T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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3505.1 | rapidly increasing problems | SWAM1::MEUSE_DA | | Thu Nov 10 1994 18:40 | 9 |
|
Nope, it's not just you.
It's really a struggle to do anything period.
If I go on with a list, it just leads to frustration.
Goodluck.
|
3505.2 | No, It's not just you! | LUNER::YANNETT | | Thu Nov 10 1994 18:44 | 21 |
| Its not just you, it's the company that's lost. I work in various
areas around manufacturing and design engineering and I find a
consistant mood. People are just doing the minimum to get by.
Nothing, NOTHING, extra! If they can they are at work from 8-4,
and work a lot less.
There are some which are trying, but very few. And upper management
hasn't the slightest idea of what's wrong.
Our VP iof Engineering made a comment about a year ago--in a fire side
meeting. He said, "Moral will improve once profit is back." Now how's
that for understanding people? Or understanding the word
"Competitive"?
I wonder in any of our SLT members ever hrard the story of the goose
that laid the golden eggs, and of the farmer who became so focused on
the eggs, he killed the goose to get them all at once?
I don't know if there is an answer to your question(s). Sometimes
I believe the SLT has an agenda just the opposite of wht they proclaim!
|
3505.3 | For want of a nail .... | KELVIN::SCHMIDT | Cynical Optimist | Fri Nov 11 1994 09:09 | 86 |
|
If you need more confirmation, it's certainly not just you.
The problem's endemic; there are just so few in leadership
positions that can motivate and encourage pride in our work.
Most of us have been trying to do our best within our own
sphere of influence, but it's a sisyphean struggle against
the environment and higher management.
It's bad enough inside, but worse when it spills over
to customers. The attached note of a customer problem
[originally posted in the "whatever it takes" topic] shows
at least four errors (defects under Six Sigma principles)
in a small order; how do we apply "whatever it takes" to
that, other than the nice ad copy? The question still stands.
Peter
<<< HUMANE::DISK$CONFERENCES:[NOTES$LIBRARY]DIGITAL.NOTE;1 >>>
-< The Digital way of working >-
================================================================================
Note 3452.150 "Whatever it takes" 150 of 194
KELVIN::SCHMIDT "Cynical Optimist" 59 lines 28-OCT-1994 11:33
-< Test case with customer >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Well, let's apply "whatever it takes", which sounds so great on paper,
to this customer satisfaction problem, which comes from a close friend
in Information Systems in a major Boston-area university.
As a reader and sometime contributor to this notesfile, I'm certainly
aware of the difficulties of delivering to customers, so it's not a
slam against the many folks trying to do their best under more than
difficult circumstances. Still, what will "whatever it takes" mean
in this context?
The message, which I've edited to delete non-relevant comments and names,
follows:
I just got this as part of a message from a faculty member who has ordered
some equipment from DEC:
>We got the disk drive and the backup tape. We want that installed before
>moving on to add the 9-track tape drive, which I hope to do by the
>end of the calendar year....
>(I must report, however, that my experience in ordering this equipment
>from DEC has demonstrated to me how/why they're in such trouble. Six weeks
>to deliver a SCSI cable????? ....
.... These are not people who live in
>a competitive world.)
A further message, on request, with more information from the faculty
member:
When the unit finally arrived, it came without a SCSI cable, which, of
course, it needs. Now, I imagine I could have gone to a mailorder
concern to get the right cable, but I wanted to go through DEC just in
case. We called the DECDirect number. First, I get a representative
who tells me what I want. (OK experience there.) Second, when it's
clear I want to buy the cable, he transfers me to someone else who
actually takes the order. Again OK experience, except that I've never
encountered the necessity to talk to two people to buy a part from a
computer company. (And the necessity to wait in a queue twice...)
At the end of ordering and paying for the cable, the fellow says, "that
will take six weeks." When I say, "what if I have you express mail
it to me," he says, "five of those weeks are us finding the part in
the warehouse and getting it to the shipping department." Overnight
shipment will only cut it to 5 1/2 weeks....
