T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
2485.1 | Don't expect miracles | ODIXIE::WESTCL | Gator Golfer | Fri Apr 30 1993 12:14 | 7 |
| Paul, good luck in whatever endeavor you choose. A couple of points
from an old veteran of the computer industry:
Don't expect it to be different at your next corporation.
Digital, on balance, is an excellent company to work for.
Don't take your notes with you. You will be viewed as a trouble
maker.
CW
|
2485.2 | significant loss | ECADSR::SHERMAN | Steve ECADSR::Sherman DTN 223-3326 MLO5-2/26a | Fri Apr 30 1993 12:40 | 23 |
| I believe Paul has found employment with a company that values "trouble
makers." Trouble making and innovation go hand in hand, IMO. During
the recent DCU BoD elections, Paul got the most votes from shareholders
and, I assume, will serve three more years on the DCU BoD. During the
past year he has served on the DCU BoD and has been responsible for much
of the direct reporting and contact with members through DCU notes. For
those that aren't aware, Paul spearheaded the no-smoking policy at Digital.
If there is anyone who has become experienced at making positive
changes at Digital, it's Paul. He has been a focal point for positive
change and building a sense of teamwork. If Paul says that upper
levels of management are in trouble (to grossly oversimplify his
message), I believe it. I can think of none other that would be more
qualified for such an assessment.
Paul's advice is not theory. It is based on personal experience that I
have seen proven in action. I consider myself fortunate to have
participated with Paul in what little I have had opportunity for.
For those who don't yet realize it, this is a major, major loss for
Digital. And, no, as I understand it Paul isn't being TFSO'd.
Steve
|
2485.3 | | MIMS::PARISE_M | Contemplating mid-life cruises... | Fri Apr 30 1993 12:54 | 11 |
|
Paul,
I have always appreciated your notes and usually agreed with them.
I still do.
Thank you for all your hard work on our behalf.
The best of luck!
Kind regards,
Mike Parise
|
2485.4 | "Would the last one out..." | BWICHD::SILLIKER | Crocodile sandwich-make it snappy | Fri Apr 30 1993 14:12 | 17 |
| Re.: .2, no, No, NO, 1000X NO, Paul is not only NOT being TFSO'd, he
is leaving, "voluntarily", WITHOUT ANY compensation for all of his years
of hard work and exemplary dedication to Digital and it's employees. I
put "voluntarily" in quotes, because while he is leaving of his own
choice, Paul did not want to leave Digital, but, sadly, he felt he had
no choice, he no longer felt that he could make a positive difference,
and that was very important to his quality of worklife, was to be able
to influence positively the journey of this company, and its people.
Digital, we, it's remaining employees are the losers, BIG time, as
Paul, Dick Joseph, and others who tried so hard to get some management
focus on employee morale issues, leave with cases of terminal
frustration. Don't know whose left to pick up the banner...
Paul, I've written to your personally. In public I say only, "thank
you", for being who you are, for being my friend, for showing the way.
Have fun! :^)
|
2485.5 | | ICS::CROUCH | Subterranean Dharma Bum | Fri Apr 30 1993 14:23 | 8 |
| We have lost a great person in Paul. I only had the pleasure of
meeting Paul once, at a non DEC function, but am sure glad that
I did. I hope our paths cross in the future.
Good luck is not needed, Paul succeeds in every endevour he elects.
Jim C.
|
2485.6 | | MAGEE::FRETTS | we're the Capstone generation | Fri Apr 30 1993 14:31 | 7 |
|
Wishing you much happiness on your continuing life's journey, Paul.
I admire your integrity and courage, and would have enjoyed working
with you.
Take care.
Carole
|
2485.7 | | CARTUN::MISTOVICH | depraved soul | Fri Apr 30 1993 14:46 | 11 |
| Paul, I didn't know that you spearheaded the "no smoking" policy. For
that alone, my lungs, my sinuses, my stomach, my head and I thank you.
I am seriously allergic to cigarette smoke and suffered from day-long
headeaches and nausea for years until that change was made.
I thank you also for the changes you made at the DCU.
Good luck and travel well on your new path. I'm sure your new company
will benefit from your presence.
mary
|
2485.8 | I hear rejoicing in the birdcage | 4106::GARROD | From VMS -> NT; Unix a mere page from history | Fri Apr 30 1993 14:55 | 45 |
| I have had the privilege of working closely with Paul Kinzelman on
last years successful campaign to oust the old DCUs board of directors
(who all also happened to be high level Digital managers). Paul, as you
may have noticed worked tirelessly over the last year in successfully
increasing communication to the DCU membership. DCU turned around due
to Paul's efforts as well as all the other new DCU directors. There has
been a real partnership between management and the DCU board. And as
you may noticed Paul got the HIGHEST number of votes in this years DCU
elections.
As Paul has said he has spent time trying to help in the turnaround at
Digital but has been rebuffed at every juncture. Yes he managed through
shear obstinance to get a few meetings but when smoked out these people
absolutely refused to even let him be part of the solution of
rebuilding employee morale and not just shaking up the birdcage but
actually making a difference. Fancy telling someone that they wouldn't
be considered for the "ethics job" because they didn't trust
management. It was "trusting" management that caused the old DCU board
to totally cock up the DCU. That sort of job needs a healthy dose of
skepticism.
And this from an employee that has demonstrated excellent achievements
in his real work at Digital over the time he has been here. And that's
what really peeved all the bureaucrats. Vouldn't put him down as a poor
performer.
I can hear it now in the corridors of bureaucratic power:
"Hey did you hear that troublemaker Kinzelman has resigned? Good
thing too he asked too many hard questions, things will be easier
now. Now about bonuses for all us brown nosers, what do you
reckon $50,000 each this year? Also we need to invent some more
policies to make people get approvals they don't need, it'll
make us look more important and keep us in a job"
This is Digital's loss and not for lack of trying on Paul's part.
Good luck Paul, your new company will appreciate you. Just as I'm sure
George Van Treek's new company is appreciating him. Two people who
the power structure just labeled as trouble makers. Not realizing that
an organization needs trouble makers (ie visionary movers and shakers)
as much as, and actually more than it needs polished bureaucrats.
Dave
|
2485.9 | The Lone Ranger | ELMAGO::JMORALES | | Fri Apr 30 1993 15:03 | 16 |
| I've worked on four (4) other corporations, including DEC.
Sadly to said, that non-for-profit, profit, public and private
the 'sins' that Paul mention to all of us here, are true, similar
or alike in all the ones I already mentioned.
For me that is one of the KEY problems with our (AMERICA) management
structure. When you pass that door to high level manager, something
strange must happen, that all of a sudden, the 'lower level ' (worker
bees as Paul called us) employees are "not important" anymore. In
fact, if you speak-out, you are considered to be a "trouble-maker"
(just like Paul).
The truth about this is we are not going to lead the Business World
again, if this trend continues. So the real question is, why are
we leaving folks like Paul, be the lone rangers ? The answer is
ours !!!
|
2485.10 | Thanks! | ESBLAB::KINZELMAN | Paul dtn223-2605 | Fri Apr 30 1993 15:20 | 7 |
| Geeze, sounds like a eulogy and I"m not dead yet! :-)
Thanks guys...
More importantly, keep speaking up. I'm nobody special. Anybody else in
this thread could also do what I've done. And there is safety in
numbers. Don't let the bureaucrats be able to think that now that I'm
gone they can continue business as usual.
|
2485.11 | TSYLT...(;^) | 4158::PAINTER | forever Amber | Fri Apr 30 1993 15:48 | 11 |
|
Thank you so much for all of your hard work, Paul.
Earlier today I was thinking how nice it was not to have
cigarette smoke in my work environment anymore, and now
find that you had much to do with that. For this you
will always have my gratitude...along with your DCU efforts.
Much appreciated!
Cindy
|
2485.12 | | JUPITR::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Fri Apr 30 1993 16:17 | 8 |
| Paul,
Saw you around the corridors of the mill for many years. Only talked
with you briefly at a table in the mill over the inital DCU petition.
Good Luck, you will be missed.
Where are you going?
Marc H.
|
2485.13 | | TOKNOW::METCALFE | Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers | Fri Apr 30 1993 16:20 | 7 |
| In colloquial terms of the industry vernacular, what we see is a "brain drain."
If the economy were a bit more robust, and local business remains the same,
the exodus might reach TSFO targets through attrition alone.
I did not know you, Paul, but good luck.
Mark Metcalfe
|
2485.14 | Going to... | ESBLAB::KINZELMAN | Paul dtn223-2605 | Fri Apr 30 1993 16:21 | 1 |
| Going to Tandem in Cupertino, CA
|
2485.15 | | STAR::ABBASI | iam confused but dont know why | Fri Apr 30 1993 16:25 | 8 |
|
i dont know you too paul but good luck to you in califronia.
any one who helps in getting us more smoke free place for DECeees is a
good dude in my book.
\bye!
\nasser
|
2485.16 | I'm not surprised, but very saddened by your decision.
| ROWLET::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow! | Fri Apr 30 1993 16:31 | 78 |
| This reply is being entered on behalf of a noter who wishes to remain annoymous.
Send mail to ROWLET::AINSLEY if you wish to communicate with the author. Unless
your specify otherwise, your identity will be passed on to the author.
Bob - Co-moderator DIGITAL
Paul,
You do not know me, but I feel that I DO know you. I have followed some
of your messages to 'management' over the past few years with deep
admiration and support, because I am unable to recall a single point that I
have had any real disagreement with!
