T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2532.1 | Tie it to an opportunity to earn more. | ICS::DONNELLAN | | Wed Jun 09 1993 23:52 | 14 |
| Another way to look at this question is to reduce everyone's salary by
10%, but then give them a chance to earn it back (and possibly make
even more) by tying it to that particular group's profitability. When
I sold for Lanier, one of the things I liked about the company was that
everyone's salary was linked to sales, even the CEO's. It's not a
panacea, but it could be a great motivator for Digital at this point in
its history. I would gladly take a pay cut if it was tied to an
opportunity to earn more money based on performance. One without the
other does not make a lot of sense to me, because it would only prolong
the agony. We have to change and we must be clearer about where we are
going. We still lack that exciting vision that can energize the people
who do the work. If we have the vision, almost anything we do will
work.
|
2532.2 | No | ESGWST::HALEY | become a wasp and hornet | Thu Jun 10 1993 02:31 | 17 |
| I believe that I have already taken several "paycuts" by being at Digital
for these past few years. I could get a job paying more outside, and stay
because of othe reasons currently. I would not take a further reduction in
pay to keep more of the people we currently have on board.
We have way too many people, we need to be either 30% larger in revenue
with solid earnings, or 20% smaller in headcount. I don't see either
happening very quickly.
I think dropping more than 20% of the current employees and refilling some
of the slots with proven winners from other companies is the right thing to
do. Our hardware and marketing messages for Alpha AXP don't match, and
there is nothing in the company getting more attention than that. If we
can't do a simple thing like that correct, we do not have the right people
here.
Matt
|
2532.3 | Peter Drucker says... | HGOVC::JAYANTKUMAR | Jayant Kumar, DECAsia, Hong Kong | Thu Jun 10 1993 02:57 | 9 |
| In a recent article in the WSJ, Peter Drucker speaks of the need to
"reengineer" the business theory of every large organization which has
been around for very long. Without this, any amount of
'restructuring' and 'employee-downsizing' will only yield short-term
results, he says.
Couldn't agree more with him, especially in our context...
Kumar
|
2532.4 | | CARTUN::MISTOVICH | depraved soul | Thu Jun 10 1993 13:11 | 14 |
| As long as there are large numbers of "senior" people collected 6
figure and near 6 figure salaries for doing nothing that contributes to
business, but only whiling away the days politicking and polishing
their linkages in the Netowrk, I would not even consider such a thing.
I've already been paid anywhere from $7-10K less/year than my peers, who
are no more productive and don't do work of higher quality as far as I
can determine.
If Digital can't get its act together and get rid of the excess
employees who have consistently been and will always be the biggest
drain on the company -- its bulging middle and senior "management,"
then it deserves to go down. If its products and services truly meet
customers needs, another company will rise to take its place. Its
called survival of the fittest.
|
2532.5 | You must be joking | SMAUG::GARROD | From VMS -> NT, Unix a future page from history | Thu Jun 10 1993 13:20 | 17 |
| I agree with all the previous replies. I have zero interest in saving
somebody elses job. I want DEC to pay me exactly what DEC thinks I'm
worth to them. If they think I'm paid too much then they should cut my
salary. If I didn't like that I'd go to a company that thought I was
worth more than DEC did. If I couldn't find such a company I'd
obviously have an incorrect sense of my own value.
DEC is not a charity nor do I or anybody else here do charitable work
for DEC. I also agree that part of the HUGE G&A line on DEC's balance
sheet is due to too many 6 figure high level managers that are not
worth what they're paid.
In my view the way to fix the problems is to Palmer to start getting
his high level managers to "Walk the Talk". At present all I see is
the good ole boy network protecting each others arses.
Dave
|
2532.6 | No | CSC32::K_HYDE | Say NO to The New World Order | Thu Jun 10 1993 14:15 | 29 |
| No, I would not favor a 10% pay cut.
Why?
1) We have people who are productive and some who are not. Those who
aren't had better shape up or ship out. I assume this company's
senior management (Bob Palmer level) is working hard to identify
which employees are contributing to the bottom line and which are
not. I'm certain their task is made even more difficult by the
current defensiveness, which is inevitable when companies lay-off.
2) I've been a victim of Digital's salary planning process in the past.
I've been told too many times: "I can't give to you unless I take
from someone else." I once responded to an ad in a Boston paper.
The job discription looked just like what I did -- Rdb database
consultant. The headhunter told me he couldn't send me on the
interview because the company was Digital and the job was for a
counter-part req for me. I was an ISWS Spec 3 and the counter-part
was for a Consultant I. To my boss' credit, I was acknowledged as
holding down a Consultant I's job and he did promote me to Spec 4
with a plan to promote to Consulant I as soon as he could. I've
since taken a voluntary demotion to Spec 3 as an alternative to
lay-off 2 years ago.