Now we have the cable. So, we've just looked at hooking up the box. It
turns out that (1) we weren't given a manual for the disk drive, (2) the
manuals for the expansion box and the tape drive illustrate different
DIP-switch configurations than actually occur on the back of the
devices. So, we'll see if Robert can figure it out.... I have a feeling
it's going to take us a while just to have all the right stuff just to
start installing the devices.
|
3505.4 | Lets be constructive | KOALA::HAMNQVIST | | Fri Nov 11 1994 09:28 | 45 |
| | Its not just you, it's the company that's lost. I work in various
| areas around manufacturing and design engineering and I find a
| consistant mood. People are just doing the minimum to get by.
| Nothing, NOTHING, extra! If they can they are at work from 8-4,
| and work a lot less.
I think it is unfair to say that this is the case for the
entire company. My impression is that the mood is really
a function of the group you work in. As soon as your group's
future becomes very unclear, it does not matter how nice or
bright working pals you have .. the group will deteriorate very
fast if something is not done.
The worst depressions appear to be gone, at least from ZKO. Sure,
things are far from perfect, but I get the distinct impression
that we are making rational decisions to sort things out. The
situation is stabilizing as opposed to rapidly degenerating.
| There are some which are trying, but very few. And upper management
| hasn't the slightest idea of what's wrong.
Some managers don't have a clue. Some do, and prefer not to
make unpopular or difficult decisions. And some managers
are just hanging around while they are looking for a job. They
are humans just like the rest of us. Of course they do have
a responsibility by virtue of being managers. But don't underestimate
the difficulty of getting rid of a not so good middle manager
without also destabilizing his/her group more than it is worth
at a given point.
| Our VP iof Engineering made a comment about a year ago--in a fire side
| meeting. He said, "Moral will improve once profit is back." Now how's
| that for understanding people? Or understanding the word
| "Competitive"?
I'm not trying to defend that VP, but perhaps that was the best he
could say given the situation. Perhaps he knew things that he
could not disclose.
BTW, making constructive lists of problems that ought to be addressed
is not complaining, in particular if you suggest realistic ways of
fixing them. Someone who can fix your problems may actually be
reading this conference.
>Per
|
3505.5 | | CSOA1::BROWNE | | Fri Nov 11 1994 09:46 | 13 |
| It is definitely not "just you". Operationally, this company has
not struck bottom yet; we continue to be a company that is very difficult
to do business with. For that matter, this company is nearly impossible to
do business for.
But the worst sign of our decline is the ever increasing amount of
political hacking and "butt kissing" evident in every organization, and
nowhere is this butt-kissing more evident than in this notesfile!
When an organization with the serious and obvious problems that we have
created begins to only listen to and recognize those people who will say
only what the corporate executives want to hear, there can be only one
outcome; and that outcome is grim.
|
3505.6 | | MROA::SRINIVASAN | | Fri Nov 11 1994 09:59 | 19 |
| Norm,
You are not the only one who feels this way. Every where you look the
system seems to be broken.
All kinds of in-fighting / politicking goes on as to who get the
credit. There are all kinds of manuvering going on as to who can sell
what products. This goes on between business groups as well as inside
each business group ( within each segment ). In fact I have heard that
some group managers are encouraging the turf battle.
So called coporate sologan : Whatever it takes " is a joke and just a
corporate slogan. Engineering and Mnaufacturing does not seems to
understand this. Even for announced products, many options are not
qualified and we cannot ship. Now enginnering / manufacturing are giving
all kinds of excuses to my customer why they cannot ship a 5.5 Million
order till March 95 for a an announced product;-) So much for WHATEVER IT
TAKES slogan. Sheesh !!!
|
3505.7 | My Opinion | RANGER::GOBLE | | Fri Nov 11 1994 10:05 | 28 |
|
The Problem: LOW MORALE
The Reason: Digital is being run Top-Down; Planning and Initiative occur
at Upper Layers; Individual Contributors React. It's not that
Top-Down functionality is bad, it isn't. It's just that it's
only part of what's needed.
The Dynamic: Digital is profitable or not, wins or loses, etc, based on
Management Planning and Initiative. This is partly reality
(the greater part) and partly perception/communications issue.
The Result: Digital is profitable: MORALE is LOW; Digital is unprofitable:
MORALE is MUCH LOWER.
The Past: Matrix Management--which had big problems and anyway was
unworkable in the current business environment-- was the check
and balance to Top-Down-edness.
