T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
2224.1 | | MANTHN::EDD | $49,000, I think it'll work out... | Tue Nov 17 1992 08:29 | 17 |
| If the bottom 3 didn't have VP in their title would this cause the same
level of concern?
For the life of me I can't figure out why so many people are concerned
over the number of vice presidents. In my previous career (banking),
the top performers were given officerships (Asst. Treasurer, AVP, VP),
in recognition for their efforts. Gaining the title put one no closer
to the top of the food chain than they were before the title was
bestowed. If you were a line manager to start, you were a line manager
with an officership. Nothing in the hierarchy changed, although you did
assume some extra responsibilities...
Whenever I read strings similar to this one, I get the impression VPs
are thought of as all but useless. Since that is probably a mistaken
impression, can somebody explain just *what* the issue is?
Edd
|
2224.2 | [read between the brackets] | SUBWAY::BRIGGS | Have datascope, will travel. | Tue Nov 17 1992 10:13 | 24 |
|
re .2, I think the issue is this:
Banks are different.
a) we are seeing large numbers of productive technical staff
being cut, but not a proportionate cut in mgmt. [aka top heavy]
b) we have seen numerous cases where managers are simply
shuffled into un-needed positions when their current
position is eliminated. [aka too many chiefs]
c) after major re-orgs of unsuccesful orgs, the same faces
keep showing up in the mgmt team. [old boys club]
d) if the reporting chain is too long, no correct information
reaches the top. [telephone game]
e) Mgmt is different, so they must be bad [tribal instinct]
It's probably bad for everyone to point the finger at everyone else,
but I can't help being cynical when
[the more things change, the more they stay the same.]
|
2224.3 | | DV780::DAVISGB | Another hot number from the 50's | Tue Nov 17 1992 10:22 | 11 |
| In banks, frequently the local branch manager is a VP. The branch
might be a trailer, but nonetheless....
A few years ago we exploded in the number of VP's in DEC (remember when
area managers became VP's overnight? The thinking was to reward them,
and also to have more people who could talk to customers at a VP
level.)
Seems to me that one should be happy to see more big titles, as this
means that there might be more job openings soon....more higher
positions to aspire to..... 8-)
|
2224.4 | | MANTHN::EDD | $49,000, I think it'll work out... | Tue Nov 17 1992 10:43 | 12 |
| So if I read the spirit of .2 correctly, the problem isn't the number
of VPs, but the perception of extraneous layers of upper management,
yes?
If these people weren't VPs, would that perception still exist? If
all the VPs suddenly had the title removed, yet continued performing
in exactly the same manner, would there be an improvement?
My point, of course, is that if something must be railed against it
should be the function, not the title.
Edd
|
2224.5 | | ATPS::BUDNIK | Ken Budnik, DTN 381-2217, ZK01-3/B52 | Tue Nov 17 1992 11:11 | 27 |
| re .4
Yes, it would. If you read Dave's note carefully you will see that the
hierarchy DID expand. In addition, keep in mind that there are, in some
areas, an additional three levels of managers under these VPs, so the real
situation is:
Bob Palmer: President & CEO
Bill Strecker: VP of Engineering
Larry Walker: VP of Networking
Mike Thurk: VP of Networking and Communications (NAC)
John Adams: VP of End Systems
??? Mgr of ?
??? Mgr of ?
??? Mgr of ?
Joe B. Worker Bee
You will have a hard time convincing me that EIGHT levels of management
above a worker bee can possibly add anything positive to this company's
bottom line. I don't care what their titles are!
- Ken
P.S. I can't come close to beating this hierarchy.
P.P.S. Please keep in mind that my comments have nothing at all to do with
the individuals who currently hold these management positions.
|
2224.6 | | EMDS::MANGAN | | Tue Nov 17 1992 11:43 | 4 |
| 2205.6 to see why we don't need anymore "VP"'s. We already have enough
that have been sponging off Digital for long enough. Managers also. Not
all are guilty...but most.
|
2224.7 | | USCTR1::JHERNBERG | | Tue Nov 17 1992 11:53 | 35 |
|
Having worked in several banks before coming to DEC, large/regional and
small/local, I can say that VP titles were often passed out but were
done so in lieu of even small salary increaes. The culture was that
until you cracked the very highest echelons your most visible reward
was your title. AND you knew that you were of course expected to
perform all you current duties plus whatever but seldom were you given
additional authority.