I will mark 13 years with Digital in July , (if I last that long..)
and in the environment where I work, xxxxxxx, the ethics and integrity
issues are even more obvious than they are in Engineering. I have seen more
'double standards' here than I can even try to remember. I have had ONE
promotion since I began in Digital back in 1980. I am completely aware of
why this has happened, and accept it as part of the way I am. I CANNOT
pretend that things that I see are not really there, and I have been
incapable of telling significant lies ever since my Dad showed me the
stupidity of lieing when I was 3-4 years old. Yet I have to cope with scams
, political maneuvering and blatant dishonesty almost every day...and I
speak up to my management, which has me on the "no promotion" list
permanently. My reveiws have always been '2', and I have consistently
carried the heaviest and most complex workload in every job that I have
held at Digital. Example: After the monthly reports went in, I asked my
immediate Manager, (who, by the way, is one FINE manager...maybe
the best one I've ever worked for...been with Digital for MANY years..)
"xxxxxx, what was the 'number' for the group for January?" xxxxx replied:
"Right around 45 million.." There are 35 individials in the
department...my 'piece' of the 45 million was 22.5 million.. I'm not trying
to 'blow my horn' here, but wanted to illustrate that what you say and have
learned is confirmed once again in me...hard work, dedication, ethics,
integrity..are MEANINGLESS with the pseudo-expert managers that we are
saddled with in many places.
In 1980, when I came to Digital from Honeywell, it was like a breath of
fresh air! Honeywell's management style was similar to what we have today
in Digital, and it had a terrible reputation even then. I was amazed to
find managers who KNEW the job and who actually cared about the well being
and success of their reports. It was a culture shock, to be sure, but one
that was enlightening and refreshing. People approached problems with
enthusiasm, cooperation and resolve, and the problems got solved. I
reported to my Manager....he reported to the Vice President of
the group. Today, I report to zzzzzz xxxxx, who is great but who has to report
through SEVEN MORE LAYERS of political appointees who are almost unable to
spell the job name, let alone understand it. xxxxx's direct report is an
accountant, who reports to a logistics person, who reports to a personnel
individual, who reports to a finance person, ad nauseum. To get anything
accomplished that requires management approval is not only impossible, it's
so distasteful that most people who want to accomplish anything simply
work around them, which isn't the best way either.
Are things improving?? Like you, I believe that they are not! I see no
positive changes in xxxxxxx, only 'changes for the sake of change'. We
keep getting systems and procedures thrust upon us that are obviously
things that have never been tested nor anyone who has had any practical
experience has ever had any. We've been directed to use systems with
technology that was obsolete in the late '70's, and when I complained about
it, I was told that I need to "use the system to increase my productivity".
When I pointed out the fact that I was currently doing 5 times what the
other individuals were, and that the system would CUT my productivity by
around 50%, I was immediately considered 'uncooperative'.
I could go on for forty pages, but that was not my primary purpose for
sending this note. I am dismayed and saddened by your departure, because
you were one rare and shining beacon for those of us who were terrified to
carry our messages to the level that you have. Your courage, integrity and
honesty will be missed by those of us 'worker bees' who are left. I want to
personally wish you the very best in whatever endeavor you pursue in the
future, and thank you for the many attempts that you have made to help us
and Digital to be a success..
Thanks..and may you prosper.....
Name withheld out of simple fear
|
2485.17 | who ya gonna call? | PASTA::SEILER | Larry Seiler | Fri Apr 30 1993 16:47 | 27 |
| Say you've just been burned by someone high in the company, and the
people you thought would support and defend you tested the flames and
then got out of the way and let it happen. Once you are done licking
your wounds, what do you do?
You could forget about it, or leave the company. Or you could find a
a person who isn't afraid of flames, to back you up and clear away
obstacles so that you can try to get your problem solved. Paul Kinzelman
was one of those people for me, and for many others. Paul's no miracle
worker -- if there's no will in the company to solve a problem, then
even Paul cannot get it fixed. But many battles were won, and even
those that weren't (or at least not yet) were worth fighting.
The best way to repay our debt to Paul is to do for others what he did
for us. That is to stand up for fairness and integrity whenever possible,
and never let expedience guide our judgement of what ethical behavior is.
Paul, you're going to be sorely missed. It was a great honor to work with
you to reform the DCU, and I'll always carry with me the lessons that I
learned from it about the costs and rewards of standing up for integrity.
I learned with you and others that I can do more than I ever thought I
could. This lesson will help me throughout my life, wherever I go.
I wish you all the best. And yes, this sounds like a eulogy, because
we all truly hope that you're departing us for a better world!
Larry
|
2485.18 | | CSC32::N_WALLACE | | Fri Apr 30 1993 16:56 | 9 |
|
Good luck Paul...and THANKS!!!!
You will be missed.
Neil Wallace
Colorado CSC
|
2485.19 | still my favorite...! | HERCUL::MOSER | and baby makes six... | Sat May 01 1993 21:45 | 13 |
| Hey Paul...
I still remember a quote from you back when I was a dweeb engineer fresh
out a' trainin'...
"they never remember that you were right, just that you caused them
trouble"
But then, you never let that stop you from telling them like it is!!!
Good luck in sunny CA...
/moser
|
2485.20 | Sorry to see you go | TOOK::MORRISON | Bob M. LKG1-3/A11 226-7570 | Sun May 02 1993 21:14 | 7 |
| I never knew Paul, but I'm sorry to see him go. (I assume he is already gone,
so I'm not addressing this to him.) The successful grass-roots effort to reform
the DCU is something I would have considered impossible two years ago, but with
Paul's leadership, it was done.
I hope Paul stays on at the DCU. Not being a DECcie is no problem, but being
on the West Coast could be. I was hoping to hear that Paul had found a NEW
ENGLAND company that "values troublemakers". I wonder if such a company exists.
|
2485.21 | | TALLIS::KIRK | Matt Kirk | Sun May 02 1993 22:51 | 6 |
| re .10:
>>Geeze, sounds like a eulogy and I"m not dead yet! :-)
Are you getting better?
M
|
2485.22 | hate to see you leave | CADSYS::HECTOR::RICHARDSON | | Mon May 03 1993 10:25 | 3 |
| Good-bye, old friend! And good luck!
/Charlotte (known Paul for more than 17 years)
|
2485.23 | Thanks and good bye | NETWKS::GASKELL | | Mon May 03 1993 10:54 | 11 |
| Paul,
I'm sorry to see you go. I will miss your clear view of what is
missing in this company, and your courage in speaking out no matter how
controversial the topic. Far from being >>an isolated, disgruntled
employee<< you often voice what I feel but cannot risk saying openly.
I would also like to thank you for the work you did to save the DCU
from falling into an even greater mess than it already was.
I hope you have success in the future. You deserve it.
|
2485.24 | | TOOK::CARROLL | | Mon May 03 1993 11:32 | 16 |
|
What would you rather have in this company, the attitude expressed in
.0 or .1.
Other companies are different. DEC is not a good place to work and the
only worthwhile people in this company are "trouble makers".
Paul, Say Hi to GERRY VANDENBURGH at Tandem for me. She used to be
myold boss at Comten and is an excellent manager.
dan carroll
|
2485.25 | Still | ODIXIE::WESTCL | Gator Golfer | Mon May 03 1993 15:19 | 0 |
2485.26 | bravo zulu, Paul | SOFBAS::SHERMAN | | Mon May 03 1993 15:27 | 120 |
| Paul -
You will be missed. Having talked with you a number of times you know that
we share many feelings and beliefs about what is happening to DEC. Chief among
these issues is the inability or unwillingness of top management to come to
grips with the problems that are inexorably destroying DEC. Like you, I have
been pushing for accountability of management, to no avail. I have well
documented information of many symptoms of impending total systemic
collapse at DEC:
* A manager who, in the current climate of layoffs, has "ordered" good
performers to resign from DEC; HRM has supported this manager in his
purge
* An Open Door Policy that is universally seen as an open door to a 'roach
motel' for employees with problems to be addressed: "They check in but they
don't check out!"; meanwhile, the problems that brought the employee to
initiate the ODP are actively convered-up by management; on several
occasions, after bringing a complaint to management through the open door,
employees have been angrily confronted by the managers about whom the
complaint had been made, in confidence
* A manager who nuked an entire department without any interference from
superiors; this manager, over a period of several years, gave 95% of her
subordinates "5" reviews and refused to give the pay raises that had been
budgeted; a number of her subordinates suffered substantial physical and
mental harm and 'sudden career death syndrome,' yet this manager has
subsequently been rewarded with promotions; when a small army of
employees went to HRM and line management to get some sort of justice, they
were all told that there were no problems with management, but rather, that
they were "whining malcontents" and "should get back to work"
* One poor soul was told by her manager that he wanted her to quit; when she
refused, he took a swing at her; she reported this and was ignored
* When a worker had to take some extra time off to attend to a family
illness, he was forced from the company; when another had to do the same,
he was also forced from his job and, after scrambling around a finding
another position, had to take a 30% pay cut from which he has never
recovered
Several years ago, after I started a new job within DEC, the group
manager changed. We were all invited to "Breakfast with [Dick*]."
When we arrived, Dick turned his chair to face ours and asked us to
tell him honestly exactly what we thought we were doing well and badly
in his group. So I told him. Several days later, by boss' boss (who
reported to Dick), called me into his office, closed the door, and then
spent 20 minutes shrieking at me, veins bulging in his forehead,
threatening me with being fired if I ever told anyone about anything
ever again. This occurred just as DEC was beginning its slide to its
present level, financial and atmospheric.
[* clever pseudonym]
I am sure others can relate their own stories.