3) No more across-the-board, wide, paint-brush approaches. Too many
manipulators took care of themselves.
Kurt
|
2532.7 | Not an option | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | You are what you retrieve | Thu Jun 10 1993 14:49 | 10 |
| I can't speak to the people who are single, independently working, etc.
but most of us are married, and many of us have children, and
compensation for us isn't an option.
We do the best we can for our families. We do the best we can for
Digital.
In turn, we expect Digital to do the best it can for its employees.
Digital itself doesn't have many options.
|
2532.8 | It MUST start at the Top !!!!!!!!!!!!!!! | ELMAGO::JMORALES | | Thu Jun 10 1993 14:52 | 20 |
| NO !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
There is a saying that applies here:
Do not throw stones if your ceiling is made of glass.
The learning here is:
1) If the company is interested in a leadership effort
to get better IT MUST start at the top.
Example: Lee Iacocca cut his salary to $ 1.00 per year
while Crysler was in trouble time.
Question: How many of our top paid/top level managers
are willing to lead and cut their salaries
perks, benefits and 'sidelines' by whatever
percent they think is reasonable ?
|
2532.9 | NO thanks, I gave at the office | AKOCOA::BBARRY | Sand: The enemy of kilted yaksmen | Thu Jun 10 1993 14:59 | 14 |
| I feel that we have already been taking pay cuts in an effort to
save fellow employees jobs. The salary review trend has seen lower
participation rates, lower spend numbers, and longer periods, not
to mention salary freezes, and people taking lower SRIs to stay on.
The question is, *which* fellow employees' jobs have we been saving?
Cost cutting doesn't sustain profits anyway, and profits fund
compensation.
As for morale, job security for me, equates to family security. My morale
is directly tied to my family's well-being. I'm not doing this for me.
/Bob
|
2532.10 | Crash! Chingle Jangle clinkle... | NEST::WHITE | | Thu Jun 10 1993 15:23 | 16 |
| re .8
If the ceiling is made of glass then by all means BREAK IT!
But there are no glass ceilings at Digital, right folks?!
:-}
--Catherine--*
P.S. If the company were very small (i.e. I knew the people who would stay
on board) and long term prospects for everyone were good, I might
accept a short term pay decrease to keep everyone, since I
would likely need them soon. So, for a startup, yes.
|
2532.11 | NOT!!!!! | GRANPA::JNOSTIN | | Thu Jun 10 1993 15:52 | 9 |
| No! noone should be asked or should consider a paycut to save someone
elses job. Digital needs to get rid of anyone who is not doing their
job or is not needed. Who are these employees that would be saved? I
for one don't want to save someone making six figures, someone that has
abused Digital, etc, etc.
The idea of taking a paycut would never work anyway, unless EVERONE
agreed to it. Most folks haven't received an increase in over 2 years
anyway, that's enough of a cut!
|
2532.12 | | NETWKS::GASKELL | | Thu Jun 10 1993 16:16 | 6 |
| DEC is not a charity (at least not yet) and I'm not one of Bush's
Thousand Points Of Light. I work for the money. If they cut my pay by
10% then they can only get 80% of my energy as I would have to work
a part time job somewhere else to keep a roof over my families head.
|
2532.13 | | HAAG::HAAG | Rode hard. Put up wet. | Thu Jun 10 1993 18:52 | 6 |
| NO. i look around the office and STILL see people who are absolutely
USELESS to our business goals. these are the very same people who have
decided to tfso some VERY USEFULL and productive people. i'm to the
point where i don't feel much like continuing to work for dec to pay
those people's salaries. much less even think about a cut. no thanks.
count me out.
|
2532.14 | The info is in here somewhere | NEWVAX::PAVLICEK | Zot, the Ethical Hacker | Thu Jun 10 1993 18:58 | 6 |
| We discussed this notion in this conference a few months back, as I
recall.
It sounds no better now than it did then.
-- Russ
|
2532.16 | fewer hours = smarter work? | ARCANA::CONNELLY | it's Cards-on-the-Table Time! | Thu Jun 10 1993 23:10 | 11 |
|
re: .15
Sounds terrific! As long as benefits remained intact, i'd volunteer for a
4/5ths work schedule anytime (and take the 20% salary cut). If the last few
years should have taught us anything, it's that more time worked (as in >65
hours a week) does not equal more productivity or feeling of accomplishment.
It's too easy to get sucked into the committee/"virtual team"/"influencing"
game that is fostered by a mushy management structure and still end up not
achieving anything when all is said and done.
