T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
3120.1 | y | ROMEOS::BOUCHER_RO | | Fri May 27 1994 12:34 | 8 |
|
I see this in most electronic companys yes.
But maybe some what diferant else where.I am
going to win the lotery anyway.
Smurf.
|
3120.2 | "The Perilous New World of Fair Play" | VMSNET::M_NEVINS | | Fri May 27 1994 17:59 | 11 |
| I thought that the formula Allied Signal has taken might be something
we could look at.
See "The Perilous New World of Fair Play" in Fortune 13 June, page 57-64.
It states that "many employers want to make pay more variable, rising and
falling with the company's fortunes."
|
3120.3 | Easy for them to say, but not bright... | MUNCH::FRANCINI | I'd like to teach the world to ping... | Sat May 28 1994 02:19 | 40 |
| >It states that "many employers want to make pay more variable, rising and
>falling with the company's fortunes."
I'm sure they do. It'd make things much more flexible for them.
However, it wreaks havoc on the employee and the employee's family.
Stability goes out the window.
Say you're in a large company and you are doing a _terrific_ job
(consistently a 1 performer, for years on end). But the economy goes in
the tank. Or senior management screws up and the company runs into the
economic shoals. They then decide to cut everyone's salary so there's
more money to help keep the company afloat. Nice disincentive to
continuing to work at the same high level. Sooner or later you're
going to either slack off somewhat or leave the company for another,
more intelligent one. After all, what's the point if doing 1-level work
is rewarded with a pay _drop_?
Also, constantly fluctuating income will make it harder to do minor
little things like applying for credit. Creditors want to see
constant, predictable income with no large gyrations. Ask someone
who's both self-employed and had income swings just how much extra
bother s/he had to go through to apply for a car loan or a mortgage.
There are some industries and jobs where such fluctuations come with
the territory. Construction work is one example -- there are fewer jobs
to go around in the northern US during the winter than in the summer.
This might be called "structural" fluctuation. It's expected every
year. You can compensate for it by saving money during the fat months
to have more during the lean.
But if you're _not_ in a cyclical industry, the fluctuations are very
hard to predict -- and therefore to prepare for. You don't see the
downturns coming. You don't know how long the bad times will last. You
likely have little to no influence on the company's fate outside your
job responsibilities. Sounds like a recipe for disaster to me...
John
|
3120.4 | life's not fair, but if it were... | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (DTN 223-8576, MSO2-2/A2, IM&T) | Sat May 28 1994 19:09 | 7 |
| >It states that "many employers want to make pay more variable, rising and
>falling with the company's fortunes."
I might be willing to accept this new deal if it applied to
the relationship between me and my creditors as well!
Bob
|
3120.5 | | PERLE::glantz | Mike, Paris Research Lab, 776-2836 | Mon May 30 1994 05:23 | 19 |
| "There will never be job
security. You will be employed by us as long as you add value to
the organization, and *you* are continuously responsible for finding
ways to add value. In return, you have the right to demand interesting
and important work, the freedom and resources to perform it well, pay
that reflects your contribution, and the EXPERIENCE AND TRAINING TO
BE EMPLOYABLE HERE AND ELSEWHERE."
It does appear that this is more or less the "deal" DEC is now offering
its employees (minus the resources and training, I suppose). Take your
cue from the man at the top. As, in a previous era, CEO Ken Olsen set
an example of behavior for employees to follow, so does current CEO
Robert Palmer: in his answer to why he accepted a $150,000 raise, he
said "that's what people doing this job get at other companies".
Loyalty can be there, but is not a material part of the contract. DEC
is not interested in paying for your loyalty, only your performance. If
you can deliver without being loyal, DEC has no problem with that (and
might prefer it).
|
3120.6 | The equivalent of job security is corporate security | TNPUBS::JONG | Steve | Mon May 30 1994 10:53 | 13 |
| If there were a roughly stable number of people working in the computer
industry, this would not be a problem. Companies would have to be
formed using a fraction of the labor pool, and one company's growth
could come only from another's decline. If Digital got into trouble,
its employees would naturally bail out and stream to Sun or HP or
whoever was on the rise. If Digital went out of business altogether,
fine: if a job isn't a right, neither is continued existence of a
corporation. If, on the other hand, Digital was renewed, labor would
tend to flow back from Sun or HP or whoever was in decline.
I say that if we have no right to job security, corporations should
have no right to expect continued existence. What do you think of
that?
|
3120.7 | | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (DTN 223-8576, MSO2-2/A2, IM&T) | Mon May 30 1994 11:43 | 12 |
| re Note 3120.6 by TNPUBS::JONG:
> I say that if we have no right to job security, corporations should
> have no right to expect continued existence. What do you think of
> that?