As you say, Paul, there are good managers but there are not enough at a
sufficient level to make a significant difference.
I agree that program like "valuing differences", "six sigma", and "open
door" are meaningless without more than lip-service support by upper
management. In fact, they are worse than useless because they raise false
expectations.
Your ideas for change have real merit. Unfortunately, as long as a system
remains in place at DEC in which incompetent and/or poisonous managers can stay
in place by protecting one another, there will be no change. Ken Olsen's dream
of a workplace in which everyone had the freedom to rise to their own levels of
excellence and contribution has mutated into a workplace where a manager's
pettiness and vindictiveness is not only tolerated but frequently rewarded. No
manager can get away with "ordering" people to resign from DEC unless there is
some unspoken system in which that manager is being rewarded for such abuse.
We have a Tale of Two Companies. One is the DEC that still strives to meet a
market need for product. The other is a shadow DEC that is interested only in
rewarding members who stick together in enriching themselves at the expense of
the people who are trying to meet business requirements. And we still have no
visible system for cleaning out the the hidden, poisonous sect that is moving
along with business as usual, whether that's diverting employees' salaries
and budgeted raises for self-enrichment or simply hurting people because
hurting others just feels good to a certain sort of person.
Bob Palmer is indeed on record as unmovably backing personal and corporate
integrity. He is being done-in by the minions of incompetence and selfishness.
He wasn't kidding when he said "Our biggest obstacle to success is the
resistance of our leadership." They resist because that resistance continues
to be rewarded.
I have run all this past the new Ethics Office. Its response was to assign to
look into my charges one of the people I indicated was one of the worst
offendors. Come aboard!
I most strongly encourage everyone to follow Paul's suggested Steps If You Have
a Problem, especially documenting _everything_ and keeping back-up copies.
Poisonous managers may want to run from 200 pages of names, places, dates, and
witnesses, but it is impossible for them to ignore it.
Good luck, Paul. Perhaps you'll feel a little better knowing that there remain
a number of us who * will * not * give up. The clock is running. If DEC does
not do something major and meaningful about how management is running amok,
we have little time before _everyone_ will be looking for another job. You can
only improve quarterly results by cutting expenses up to a certain point. DEC
saved a whopping $1100 for each employee layed-off to date in F93. Expenses
have continued to increase to fill all available savings. When all you have
left are $90K "managers" sitting in closed offices all day writing memos to
one another, it's time to start packing because the movers are on the way.
I am convinced that DEC is chasing an Intel model, with a target total employee
population of perhaps 70,000 by FY95. Wouldn't it be wonderful if the company
simply said: "Look. We need to get rid of 23,000 more people in the next
year or two. This is what we plan to do, and when we plan to do it." Then
employees could start making plans for the rest of their lives. And DEC would
start to look like a professionally run company again.
When I joined DEC in 1980 I was told how glad they were to get someone who had
recently earned an MBA with top honors. How horrible to then have to watch
while DEC makes almost every mistake we studied in business school.
Ken
|
2485.27 | | CARTUN::MISTOVICH | depraved soul | Mon May 03 1993 15:42 | 12 |
| FWIW, I've heard rumblings over ending up at 50K employees. Face it,
if they can make you miserable enough to quit, they will -- it saves
paying TFSO and unemployment.
I once had a senior manager (base salary over $100K) physically (yes,
physically) force me to work overtime, back when I was a secretary and
also was sick. Personnel got involved -- he got a slap on the wrist; I
got blugeoned in my next review.
If any manager anywhere in this company ever dares to lay a hand on
me again, I won't waste 10 seconds on personnel. I will, however, file
an assault complaint with the police and take it to court.
|
2485.28 | "The torch passes on?" | BWICHD::SILLIKER | Crocodile sandwich-make it snappy | Mon May 03 1993 17:13 | 8 |
| Re: .26 - Ken, glad you're out there...mebbe Paul's banner is not
destined to fall to the ground...yet... There may be others out there,
as well, that I don't know of, who are trying their level best to get
Senior Managment to hear, to act... but... would the last one out
please turn out the lights?
I had a happy/sad thought, as long as these Notes conferences remain
vital and active, Paul will never be completely gone...
|
2485.29 | | VERGA::FACHON | | Tue May 04 1993 11:49 | 115 |
| Re .26
I have been with DEC for 8 years. Never a manager. Well, I play-acted
at product managing for a year. But although I've had my share of gripes
about management -- a certain level is unavoidable -- I've never seen
anything so flagrant as the episodes you recount. In my experience,
when the red flag is raised with professional courtesy and level-headed
restraint, the matter is almost always given a fair hearing, and steps
are taken to amend a bad situation.
Being what we are -- people -- there will always be failures in any system
we create -- DEC. A few bad characters will become managers. And even
good managers may encounter situations in which they can't help falling
prey to self-interest -- just like anyone else. But to imply that DEC,
as a corporate entity, might tacitly endorse practices like those outlined
in reply .26, or even .27, is purely outlandish. Really. Many of the
happenings you speak of, if recounted accurately, are grounds for
litigation and should have been prosecuted. Why weren't they? Fear of
reprisal? C'mon! This isn't a nation-state, and human rights are
still protected by the Constitution and Bill of Rights, not some
Digital Department of Ethics.
An "impending total systemic collapse at DEC?" If this note-string
represents a majority opinion, I guess so. But I believe this company
is making a real bid to rebound, pockets of severe employee
depression notwithstanding. Why? Look at the numbers. Look at the
moves being made to stem the red ink and to rationalize DEC's mission.
Do these moves make Bob Palmer heartless? Is upper management completely
unresponsive to employees? It seems so based on what we see from
inside the corporation -- for instance, BP and company never even
acknowledged the ad campaign I sent them (the one that so many of
you seemed to like) -- but when I put my disappointment aside and
look outside, I have to admit that DEC is showing real progress at
taking back control of its fate. Our management has made some "tough
choices" that are making a real difference on the bottom line and in
the world's eyes. The results all-but-prove it, and that's what counts
first.
To solve a problem -- any problem -- you have to see it from the
appropriate perspective. For a typical employee, it's tough to adopt
the mindset that we and our fellow employees could be viewed as
numbers, as tools, or as instruments to get a job done. And yet, that's
what management must sometimes do. Body X costs so-many-dollars and
makes so-many-dollars. Period. It's harsh. It's contrary to our
code of ethics. It's so utterly impersonal. But it's not personal,
though we often take it as such. You're nuts if you think management
doesn't realize how bad morale is and that they need to do something
to change it. They're doing it. The problem has one answer from their
perspective -- from the capitalist-chief point-of-view. Stem the red
ink. Get into the black with all haste, because the longer it takes
the tougher it will be, until it's impossible. And we almost waited
too long. Now, we've got to get ahead of the spiral decline. Use
whatever cutbacks are at our disposal -- products, resources, strategies,
people, and maybe even executive salaries -- all the while understanding
that those very cutbacks make the curve that much steeper.
DEC was perilously close to going over the edge. KO did stay too long;
I'll be the first to admit I argued on his behalf, but I believed he'd
step down if given a graceful way out. Anyway, look at where we are now.
Last quarter was nearly break-even, and Q4 will show a profit. That's
all but assured from what I hear. We'll all feel much happier when that
happens. And although the tough times won't be over unless we sustain
profitability, it will become increasingly apparent that management
has done what had to be done. Not to save jobs for their own sake, but
to restore as much revenue-generating capability as possible, and thus
save the jobs that go with it. The human fall-out is painful, but the
sooner the problem is solved, the less pain there will ultimately be. No
one wants to manage continuous decline, and that's why we're going
through one more layoff at least, even though we appear to be mending.
The last push is resolve, not heartlessness.
Yes, we're lopping off needed parts and abusing others -- the steepening
curve -- but if we can't cope until replacements are fashioned or inept
practices are identified and purged, we'll die. But we seem to be
coping -- this note-string notwithstanding. It's tooth and nail time,
and DEC is fighting with a will. In the fracas, some people get ignored,
but how else could it possibly be? Someone has to make the *big*
decisions. There will always be management -- room for the "us and them"
mentality -- and no decision will ever be universally popular. But
in better financial times, the entire picture will look different. Our
top management may well find itself heralded as pulling off one of the
most successful turn-arounds of a giant corporation in modern history.
It's still a long shot, but not nearly so long as it was a few months
ago. Chart the trends, and don't take the ambivalence so personally.
Try to imagine the realistic alternatives. But where there are bonafide
transgressions of human rights, then use every professional means at
your disposal -- including legal recourse -- to root it out. Nine times
out of ten, I'm betting that legitimate problems get resolved long
before there's any call to get nasty.
No, I'm not saying this for some hidden reason. I've no ulterior motives
whatsoever. Indeed, I'm likely to leave DEC fairly soon. But I'd hate
to go thinking that the general angst was causing the Indians to rail
thoughtlessly -- as I too am too often prone to doing. So I want to
suggest this counterpoint. People like Paul Kinzelman *do* make a
difference at DEC. So many of these comments attest to the success of
his initiative. But very little will ever happen over night, and
sometimes what seems like disregard or even abuse of power is no more
than enlightened corporate self interest. These aren't luxurious times.
We can't afford a lot of niceties. And some managers just plain don't
know how to handle the pressure. But neither can we, the Indians,
afford to deny the severity of the measures that must be taken to keep
things from getting far worse than they already are, even if we aren't
privy to the full intent or rationale of those measures.
I've been a DEC fan right along -- "Pollyanna optimistic" -- but DEC *is*
coming back as far as my expectations and money are concerned. And it's
happening right now. Every move won't be perfect, but they're starting
to make sense. We couldn't say that much 12 months ago. Take heart in
that and keep fighting those negative sentiments. And after this storm
is weathered, see if you don't find yourself a lot more empowered than
seem to feel now.