- paul
|
2532.17 | another reply | DWOMV2::CAMPBELL | Ditto Head in Delaware | Thu Jun 10 1993 23:22 | 23 |
|
re: .10 and others
Upon reading the replies, I have an opinion on what needs to happen.
We don't all know each other, its alot easier to accept a bunch of
folks somewhere else losing there jobs. So why not give TOTAL
control to the lowest level possible, put in some peer review, and
allow each small group (where we all know each other) make a group
decsion on what the group needs to do to be a 'profitable' group?
Morale up, profit up, and productivity up.
Could we come to a conclusion, with the individuals that would be
"selected" in the room, on who would go and who would stay?
Perhaps I'm dreaming, but I'd be willing to meet with my peers and
either change (if I needed to) or leave, if I was part of the
decsion process.
Oh, on the topic.... I'd do it if my group (team) did it.
dennis
|
2532.18 | | GJOVAX::SEVIC | | Fri Jun 11 1993 00:10 | 16 |
| Great this responds is what I was looking for, so far the NO'S are the
higher percentage. Not that I agree with the no's. From reading there
replys these are some of my observations. That upper level managers
are making six figure salarys, and they seem to be unaccountable for
the financial heath of digital. ( Hopeful Mr Palmer, has or will address
this valid concern.) Secondly that most of the digital employes or a
high percentage of the past TSFO candidates, and furture candidates are
poor performers. If I remember back a few years after the first round
of TSFO'S, a team of upper level VP'S and six figure managers went
around the field/country telling us that the employes left where the
best in class. Most be some inheritable problem that digital breeds
poor performers. My hope was that if we could some how put this TSFO
processes to rest for a period of time, that we could spend that period
of time focusing on customer/hardware/software/network problems without
the destraction of the TSFO process every quarter.
|
2532.19 | Good old "boys" still rule! | GLDOA::MORRISON | Dave | Fri Jun 11 1993 01:45 | 6 |
|
re: .11 - One MAJOR problem I see VERY clearly in some cases, is that
many of those sloted to TSFO are EXCELLENT employees, while several of
those not set to go - SHOULD BE. THIS is what IS so IMMORAL & stupid
about how this process is being handled. IT IS STILL HIGHLY POLITICAL &
so it adds up to CRAP!
|
2532.20 | NO more to give..!! | BSS::GROVER | The CIRCUIT_MAN | Fri Jun 11 1993 03:40 | 29 |
| I also say **NO** to pay cut....
As someone else said, I am not doing this for me. I have a family and
my family is growing older (teens (3 of them) ready for college soon).
I have not received a pay increase in four years... "due to the
companys' financial problems".... From the beginning of my 12 years
here at digital, I have been tied up in the ever changing pay cycles.
It seems I'd just be nearing a salary review, then the cycle changes. I
think I've been considered for a pay increase maybe three times in the
12 years...
If I'm to be cut, be done with it.. and let me get on with my life. I
am a compationate person, but when it comes to the well-being of my
family, it comes first.. I'll save my charitable giving for my church
and the boy scouts, thank you..!!!
Believe me, if I were single, I wouldn't be working in this industry. I
would most likely be doing something much less stressful.
NOPE, sorry, Digital can't have 10%, cause I need it for the family. As
it is, I've volunteered to go on third shift to compansate for the lack
of pay raises... The 15% shift differential helps keep the roof over
the head...
Give me the package, but don't cut my pay to keep me here.!!
Bob G.
|
2532.21 | | FRSBEE::ROBERTS | office boy by day, killer at night | Fri Jun 11 1993 07:52 | 4 |
|
I say NO also. I really tired of getting great reviews and nice atta
boys. Still rubs me raw to know 40k bonuses were paid out to upper
managers last year. Nice example of sharing the pain for ya!
|
2532.22 | More on France | RELYON::HOWE | | Fri Jun 11 1993 09:32 | 6 |
| It looks like we are subsidizing France! For a 20% reduction in work,
they take a 10% reduction in salary. For a 40% reduction in work, 20%
cut in salary. At that rate, some jobs could be cut 100% in work
(eliminated) for only a 50% reduction in salary.
- Rick
|
2532.23 | it's FUNCTION, _NOT_ PEFORMANCE; sheesh, get it straight | KELVIN::BURT | | Fri Jun 11 1993 09:35 | 55 |
|
Digital is NEW and very defintely DIFFERENT. This company is in the
midst of selling off sites and people and outsourcing virtually
everything it needs to support it's software and services goals.
(come on, we even second sourced the Alpha chip to Japan- wait and see
what the future brings of that! "In Japan, we take everything that is
the best in all the world and make it ours." A slightly paraphrased
quote from _Mr Baseball_)
Digital doesn't care if you're a poor performer or not, if your
FUNCTION is no_longer_needed, you are out the door- plain and simple.