But they're bigger than us!
(Which is one of the observations that led to the formation
of unions, and I surely don't want to get into that rathole!)
Bob
|
3120.8 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Mon May 30 1994 11:47 | 11 |
| The inverse of job security is project security. I know someone who
is a contract project manager with DEC. They have no guarantee that
their contract will be renewed at the end of this June, so obviously
they are looking around for another job. The project is an 18 month
project, and other people on the project are also contractors.
One of DEC's advantages of using contractors is that they can
get rid of a contractor at a week's notice with no cost. One of the
contractor's advantages is that they can walk out of a project at
a week's notice with no cost. Would you want to be a project manager
in an environment like that?
|
3120.9 | Only the bosses should have variable pay! | SUBURB::POWELLM | Nostalgia isn't what it used to be! | Tue May 31 1994 05:45 | 14 |
|
I think that if any company wanted to "go into variable pay"
territory, then that should start at the very top!
Nothing can destroy morale quicker, in any company, than "the
bosses" taking pay rises when they impose pay freezes or reductions
upon the rest of the workforce - upon whose efforts they depend,
directly or indirectly for their renumeration.
What happened to morale in DIGITAL when RPs 20% pay rise was
announced? At that stage, I was into my 3rd year of 0% pay rise "due
to the state of the company!" I am now in my 4th year of 0%!!!!
Malcolm.
|
3120.10 | maturity | DNEAST::DALELIO_HENR | | Tue May 31 1994 08:30 | 12 |
|
When I was a child, I spoke as a child, I understood as a child, I thought
as a child , but when I became a man, I put away childish things.
Paul, I Corinthians 10:11.
Digital has grown up into manhood.
It had to happen.
Hank
|
3120.11 | Security is mostly a superstition | CAMONE::ARENDT | Harry Arendt CAM:: | Tue May 31 1994 09:42 | 24 |
|
This is a quote from Helen Keller.
"Security is mostly a Superstition.
It does not live in nature nor do the children of men experience
it as a whole.
Avoiding danger is, in the long run, no safer than
outright exposer.
Life is either a grand adventure or nothing."
Companies in the past have provided us with what appeared to
be security. In the past they were highly centralized so that
we could move from on part to another to remain employed.
However we can now see that this security was a myth or a
superstition. We created this myth of security to allow us
to feel secure about the future.
Harry
|
3120.12 | The Age of Personal Responsiblity | USCTR1::ESULLIVAN | | Tue May 31 1994 10:51 | 11 |
|
I think that the new deal is 'personal responsiblity'. This is a new
deal term that is being used more and more, and not just for those that
are employed, but also for those who are unemployed. Corporations and
government have to operate leaner and meaner. This means no one's job
is secure; you must have a personal plan, i.e. educuation/training; you
must be flexible; and entitlements are basically dead.
ems
|
3120.13 | Linus without the blanket | CHEFS::BRANDP | | Tue May 31 1994 11:04 | 42 |
| re .8
As another senior contract person I can speak with authority on the
need for security. I basically do the following things each year, see
how different or not they are to permanent staff feelings:
- every 3 months I have to request a Purchase Order and worry
- every re-shuffle I have to make sure my new boss understands my
capabilities and commitment to the company
- every month I worry that my contract will be closed early
- every time my swipe card fails to read, I wonder if its time
- every time there is an expense clampdown, I have to re-justify that
I am revenue generating
- every time a permanent person goes I feel guilty that it should have
been me.
- I shelve plans for holidays, redecorating etc. until I have my next
3 month PO, and then still feel insecure, so I shelve them again.
Of course it is not all bad. Some of the good things that are
applicable to the NEW DEAL style of working are that:
- I do not worry about career, it just happens
- I have a minimum of admin at work, making me more time efffective
- I do not carry baggage from my last project around, making me more
focused on my new project
- I have no real title/job code/job level so I can talk to people at
all levels with impunity
- I constantly have to sell myself, and therefore know how to sell
Digital better
- As a minority group member, I have to work harder to prove myself
- I have no redundancy payment to cloud my judgement when I need to
move out
All in all the stress is more manageable because it is under my
control.
Hope it helps.
Peter
|
3120.14 | conundrum in the making -- what to do? | BOOKS::HAMILTON | Change sucks. | Tue May 31 1994 11:14 | 35 |
|
I will go back to something I said several months ago in here.
It appears to me that large American corporations are basically
saying to workers that "you must consider yourself a business"
(with all that implies). *You* must look out for yourself; *you*
must figure out: a) what skills will be needed in the future,
and b) how to best go about acquiring and retaining those
skills (your edge).