For what it's worth,
Dean
|
2485.30 | Maybe somebody is getting it... | PLOUGH::KINZELMAN | Paul dtn223-2605 | Tue May 04 1993 12:00 | 54 |
| This message came floating over my tube. I don't know who wrote it, but
somebody else evidently noticed that there is a problem too. One can
hope/wish that perhaps these are notes that Win took from his meeting
in HLO with employees. From the feeling I got when I last met with him
I doubt it though. :-(
MAJOR MESSAGES FROM OUR EMPLOYEES
0 A MAJOR GAP HAS DEVELOPED BETWEEN EMPLOYEES WHO ARE MANAGERS
AND EMPLOYEES WHO ARE INDIVIDUAL CONTRIBUTORS. COMMENTS FREQUENTLY
HEARD FROM EMPLOYEES INCLUDE:
* NOT ONLY MY MANAGER CANNOT SOLVE THE PROBLEM,
MY MANAGER IS THE PROBLEM
* MANAGERS MANAGE PROJECTS NOT PEOPLE
* MANAGERS NO LONGER COMPLETELY UNDERSTAND THE TECHNOLOGY
AND THEREFORE CANNOT MAKE INFORMED BUSINESS DECISIONS
* MANAGERS SPEND AN INORDINATE AMOUNT OF TIME PLAYING
POLITICS AND AS A RESULT ARE NOT IN TUNE WITH THE DAY
TO DAY OPERATION OF THE BUSINESS
0 EMPLOYEES BELIEVE THAT TRANSITION IS HAVING A DISPARATE IMPACT
ON INDIVIDUAL CONTRIBUTORS AND MINORITIES.
0 EMPLOYEES DON'T UNDERSTAND WHY DOWNSIZING IS TAKING SO LONG.
"FINISH ALL THE LAYOFFS THIS QUARTER AND START REVITALIZING
THE COMPANY".
0 THE EMPLOYEES THAT WERE TRANSITIONED EARLY ON, WHO HAD LOWER
PERFORMANCE RATINGS, GOT A BETTER TRANSITION PACKAGE THAN OUR
BETTER PERFORMERS WHO ARE BEING TRANSITIONED TODAY. THIS DOES
NOT SEEM RIGHT.
0 MANY ORGANIZATIONS HAVE REDUCED STAFF DRAMATICALLY WITHOUT
ADJUSTING THE WORKLOAD. WHEN WE DOWNSIZE WE MUST RE-ENGINEER
THE WORK.
0 IN THE PAST, EMPLOYEES HAD ALL THE RESOURCES THEY NEEDED TO DO
THEIR WORK. NOW THEY BELIEVE THEY ARE RESOURCE STARVED.
"WE CANNOT GET EQUIPMENT INTERNALLY THAT WE SELL TO OUR CUSTOMERS".
0 POOR COMMUNICATION BETWEEN EMPLOYEES WHO ARE ENGINEERING OUR PRODUCTS
AND EMPLOYEES WHO ARE SELLING OUR PRODUCTS GENERATES A LOT OF
FRUSTRATION FROM BOTH ENDS.
0 EMPLOYEES BELIEVE BENEFIT COSTS INCREASES ARE BEING PASSED DIRECTLY
TO EMPLOYEES, THEREFORE CHANGING THE PERCENTAGE OF EMPLOYEE
CONTRIBUTION VS. COMPANY CONTRIBUTION.
|
2485.31 | Sorry, that's not my experience | PLOUGH::KINZELMAN | Paul dtn223-2605 | Tue May 04 1993 12:15 | 10 |
| Re: .29
DEC may turn around but the problem is that upper management in the human
resources department is devoid of ethics from my experience. So even if DEC
turns around, as far as I can tell the same people will still be there and
I've gotten to the point that I refuse to support the structure they resist
fixing. Believe the events mentionned in .26 - I am unfamiliar with his
specific events, and might not even believe them if I had not see similar
stuff myself. Count yourself lucky you didn't get squashed the way lots of
other folks have been squashed.
|
2485.32 | Everyone has their limit. | SCAACT::RESENDE | Subvert the dominant paradigm. | Tue May 04 1993 12:26 | 12 |
| Farewell, Paul.
Your dedication to trying to fix problems constructively hasn't gone unnoticed.
Your presence will be missed.
Your warnings will likely continue to go unheeded. But I hope not.
We are diminished by your passing from us. Your new employer gains.
Best wishes,
Steve
|
2485.33 | | CARTUN::MISTOVICH | depraved soul | Tue May 04 1993 12:28 | 7 |
| re: .29
My experience has been that if I raise an issue politely and
rationally, I am ignored. If I repeat myself several times, than my
experience is denied and/or invalidated. If I elevate, than I am
creamed, and the experience is "buried."
|
2485.34 | this problem is not because of layoffs | RGB::SEILER | Larry Seiler | Tue May 04 1993 12:59 | 36 |
| Note .29 makes some good points about the fear and frustration caused by
layoffs. That problem can only be solved by a return to profitability.
However, that's not the sort of problem that has caused Paul to leave,
and that some of the rest of us are saying that we've experienced.
The problem is not even that there are people in the company who may
choose to act unethically. The problem is that unethical behavior
appears to be condoned at high levels of the company, since there are
senior people who know of such behavior but seem to do nothing.
The author of .29 does not fear reprisal. I'll just say that I never
thought it could happen to me, either.
As for prosecution being a way to solve serious abuses... it's not that
easy in practice. For example, a sexual harrassment case can take 5 years
to make it through the courts. How many victims have the strength of will
(and the independent means of support) necessary to pursue such a thing to
the end? Besides, a prosecution would hurt Digital as a whole, and few of
us want to do that. What we want is for the abusers to be removed.
So, are the cases people have cited real, or are they blown up out of
proportion? I can only speak to my own case, and I assure you that
it is real. I can also repeat what a manager once said about how he
treats negative feedback when doing a performance review:
"If just one person tells me there's a problem, I ignore it.
But if three people tell me about the same problem, I decide
that it's probably for real."
When should upper management decide that there is enough negative feedback
about ethical abuses to believe that the problem is for real? I am not at
all convinced that they yet believe that this is a real problem, although
I'm still waiting for proof either way, and hoping for the best.
Sincerely,
Larry Seiler
|
2485.35 | victim --> survivor | SOFBAS::SHERMAN | | Tue May 04 1993 14:39 | 77 |
|
Re: .29:
I cannot comment on what your experience has been at DEC. However, for you to
discount the events I summarized in .26 shows, unfortunately, the same mindset
displayed by company management in these cases: deny or ignore. Let's make
a deal. If you want, I will check with the people involved in these incidents.
If they do not object, I will share with you the details of these events as
long as you give your word not to in turn share this information with anyone
else. It documents not only the events but the fact that management was fully
informed and refused to act properly. In return, after you have reviewed
this information, you will post a note here indicating that I have indeed
correctly represented both the events mentioned and the fact that management
covered-up the events and, in some cases, then tried to punish the people
who had brought the complaints. Deal?
Regarding legal action: ever try to sue a huge corporation? I am informed
that DEC drags out an action for an average of two years before coming to
trial. Do you have the resources to wait two years -- probably unemployed
-- before coming to trial? Nonetheless, many people make that choice. If
you are interested I will inform you in private of where you can go to
review a phonebook-sized volume of suits pending against DEC, brought by
current and former employees for just the types of situations I related.
For whatever reasons, DEC is indeed tacitly endorsing abuse by some managers.
Remember the definition of tacit. This does not imply active support, just
neglect. Please do _NOT_ tell me that this is not happening. It has happened
to me and to many others. If you have been more fortunate, lucky you.
As I indicated, for the 16,000 employees laid off so far in FY93, DEC saved
an average of $1,100 each in SG&A. If this were a course in management, the
grade would be F. The "improved" third quarter is the result of cost-cutting,
not business improvement. Just how long and how much do you think R&D, salary,
and other long-term investments can be cut? And what the hell happened to the
salary and benefits expense saved from 16,000 layoffs? It didn't go to TFSO;
that's a separate accounting entry.
Sure, drastic times require drastic measures. But to let middle management run
amok because top management is preoccupied shows, at best, inability to be top
management, and at worst, a slash-and-burn style of management that says no one
has any future with DEC.
And by the way, please don't call me "nuts." Such a comment reflects most
unfavorably upon you.
What's happening at DEC now reminds me of what happened at Eastern Airlines
several years ago. Costs were up. The company was losing money. New management
came in and had to make "the tough decisions." Costs were slashed. New
"products" were introduced. Fast forward several years. Eastern, now bankrupt,
was liquidated, putting some tens of thousands of people out of work. The new
management team, headed by Frank Lorenzo, walked away fat and happy. I believe
that Lorenzo alone pocketed $37,000,000 for his "work" in destroying Eastern.
He made the "tough decisions" all right, but was protected from their effects.
"Over night?" Who said anything about making things change "over night?" The
situations and events I have related go back to 1986. This is a very long
night.
In summary, I remain certain that, unless certain DECbarnacles are scraped
from the hull of Digital, there is no future for DEC. It seems likely that
DEC's long-range plan is to get down to perhaps 70K total employees. And in
the cruel, cold light of Management by Objective, ignoring legitimate
employee grievances serves two purposes: it saves money short-term and also
reduces headcount by simply driving people out of the company.
We learn what we live. All the lip-service in the world about "empowerment" is
crushed under the weight of one tacitly-approved abusive manager.