The Solution: Keep needed benefits of Top-Down: Efficiency, Coordination,
Consistency; Find ways to increase Bottom-Up and thereby
gain: Ideas, Individual Contributors Sense of Control,
Flexibility, Customer Input, etc.
How: Not easy. Implement specific programs one by one. What do other
well run companies do (HP?, Motorola?, FTP?, Compac?). I'm sure
many of the employees know what could be done. Find out and
implement the best ideas.
|
3505.8 | Different meaning... | PERENS::STODDART | Lorey Kimmel Stoddart, EDI Consultant (DTN 342-5426) | Fri Nov 11 1994 11:03 | 23 |
| Gee, I thought WHAT EVER IT TAKES, was in reference to keeping your
job...meaning jumbling numbers, making numbers, worrying about numbers....
That's all that seems to matter. Make the numbers, not make sure the customer
is statisfied, or that we do the right thing.
I remember years ago we put out a statement saying:
The CUSTOMER comes first
The EMPLOYEE comes second
The COMPANY comes last
Now it seems to be:
The COMPANY comes first
The COMPANY comes second
The CUSTOMER comes last
(Notice the EMPOLYEE isn't even metioned)
|
3505.9 | | MBALDY::LANGSTON | our middle name is 'Equipment' | Fri Nov 11 1994 12:23 | 6 |
| Some on the SLT know what's going on. They know that things are broken and that
the fixes are not easy. See if you can find a way to see Kathy Horbach's
presentation on the corporate strategy. I saw the same material presented this
week by Lucia Quinn. I felt pretty good coming away from that presentation.
Bruce
|
3505.10 | | CSC32::M_BLESSING | Non-DEC addr: [email protected] | Fri Nov 11 1994 12:37 | 2 |
| re: .9
Kathy's last name is Hornbach (with an 'n')
|
3505.11 | Use new technology to increase productivity | OSL09::OLAV | Do it in parallel! | Sat Nov 12 1994 09:13 | 9 |
| We seem to be incapable of using our leadership technoloy to make life
easier for ourself. Still living with technology from the early
eighties. How about a strucured system for technical information using
world wide web technology for example? I see that something is happening,
but it's use is too random and very good organized. Use of VTX should be
migrated to Mosaic etc. as soon as possible (and that should be today
and not tomorrow).
Olav
|
3505.12 | The Chicken and the Egg | DEMON::PILGRM::BAHN | Curiouser and Curiouser ... | Sat Nov 12 1994 09:57 | 27 |
|
The system is broken ... and, probably can't be fixed ... complex
systems that don't work usually need to be scrapped and rebuilt
from the ground up.
The problem is that we don't have the resources to rebuild the
system and we won't be able to get those resources unless we
rebuild the system. So, what do we do? Let's look at what's
worked in the past. The past is seldom a guide to the future
but, it might be a good place to start.
Where did Notes come from ... or SPOOL ... or NMAIL ... or a lot
of other products and/or in-house tools that we use every day?
Someone saw an interesting problem or in interesting idea and
started playing with it. Someone generated the necessary
resources out of his or her own intent. Some things grew out of
"midnight hacks;" some things grew out of getting othere to "buy
into" the idea; some things grew out of thin air ... powered by
the desire to make it work.
I don't have the skills or intent for this one. I'm not even
sure that I understand the problem. Somebody out there does have
the skills, understanding, and desire to "make it work." Go for
it.
Terry
|
3505.13 | something's gotta give | ROMEOS::TREBILCOT_EL | | Sat Nov 12 1994 21:35 | 70 |
| Re: .4
I think the previous noter and all of us in here knows that when we say
something, like about people coming in from 8-4 if they can get away
with it, they don't mean everyone. There are so many out there who are
trying, trying to keep a good attitude and trying to stay motivated.
I consider myself one of those people but I get worried when I deal
with things which seem so ludicrous...too much so to be real...
Let's see...I have a customer who has a problem so I call one of our
1-800 numbers to get some insight. In the past I've always been very
successful with this method...
I'm told the entire group is in Phoenix...sorry, someone will have to
call me back. Then the guy calls me back and says, "Sorry, I don't
know the answer to that, I'm out of town and don't have access to my
system," or something to that effect.