Now, that's all fine and good. The problem is that when you
give that message to employees (in the form of implicit or
explicit messages), you need to understand the ramifications.
And this is basically what I said before: if I am a business,
and I invest in myself in order to effectively compete in
a tough job market against similarly motivated people, then
I *must* look at my co-workers as competitors. Then,
my incentive to function in a team environment is tempered
by my need to keep a skills edge on the competition -- just
like Digital needs to keep that edge on *its* competition.
So, we (as a corporation) are faced with a nasty little
conundrum. Digital needs people to function effectively
in teams. The teams need to be staffed with hungry, lean,
tough individuals; within those teams, therefore, rugged
competition must exist. If a team is staffed with five
software engineers (say), and they all realize that shortly
there will only be four survivors (20% cut), what happens
to the team dynamics? What is the motivation for one to
subordinate one's need to survive to the overall needs of
the team?
Multiply this all across the economy, and what happens?
Glenn
|
3120.15 | what to do | LEDS::OLSEN | | Tue May 31 1994 13:50 | 16 |
| One of the consequences of "no security" has always been "higher
wages".
Once I hired an architect, and when construction encountered an
obstacle that could be traced to the drawings, the architect said "bill
me". How could this be? Probing, I discovered that the architect knew
that x% of the document would be in error, as we all make errors; so he
built a cushion into his fee. Doctors pass on costs of liability
insurance. Construction gets all the market will bear. Etc, etc.
So, one consequence of working under a security contract has been
"below-opportunist" wages. This describes past standards in the field,
as well as at home. Human Resource has known this for ever and ever.
So, prevailing wages with a "no-security" contract are a pay-cut.
Remember that, next time you negotiate wages.
|
3120.16 | The final evolutionary stage of Horses and Jockeys | PEAKS::LILAK | Who IS John Galt ? | Tue May 31 1994 14:18 | 36 |
|
As one who has always practiced individual responsibility, even when it
meant those who didn't were getting a free ride on the backs of those
who did - I know takling personal responsibility is the right thing to
do.
But I don't see DEC, er, Digital, turning into a company of contractor
& guns for hire.
We are hearing a lot about 'taking responsibility' but it seems to come
from management (who does not practice this) directed at the worker
bees. Management seems exempt from the implications of this policy.
This 'do as I say not as I do' is becoming typical.
If we follow the trend of having only 'key' personel on full time, and
technical people ' resources' on part time or contract I see the
company evolving into sort of a feudal caste system.
You'll have your Palace Courtiers (management) who will be full-time
employees. They will have little reason to worry about security. as
long as they lick the right boots, and political manouevering will take
the place of innovation as a criteria for advancement. Barring any
major changes in the Palace administration, they will be safe.
Like the Ronin or 'free samurai' of Japanesee history, the hired
techincal guns will be free to come and go, and will be asked
occaisionally to shed their blood in order to protect the Palace
Courtiers. But in the in-between times they will be well paid.
The question they will have to ask themselves is...
With all these other companies out there... why work for DEC, er
Digital...?
-Publius
|
3120.17 | uugg | AIMHI::FLATHERS | | Tue May 31 1994 15:26 | 16 |
|
I agree with .3
It will wreak havoc on the employee......in many ways.
More stress, more back-stabbing, longer hours.
Yup, some day, ( not just Digital ) we will all be working 12 hour
days, no breaks, lousy conditions....like back around the turn of the
century. We'll all regret bashing the unions, and embracing the
idea of a global economy. With tremendous competition from abroad,
all of the employee benefit gains will, over time, wash away.
Sorry, I'm "in a mood" today.
|
3120.18 | The brutal truth is that capitalism has no conscience | NOVA::SWONGER | DBS Software Quality Engineering | Wed Jun 01 1994 09:36 | 36 |
| If anybody hasn't noticed, we are moving more and more towards
capitalism as our driving social philosophy. This applies to the
workplace (as in this note string), politics (trade decisions, at a
minimum, but also decisions on when to use military force), and just
about every aspect of life in the "world economy."
Companies are no longer to sacrifice "competitiveness" in order to
take care of their employees, and governments are either unwilling
or unable to take up the slack -- in part because the dollars to pay
for that slack are not there.
I realized a couple of years ago, and others have stated in print,
that we face a new job market. All companies will be CONSTANTLY
trying to become more efficient, do more with less, and raise
productivity. This means keeping only those with optimal skills,
always trying to reduce headcount and associated costs, and
automating everything that can be automated.