In DEC that is quite different; VP's even those who have not proven
themselves worthy of that title, DO have a great deal of authority
with respect to the individuals that report to them. Also unlike
banking, when a competent, creative engineer sees his/her peers
advancing into middle/upper management and would like to join them but
stay in engineering, there is a Catch 22 situation brewing. Why not a
parallel ladder like at H-P; wherein an engineer can raise through the
ranks but stay were his/her contribution is strongest and means the
most?
Assigning additional layers of management without a perceived increase
in productivity, renenue, etc., at the heart of it all hurts those who
of us who know of a solid, productive "worker bee" with a family who
was shown the door after being given four days to find another job and
that is about 99.9% of us.
The people who occupy these VP position may be competent, hard-working,
productive men and women and I don't mean to discredit them but somehow
objectivity is dimmed when filtered through the pain of how TFSO is
being conducted.
Just my $.02 worth.
|
2224.8 | As always, IMHO ... | AUSTIN::UNLAND | Sic Biscuitus Disintegratum | Tue Nov 17 1992 11:57 | 35 |
| re: previous comment on banks
Banks are *very* different. You need a large number of officers
empowered to sign things (loans, trust agreements, etc.) so you
end up with lots of VPs. A lot of them don't make that much.
Being a Vice President in our industry is another kettle of fish.
For one thing, if you look at those "Industry Salary Surveys" that
Personnel uses to set "competitive" pay ranges, you will find that
being a VP directly translates into a higher competitive salary
rating than just being a so-and-so manager. This topic came up in
discussion back when Area Managers were made into VPs, but it was
glossed over because the Company was doing well and it was perceived
that the Area Managers deserved both the title and the money. But
times have changed.
When the layoffs first started, I sat down and had a nice talk with
a manager I really respected. He said that what the company really
needed to do was to rebuild the internal management structure to
achieve three goals:
1) Put authority and responsibility in each job
2) Eliminate matrix management and management by committee
3) Define the right jobs and put the right people in them
This manager saw the New Management System as a total contradiction
to the first two goals, and that, while DEC had a surfeit of senior
managers, few of them were in jobs that delivered any useful return
to the company for what we paid to have them there. The handwriting
was on the wall, so this manager bailed out to one of our biggest
competitors. No package, no tears, just the realization that things
weren't going to "work out". Bob Palmer has a shot at making things
better, but he doesn't have an unlimited time to do it in ...
Geoff
|
2224.9 | ???? | DELNI::JMCDONOUGH | | Tue Nov 17 1992 12:27 | 17 |
| Re .5
Whooooa... That's Org. list ain't all that bad!
When I started at Digital in 1980, I had ONE LEVEL (Yep!! A SINGLE
manager!!) between me and the V.P. of the Group. Things got done!
Profits were made! Products were shipped. (And THAT organization was
part of a multi-country Group....yes---International Logistics even!!)
Now, how-some-ever, I have EIGHT levels between my manager and a
Junior-type V.P.!! And we're convulsing currently with a second 20% or
so of the "do-Bees" being trashed out the door....and another one of
these lovely 'downer-sizing' scenes on the horizon for next year!!
Wonder who'll do the work when ALL the "do-Bees" are TFSO'd??
JM
|
2224.10 | | SGOUTL::BELDIN_R | Free at last in 59 days | Tue Nov 17 1992 12:33 | 8 |
| The goal is to downsize the work before we downsize the people. :-)
However, since nobody can describe the work of many people, we downsize
the people first and try to pick up the pieces later. :-(
Seems like old times, Fire, Aim, Ready!
Dick
|
2224.11 | Who? Where? | SCAACT::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow! | Tue Nov 17 1992 14:13 | 6 |
| I have no idea home many people are in the food chain above me, other
than it must be at least 2, my manager and Rober Palmer. My manager
reports to someone who SERPed and came back on a contract which I
believe will end soon.