Oh, I'm sure this is a way to weed out the "last" of the poor
performers (even though I tought they were all gone way back with the
big bucks), but the key is YOUR FUNCTION. If Digital can out source it
and get it cheaper/equal/better and reduce it's headcount to make the
funny money balance sheet lines look profitable, that's what is needed
to make it profitable.
And all those who whine about how many poor performers are still here
and how many make big bucks for nothing and how the good old boy
network is still alive and well: toooo baad. Those people got their
foot in the door and took advantage of the situation and got to where
they got to by "doing what it takes" and that is not always the right
way, but that is survival of the fittest. If maybe (global) you would
just smile a little more and suck up a little more and learn when to
insert you're foot into your mouth or not, you might be up there too-
faced with which people to axe, which groups to slice, which products
to crush, which services to flush (notice I haven't learnt yet, as
well). Then, if you made the wrong choices, well, you would just have
held onto your job a little longer before the doors closed on you and
everyone else. (besides, most of those people occupying "useless" jobs
are not a fault of their own, but one of management as the position was
created when it was truly needed; now it is functionless and will be
gone soon enough)
I am not here to save anyones job but my own, except for those who
request help from peer/superior persecution at which I will do my best
to prove that person right, the persecurer(SP) wrong. I will not die
for Digital, nor will I cease to exist if Digital boots me out the
door. There is so much more to life than Digital, this is just what I
do 8 hrs a day.
Anyway, they've taken enough and they'll not get my free-willing
support to help them out financially anymore, I have a family to
provide for. However, if they so deem it mandatory to institute a
cross the board pay cut, there's nothing I can do about it except 2
things: accept it, or leave.
Reg.
(If you really think your job is secure, thing about the business you're
in and how easily it can be outsourced/farmed out and stop spending so
much time equating you performance with those of others around you;
when your function is not required, expect to leave on the next train
bound for the future.)
|
2532.24 | "Your job has been redefined..." | SOFBAS::SHERMAN | empowerment requires truth | Fri Jun 11 1993 10:44 | 23 |
| 'All the myriad ways ...'
One of the latest, and, in my opinion, most pernicious, ways of cutting
costs is the 'your job has been rewritten' scam.
You are told that your job has been 'redefined,' 'rewritten,'
'releveled,' etc. This then gives DEC the freedom to:
1. Make you take a 'new' job at whatever level and at whatever pay they
want to offer (if any), or
2. Force you out of the company without TFSO or any other benefit.
Since you haven't been layed-off and since your job hasn't been -- in
the finest sense of legal weaselese -- eliminated, you are history but
have no recourse.
DEC doesn't pay $ 60M a year for corporate legal staff for nothing.
This method of "reducing pay" to save money is gathering steam for an
apparent June/July "personnel reduction event."
|
2532.25 | I give at the office | CSOA1::GOBEY | | Fri Jun 11 1993 10:45 | 31 |
| Cutting back on salary will accomplish nothing if we, as a company,
don't know what we want to accomplish. Let me attempt to clarify this
statement. The track records of other Fortune 50 companies that have
"rightsized" in the past ten years has revealed something very
interesting. Companies have focused on the easist part of reducing
costs quickly....dumping people. However, this has been done prior to
the company executives deciding and communicating where it's going, why
it's going there and how it will get there.
As a result of not addressing these issues, the companies involved never
sought to understand what jobs and tasks were unnecessary, what were
needed, what would be needed for the future and where the people are
in the organization who can help get the firm where it needs to go.
Consequently, each company still performed the same tasks as it did
prior to the staff reductions. This meant that fewer people had
to perform the both the same ol' value-less tasks and could devote
less time to the tasks that the company eventually felt were important.
To make a long story short, getting rid of people (and talent) prior
to deciding what jobs and tasks need to be performed is technically
known as bass-ackwards. Until there is a fundamental change in the
still entrenched corporate-wide management that has held sway over
a Digital stock plunge from nearly $200 per share to the high $30's,
contributing 100% of my salary will make no difference, whatsoever.
At this point, the management at all levels, is indebted to all of the
associates for what has been foisted upon us. Once we have leaders who
can lead, managers who can manage and directors who can direct, we can
begin to discuss repaymemt of this indebtedness. Until then, I refuse
to reach for my wallet.
|
2532.26 | | AIMHI::BOWLES | | Fri Jun 11 1993 11:03 | 26 |
| As I read this string of notes, I'm reminded of the time (in a former
life) when I worked for Southwestern Bell--then part of AT&T. They
made a big deal of the fact that no person had ever been laid off by
the company.