The bottom line is that capitalism and the free market have no
conscience, just as nature has no conscience. The "new deal" might
as well be termed "survival of the fittest." Under these conditions
YOU, the individual, must take responsibility for staying current
and saleable in the marketplace. YOU must push for training, stay on
top of technology, and stay aware of what's happening and what's
valuable in the job market. And if you feel undervalued, YOU must
take the responsibility of either making sure that your current
employer places the right value on your services, or take your
services elsewhere where you will be fairly compensated.
That's reality, folks. Companies don't want to hire (or keep)
engineers who have been hacking Bliss for 20 years any more than
they want to buy PDP-8's. Digital has seemingly finally realized the
realities of the market. It's time that Digital's employees did the
same.
Roy
|
3120.19 | I heart capitalism | WONDER::REILLY | Sean Reilly CSG/AVS DTN:293-5983 | Wed Jun 01 1994 10:16 | 32 |
|
> The bottom line is that capitalism and the free market have no
> conscience, just as nature has no conscience.
I've never understood why "capitalism" gets saddled with these negative
descriptions (probably you didn't mean it that way, Roy).
People equate "survival of the fittest" with things like dog eating dog
pounding your competition into oblivion by any means necessary, and looking
out for Numero Uno.
I firmly believe in capitalism and I'd like to defend it. First off,
it does come closest to ensuring that nobody gets more than they deserve
(defined by what they're willing to work for).
But my real point complaint is that a lot of people automatically assume
things like: it is not capitalistic to help others; it is not
capitalistic for two entities to exist for each other's mutual benefit;
it is not capitalistic to charge "fair" prices, etc.
All those things are capitalistic because they may in fact be something
you do for the *very* selfish reason of "adding to your wealth." It
is decidedly *uncapitalistic* to do things that alienate your
work-force. It also seems capitalistic for employees to "love" their
company and want it to do well. Capitalism doesn't have to exclude
pride, loyalty, and cooperation between entities.
"Doing the right thing" and "being a nice guy or company" can very well
fit into the capitalist ideal as things we all do to ensure our selfish
personal gain.
- Sean
|
3120.20 | Who is John Galt, indeed! | PARVAX::SCHUSTAK | Join the AlphaGeneration! | Wed Jun 01 1994 10:27 | 17 |
| I guess it was another string in this conference that started
discussing Ayn Rand and Atlas Shrugged. Happens to be very appropriate
here, too. In a capitalistic environment, both economically and
socially, an individual should act in his or her own self-interest. As
said previously, this doesn't preclude helping others, having morals,
etc, it simply means thaqt within the rules/laws of society, we act in
such a way as to best meet our own needs. It does ensure optimal
contribution to society, best allocation of resources, etc.
FOR THE MOST PART, if people are working for the benefit of OTHERS,
they tend NOT to work (play, contribute, whatever) as hard as they
would for themselves. Yes, this can be "difficult", and doesn't make
for all getting equal "returns", but does deliver equity in
opportunity, i.e. you get out what you put in.
MY personal name USED to be "Who is John Galt", but then I joined the
"AlphaGeneration"!
|
3120.21 | Corporations are not immortal | OUTPOS::MURPHY | Dan Murphy, now at LKG. | Wed Jun 01 1994 12:56 | 56 |
| Re. .6:
> I say that if we have no right to job security, corporations should
> have no right to expect continued existence. What do you think of
> that?
Corporations DO have no right to continued existence. That's a plain,
indisputable fact, and there are plenty of corporations that were in
the computer business and now do not exist to demonstrate the point.
Corporations exist only so long as they can generate enough revenue to
pay their expenses.
Of course, there are exceptions and aberrations created by politics and
other factors, but in a true capitalist economy, corporations have no
entitlement.
Consequently, individuals working in a corporation also have no
ultimate guarantee of security. At most, it is limited by the
continued existence of the corporation. At times in U.S. society, big
corporations have enjoyed considerable stability and, therefore,
security, and that security has accrued to the employees. This has
both good and bad results. The bad results include the growth of
unproductive bureaucracies and a loss of individual incentives to
effective work.
For a variety of reasons, corporations in the U.S. now face greater
competition, and that leaves less room for inertia and other forms of
stability. This inevitably affects the stability of jobs and the
security of employees. This is not the only way it could possibly be
however. In Japan, despite recent economic difficulties, corporations
can still count on government help to keep things running smoothly, and
employees can still count on lifetime employment. These are not
independent variables however. Those benefits(?) exist only within a
social context far more regulated and regimented than our own.
People working for DEC have, up until recently, have been able to
expect a very high level of stability and security -- I would say a
level that is better than 99.6% of ALL other human beings now living or
who have ever lived. All the traditional ways of life -- farming,
herding, shopkeeping, whatever -- were subject to whims of nature and
man that made "security" a foreign (or at least very relative) concept.
