people for data so they can report data
to other people (for summarization and reporting) think they are
producing revenue for the company.
Overhead is evil. Some managers treat it like a FIXED cost and assume
that margins on our work must be high to pay for the overhead...so the
logical course of action it to trim off the lower margin work. This
allows us to focus on the high margin work. An alternative (and a
better one in my opinion) is to view overhead as the problem and
organize the low margin businesses such that they are not burdened by
the high overhead....shed those costs, keep the "doers" and make a few
bucks for the stockholders.
Alas, Digital is paradise island compared to our federal government.
-Jim
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