The company is now well over 100 years old, so the no-layoff policy
even extended thru the Depression. During the Depression, employees
took a pay cut, but worked the same number of hours. The result was
that all jobs were saved. Everybody sacrificed to save the company
and, therefore, themselves. It made sense. And it worked.
Today's situation is very different.
First, people have already been laid off using, in many cases,
extremely spurious selection criteria. Do I really want to save the
jobs of some of the remaining people? After all, they have engaged in
some very questionable management decisions.
Second, the Depression was affecting everyone. There was less of the
"have" and the "have not" situation we face today.
All things considered, I do not support the idea of group sacrifice to
save the group. At least not this group!
Chet
|
2532.27 | NO! | STAR::DIPIRRO | | Fri Jun 11 1993 12:44 | 4 |
| Just needed to add my NO
And keep your hands off my dough
Cause if you cut my lousy pay
I'll be outta here the next day.
|
2532.28 | 'Nuther "NO" | 16BITS::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dog face) | Fri Jun 11 1993 14:17 | 21 |
| re:.0, Sevic
> WOULD YOU GIVE UP A PERCENTAGE OF YOUR SALARY TO
> RETIRE THE TSFO PROCESS FOR A PERIOD OF 24 MONTHS.
Absolutely, positively, unequivocally, not. What possible good would buying
another 24 month delay be? Now, if you wanted to change it to -
WOULD YOU GIVE UP A PERCENTAGE OF YOUR SALARY TO
RETIRE THE TSFO PROCESS permanently and institute
a guaranteed-job-for-life-policy?
- I still wouldn't take the bait.
It's all been said. Sacrificing part of my remuneration isn't my responsibility
in terms of helping out the company or my fellow employee. Neither should DEC
be in the business of providing a welfare state.
-Jack
|
2532.29 | | SOLVIT::GRTVAX::THERRIEN | | Fri Jun 11 1993 14:27 | 16 |
| Several responses to this note have made reference to "unproductive", "useless",
etc. people.
If ALL such people were identified and released today, Digital's problem would
still not be solved.
IMHO, Digital's problem is longstanding and very ingrained. It was lack of
qualified business leadership. Not technical visionary leadership (God knows
we had that market cornered at one time), but solid and capable BUSINESS leaders
who know how to develop, manage and maintain a healthy corporation.
In closing, I believe that RP is capable of turning this company around and that
he is getting lieutenants who can make it happen.
P.S. No, I don't want to take a cut in pay to save someone's job nor do I want
other to take a cut in pay to save mine.
|
2532.30 | Let's not have the wrong people leave | CSC32::K_HYDE | Say NO to The New World Order | Fri Jun 11 1993 14:35 | 11 |
| Re: .27
If Finance runs the company, this can be depicted as short-term goodness
-- Minus 1 off the headcount and no TFSO expense.
If the company ever hopes to recover and become competitive, which
means productive people, this would be badness. These types of
financial games, which emanate from spreadsheet people, typically
result in the wrong peoples' leaving.
Kurt
|
2532.31 | | THEBAY::CHABANED | Choose Your Dilusion | Fri Jun 11 1993 14:53 | 7 |
|
The best morale booster would be if we *REALLY WERE* doing the
downsizing to improve the "Supply Chain". As I see it, whether or not
you get downsized depends on where you are in the "Food Chain".
-Ed
|
2532.32 | Another no. | GAAS::BRAUCHER | | Fri Jun 11 1993 17:49 | 8 |
|
Nope. Lowering headcount at DEC is necessary, even if it's
you or me. It's healthy. As to improving morale, nothing
but quarters in the black are going to work. Let the normal
process continue. What survives (if anything) is what deserves
to. TFSO is NOT the end of the world - just a chance to change
your life around, maybe for the better, maybe not.
|
2532.33 | | PASTA::SEILER | Larry Seiler | Fri Jun 11 1993 18:31 | 12 |
| As to improving morale, nothing
but quarters in the black are going to work.
Do you think that a few quarters in the black will suffice to raise morale?
What survives (if anything) is what deserves to.
Do you think that the right set of people are being TFSO'd in order to
help Digital the most in the long run, or even the short run?
Just curious,
Larry
|
2532.34 | It's the POLITICS stupid - not the economy! | GLDOA::MORRISON | Dave | Sat Jun 12 1993 01:39 | 25 |
| RE: -.23 Not even FUNCTION will protect you from the REAL motivator of
cuts which is blind panic driven from the top to meet some mystical
number, cutting valuable technical resources while the good ole boy
political system saves the well connected management club - yet again!