If DEC is to be just another company that does business by treating employees
like kleenex, that's one thing. If, however, it is to be a better place to work
-- the type of place that attracts and keeps the superior people that make
a business not just a player but a winner -- then real, timely corrective
actions need to be taken immediately. So far, this is not the case.
Ken
|
2485.36 | | VERGA::FACHON | | Tue May 04 1993 17:39 | 123 |
| No. I'm not trying to say there are no abuses. I'm only trying to
point out that perspective makes a big difference in what really counts.
There have been many times when I could have made a case for
unfair treatment because events that were beyond my control had
an impact on my career. The one that comes to mind right away
was a promotion I never got because an organization I'd joined -- on
the promise of getting a promotion -- was reorged and subsumed by
another organization that would not honor that commitment. From a
personal perspective, this was *grossly* unfair, but from one level
removed, the organization had no alternative. I've also heard of
many horror stories -- most seemingly less reasonably explained than
mine -- that, when viewed objectively, often end up being just that.
Stories. Not all, but many. You shouldn't discount the implications.
It's impossible for anyone -- let alone "management" -- to account
for the endless variety of human perceptions. "One man's garbage..."
Given the note Paul posted right after my entry, I would have to
believe that "management" knows what's going on. Maybe Paul isn't
fully convinced, but then maybe he's tilted at one too many windmills.
We all have our threshold. It's no crime.
I don't need to take you up on your offer to know that there are real
feelings and perceptions of abuse -- some cases factual and probably
provable in court. I'm *not* saying they don't happen at DEC. But I refuse
to indulge in the notion that DEC, the corporation, condones them.
Suffice it to say, I just refuse. If I beleived that, I would
quit immediately. And besides, I would only end up rationalizing whatever you
tell me, just as you rationalize what I'm saying. That's what people do.
Rationalize. Until whatever it is that they're thinking about fits into
whatever place needs filling. I beleive you're convinced of some
malicious intent. I just don't read the signals the same way.
No, I've never tried to sue anyone. But if I'm ever convinced that
I've been criminally wronged, I will absolutely litigate, and I will
sue for all damages, including time lost. That goes without saying.
And being the writer that I am, I'll probably start a PR campaign to
embarrass my transgressor into capitulating. Sure, I believe there's
a phone-book sized volume of cases pending. I'd suspect that IBM, HP,
Data General, Proctor and Gamble, GM, and just about any other large
corporation you can name has just such a volume. I don't think
that indicates the willful, systematic betrayal of employee rights.
At least, I haven't felt my rights to be unduly abused, nor do I think
that most of my colleagues -- even those TFSO's -- have any exceptional
grievances. Maybe I have just been lucky. Or maybe I'm somewhat more
realistic. Or maybe I'm just a pushover.
Yes, the improved third quarter is a result of cost cutting. I figure
16,000 salaries no longer being paid is cutting a lot of cost. I'm
not sure what you mean by "DEC saved an average of $1,100 each in SG&A."
But if we aren't paying those salaries, it's got to show up someplace
on the balance sheet.
Yes, these drastic measures are tough, but they aren't the way DEC
grew up. We've had better times, when DEC was a "GREAT" place to be.
Again I assert, the times exacerbate the perception. You've got to see
past and around them to envision better times. Maybe I'm kidding myself,
but I don't think the way things are is the way management wants them
to be. Time may prove me wrong, but I believe I have the greater
weight of precedent on my side. We'll just have to see.
I always try to be extremely careful in the language I use. I thought
twice about the phrase "you must be nuts," but I felt the overall tenor
of my note would alleviate any misinterpretation of my meaning. It's
just a colloquialism. I did not mean to imply that you're actually
"nuts," but only that your reasoning might benefit from a little cooling
down. Maybe not. I don't know you. If that phrase reflects "most
unfavorably," well that's too bad, as your attention was likely diverted
from the meaning I'd hoped to impart.
Eastern airlines? We don't even begin to compare. DEC is betting the
company on Alpha, not some re-hashed service routes. DEC is also
consolidating on redundant efforts, invigorating sales and marketing,
outsourcing what we admit we don't do well, focusing on those things
that we do. We haven't thrown out the baby with the bath water.
Not yet, at least. But that will come if this respite doesn't
pan out into a bonafide rebound. That's the only thing to do with
a broken business. If you don't embrace the current efforts as a remedy,
then they won't work, and we'll never know the kind of DEC whose
absence you lament. Geez, I sound like a holistic corporate psychologist!
Yes, this is a very long night. "It's always darkest before the dawn."
Maybe, just maybe, this once.
Yes, certain DECbarnacles need to be scraped from the hull of Digital.
I love the maritime metaphor. I believe they will be. Hell, I've
seen a lot of them get scraped already. Really. Maybe not the
condemnable ones you're aware of, but there's lots of empty management
offices in my organization.
I doubt DEC will contract down to 70,000 employees. I think the magic
number is 85,000. The current financials would seem to justify that many
bodies. If sales fall -- for any reason -- expect more layoffs unless
we can reasonably forcast an upturn. Tough even in good times. But
personally, I think sales will start to show modest gains. Hell,
if Alpha could run DOS and Windows, I'd say our bottom line would move
up nicely. Oh well, that's another topic, and I've already cast my votes.
Does DEC want to drive people from the company? I've thought so
too -- in weaker moments -- but I don't really believe it. On the
other hand, if someone wants to leave, no one is likely to stop them.
The employee morale isn't a case of malicious intent on management's
part. It's a matter of events getting much larger than anyone imagined.
Things fall through the cracks. As a good friend of mine likes to
say -- someone who had a serious brush with the same type of inequity
you've alluded to -- "sh*t happens." He got out of the way. And
he was later TFSO'd. Leaving DEC was the best thing that ever could
have happened to him. He'd had enough. Does that make DEC bad? He
doesn't seem to hold any grudge.
>If DEC is to be just another company that does business by treating employees
>like kleenex, that's one thing. If, however, it is to be a better place
>to work -- the type of place that attracts and keeps the superior people
>that make a business not just a player but a winner -- then real, timely
>corrective actions need to be taken immediately. So far, this is not the
>case.
I agree and disagree. I think that actions are being taken that will
restore the equitable environment you expect. But in the meantime, things
will remain difficult, not the least because tensions are high and
perceptions of actions often overshoot the intent of their authors.
Ever yours,
Dean
|
2485.37 | | VMSMKT::KENAH | Another flashing chance at bliss... | Tue May 04 1993 18:38 | 12 |
| >I don't need to take you up on your offer to know that there are real
>feelings and perceptions of abuse -- some cases factual and probably
>provable in court. I'm *not* saying they don't happen at DEC. But I
>refuse to indulge in the notion that DEC, the corporation, condones
>them. Suffice it to say, I just refuse.
Refusal to believe in the face of real evidence is called "denial."
>If I beleived that, I would quit immediately.
This probably explains the denial, 'cause you're still here -- and
so is the abuse, along with its being condoned.
|
2485.38 | | TOOK::CARROLL | | Tue May 04 1993 18:39 | 11 |
| re .36
Fron your reply, you think we have the wrong perception of management.
Well, the statements you make in .36 give me the perception you are a
quitter, a suer, and either a manager or just plain ignorant.
Does anyone else reading this have as much blind faith in management as
.36??
|
2485.39 | A reason for only $1,100??? | CALDEC::DMILLER | | Tue May 04 1993 18:43 | 6 |
| Re: .35, .36 and the $1,100/employee savings.
Has anyone checked to see the trend of the consultant/contractor
activity for the company? Could an increase in this (to cover work
that TSFO'ed people used to do) be the hole that is absorbing the
"savings" we should have from 16,000 less people??
|
2485.40 | | SOFBAS::SHERMAN | | Tue May 04 1993 23:31 | 78 |
| Dean -
No. We are not talking about an issue of perspective, feelings, or perception
here. We are talking about very clear issues of right and wrong. I am not an
adherent of 'variable morality.'
Here is one example.
Manager A calls Employee to an unscheduled, closed door meeting. Manager tells
Employee, who has always had only "2" and "3" reviews, that Employee's job has
been eliminated, and as a result, Manager is ordering Employee to resign.
Employee, taken totally by surprise, asks about TFSO. Manager replies that this
is at the discretion of a manager, and this Manager has decided to simply order
Employee to resign. Manager also says Personnel has sanctioned this move.
Employee gets the contents of meeting in writing. Manager does not contest the
contents of the memo.
Employee then elevates issue to site Personnel via Open Door Policy, with
copies to site Legal Department and Corporate Personnel. Personnel
Manager B says he will work issue. Time passes. No word from Personnel Manager
B.
Employee talks to Coworker about situation and is astounded to learn that
Manager has presented Coworker with same ultimatum.
Manager A now claims a "misunderstanding," despite memo, but now insinuates
"performance issues" into saga. Employee then formally contacts, in writing,
Personnel Managers C, D, and E (with copies to Legal and Corporate
Personnel), who Manager A has indicated have said that he can indeed force
Employee out of company without a pot to piss in. Managers D and E refuse to
respond, despite repeated calls and memos. Manager C says, in writing, that,
yes, he did indeed say Manager A could order Employee to resign, leaving
Employee to make the next move. This is clearly in violation of company policy,
but neither Manager A nor Manager C seem to care.
No word from Personnel Manager B.
Employee is able to find job in other group. Coworker is bullied out of DEC.
Neither Manager A nor Personnel Managers B, C, D, or E are ever brought to task
for their parts. The Open Door is revealed (again) to be an empty shell.
Neither Legal Department nor Corporate Personnel ever respond.