So then I tell the customer I'm still working on it and he is being
patient, no problem. I put a note in the product notes file. It was
never answered. I figure, okay, nobody knows.
A few days go by, I call the 1-800 group again and talk to the Networks
Group, the Low-End Systems Group, the PC Group, the PATHWORKS group,
and the Netware people and every single time I got the same answer:
"The people who knew that have been laid off. We don't have anyone
here who knows enough about that." They did manage to find "an
old-timer" who was able to answer my question. Days have gone by but
the customer is still being patient.
I get back to the customer, I fax him the part numbers and product
descriptions, okay, he's ready to buy, he has the money, everything. I
talk to the sales rep...the sales rep tells me to give it to the
reseller. I'm thinking what???? I have a customer who has the part
numbers, just needs the quote so they can cut a p.o. and you want me to
give this away? Because the rep will get reseller credit anyway. I
can understand if the rep is too busy and doesn't have the time
(actually I can't understand that but I don't want to knock the person)
but in this case I'd already done all the work so I am confused. It
doesn't take but five minutes to go into AQS to generate a quote (I
think I'll reinstate my old account).
In the process of trying to get this together for the customer I
encounter being told, "We used to have that product but we don't have
the personnel in engineering anymore so it was decomitted." I was
told, "The person who knew that was laid off so I don't know and I
don't know what to tell you." I was told that being an internal I'm
not allowed to call the 1-800-525-7104 anymore unless I'm prepared to
have my cost center charged something like $60/hour. Oh, so now I'm go
be a god and know it all? Do I get to go to god training? Oh that's
right, it's not in the budget.
I am TRYING not to become frustrated but being able to successfully do
my job can be very difficult. I don't know what the answer is but we
have to do something.
I don't reccomend the solution be to stand up in front of our VARs,
OEMs and Resellers at Network Academy and continuously tell them how
this product and that product are either delayed or decommitted because
of the cuts to our engineering staff. Doesn't seem like a real
confidence booster, truthful as it may be.
I hate to see what's happening to this company. I don't understand it.
It makes me very sad because I remember how great DEC was. We were the
best and I know we're trying to be the best again but somehow I think
we're taking the absolute longest, most round-about way to get back.
Can we survive that long?
|
3505.14 | No easy answers... | HANNAH::SICHEL | All things are connected. | Sun Nov 13 1994 10:58 | 23 |
| I can really sympathize with the last few.
From where I see it, we're still stuck with too many people in positions
of "authority" who don't understand enough about our products or the
business we're in to sustain a coherent strategy long enough for the
folks in the trenches to deliver.
The people who are working hard to do the right thing have to deal
with limited or non-existant resources, frequent re-organization,
and often down right resistance from managers who are trying to
"control" the organization in a different direction.
I could give personal examples, but that's not the point.
How can we respond?
So far, I'm still taking personal initiative (unilateral action + risk)
to use the best tools I can get and try to deliver for the customer.
It's frustrating. I wish I had a better answer.
Somehow, we need to do a much better job of listening and understanding
each other. Management in this company has failed rather badly.
- Peter
|
3505.15 | Where did corporate re-engineering go? | MROA::JJAMES | | Mon Nov 14 1994 09:45 | 31 |
|
All of the internal control systems I've used are dreadfully old and
some were very badly designed. Most of the people who tried to fix
them were sacrificed to the gods of corporate politics. I once saw a flow
chart of the order entry flow that looked like a CPU wiring diagram. The
presenter said, with tongue in cheek, (This is before things really started
to fall apart) that ONLY Digital could make a system like this work and
ONLY Digital would try. I wondered at the time why Digital didn't have a
conventional TP order entry system and later realized the answer. You
can't run a world wide TP system on a VAX 780. The basic design
phylosophy of the order fulfillment system (POM) was to minimize finish
good inventory by ensuring that every optiion was shipped to someone.
It was based on the assumption that orders would always exceed supply.
I would hope it has improved, but I expect it is unchanged.
Achieving even passable results from these systems was the result of
many people who "did the right thing" and "went around the system".
With fewer people, the systems are now doing their own thing, which
isn't very good. The few people who are left, are candidates for
sainthood.