Bob
|
2224.12 | Parallel path aslo exists here | STOAT::BARKER | Jeremy Barker - CBN - Reading, UK | Tue Nov 17 1992 14:28 | 6 |
| Re: .7
In engineering there *is* a parallel career structure. It goes up to
Senior Corporate Consultant - these are usually also VPs.
jb
|
2224.13 | | ENABLE::glantz | Mike @TAY 227-4299 TP Eng Littleton | Tue Nov 17 1992 16:57 | 23 |
| > Bob Palmer: President & CEO
> Bill Strecker: VP of Engineering
> Larry Walker: VP of Networking
> Mike Thurk: VP of Networking and Communications (NAC)
> John Adams: VP of End Systems
> ??? Mgr of ?
> ??? Mgr of ?
> ??? Mgr of ?
> Joe B. Worker Bee
Here's some arithmetic for you:
There are eight levels between Bob Palmer and Joe B in this management
chain. If each of the managers in this line has only five direct
reports, and all of Digital has the same, then there are 5^8 employees
at the *bottom* level of this tree (never mind all of the managers).
That's 390625 worker bees.
The conclusion one could draw is that, since this is not the case,
there are too many levels of management.
This is, of course, just playing with numbers, because it makes some
assumptions which aren't true. But it was fun, anyway.
|
2224.14 | Marginally better in the field? | ALOS01::SCHICKEDANZ | Imaging in Albany, NY 344-7208 | Tue Nov 17 1992 17:43 | 13 |
| President & CEO Bob Palmer
VP & COO Jack Smith
VP - US Sales & Service VACANT (formerly Don Zereski)
VP - US Sales VACANT (formerly Bob Hughes)
VP - Eastern States Tom Colatosti
Account Group Mgr. My bosses boss.
PSSM My boss.
Systems Sales Specialist Me.
I expect this to collapse (by one level anyway), once BP is done
sorting out the rest of the VEEP's.
- Andy -
|
2224.15 | Even Worse! | FORTSC::CHABAN | Pray for Peter Pumpkinhead! | Tue Nov 17 1992 18:09 | 23 |
|
In Channels things are even more interesting.
President & CEO Bob Palmer
VP & COO Jack Smith
VP - US Sales & Service VACANT (formerly Don Zereski)
VP - US Sales VACANT (formerly Bob Hughes)
VP - US Channels John O'Keefe (his other boss)
VP - Western States Cecil Dye (his boss)
Account Group Mgr. My bosses' boss. (their boss)
PSSM My other boss.
Account Set Mgr. My boss.
Software Consultant I Me.
Technically PSSM's also report into Bob Schmitt's orgainization too.
Yet another VP. I don't know what the hell he does.
Who says matrix management is dead?
-Ed
|
2224.16 | | FORTSC::CHABAN | Pray for Peter Pumpkinhead! | Tue Nov 17 1992 18:33 | 5 |
|
I forgot Dick Keaton, VP TOEM sales.
-Ed
|
2224.17 | Tailgate anyone... | PHDVAX::RICCIO | Help me Mr. Wizard! | Tue Nov 17 1992 22:03 | 13 |
|
I say we all quit, set up beach chairs at OGO, PKO and other such
places, (I know it's cold, maybe we could do a "tailgate") kick back
with a cold brew, and watch "management in action".
The rate the "worker bees" are being cut, and management is being
shuffled around, ( I have personally seen this in no less then 5 cases)
it's only a matter of time anyway. So we might as well sit back and
have a few laughs.
Phil... :^)
|
2224.18 | | BLKOUT::GLASER | Steve Glaser DTN 2267212 LKG1-2/A19 (G17) | Wed Nov 18 1992 15:19 | 9 |
| Re .0 and the heirarchy in Networks...
I wouldn't be surprised if this particular chain changes again.
Larry Walker just got added and he got more than just NaC. He will be
making changes to meld the organizations together. I believe that these
changes will have the effect of flattening the current organization.
Steveg
|
2224.19 | how I see it | FIGS::PRAETORIUS | mwlwwlw&twwlt | Wed Nov 18 1992 17:07 | 4 |
| WRT jettisoning individual contributors without proportional management loss:
The image that always runs through my mind is that of pulling all the
leaves off a tree and being confused when it doesn't grow better.
|
2224.20 | | GUIDUK::FARLEE | Insufficient Virtual...um...er... | Wed Nov 25 1992 14:21 | 8 |
| Yeah, heck of a way to do your pruning, eh?