I personally know - not just of - but know many well qualified
technical software support reps who have been told they are not funded
and good luck finding a job, oh by the way, hope you can afford to
relocate too! Even in networking tecnical expertise areas where we are
supposed to "lead the world" with the best people, several just in my
immediate district have just gotten the shaft! Given how our network
capabilities are played to the press, this is equivalent to firing a
bunch of AXP ALPHA engineers - totally brain dead! These folks are
level 2 performers consistently, exceed budget - you name it. But what
do you expect when given a number of folks to cut & you want to save
your political buddies' butts & a few productive folks - you only have
good workers to cut from. It's a sham. So, it's not function, it's
still politics although un-needed function may fall prey as well. The
thing to look for is who survives & NOT to assume only unnecessary
baggage gets dumped - that is a lie. It is similar to something that
happens in fly fishing. One can see lots of a kind of flies and assume
the trout are biting on them, tie one on, and get no hits. The apparent
target (of the fish) is only masking the true selection. The real
target can often be surprising! Look closely & you'll see the pressure
to cut skipping over many managers yet hitting those even in functional
areas declared almost sacred to the company! Why?
|
2532.35 | Not ! | KAOS::TURRO | Make it so number 1 | Sun Jun 13 1993 23:27 | 9 |
| I read the 1st 2 replies the answer is"NO" .Ive taken pay cuts in
Medical care/company car etc,etc,etc... and for what. Theres still alot
a dead wood out there.
If anyone answers yes your saps IMHO.
mike turro
|
2532.36 | Je dirais meme plus... | COUNT0::WELSH | Where have all the techies gone? | Mon Jun 14 1993 05:57 | 12 |
| re .22:
> At that rate, some jobs could be cut 100% in work
> (eliminated) for only a 50% reduction in salary.
That's nothing. I could name people who have had their work cut
100% and had a big increase in salary. This happens all the time
when someone too incompetent or lazy to do a good job in their
current position gets promoted to a level where they don't have
to do anything except go to meetings.
/Tom
|
2532.37 | Not dead yet! I feel like dancing! | NEST::WHITE | | Mon Jun 14 1993 08:19 | 19 |
|
Deadwood - what a rotten word. It tends to devalue the person rather
than the position. Just because Digital is unable to make use of the
good people we have, doesn't make those people "useless." There are
plenty of people with good skills and ideas to offer who may be at
risk, who have nevertheless made significant contributions to this
company. They deserve thanks, not derision.
I bet lots of that "deadwood" is going to do wonderful things for other
companies. That "deadwood" may end up being your next employer!
--Catherine--*
P.S. I would be the first to admit that some folks job responsibilities
seem pretty unnecessary at the moment. But some of these terms that
get bandied about seem to get attached to the people rather than
the job functions.
|
2532.38 | ah, "deadwood" ... not a PC term ... | ECADSR::SHERMAN | Steve ECADSR::Sherman DTN 223-3326 MLO5-2/26a | Mon Jun 14 1993 11:14 | 22 |
| Other companies insensitively use the term "deadwood" with the
understanding that during times of layoff you let go of "bad" workers.
When they eliminate jobs, they force new training on their good workers
for other jobs. Note that other companies judge individuals as "good"
or "bad" ("deadwood") when it comes to layoffs. This is a bit
insensitive because it takes away the choice people have in their training
and doesn't show respect for their diverse skill sets.
At Digital, we value all kinds of diversity, including the competence
challenged. So, our separations are done by restructuring organizations,
rewriting charters and redefining jobs to match new visions. We do this
while still recognizing the individual as the company's most valueable
asset. Sometimes management needs to make the tough decisions when it
comes to liquidating valued company assets and eliminating jobs that no
longer match changing group charters. Those who unfortunately hold jobs
that no longer fit group charters cannot be forced into other jobs that
don't fit their skill sets. So, they become eligible to volunteer for
separation.
:^(
Steve
|
2532.39 | No way for me! Unless Im at risk.. ;-) | 25861::OUELLETTE | | Mon Jun 14 1993 11:42 | 4 |
|
If you ask me, (I know you did'nt!) anyone who answers yes,
is probably on the hit list......
|
2532.40 | | CARTUN::MISTOVICH | depraved soul | Mon Jun 14 1993 11:51 | 3 |
| Not necessarily. If I was on the hit list (and I may well be, since the
"communications" function is being "re-engineered" in half or so), I
would still say no. TFSO me and get it over with.
|
2532.41 | What's deadwood got to do with it??? | NEMAIL::WASIUK | | Mon Jun 14 1993 12:28 | 26 |
|
Reduce the inequity outlined below and you may not have to give up part
of your salary to save fellow employees.
The issue is who gets to stay on and who doesn't, i.e. Management at
higher salaries or Individual Contributors, generally at lower
salaries.