When Mr. Palmer took over, re-engineering the corporation was all the
rage. What happened to it? If it had been pursued with vigor
wouldn't we surprize Wall Street less often? Might Bill Stuel still be
with us? Enquiring minds want to know!
|
3505.16 | we build 'em, but don't use 'em. | SWAM1::MEUSE_DA | | Mon Nov 14 1994 14:30 | 16 |
|
Here's an example of how our systems work,actually how they don't work:
Bunch of manuals get stuck out into December, entered Oct.
Called 1st time two weeks, no problem will fix since partialed.
Call again today. Told they are were on hold. Ask how long?
Don't know.
Its safe to assume, if I hadn't called they would be on hold until
next June. And clearly the person at the other end had absolutely
no clue as to what they were doing or saying. Is it fixed, doubt
it.
Typical example how everything doesn't work right in this company.
|
3505.17 | Do home offices make sense? | THEWAV::GASSNER | | Mon Nov 14 1994 15:27 | 6 |
| We cut costs by removing office space and replacing with employee home
offices. But where and when should employees talk with each other? It
seems unlikely unmanaged collaborative effort will occur as often;
perhaps that effort is perceived to have little value. We've
successfully cut the cost, but have we improved profitability?
/Steve
|
3505.18 | Nothing makes sense any more... | POBOX::CORSON | Higher, and a bit more to the right | Mon Nov 14 1994 16:57 | 8 |
|
Oh, we'll have improved profitability...
Even if it is just Bob and Enrico working at home taking orders ;-)
the Greyhawk
|
3505.19 | And the beat goes on.... | ANGLIN::BJAMES | I feel the need, the need for SPEED | Tue Nov 15 1994 17:28 | 7 |
| RE: .18
If things go any further that's about all who's going to be left
handling the ever decreasing calls and inquiries for our goods and
services.
Mav
|
3505.20 | How about this story (just sent to me by a customer...)? | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Wed Nov 16 1994 14:11 | 56 |
| I call my local DEC (or IBM) office when I got all the info from DEC (or IBM)
in another country and have to place an order, or when the bosses said I have
to call them. You have no idea of the lack of interest. You'd get a heart
attack. 6 months after the first AXP box was out, I visited DEC's headquarter
and showroom in Sundbyberg. In the showroom I found all the PCs you want and
various obsolete VAXstations and not a single Alpha. No kidding. So I looked
for glossies and they were all 6 months old. One glossy about Alphas. So I
walked to the front desk and asked where I could see an Alpha. They asked what
company I worked for. So, thinking I was being clever, I said I work for a US
company that is opening an office in Sweden. I should have brought this friend
who works at Ericsson. You won't believe this. They gave me a card with a phone
number and said to call that number and they would help me. It was the same
address, so I had a peek at their phones and commented that they had given me a
card with THEIR OWN phone number. They said nope, that is indeed the number for
this building, but it rings first at the other helpdesk inside :-) It doesn't
ring on that phone unless the others don't answer, it's for the night shift.
Well, of course I knew this meant they had no intention of lifting a finger to
help me, but being stubborn I insisted that, since I had taken a commuter train
to come here just to see Alpha and I was already in the right building
corresponding to the phone number they were giving me, couldn't they just
expedite the whole thing and let me into the room with the Alphas? They said
no, that's not the way it works. DEC has no Alpha on display. DEC only shows
Alphas by appointment. To get an appointment I have to get a salesman. To get a
salesman I have to call that number. I can call that number from the phone
booth outside if I want. But it's not like, just because I'm already at the
right building, I don't have to call like everyone else. When I call they'll
set an appointment in a few weeks and then I'll be able to see an Alpha. But
not today, there is no way I can see an Alpha today. The showroom does not have
Alphas because DEC does not feel it is appropriate for the showroom to have
Alphas. Now could I please get lost so that they can resume their conversation?