When you add in the matrix orgs to the feeding chain,
it really turns into a tangled web!
The worst part about is that nobody seems to be accountable
except at the bottom!
|
2224.21 | redundant positions? | CSC32::K_BOUCHARD | | Wed Dec 02 1992 18:46 | 6 |
| Did I read .0 right? We have a VP of networking *and* a VP for
networking and communications? I'm saying nothing about the guys
filling these jobs but this would seem to the casual observer to be a
bit much,eh?
The_other_Ken
|
2224.22 | I will be following up on my question and answer | SMAUG::GARROD | From VMS -> NT; Unix a mere page from history | Wed Dec 02 1992 20:36 | 38 |
| Re .-1
Yes you heard right. Also when Larry Walker gave a talk to NAC I asked
him how many levels of managers he wanted to see between himself and
workers (not including project leaders). He didn't give me a number
but answered the question very directly by saying he wanted to see a
span of control of 7 ie 7 reports per manager.
That equates to 3 levels of manager under him ie:
Larry Walker 1
Level 3 7
Level 2 ~50
Level 1 ~350
Workers ~2450
Since there is nowhere near 2450 in Networks Engineering at present he
has plenty of room to grow to 2,450 people with only 3 levels of
managers. Sadly today his organization is way off that mark (read .0).
I'm watching and waiting. In a few months time I fully intend to follow
up on my question and the answer he gave. He impressed me as a very
forthright guy who said what me meant. I hope he implements the answer
he gave to my question. If in 3 months time I see any more than 3
levels of manager between him the non managers I will be disappointed.
I'm a first level manager (ie I don't manage managers and yes my span
of control meets his 7 benchmark). In my chain up
to Larry Walker there are 2 people and an open slot. Therefore I'm
expecting to see one of those layers eliminated. Other parts of
Network Engineering have even more layers so multiple layers to
consolidate there.
Dave
Workers
|
2224.23 | | LABRYS::CONNELLY | Out of the fog, into the smog | Wed Dec 02 1992 22:26 | 14 |
|
re: .22
Maybe i didn't follow the logic right, but are you assuming that everyone
who reports to a non-line manager is a manager? That's probably not a
desirable situation...at least some of those people should be consultants
to handle the manager's special projects and firedrills, so that his/her
reports with people responsibilities don't get distracted by that crap (as
seems to happen all too often currently).
Even so, ideally i'd say a ratio of about 1:12 or 1:15 would be more
desirable...with about 3-4 of those reports being consultants.
paul
|
2224.24 | Things are looking up in my neck of the woods | SMAUG::GARROD | From VMS -> NT; Unix a mere page from history | Sat Jan 09 1993 21:30 | 22 |
| As the base noter I'm happy to report that my management chain now
makes sense ie there are the right number of levels:
Bob Palmer - President and CEO
Bill Strecker - VP of Engineering
Larry Walker - VP of Networks Engineering
Ralph Dormitzer - Networks Infrastructure (ne� Private Networks) Manager
Jim Tereshko - IBM Interconnect Manager
Dave Garrod - 1st level manager of 8 people
This seems right to me. 6 levels of manager which at a span of control
of 7 gives room for 117,649 individual contributors. I'd say 5 levels
including BP is too few and 7 levels is too many.
How's things in your neck of the woods? Did TFSO help thin out the
management ranks. At least 12 managers got TFSOed in Networks
engineering which helped thin out the bloat.
I get the feeling that there are still large areas of the company where
management is 7, 8 or 9 levels deep. I hope that's being fixed.
Dave
|
2224.25 | | ESOA12::SMITHB | | Sat Jan 09 1993 22:45 | 11 |
| When we get to this, I will be happy...
Palmer
VP
District Mgr
Unit Mgr
me
Anything extra is overhead, pure and simple.
Brad.
|
2224.27 | | CX3PT2::CODE3::BANKS | David Banks -- N�ION | Mon Jan 11 1993 13:58 | 18 |
| Re:<<< Note 2224.24 by SMAUG::GARROD "From VMS -> NT; Unix a mere page from history" >>>
> As the base noter I'm happy to report that my management chain now
> makes sense ie there are the right number of levels:
>
> Dave Garrod - 1st level manager of 8 people
>
> This seems right to me. 6 levels of manager which at a span of control
> of 7 gives room for 117,649 individual contributors. I'd say 5 levels
> including BP is too few and 7 levels is too many.