I'm sure some managers leave the company, but not at the same
percentage as Individual Contributors. This is what I see, a high
number of Ex-Managers find new positions than IC. These are positions
not open or available earlier within Digital. Interesting, isn't it?
FYI: From what I've been told, the reason managers stay is because
`they made the company what it is today'....enough said.
This one-way approach troubles me, I.E. a manager and their direct
reports have their positions eliminated. The reason for this was to
reduce headcount, redundancy and expenses. The reality is the job
functions went away, but only the middle managers stayed with the
higher salaries. Personally I wouldn't wish anyone lose their job. I
have a family too. The problem is the negative financial impact it has
to Digital's employee base with the replication of this DEC-think over
and over.
My observations - Ed
|
2532.42 | | SOFBAS::SHERMAN | empowerment requires truth | Mon Jun 14 1993 15:14 | 4 |
| "Competence challenged"! That's great, Steve! Thanks.
|
2532.43 | DEADWOOD? - I think not.... | GLDOA::MORRISON | Dave | Tue Jun 15 1993 01:05 | 10 |
| I vote no & I got my 2 weeks notice today to go find a job & pay
relocation for the privlige to bet my butt & those of my family on the
potential success of the new venture. I have a fair amount of network
expertise but apparently those "family jewels" of DEC's network
capability are overstocked in some areas & logic certainly does not
apply in the selection for layoff of many of those I know who were
notified today. I am not DEADWOOD & you overestimate DEC & those that
run this process if you think so, much less many of your fellow
employees. I may find a job inside & take or may not, but the issue of
this flawed process will not change. Good luck to all who remain.
|
2532.44 | Yes | SALEM::GILMAN | | Tue Jun 15 1993 13:00 | 15 |
| I was 'invited' to find another job in DEC two years ago. I did. I
went from Development Engineer to Warehouser with approximately a 30 %
pay cut. I adjusted... emotionally and financially, at least I kept
a job.
I suggested BEFORE being 'invited' to find another job that there be an
across the board 5 % pay cut for all DEC employees to eliminate the
need to have layoffs at all. At the time it made sense... that a 5 %
pay cut for all would do the job, now I know it wouldn't have been
nearly enough.
I would be willing to give up ANOTHER 5 % on top of the 30 % cut I have
already had to stop the layoffs. So the answer is yes.
Jeff
|
2532.45 | Ya Right! | WMOIS::GOSSELIN_E | | Tue Jun 15 1993 17:18 | 10 |
| Raises, if you do get one are low and so far apart it's like not getting
one at all. I wonder if management gets them in the same timeframe
as individual contributors? I can't take a pay cut. I am lucky I have
something in the back to draw on every week the way things are now.
After awhile I'll be stuck. Nothing to take out to make up the balance
and pay my bills.
Ed
|
2532.46 | NO! NO! NO! NO! | AMCUCS::YOUNG | I'd like to be...under the sea... | Wed Jun 16 1993 14:05 | 11 |
| I'll vote no to the pay cut issue.
Money isn't the problem here, management of resources IS the problem.
To suggest a pay cut in this climate is tantamount to raising taxes
instead of cutting spending. It misses the point entirely.
Digital is re-organizing and the new model simply doesn't require
as many people as the old model did. But those people that are
required will be paid what they are worth, or they won't stay around.
cw
|
2532.47 | It doesn't matter now. | SUBWAY::LABOMBARD | Nous Sommes Du Soleil | Wed Jun 16 1993 14:15 | 8 |
|
In regard to the events of the past couple of days, isn't this
question now moot?
Just an observation.
Don
|
2532.48 | | ZEKE::QUAYLE | | Fri Jun 18 1993 15:18 | 3 |
| re .40> TFSO me and get it over with.
hear, hear.
|
2532.49 | breaking my silence. | CSC32::J_OPPELT | happiness is a having a bad memory | Thu Jun 24 1993 15:56 | 24 |
| No.
Digital is not in the business of hiring people. It is not in
the business of "saving jobs".
If digitat identifies unnecessary positions (though that is a
debatable point for all the folks TFSOd) then those positions
should be eliminated.
"Well, if we just eliminate the holiday turkeys and Canobie
Lake and <fill in any benefits you don't use> then we can 'save'
x-many jobs."
Bull. TFSO useless or duplicate jobs and pay those who remain
what they are truly worth. Instead of having 100,000 employees
with watered-down pay and benefits (and thereby watered-down
levels of satisfaction and loyalty) lets have 80,000 employees
with full pay and good benefits -- maybe even higher-than-avarage
compensation -- and high levels of job satisfaction and loyalty.