So I did what I should have done right away and simply walked into the inner
part of the building which, with Swedish security, was wide open. Noone asked
me any question. I just walked around until I saw a box that said AXP in
someone's office, I told them my story, and being technical folks they were
sorry and helpful, they wouldn't know what the showrooms had and they have no
control over it anyway, but I was welcome to take a look at their machine. IBM
is a little bit better in that they'll show you everything you want to see, but
if you need some help and you're not from a big company, you're free to get
lost and buy from someone else. In Sweden it's like 80% of the business comes
from a couple dozen huge companies, or something like that, so the salesmen get
lazy and smaller companies can get lost. Over here the DECpc AXP 150 costs
$12,500 and in general all the DEC stuff is 50-100% more expensive, except the
PCs, and nobody cares because the big companies pay anyway. Last week IBM
refused to sell me a PS/2, saying they weren't interested but I could call this
number and ask for a list of retailers that do sell PS/2. It's a national
disease. In what other country would I have to wait 3 weeks for glossies on
RAID controllers for VMS, only to be finally sent AlphaServer glossies? :-) And
find out, 24h later and from DEC USA (no way DEC Sweden would even return a
call in 24h), that the RAID references I had *finally* gotten from DEC Sweden
after barking at them on the phone in English (the only way to scare them into
helping you) and supplying a FAX number for *immediate* use are in fact not
supported under VMS, and, while there are plans to support them under VMS,
there is no estimate yet! Ah well. When I'm not working for the government I do
all my shopping in the US and ship it over, and I never have to deal with these
bozos. DEC is kind enough to supply dual voltage on US models nowadays :-)
|
3505.21 | So now we know the difference... | POBOX::CORSON | Higher, and a bit more to the right | Wed Nov 16 1994 14:24 | 6 |
|
I believe this -1 is the *new* Digital everyone has been talking
about. The old DEC a salesman would have closed 'em on the spot and
been on the golf course an hour later.
the Greyhawk
|
3505.22 | We ain't there just yet, but it is coming. | NEWVAX::MZARUDZKI | I AXPed it, and it is thinking... | Thu Nov 17 1994 07:37 | 10 |
|
Computers are commodites, show me items. Witness the retail chains
and the hands on, touchy feelies you can get there. Alpha/AXP systems
are not yet commodity items. Heck, we have problems supplying our own
demand. I want one of those new AlphaStations. I am sitting at a
customers site right now. Do you suppose the customer might find a use
for this technology?
Awaiting critical supply. The move to MASS produce. Let us indulge.
-Mike Z.
|
3505.23 | Is it Contageous? | JULIET::MULLER_JI | | Fri Nov 18 1994 13:17 | 7 |
| Maybe it is the World...This morning went to the local Ford Dealer to
have a simple oil change (Flexible Fuel Car, needs special Ford Oil),
the Service Order taker said that it would take maybe 4 hours if he
really tried! This was due to the two hour delay in making a call to
GE for authorization. Needless to say I left wondering how they stay
in business. So maybe we are not alone.....just a thought.
|
3505.24 | We've found a new revenue source | DYPSS1::COGHILL | Steve Coghill, Luke 14:28 | Fri Nov 18 1994 14:52 | 33 |
| We fired the Edu rep for Cincy geography. So he gets a job selling
computers for a well-established Cincy office equipment company.
Wants to continue selling Digital stuff.
University of Cincy really likes the Alpha, but...
Seems there Alpha (running Mathematica) runs 7X the Sparc for small
models, but 7X slower than the Sparc for large models. UC attributes
this to cache-thrashing they've been hearing about. However, they
are very excited about the new 275MHz Alphas, and want to see there
models run on it. Fortunately, the former DECrep kept in contact
with all his previous accounts (Digital doesn't think universities
are worth the effort anymore, I guess).
So he does the normal channels thing, and calls his channels liason
within Digital. Former DECrep tells liason the need for a benchmark.
Liason says he'll set it up. Liason doesn't get back to former
DECrep for over a week. Says the benchmark center is willing to do
it, but that the distributor will have to pay for it. At this point
the former DECrep calmly tells the liason that UC also asked for an
RS6000 quote and that he was going to give them one and that he
wasn't going to bother with the Alpha quote and then hung up.
About a week later the liason calls the former DECrep and says the
benchmark center will do the job at no charge.
EXCUSE ME!!!
Distributor finds a Digital customer who wants a Digital box and
wants to see how the Digital box runs a very popular product, and
Digital wants the distributor to pay for the privilege of selling the
Digital box.
