T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
3357.1 | | FILTON::ROBINSON_M | It's only a flesh wound! | Fri Aug 26 1994 10:48 | 12 |
| There is a lot of truth in this, although there are interpretations to
be made base on a possibly minor typographical error.
*exiting* times ahead - I think we are going through lots of exits
right now,
*exciting* times ahead - remember the ancient Chinese curse "May you
live in interesting times". This is probably as accurate. Digital has
been unnecessarily exiting or exciting for quite a while now. Before
th
Martin
|
3357.2 | | TOOK::MORRISON | Bob M. LKG1-3/A11 226-7570 | Fri Aug 26 1994 18:15 | 10 |
| > Creating a 'virtual' corporation where only 'managers' are employed,
> to 'manage' all outsourced non-core activities.
> Believe me, this will establish a new breed of managers.
> No longer people need to be managed, but BUSINESS itself, through
Yes, this is the ultimate out-sourced company. And there are lots of companies
in the U.S. that are like this; that's why the term "virtual corporation" was
coined.
Virtual coporations may work in some industries such as shoes, but I don't
think it will work for Digital.
|
3357.3 | | MRKTNG::SLATER | Marc, ASE Performance Group | Fri Aug 26 1994 23:13 | 12 |
| re: <<< Note 3357.2 by TOOK::MORRISON "Bob M. LKG1-3/A11 226-7570" >>>
| Yes, this is the ultimate out-sourced company. And there are lots of companies
|in the U.S. that are like this; that's why the term "virtual corporation" was
|coined.
| Virtual coporations may work in some industries such as shoes, but I don't
|think it will work for Digital.
Please name some of the many U.S. companies that are "virtual corporations".
Thanks.
MS
|
3357.4 | | OFOS02::GINGER | Ron Ginger | Tue Aug 30 1994 12:45 | 4 |
| Re .3- some virtualcorporations.
How about AMBRA? Its an IBM division, was published somewhere tht they
had only 64 employees, all else is contracted.
|
3357.5 | AMBRA's dead | MBALDY::LANGSTON | our middle name is 'Equipment' | Tue Aug 30 1994 13:19 | 1 |
| IBM pulled the plug on Ambra about three weeks ago.
|
3357.6 | | TOKNOW::METCALFE | Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers | Tue Aug 30 1994 14:37 | 10 |
| A friend sent good-bye mail stating that the company to which he was going
was getting rid of their contractors and hiring permanent people. The reason
was "they're tired of seeing the business-specific knowledge walk out of
the door." So it seems that the pendulum is swinging back for at least
some of the companies who've tried outsourcing and have learned from it.
Why is it that it seems like we want to jump on a bandwagon that has
already turned around and going in the opposite direction? Behind the curve
again.
Mark
|
3357.7 | Good reading | MSDOA::HYMES | I'd rather be fishing | Tue Aug 30 1994 21:46 | 3 |
| A book worth a glance - "The Age of Unreason", written by Charles Handy,
published by Harvard Business School Press, 1990.
|
3357.8 | Balance is Key | PENUTS::STEVENS | | Wed Aug 31 1994 13:36 | 44 |
| This reply seems to fit well within your topic also. Although it relates
to MCS, any organization which directly interfaces with our customer,
could be inserted within the context.
<<< HUMANE::DISK$CONFERENCES:[NOTES$LIBRARY]DIGITAL.NOTE;1 >>>
-< The Digital way of working >-
================================================================================
Note 3337.41 MCS engineers or Contractors?? 41 of 41
PENUTS::STEVENS 32 lines 29-AUG-1994 21:23
-< Balance is Critical >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
During a recent social function I had the opportunity to speak with
a Digital/IBM customer, who is also a distant relative. She is an
MIS Manager who makes purchasing decisions, so I asked her what she
thought of the service she received. This is what she said....
"The IBM people come across with a holier-than-thou attitude and I
don't enjoy dealing with them."
I then asked what about the service Digital provides? She said...
"John doe is great! No problems, always there for us, very helpful,
very pleasant, a pleasure to deal with."
** Notice when I asked about Digital she used an MCS Engineer/Account
Representative's name, ( phony name inserted above, although I will
say he is in Connecticut ). To this important multivendor customer,
John Doe, Is Digital. This personalized service is what
differentiated Digitial from IBM.
If Digital/MCS were to invest heavily in outsourcing/contracting
while divesting in their existing frontline service engineers, we
may jeopardize an important competitive advantage which we have
established over the years. The proper balance must found to meet
the individual needs of our diverse customer base or Digital may lose
a clear service product differentiator.
Beware - a service product commodity mind set, it may lead to a
tragically flawed strategic plan.
Regards,
Dave
|
3357.9 | Some random thoughts.... | LARVAE::HARVEY | Baldly going into the unknown... | Wed Aug 31 1994 19:31 | 28 |
| Re: several back.. I believe BP (British Petroleum) operate as a virtual
corporate company ie. a relatively small permanent workforce controlling a
much larger population or contract staff. I can see it working for the some
of stuff they do - survey work and drilling etc. - so that when the oil/gas
well dries up they lay everyone off. If a "product line" fails to make the
expected return (they used to be quite diversified, don't know if they still
are...) they get rid of it ! No pensions/redundancy payouts ! Really quite
"cold" and strictly business-like...
Whether we can see this translating into our world or parts of it I would
have to ponder for a while... I think it would come hard to me to become
THAT hard-nosed.
I once heard - perhaps 2-3 years ago, before we experienced layoffs etc. -
that Digital in the UK wanted to get down to below 2000 employees (the rate
it's going that won't be long !). The inference being that something akin to
the BP model above would be put in place.
At the same time it was suggested that you/we could work as self-employed
contractors based at home. In the morning you work for Digital, in the
afternoon you could work for Joe Bloggs (John Doe I guess in the US)...
Freaky !! I could see it working for some functions and disciplines but not
all.
A previous note sums it up for me in that I believe we would lose a lot if
we "depersonalised" Digital's differentiators to such a broad extent.
Rog
|
3357.10 | Somehow those initials sound familiar... | OOTOOL::HIGGS | SQL is a camel in disguise | Thu Sep 01 1994 12:30 | 3 |
| Where have I heard BP before???
8^)
|
3357.11 | Plus ca change... | MUNDIS::SSHERMAN | Steve Sherman @MFR | Mon Sep 05 1994 10:23 | 11 |
| In my 26 years in this business, one thing has remained constant:
data processing management underrating the importance of expertise.
Go pick up Weinberg's 1971 classic _The Psychology of Computer
Programming_ (avbl in the US in PB from van Nostrand Reinhold):
except for discussions of technical matters like programming
languages, it could have been written yesterday. And that is
chilling, because it means the people that run our companies
haven't learned a bloody thing in a quarter of a century.
Steve
|
3357.12 | concept closer to Digital than you might think! | STOWOA::JCHU | | Mon Sep 12 1994 12:28 | 7 |
|
It may interest everyone to know that the person credited with coining
the term "virtual corporation" (in at least one publication I've seen)
is none other than Digital's own Jan Hopland. (of Digital Consulting)
Julian.
|