Employee subsequently refers matter to the vice presidential level. The
response is to assign to review case -- Manager C, who was in this scheme
up to his eyeballs and has already said that he fully supported Manager A.
Is this starting to get through to you, Dean? This is so far beyond simple
incompetence that it can only be by intent. And since management hasn't
been doing a thing to stop it -- you tell me.
We're not talking about a missed promotion here, or "one man's garbage." We're
talking about everyone's garbage. You are free to refuse to believe that DEC
condones this sort of thing. Let's just say that a number of middle managers
condone it, and when Corporate is notified, the company has in the past
simply ignored it.
Clear now? I am not rationalizing. I am not interpreting. I am relating
documented facts.
My statement that "DEC saved $1100 per TFSOed employee" refers to the savings
in SG&A after nine months. Based upon 16,000 employees TFSOed during that time,
SG&A decreased just $1100 per employee cut. That stinks and indicates that
cutting employees does not save money -- at DEC, anyway.
Yes, things remain difficult, tensions high, and perceptions colored. However,
in the cases I relate, we are not talking about colored perceptions. We are
talking about serious wrongdoing, and the company has not been dealing with it.
You decide why.
This is not the company I joined in 1980. I want that company back. I think we
both do. An unavoidable step in reaching that goal is making managers
accountable for their actions.
Ken
|
2485.41 | Another anonymous perspective | PLOUGH::KINZELMAN | Paul dtn223-2605 | Wed May 05 1993 09:30 | 55 |
| This note is from somebody else who wishes to remain anonymous. I am leaving
today, so sending me mail if you wish to communicate with the author will
not work. I'd suggest posting a request in the notes file and hopefully
he will read it and arrange something.
Paul,
your departure gives occasion to say a few words that need to be said,
largely because I share your concerns about DEC, and because you are indeed the
"troublemaker" that is so badly needed. I am one too, but not as successful or
objective or courageous as you are.
So, this will have to be anonymous, but you can and should put it into the
notes. I hope this notes file will grow, even as you leave.
To begin with, as the other anonymous note, this is very personal, and I
will not even attempt to be pseudo-objective but will call a spade a spade.
As far as your going-away message is concerned, it is TOO MILD. Things are
probably worse than you think. Your belief in your local middle-level management
is probably naive. I think at least 80% of all middle-level management is lousy,
selfish, uninformed, and disinterested, and I suspect yours is too. I also think
that they are probably SCARED of you, and that's why they treat you decently.
We all do this. WE WANT TO BELIEVE we are working for a good boss. I have
done this again and again, and often wound up disullusioned. And then of course,
there are GOOD MANAGERS. So, I, like you, am not attacking middle-management as
whole evil entity, but only bureaucrates, beancounters, and plain imcompetents.
Unfortunately, by bitter experience, that's about 80% of them.
Let me also say that my criticism, at least in the past, has not included
upper management. We had some fanstastic people, ethical and technical, such
as Ken Olsen and Gordon Bell. Never talked to Ken, but his MORAL PRESENCE was
fantastic. I met with Gordon a few times; it was always good. To the point,
technical, honestly emotional. I also met Win Hindle a long time ago; a true
gentleman, interested, a human being. Yes, he may be out of touch by now, but
I think he's got a most difficult job. Indeed, he should have allowed you to
help him. That he didn't, was wrong.
My own story is this. I am in inventor type, senior, reasonably successful,
about 15 years at DEC, papers, patents, much outside recogniton. Middle
management, for all these years, has been NOTHING BUT TROUBLE for me. About
80% of them have always fought and resented me as if I were trying to destroy
the company. I have succeeded, in spite of them, to do a few good things for
DEC. WITH the help of the 20% good managers, but it has been a bitter battle.
One thing is that middle management almost always is in COMPETITION WITH
ME, a ridiculous competition, but nevertheless competition. They are in
competition with SUCCESSFUL TECHNICAL PEOPLE. They do not want us to gain
too much power. They do not give a damn about the success or failure of this
company, about the long term, but are self-absorbed, engaged in self-
preservation above all things. They often may have thought I wanted their jobs
(nonsense) or some of their power (true, of course), and that my feelings were
often of contempt (which, I am afraid, is sometimes true).
We are, I am afraid, becoming a VERY ORDINARY COMPANY. I have worked at
six companies in a 40 year career, and DEC was special. I think your fight
for ethics is the key. I think Ken Olsen, with his quaker ethics, provided
something crucial in that dimension.
I will try to survive here. We will let you know it goes.
X
|
2485.42 | It hasn't gotten bad enough for them yet | PLOUGH::KINZELMAN | Paul dtn223-2605 | Wed May 05 1993 09:53 | 24 |
| Dean - one of the bureaucrats strategies is to hamper communications so
that folks will see each case that's brought up as an isolated case and not
the norm. I have not personally seen a great number of cases, but I have
seen several that went all the way to the top of the human resources
chain and nothing was done so it's clear to me what the norm is.
In most if not all cases, what happened was a premeditated
response. We're not talking about a minor mistake or accident here. We're
talking lots of thought and damage control. It's really sad to see people
in a position of power to act as though they are devoid of ethics but at
the same time fool the top people (like KO and possibly Win Hindle) into
thinking they are doing the right thing.
I was committed enough to Digital that there was no company on the face of
this earth that could have gotten me to leave Digital... except for Digital.
I have seen too much how management operates and what they hold important.
The Digital that's left is a fraudulent shell of what Digital once was.
If you doubt that most people share my view, how come my messages get
so rapidly forwarded around the world (of DEC)?
Dean, the bureaucrats are depending on folks like you to help them hold on
to the status quo. As long as there is a critical mass of folks who
continues to think that each case is an isolated case and is not the
norm, management won't change. They will only begin the repair when they
see that their propaganda and damage control has stopped working.
|
2485.43 | I don't believe they can change... | XNTRIK::MAGOON | Village Idiot | Wed May 05 1993 10:57 | 20 |
| I've been working for Digital for 12 years. Most of the management and personnel
people and many of the worker bees I've dealt with during that time have been
extremely dysfunctional. Much of that dysfunctionality stems from large amounts
of ignorance, much of it willful, and from professional and personal jealousy.
I don't expect many of those who are dysfunctional to ever become much less
dysfunctional, because I don't believe they are capable of it. It's like
expecting a person with no legs to learn how to run.
Many of the people in Digital, mostly males, remind me so much of male dogs:
running around lifting their legs to mark their territory, putting their front
paws up on everyone else's shoulders and trying to mount everyone else to
establish themselves as the alpha male. They only seem interested in territory
and position in the pack, and not in doing the hunting.
I believe the best way to change Digital for the better is to get rid of those
whose dysfunctions get in the way of Digital being the best company it can be.
Digital has an alpha male. Digital needs to get rid of those who would be alpha
male and let the hunters get on with the hunt!
|
2485.44 | Anonymous Note 2485.41 | ROWLET::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow! | Wed May 05 1993 11:10 | 15 |
| It is a conference rule that only DIGITAL moderators can post anonymous notes.
I was contacted by the anonymous noter in .41 and can forward mail to the note
author.
Rather than delete and repost .41, I'll simply add the normal anonymous note
header here...
.41 has been contributed by a member of our community
who wishes to remain anonymous. If you wish to contact the author by
mail, please send your message to ROWLET::AINSLEY, specifying the
conference name and note number. Your message will be forwarded with
your name attached unless you request otherwise.
Bob - Co-moderator DIGITAL
|
2485.45 | | GRANMA::MWANNEMACHER | Being a Daddy=The best job | Wed May 05 1993 12:01 | 6 |
| RE: .43 hahahahahaha, that was a joke.......right??????
Mike
|
2485.46 | | TOPDOC::AHERN | Dennis the Menace | Wed May 05 1993 12:06 | 9 |
| RE: .43 by XNTRIK::MAGOON
>Many of the people in Digital, mostly males, remind me so much of male
>dogs: running around lifting their legs to mark their territory,
>putting their front paws up on everyone else's shoulders and trying to
>mount everyone else to establish themselves as the alpha male.
Alpha dominance is Digital's fondest dream.
|
2485.47 | | VERGA::FACHON | | Wed May 05 1993 12:53 | 62 |
| re .37
Denial? I've not once claimed that these things don't happen
at DEC, but only that it's not some grave, unwritten policy of
this corporation. By all means, go after the bastards that
perpetrate a real crime. Just be sure you try to excersise
an objective perspective.
Re .38
Quitter? My eight years here have not been a cake walk. There have
been a hundred times when I wanted to quit, and I've fought lots
of battles -- product and strategy related. That's sort of my "claim
to fame." Once a badge of honor at DEC. Would I be arguing on
management's behalf if I were a quitter? I don't think so. I just
tend towards Devil's advocacy. "Bingo," you figure. "Managers are
all a bunch of Devils." Well, you got me. Actually, there really
is a Machiavellian plot to systematically deny individual contributors
of their confidence and rights, basically because hapless, quivering
slaves are more productive than creative innovators. Obviously.
And no, I'm not a manager. You didn't read my notes thoroughly. Nor
have I ever sued anyone (although I was once rear-ended and my
neck still aches). But I guess you didn't infer that. That
leaves ignorance, which goes hand in hand with blind faith. Mia culpa.
re:Ken and Paul
I do understand what you're saying. But if you attack *ALL*
management and infer tacit, exploitive policy, of course you'll
be viewed as a trouble maker and shoved aside. I think that attitude
alone hurts your case. If these problems require escalation to
the very top, then don't alienate the very folks that have to help you.