Let's increase compensation through stock ownership, options,
resurrect ESOP, match 401K with stock. Make us all accountable
to ourselves! And use payroll savings gleaned through TFSO to
do it.
|
2532.50 | | ARCANA::CONNELLY | is pleasure necessary? | Thu Jun 24 1993 16:31 | 12 |
|
re: .49
> Instead of having 100,000 employees
> with watered-down pay and benefits (and thereby watered-down
> levels of satisfaction and loyalty) lets have 80,000 employees
> with full pay and good benefits -- maybe even higher-than-avarage
> compensation -- and high levels of job satisfaction and loyalty.
OK. But what about 70000 employees with watered-down pay and benefits?
That seems more likely to be where we're heading... ;^)
-paul
|
2532.51 | Put that in your spreadsheet | CSC32::K_HYDE | Say NO to The New World Order | Thu Jun 24 1993 16:31 | 5 |
| I agree 100% with you, Joe. Could you find some way to express that in
spreadsheet terminology so the decision makers could see it on their
spreadsheets?
Kurt
|
2532.52 | | CSC32::J_OPPELT | happiness is a having a bad memory | Thu Jun 24 1993 17:13 | 1 |
| You can't factor common sense into a spreadsheet.
|
2532.53 | Profits? | COUNT0::WELSH | Where have all the techies gone? | Fri Jun 25 1993 05:40 | 37 |
| The spreadsheet idea is good in principle.
If only it were as simple as
"Either
$N divided among 100,000 employees
Or
$N divided among 70,000 employees"
on the basis of which it looks good for the second option:
each employee gets an extra 43% salary and benefits.
Unfortunately, in removing the "surplus" 30,000 employees,
the company is not in the position of a surgeon diagnosing
and removing an appendix (an apparently functionless organ).
Instead, it is a lot more like bombarding a human body with
ionizing radiation, which sleets through the body and damages
or destroys cells at random. Many of these cells may be
replaceable. Some might even be obnoxious fat cells.
But I think we are all familiar with the health effects of even
small quantities of ionizing radiation.
Under the circumstances, I feel the company should be asking
itself "Do you feel lucky?"
The $N to be divided among the 70,000 / 50,000 / 30,000 survivors
will come from a profitable business based on selling WHAT? I
know one profitable business my part of the company has implicitly
rejected - based on redundancy choices. It is my business, CASE
tools. Who knows what effect that rejection will have on the
bottom line? Stick around and see.
/Tom
|
2532.54 | | DUGROS::ROSS | Objection oriented | Thu Jul 01 1993 10:58 | 4 |
| Read in PC Week last week that in order to control costs for next fiscal
year, Microsoft has set a budget of $20 per employee per month for
events/t-shirts/etc. for morale building purposes.
|
2532.55 | lucky to have a job? | DECLNE::TOWLE | | Thu Jul 01 1993 12:24 | 7 |
|
Our morale booster is
"Your just lucky to have a job!!"
I knew that.
|
2532.56 | I miss getting trinkets... | KISMIF::WITHERS | | Fri Jul 02 1993 13:49 | 22 |
| Re: .54 (Microsoft Benefits for Morale)
I used to work for a small company that made boards (data acquisition,
image processing, et al.) for IBM-PC's, VAXen, et al.
We had 1) A paid company picnic that included things such as going to
Riverside Park BUT also had things like an open bar (mind you not to
get sloshed out of your gord (sp) but it was still nice to know even if
I wanted a beer EVERYTHING that day would be free), 2) a christmas
dinner where you choose your entree (at DEC each year I get mail saying
come to the Christmas feast, $25/person...), we had various toys given
out now and then including a calculator (like what you get here for
your 10-20 anniversary (8-()), T-shirts, hats once. Finally,
Thanksgiving included a $50 gift certificate to a local supermarket,
and Christmas was preceded by a bonus (in my youth as a part-time I
still got three-figures and ~$2000 was the norm).
I'm not saying DEC can or should afford to do these things, but they
were great morale boosters.
George
|
2532.57 | Value | SALEM::GILMAN | | Thu Jul 08 1993 16:18 | 20 |
| The gimmicks/gifts you were given were nice but I don't think they are
key to DEC morale. DEC employees need the feeling that the company is
going places (GOOD places) and that we are valued employees, (rather than
baggage to be TFSO'd at the next possible opportunity). Those two
things would make a major difference.
I expect to give DEC a days work for a days pay... but I am damm tired
of the feeling that the managers spend most of their time trying to
figure out how to get rid of us.
If DEC doesn't stop this downward spiral pretty damm soon I wonder if
DEC can pull out of this dive.
For the most part I am surrounded by DEC peers who do a good days job.
I wonder why all this effort 'isn't helping'.
The trinkets are nice... but we need goals and the feeling we are
valued more.
Jeff
|