What is difficult for us now is the change -- a loss of this
expectation and sense of security, and a feeling of betrayal. Somehow,
somebody broke the AGREEMENT we thought we had.
Well, the world has changed, but IN ADDITION, Digital has screwed up.
Badly. See the front page of the Globe yesterday for one more
discussion of how and why. In this case, it's a comparison of DEC and
HP over the last 10 years -- a period of steady growth of revenue and
profits for HP. So that's a big part of the frustration. It's not just
that the industry has changed, but that our company has bungled it and
is still bungling it, and that each of us individually feels powerless
to fix it.
dlm
|
3120.22 | Stability??? What planet....? | ICS::DOANE | | Wed Jun 01 1994 17:57 | 44 |
| I've been working at various companies for the last 34 years, and
in various groups, and at various occupations. All of it has been
under the heading "Digital" but change has been continual. I have
never had much of a sense of what some contributors on this string
seem to mean by the word "security." I have never been comfortable
for long at Digital, because I've been aware that the company has to
re-invent itself every few years, and each of these is a highly
risky crisis. And, I've seen many companies that I once regarded as
important competitors disappear under the waves during this time--
so I know it can happen to Digital if we aren't both clever and
reasonable lucky as well.
I really can't understand how anyone who works in this industry could
develop a sense that stability could be available here. The only way
I can imagine that happening, is if someone was naieve enough to think
that the question "are you comfortable with this...?" was coming from
a mind grounded in reality.
My perspective is that being uncomfortable is a condition of aliveness.
The extreme form of stability would be if nothing is happening.
Nothing happening: that's a pretty good operational definition of
death.
I think it is fairly careless reasoning to think that you can't be
loyal in the presence of risk and change and aliveness and discomfort.
I can be loyal to any person I interact with even for an hour or less!
I don't have to have a guarantee of a lifetime stable relationship.
Just show me that you are alive, that you have decent intentions, and
that you are committed to making a contribution--you have my loyalty.
I believe most people who know me see me as a loyal Digital employee.
(I certainly see myself this way!) Yet I'm fully aware how careful
Ken always was, not to ever to promise that we'd never have a layoff.
All I expected from my co-workers here was, as I say: aliveness,
decency, and a commitment to make what contribution the person can.
I think in the aggregate, we can say that we've had this from Digital
as a whole. An alive company, a decent company, a company committed
to making whatever contributions in the lives of human beings that we
could.
The "new deal" does not seem new to me--as far as I can understand it,
it seems like the "deal" I've always had.
Russ
|
3120.23 | I like this topic a lot | POBOX::CORSON | YOU CALL THAT A SLAPSHOT....? | Thu Jun 02 1994 19:23 | 24 |
|
Have to respond because this is all getting so interesting.
If we as employees have to do everything discussed in this topic -
Wash our hair
Keep our clothes clean
Tie our shoes properly,
etc.
What is management supposed to do? I can't believe it is to be
toadies, lackeys, or The Lone Ranger. Changemeisters, where?
Controlfreaks, how? Policymavens, who?
This is now big people stuff. The real problem is mindsets -
everyone is either in the 50s, or the 70s. Some just want less stress,
others want stability. My grandfather used to say "There ain't no free
lunch". He was absolutely correct. We keep trying to make Digital
appear as a people, having human traits. This place is an organization.
It functions like one. So, what's management to do?
My bet is they do not have a clue.
the Greyhawk
|
3120.24 | | GLDOA::SHOOK | Pomp,circumstance,dropping trou | Fri Jun 03 1994 02:01 | 10 |
|
re: -1
attn: mr. the Greyhawk,
thank you for sharing that with us. perhaps you could gain a more
appreciative audience in pear::soapbox.
regards,
the bill
|
3120.25 | -< My opinion only > | SUBPAC::POTENZA | a Republic, if you can keep it. | Fri Jun 03 1994 11:54 | 11 |
| re .23
I appreciated your comments. Of course, I also appreciated the last
discussion we had over a beer at Chez Paree. :-)
re .24
Perhaps. :-)
Dan
|
3120.26 | Somebody stop that man | POBOX::CORSON | YOU CALL THAT A SLAPSHOT....? | Fri Jun 03 1994 13:34 | 10 |
|
Thank you all. Humor at this particular point is probably far more
important for our sanity than vast introspection on our relationship
with our employer.
We work, they pay. As my collegue in hockey just noted, I believe
having fun in life is far more important than the quantity of work. No
one ever died mouthing their final words as "I should have worked more"
the Greyhawk
|