I don't think that's arguing for the status quo, I think that's just
common sence. And if the very top turns a deaf ear to cogent,
rationally voiced grievances, then it really is time to leave, as
you are doing Paul. But are you certain the very top doesn't
care? Or could they have their hands full trying to save what they
can of this company, and thus hold priorities that are different
from yours? I can only conjecture.
Paul, I'm sorry to see you leave. It might have been interesting to
work through this a bit more.
Ken, what does SG&A stand for? Sorry to be so "ignorant." I'm
not up to speed with business acronyms.
Best of luck to you all.
Dean
PS I just had a call from a woman. She didn't want to give her
name, but she wanted to tell me about her experience with a manager
that threatened to hit her. Personnel even witnessed a threatening
gesture, but no reprisal resulted. Clearly a case in point. The woman
also mentioned that this sort of thing seems to have gotten worse in
the past six years, and that as many as 18 years ago, when personnel
was a separate entity, unbeholden to any product-line manager, these sort
of events were dealt with properly. Perhaps therein lies part of
the problem? Apparently there isn't a VP of personnel. Leaving
personnel in the line-manger (middle) loop makes it tough from
them to excersise impartiality. That's an objective issue.
|
2485.48 | | ARCANA::CONNELLY | it's Cards-on-the-Table Time! | Wed May 05 1993 13:23 | 16 |
|
re: .40 SG&A
Isn't the savings going to trickle in slowly as people's "packages" run
out? If the majority of the TFSOs are indeed behind us as of July (hope
against hope), then the real savings should start getting more obvious
by CY94. Plus there are longer term impacts to downsizing like being able
to consolidate and close more facilities.
re: rest of string
Who is at the top of the HR chain anyway? Is it Farrahar, or does it
still go up to Sims? One guess would be that BP and company are trying
to let them finish the TFSO process before scrutinizing their other
activities.
- paul
|
2485.49 | On a more positive note | MIMS::HUNT_B | | Wed May 05 1993 15:11 | 43 |
| RE: SG&A
I believe SG&A stands for Selling, General & Administrative expenses.
I'm not sure of how all of the specific labor costs get categorized at
Digital, but I would think that a good portion of the 16,000 TFSO'd
people would have fallen into other labor categories. For example
direct costs, such a labor costs which goes into the production of
manufactured goods, would be captured under cost of goods sold, not
SG&A. When I used to work in the Aircraft industry a very small
portion of the work force, usually senior mgt, was categorized under
G&A expense. My point is that you can't take the reduction in SG&A and
divide by 16,000 and arrive at an accurate cost/person reduction. You
would need to determine the number of TFSO'd people who were formally
categorized under SG&A. A more appropriate measure would be total
labor and variable overhead cost per person across all categories.
I've been here five years now, so I wasn't a part of Digital during the
good times. I will say that I have never felt as good about the SENIOR
leadership at Digital as I do now (ie Bob Palmer, Russ Gullotti). They
are in the process of implementing changes which need to take place.
They are providing strategic leadership and pointing the company in a
definite target (instead of shooting arrows off in all directions,
hoping they'll hit something). I believe they have made great progess
during the few months that they have been in leadership. Its going to
take time to change attitudes and ways of doing business which have
been engrained over many years (its kind of like losing weight, if it
took a year to put on the weight, its not going to come off in a week).
I don't believe every one in middle/lower level mgt has gotten the
message yet. For instance, senior mgt. has consistently been saying we
need to reduce travel to mtgs (taking 3 people, when 1 will do). The
people that I see abusing this guideline is mgt. for the most part. If
BP holds his mgt accountable, I believe this will change, but its going
to take time.
In short I believe that there are a lot of things to be positve about
in our company. I know that there are still a lot of abuses, but I
don't believe they started when BP became CEO. It takes years of
inaction for these kinds of things to happen, and it will take time to
fix them. I believe we need to give BP a chance and point towards the
same target that he's trying to lead the company in.
Bing
|
2485.50 | More Work, Less Gripe | KAOOA::HASIBEDER | Good tea, nice house | Wed May 05 1993 15:54 | 32 |
| Well, time for my 2 cents worth... (Please bear in mind all statements
below are personal opinion or experience. There are no intentional
disparaging remarks directed at others in this string).
I too, at times, have been disillusioned with the "new" DEC. And it's true
that it's not the same company I started with in 1980. It's a new company, and
I have to adapt or leave. The only constant in today's world and workplace is
CHANGE.
Remember the grass is NOT always greener on the other side. I personally
don't think the incidents related in this string are unique to DEC. Yes, they
are wrong and shouldn't happen, but to believe it doesn't happen in thousands
of other companies is naive (IMO).
I have my own horror stories that in recent years have caused me pain and
career setbacks, and of the 13 or so managers I've had in DEC, there are only
three I would rate as excellent. Unfortunately, all 3 are long gone from DEC.
So, what's my point? I guess it's that I'm still here, I still believe Digital
is one of the best places I can be, and the negative effects of whining and
complaining do little to improve the situation. In fact, "morale", that word
everyone hates from either perspective, suffers most when people publicly
grumble.
I'm not saying people should be quiet and allow injustices to be hidden. Find
someone who will act on it, difficult as that may be. But don't cite tons of
examples for all to see, as it only succeeds in demoralizing everyone, even
those who have never encountered any wrongful act or person wronged.
The world's not perfect and neither is DEC, but it is pretty good overall, and
we need to work to improve it.
|
2485.51 | | ECADSR::SHERMAN | Steve ECADSR::Sherman DTN 223-3326 MLO5-2/26a | Wed May 05 1993 16:18 | 39 |
| A bit of a tangent, but what the hey ...
I was out in the Mill parking lot waiting for my wife to pick my up a
few nights ago. When I'm out there, I like looking at the ants. It's
like watching a small company if you can find the ant hole. Each ant
has a job to do and pretty much "does the right thing." Watch any one
ant and the little critter wanders about, not always in a straight path
and often going around in circles. It might pick up a twig near the
hole and move it over. It might wander out and bring in a morsel. It
might find an aggressor and pull on an appendage (hoping that other
ants will join in). It's amazing what the group can do. Probably the
epitomy of Management by Objective. The ant hill will survive and go
through good times and bad. Each little ant can pretty much depend on
all the other ants and on lifetime employment (at least until
Management by Objective determines that some ants are going out to face
the marauders and aren't coming back).
Then I thought while watching one particularly industrious ant. The
critter was probably a top performer, innovative and hard working.
But, in spite of all that could be done, this ant would always be an
ant.
The lesson? I guess it is the recognition that Digital has become a
Big Company. Many of us want it to be a Little Company like it once
was where the focus was on the contributions of the individual or of
small teams. And, with the downsizing some folks figure Digital is
destined to once again become a Little Company. But, I think that
Digital has become like an ant colony. Though times will be good and
bad in the future, it will continue on as an ant colony. Those who hire
on and stay on will be ants with all the privileges and limitations.
Paul's leaving kind of set me thinking this way because to me he was
one of the main people who represented the ideals and value of the
individual that the old Digital embodied. From his perspective, I
believe the new Digital became that which the old Digital eschewed.
It is no wonder that he left. Who wants to be an ant when there is
a small herd of gazelles you can run with?
Steve
|
2485.52 | ...and more positive thinking | TLE::SAVAGE | | Wed May 05 1993 16:20 | 22 |
| "You can catch more flies using honey that you can using vinegar"
applies to managers too.
I get the impression that some contributors to this topic are most
interested in making the case for disrespecting the integrity of
Digital's top managers. But where does that leave the rest of us? How
can we work effectively with people we have been convinced not to
respect?
And that word - trust? Trust means that when you ask your manager for
support, you can walk away with confidence that your manager will
indeed come through for you. If you act as though you suspect that
your manager is going let you down, you are setting yourself up for
just such an outcome.
It is a difficult balancing act - between naive trust of a parental
authority figure and complete disillusionment.
IMHO: the 80-20 rule applies here. Sure, managers must go 80% of the
way to build trust in the folks who work for them. When those workers
see 80% coming at them from management's side, the employees ready to
go their 20% of the distance will be the ones who still work here.
|
2485.53 | | GSFSYS::MACDONALD | | Wed May 05 1993 16:36 | 12 |
|
Re: .47 and the threat of violence
There's no point in explaining away how things have changed and
that's why personnel did nothing.
A direct threat of violence is an assault. I'd have called the
police, filed a complaint, and sued the pants off the company if they
carried out any reprisals against me. I would *not* stand for that.
Steve
|
2485.54 | | SOFBAS::SHERMAN | | Wed May 05 1993 17:00 | 37 |
| I never meant to imply that all management is rotten. If that were the
case, it would be futile to try and effect change. On the other hand,
it is clear to me that DEC _cannot_ turnaround unless it faces its deep
problems with much of middle management.
If a person takes a swing at an employee --
If a manager tries to bully an employee into quitting --
If a manager gives everyone in her group "5s" and keeps their raises --
If a person is forced to quit because they are trying to deal with a
serious family illness --
These managers should be suspended _instantly._ Then, DEC can decide if
termination or criminal prosecution is also in order.
If a manager has a serious problem presented to them by an employee and
ignores it, that manager should have to do a pretty impressive rug dance
in order to keep their job.
Of course there are excellent managers here. I've had the privilege of
working for several of them (although all but one have since left DEC).
But the presence of some excellent people makes the presence of some
unexcellent people all the more apparent.
I have been involved in one situation since 1986. "Management" has
successfully buried it so far, although I keep leaving it, bleeding on
the floor, in subsequent offices. And I will continue to do so until it
is properly addressed.