I'd be concerned if I managed only 8 people. There is "restructuring" going on
in the CSC right now in order to have managers have more direct reports. For
example, in my district, unit managers will each be managing about 25 people...
That type of span means *far* less management layers for the number of people.
- David
|
2224.28 | | ADSERV::PW::WINALSKI | Careful with that AXP, Eugene | Fri Jan 15 1993 19:45 | 26 |
| My current management chain:
Bob Palmer - President and CEO
Bill Strecker - VP, Engineering
Dennis Roberson - VP, The New Software Group
Jeff Rudy - Manager, Software Development Technologies
Leslie Klein - Manager, The Languages Group
Becky Will - Manager, FORTRAN, GEM, Pascal
Bruce Foster - Supervisor
Paul Winalski - Software Engineer
My management chain in 1980 (shortly after I joined DEC):
Ken Olsen - President and CEO
Gordon Bell - VP, Engineering
Bill Johnson - Manager, Software Engineering
Bill Keating - Manager, Software Technical Office
Bill Segal - Manager, Methods and Tools
Steve Gutz - Manager, Development Methods
John Hrones - Supervisor
Paul Winalski - Software Engineer
Same number of management levels, slightly different titles. More
significantly, the organization is MUCH larger than it was in 1980.
--PSW
|
2224.29 | that is very good | STAR::ABBASI | iam your friendly psychic hotline | Sat Jan 16 1993 00:29 | 12 |
| .-1
Eugene, this is really amazing, you still know how your management
structures was 13 years ago !
i think this is a very good feat. i bet more DECees than not dont know
their management structures in this details right now let alone
how it was back in 1980.
\bye
\nasser
|
2224.30 | | WMOIS::RAINVILLE | Dances with squirrels! | Sat Jan 16 1993 12:12 | 10 |
| That's nothing Nassar, twenty years ago mine was;
Ken Olsen Pres
Pete Kaufman VP Mfg
Jack Smith Plant Mgr
Lou Gaviglia Bus.Mgr
Bob Johnston Mfg.Eng.Mgr
me Grunt
Of course there was less to remember and my head was clearer! ;^) mwr
|
2224.31 | | ADSERV::PW::WINALSKI | Careful with that AXP, Eugene | Sat Jan 16 1993 19:36 | 6 |
| RE: .29
My name is Paul, not Eugene. My NOTES personal name is a pun on a song by Pink
Floyd titled "Careful with that Axe, Eugene".
--PSW
|
2224.32 | | ELMAGO::BENBACA | I've Got Three Knees!! | Sat Jan 16 1993 20:02 | 2 |
| Mine used to be "Careful with that Vax, Eugene"
|
2224.33 | | RTL::LINDQUIST | | Sun Jan 17 1993 17:45 | 4 |
| ��My name is Paul, not Eugene. My NOTES personal name is a pun on a song by Pink
��Floyd titled "Careful with that Axe, Eugene".
And, for years I thought it was a reference to BRIGHTON BEACH
MEMOIRS. Seriously.
|
2224.34 | continuing a rat-hole... | WLW::KIER | My grandchildren are the NRA! | Tue Jan 19 1993 14:52 | 7 |
| Actually I believe its a line from a P.F. song titled `One of
these days' which was used as the background music to a great
animation flick titled `French Windows' shown as part of one of
the old International Animation Festival movies (I forget which
year).
Mike
|
2224.35 | Old hippy stuff... | MU::PORTER | savage pencil | Wed Jan 20 1993 22:02 | 4 |
| Nonsense. "Careful with that axe, Eugene" is from Ummagumma,
"One of these days" is a more recent composition, whose
entire lyrics read "one of these days I'm going to cut you into
little pieces".
|
2224.36 | Good Stuff | SMEGOL::COHEN | | Thu Jan 21 1993 10:23 | 10 |
|
"One of these days" is basically an instrumental, the one line is a garbled
"one of these days etc etc" at the end. You had to listen "real hard" to make
it out.
Interesting how the talk on VP's has drifted to "axes" and "cutting heads"
Hmmmmm?? 8^)
Bob Cohen
|