We are in serious trouble people.
|
3505.25 | Just the beginning, unfortunately.. | POBOX::CORSON | Higher, and a bit more to the right | Fri Nov 18 1994 15:42 | 4 |
|
Just wait a couple of more quarters - you ain't seen nothing yet!
the Greyhawk
|
3505.26 | It does seem to be spreading! | AMCUCS::SWIERKOWSKIS | | Fri Nov 18 1994 19:52 | 33 |
| RE: .23
I don't think it's the world, but you've opened a real can of worms
with Fleet and Ford. One of my coworkers and I both tried to get our
Flexible Fuel cars serviced at the same Ford dealer. For her car, no
problem; they made the call to GE for authorization. I brought mine in
about an hour later and was told they no longer did business with GE
because of slow payments. However, I was also told that it didn't
matter since the oil change is covered under the warranty for
these cars. So, on the same day, one of us paid for the oil change and
the other didn't.
BTW, did you have any luck getting your floor mats?? That story for my
car was another comedy of errors? When they finally came in (2
months!), the parts department wouldn't give them to me because of old
billing problems with Fleet (and this was a different Ford dealer from
the one in the first paragraph). A few days later, they changed their
mind.
My local Firestone shop doesn't want to take Fleet work either because
of slow payments. They did do emergency work and oil changes for me on
my old car, but it was clear that they really didn't want to. They
certainly didn't even attempt to do anything resembling preventive
maintenance because of Fleet.
I called what's left of Fleet at Digital hoping they'd go to bat for us
on this problem before we're stuck with no place to go for repairs. I
was given the 800 number for GE and another one for Ford??
At one time I considered buying a Ford truck; I'm not so sure that's
such a good idea anymore.
SQ
|
3505.27 | | WRKSYS::BCLARK | Where can I rent a cone-of-silence? | Wed Nov 23 1994 10:22 | 7 |
| We are only just beginning to observe the affects of TFSO on many
individuals who made significant contributions. It's sort of like
pulling on a loose thread and before you know it, you haven't a shirt
on!
It will take the rest of us to patch thinsg up, or it will be the
end.
|
3505.28 | RE: .-1 - Trouble is, the TFSO exercises aren't over ... | FX28PM::COLE | Paradigm: a 50 cent word downsized 60% | Wed Nov 23 1994 15:38 | 3 |
| ... by a LOOOONNNGG shot. At least if what I've heard
today is true, it'll be March before the dust really settles!
December ain't gonna be real jolly for MCS and Admin.
|
3505.29 | | HAAG::HAAG | Rode hard. Put up wet. | Wed Nov 23 1994 16:04 | 8 |
| Note 3505.28 by FX28PM::COLE
> ... by a LOOOONNNGG shot. At least if what I've heard
>today is true, it'll be March before the dust really settles!
>December ain't gonna be real jolly for MCS and Admin.
could you elaborate for those of us stuck out on the far reaches of the
dec empire?
|
3505.30 | Scuttlebutt I've heard is ... | FX28PM::COLE | Paradigm: A 50 cent word downsized 60% | Thu Nov 24 1994 23:58 | 3 |
| ... 1st week in December, MCS starts a new round of TFSO's, probably
not ending until March. Week before Christmas: HR, admin, etc. get tapped.
|
3505.31 | Some firing, some hiring? | NEWVAX::PAVLICEK | Zot, the Ethical Hacker | Fri Nov 25 1994 10:15 | 8 |
| re: .30
Meanwhile, I hear that DC in our geography will be looking to hire fairly
recent college grads (read: young, cheap labor) to expand our business.
I was told that these people are more likely to have a background in
object-oriented programming than more experienced people
(...no comment).
|
3505.32 | Our own failing, years in the making. | NEWVAX::MZARUDZKI | I AXPed it, and it is thinking... | Fri Nov 25 1994 11:38 | 10 |
|
I can comment that it makes sense. We have almost zilch experience in
internet solutions, almost zilch experience in UNIX offerings, almost
zilch experience in NT and NTAS offerings, almost zilch experience in
the latest groupware technologies, almost zilch in DOS, in NOSes etc.
etc. Shall I go on, now what do we do? Where is the deliverable skill set?
Not a pretty picture, is it.