We have DELTA. We should have "DEC DROP A DIME," too. Issues reported
should be professionally investigated within days of reporting. And as
Paul and others have already said, as long as the management that is
committing the crimes is investigating itself, nothing will change, and
DEC will not survive.
|
2485.55 | "The end of an era" | BWICHD::SILLIKER | Crocodile sandwich-make it snappy | Wed May 05 1993 17:42 | 10 |
| Paul's flight for Cupertino left at 3:40p this afternoon.
Paul was my friend. Paul taught me that there are still special
individuals from the "old" DEC that still believe in doing the right
thing, and are willing to put themselves on the line to fight for that
right, and for all DEC employees.
Paul gave me my first sailplane lesson.
Happy soaring, Paul!
|
2485.56 | It happens but it shouldn't. | NZOMIS::DUKE | | Wed May 05 1993 19:16 | 45 |
| A changing world.
I have seem like problems in nearly all the companies I have ever
worked for or with. It really is unacceptable but is a fact of life.
I don't believe for one minute that management (the good ones) condone it
Have you ever tried to remove someone for these reasons. It's
become almost impossible. I tried once. The guy admitted it was his
problem. (His hands were incapable of leaving the female staff alone)
Yet when finally asked to go (after verbal and written warnings) denied
everything, called in the legal mob etc.
It got really messy. Staff took sides, lawyers took fees, I took a
beating, the company got took.
Just as it takes years to get corporations to court try settling
employee cases from the companies side. I tried its real sole distroying.
It not easy and actually becomes so expensive that giving in is a
reasonable choice.
I have often wondered if we all have forgotten why we are here. It
often appears that each of us now works for ourselves alone, the team
spirit has gone. I suspect its the result of 3 things.
Size
Digital's so big its impossible for anyone, or even a group to
understand and control. It structure no longer supports its size.
Maybe the slow breakup will help, it appears to in other companies.
Also people have little or no sense of belonging to such a large
complex company. They can no longer see the greater goal.
Market
The market is not growing. Mistakes made in the past were "covered
up" by the always growing market. Its just not true any more. There is
little or no real growth. In fact we can now produce so much more
per person that Digital needs to get smaller. Its true not just of
our industry but of several.
Coach
Who does now lead me. We are so far removed from the real leaders.
We would not even know them if they appeared in our offices. This is
because none of us are given the authority we need to do your jobs. So
if we need something it goes from us to our manager and most often to
theirs and often to the next level. The result is that our *real*
manager is someone we don't know and never see. In fact I often feel
there is a special committee that does it. It just doesn't meet too
often.
|
2485.57 | I have seen the problems first hand | SMAUG::GARROD | From VMS -> NT; Unix a mere page from history | Wed May 05 1993 20:04 | 33 |
| To those of you saying that it is bad news to talk about issues such as
Paul brought up in .0 and it is bad for morale and that people should
find someone up the chain to address issues. Well my experience is
that going up the chain doesn't work. I have personally seen problems
that were refused to be addressed and the victim sandbagged for years.
The problem is that the problem is SYSTEMIC. People like Paul Kinzelman
have made a valiant effort to address it at the highest levels of the
company. In general all he got was a lot of platitudes and no action.
He was just perceived to be a trouble maker.
Until sunshine is put on these systemic problems morale will remain
low. Pretending there isn't a problem is not the answer.
I learned my lesson back in 1985. I was younger and more naive then.
The company was not following policy in regards to my relocation
benefits and I had documentation that I was being discriminated against
vis a vis another employee. I tried taking the issue up the management
chain and to personnel. The managers pointed at each other to say the
other made the decision. The personnel rep and the personnel group
manager refused to accept my hard data. I pushed and pushed. Eventually
I backed down because I was effectively told that if I didn't the
company would not back my Green Card application. That threat was
enough to make me back down. But I've resented it ever since.
And my case is extremely mild compared to other situation that I
personal knowledge of.
So those of you that say there isn't a problem you can continue to
believe that until it is you that gets nailed. And it is my belief that
it is this systematic abuse of power that is responsible for a lot of
morale problems in the company.
Dave
|
2485.58 | lots of things are worse than talking about problems | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (381-0899 ZKO2-2/T63) | Thu May 06 1993 01:58 | 14 |
| re Note 2485.50 by KAOOA::HASIBEDER:
> So, what's my point? I guess it's that I'm still here, I still believe Digital
> is one of the best places I can be, and the negative effects of whining and
> complaining do little to improve the situation. In fact, "morale", that word
> everyone hates from either perspective, suffers most when people publicly
> grumble.
I agree that morale suffers a lot when people publicly
grumble, but I think morale suffers MOST when people have no
outlet for sharing their angers and frustrations or, worse,
are actively prevented from doing so.
Bob
|
2485.59 | | CARTUN::MISTOVICH | depraved soul | Thu May 06 1993 15:53 | 5 |
| Public grumbling is what let me know that the abuses I suffered were
not flukes or my fault. That bit of knowledge is what will drive me to
fight them in the future, and have some insight into how to fight them,
instead of waiting for the problem to go away or not documentating from
the moment I suspect a problem.
|
2485.61 | | RANGER::SOUSA | It's a Raptor! | Fri May 07 1993 08:39 | 5 |
| Guess we won't be playin' any disc this Summer, 'eh? :)
Best of luck to you Paul. You're one in a million!
Bob Sousa
|
2485.62 | David versus Goliath | VICKI::SMITH | Consulting is the Game | Fri May 07 1993 12:08 | 11 |
| Paul, thanks for your many years of effort trying to improve the
plight of the household variety (Joe/Jane) DEC employee. It's tough
fighting bureaucracy in its' many mutated forms. But, somebody has
to play the role of David so that Goliath doesn't always get the
unfair advantage in battle.
regards,
Bob
|
2485.63 | new address? | SOFBAS::SHERMAN | | Tue May 11 1993 16:48 | 3 |
| Does anyone have Paul's new enet address?
|
2485.64 | Try this...it might work! | ASG3::STEWART | I hear and obey the voice of Landru. | Thu May 13 1993 14:25 | 9 |
|
This is what Paul told me his address would be. I haven't
tried it myself:
[email protected]
Later,
Andy
|
2485.65 | | NETRIX::thomas | The Code Warrior | Thu May 13 1993 16:08 | 1 |
| It's real (at least tandem.com confirms it).
|
2485.66 | still MIA | SOFBAS::SHERMAN | | Mon May 17 1993 17:07 | 12 |
| From: DECWRL::"[email protected]" "Mail Delivery Subsystem" 17-MAY-1993 16:02:48.71
To: <sofbas::sherman>
CC:
Subj: Returned mail: User unknown
----- Transcript of session follows -----
Connected to comm.Tandem.com:
>>> RCPT To:<[email protected]>
<<< 550 Bad Recipient Name
550 <[email protected]>... User unknown
|
2485.67 | anyone have the right net address? | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter & Diamonds | Tue May 18 1993 11:13 | 12 |
| If anyone is able to get a mail address that works, could you please
post it here.
I've known Paul for years, worked with him about 10 yrs. ago, as
secretary for an engineering group he was in, and I've always liked and
respected him a lot. I just found out that he left the company and
moved to California, and I'm sorry I didn't have a chance to say
goodbye. Regardless of what Paul said earlier in this string, he is
somebody special.
Lorna
|
2485.68 | This string is typical Paul I'd say | SMAUG::GARROD | From VMS -> NT; Unix a mere page from history | Tue May 18 1993 11:37 | 17 |
|
Re .-1:
> Regardless of what Paul said earlier in this string, he is
> somebody special.
>
> Lorna
I'm curious why does what Paul said earlier in this string make him any
less "special" to you? I don't know about you but one of the major
things about Paul that earned my respect is his dedication to standing
up to people (whoever they are) when he sees wrong being done. I see
his comments earlier in this string as just more of that.
Dave
|
2485.69 | hope this explains what I meant | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter & Diamonds | Tue May 18 1993 14:59 | 22 |
| re -1, Dave, sorry, I was apparently unable to convey my meaning to
you. Paul said in .10, of this string, and I quote, "I'm nobody
special." What I was saying, in reply to that was that, regardless of
the fact that *he* said "I'm nobody special", I think he *is* somebody
special. Do you understand what I meant now? Sorry for not being
clearer before.
I certainly applaud all the efforts Paul made over the years to make
Digital a better place for the average worker. (Plus, I enjoyed the
various interesting conversations I had with him over the years, and I
appreciate the time he changed a tire for me in the DEC parking lot!
:-) )
I hope I have a chance to write to him and wish him well in the future.
Ironically, I saw him in a restaurant, in Maynard, a month or so ago.
I was walking by on the sidewalk and he waved to me from inside. If I
had any idea at the time that he was about to move to California I
would have gone inside to talk to him. *sigh*
Lorna
|
2485.70 | How to get Paul's Internet address... | ASG3::STEWART | I hear and obey the voice of Landru. | Tue May 18 1993 15:27 | 14 |
|
I've gotten a good Internet address for Paul Kinzelman, but at Paul's
request, I'm not able to post it in this notes file.
However, Paul did give me permission to give out his address to individuals
making specific requests for it. So....as long as I don't get 3000 mail
messages a day, I'd be happy to provide this service to Paul's friends,
colleagues, and acquaintances.
Please send me mail at ASG3::STEWART.
Thanks,
Andy
|
2485.71 | | SOFBAS::SHERMAN | empowerment requires truth | Tue May 25 1993 09:56 | 5 |
| Has anyone heard from Paul? I used the latest, "certified" address for
him, and it came back undeliverable.
ken
|