-Mike Z.
|
3505.33 | Our problem. But will we solve it... | NEWVAX::PAVLICEK | Zot, the Ethical Hacker | Fri Nov 25 1994 16:49 | 12 |
| re: .32
Question is, Z, whether or not the situation will have really changed after
the new bodies are hired.
We tend not to hire until we have sold a skill set to a customer.
Sales tends not to sell the skill set until they think we already have the
skill set somewhere. Result: we tend to hire more people of the same
skills.
Hopefully, they'll break the circle when they hire this time. We'll
have to wait and see.
|
3505.34 | It's ours for the having... | NCMAIL::SMITHB | | Sat Nov 26 1994 17:03 | 7 |
| re -.32
The lucky thing is, no one has a lot of experience in some of
these areas either (Internet, NT for example). That means this is
an opportunity for us...
Brad.
|
3505.35 | make the systems available! | CSCMA::HATCH | | Mon Nov 28 1994 09:22 | 5 |
| What we need is access to systems that are running the operating
systems and applications so we (read: current internal employees) can
pick up those skills so they don't have to go outside for the
knowledge. Especially since the internal training is gone which would
have provided that needed exposure!
|
3505.36 | College grads tend to be coders | DYPSS1::COGHILL | Steve Coghill, Luke 14:28 | Mon Nov 28 1994 11:21 | 11 |
| Re: Hiring college grads
The problem with this is approach is that most universities today are
turning out coders---not computer scientists. What this means is
that the college grad can write a program once someone else has
solved the problem for him/her. They do not know how to go into a
situation where a client says, "I need to have the system do..."
If we need coders, then we should contract the work out to some sort
of bodyshop. Digital Consulting has proven time, and time again,
that we cannot compete with low-end, bodyshop coders.
|
3505.37 | Semantic quibble | PERFOM::WIBECAN | Going on an Alphaquest | Mon Nov 28 1994 12:09 | 13 |
| >> The problem with this is approach is that most universities today are
>> turning out coders---not computer scientists.
>> They do not know how to go into a
>> situation where a client says, "I need to have the system do..."
This is a semantic quibble, but I tend to think that a software engineer would
be more appropriate than a computer scientist for this type of situation.
Similarly, it has been said that colleges are indeed turning out computer
scientists (prepared for academic careers and research), but perhaps not
software engineers.
Brian
|
3505.38 | a thought ? | WELCLU::SHARKEYA | LoginN - even makes the coffee@ | Wed Nov 30 1994 03:14 | 8 |
| IMHO, what customers want are both analysts (how do we get this
business opportunity (=problem) solved) and coders who can sit down
with the customer and produce a PRODUCT. The coders need to also have
DEC in mind and therefore MAY do a better job than an external coder
(they will be around afterwards!)
Alan
|
3505.39 | The more things change..... | JOBURG::SADLER | | Wed Nov 30 1994 04:13 | 31 |
| But isn't this like trying to sell China coffee mugs - washable and
re-usable, and can be used to hold other fluids even turps for washing
out the paint-brushes, with good insulating properties so even scalding
hot drinks can be cupped in the hands on a chilly day for comfortable
warmth, selling into a culture that still thinks throwaway plastic or
paper cups are really neat?
Why go to the expense of a large investment in say worthwhile full time
employees with the skills and potential, and an on-going training
programme, when you can just briefly buy in the necessary skills from
an outsider - no pension, med-aid, no human resource management etc.
Biggest problem is eventually all the customers buy direct from the
papercup manufacturer, and cut the MiddlemanWEwannabe out of it.....
I know it makes sense, I try to buy everything from factory shops,
distributors etc. and I'm making savings in the region of 50% of shop
price - just for going direct - a little more legwork maybe but what
dividends it pays. So am I going to be the only one to look for
savings? I think not.. And wouldn't I like to pay a premium for the
Service/Backup. NOPE!. I meddle and fix up things better than half the
no-training-never-seen-one-before-lost-souls anyway. And I don't have
to spend half a day (or more) chasing myself on the phone either!
I think we should be building the in-house skills again, training
again, and getting a lot more involved in the real world, and if that
means WARPing then hell, get in there!!
If them Custermer whosits use it, we need to use it better!
|