T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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3639.1 | | ICS::BEAN | Attila the Hun was a LIBERAL! | Mon Jan 16 1995 13:25 | 11 |
| just for starters...
The principal reason some of my peers have voluntarily left is because
they were "fed up" with lack of direction, uncertainty about prospects
of future employment with Digital (read that as the "threat" of
possible layoffs and the perceived lack of security), and the promise
of no forseeable advancement within the company.
Many months of this kind of abuse eroded their "loyalty", and they were
scooped up by more promising employers.
tony
|
3639.2 | | NCMAIL::SMITHB | | Mon Jan 16 1995 13:28 | 18 |
| The fact that management has to ask shows just how out of touch they
are. For those of you in other parts of the world, the greater Boston
area is in the midst of an employment rebound. The help wanted section
of the Boston Globe has been quite full for many months. What does
this mean for Digital? It means that engineers with good skills can
*easily* find other jobs at least equaling their pay. This was not the
case two or three years ago. Couple this with many cutbacks and
general lack of other benefits, and you have 'brain drain'. I was in a
position several months ago to hook up VMS engineering with an
extremely qualified Digital person for a highly critical area (Volume
Shadowing). I asked this person if he were interested. His reply was
'not really, he was interested in OOP'. I asked if he would be
interested for a $10,000 raise, and he practically jumped out of his
chair 'Yes - yes!!" I passed this info on to the hiring manager. This
'extremely qualified person' now works for Microsoft Consulting.
You get what you pay for.
Brad.
|
3639.3 | mis dos centavos | DPDMAI::EYSTER | Fluoride&Prozac/NoCavities/No prob! | Mon Jan 16 1995 13:47 | 30 |
| As Digital continues reorgs, layoffs, etc. many of our clients are
worried (and justificably so) that there won't be anyone to support the
applications they're betting their business on. Thus, they're hiring
us out from under us. :^]
The people I've seen leave, as in -.2, couldn't handle the uncertainty,
overwork, dwindling resources, and frustration. One told me "It's
eerily quiet. We decide what we need to do, procure the resources, and
do it. I don't spend hours tracing information, procuring pencils,
etc. I keep waiting for someone to tell me this is all a joke."
Another's wife told me "He looks and acts ten years younger. This was
the best move he's ever made. It's like he's a totally new person."
Another said "It's taken me time to adjust to slowing the pace while
still getting twice as much done. I wish I would have done this a long
time ago."
Another: "I've got training, room for advancement, and best of all I
don't have to worry about the ax falling randomly on me. They like me,
they're happy with me, and I don't have to worry every day 'Do I have a
job?'" (He's got two young kids, by the way)
If .0 isn't a hoax, then someone's wasting time doing a study. Eat
lunch in the cafeteria, call the people who have *already* left and ask
them why, spend 30 minutes with your local sales team. No mysteries
here.
The Dallas office has seen a drain of very experienced people. It
affects the bottom line (adversely, IMHO).
|
3639.4 | | CSC32::C_BENNETT | | Mon Jan 16 1995 14:05 | 30 |
| Partially self induced brain drain?
I would imagine they (upper managment) could gain some insight
thru reviewing the percentages of Engineering Staff TFSOed to
start. I know of 2 or 3 very talented Engineers who were given
the package. We have strugled ever since to regain valuable
internal knowledge that was TFSOed.
This probably started the ball a rolling-in that why should a
person wait around to get TFSOed if there are good jobs to
be had in the outside world? Impending layoffs hurt morale!
Hopefully this part of Digital's history is behind us all!
9 times out of 10 the job duties which disappeared with the
TFSOed person still needed to get done although I do not
believe this was really understood. This is another reason -
the job still needed to get done so the remaining people
get swamped with not only there old job but all of the duties
of the 5-10 TFSOed people. This also does not do much for
morale, product ship dates get pushed out, SPR processing is
slower, etc....
Sometimes Consultant types are acquired to backfill positions -
the job gets done but not without alot of training and overhead.
I am currently going thru this.... I wonder - am I training this
person for my job and essentially training myself out the door?
This mentality that laying off Engineers in lue of hiring a
temporary Consultant does not do much for loyalities...
Anyway I hope that we can turn Digital around soon...
|
3639.5 | Color me concerned also... | POBOX::CORSON | Higher, and a bit more to the right | Mon Jan 16 1995 14:05 | 26 |
|
My two pennies also.
The MidWest region is now approximately the size of what was a
standard District four years ago (that's about 80 reps across direct
and indirect sales). Attrition is averaging about two people per week.
Reasons are just about what .2 elaborated, coupled with an improved job
market in the upper Midwest, and additional opportunities with existing
accounts/resellers.
As time goes on, this will become more of a problem. As I write, my
manager has resigned, and his manager has resigned. Does one read
something here? You bet.
Digital has, unfortunately, appear to have taken the tack that
loyality is cheap; that performance has no rewards, and desire coupled
with "street smarts" has no position in Digital, unless you are *new*
to the company.
It would seem that we've gone from politics as usual to politics as
a matter of survival. It should be no wonder the "feets are on the
street".
the Greyhawk
|
3639.6 | We still have some bad management | ROWLET::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow! | Mon Jan 16 1995 14:30 | 37 |
| I was wondering where to put this...
A coworker recently resigned. He was happy working on our product, enjoyed
what he was doing, wasn't too concerned about the pay freeze, and only mildly
frustrated with having to chip in to buy needed software out of our own
pockets.
Why did he leave? One morning he got a call from a VP and was informed that he
no longer worked on our product, he was assigned to something else that he
disliked and to be in MRO a week later to work there for a few days and to
expect to commute to MRO on a regular basis (We are located in Dallas). He went
to our supervisor and said, "I assume you know about my transfer." Our
supervisor said, "What?" My coworker then informed our supervisor of the phone
call. Our supervisor immediately got on the phone to our manager who knew
nothing about it, who in turn got on the phone to the product manager, who knew
nothing about it, who immediately started firing off memos to various VPs
wanting to know just what was going on. That afternoon, my coworker got a call
from a head-hunter. Was he interested in a new job? Of course he was. In the
days before going to MRO, he interviewed with the perspective employer. After
returning from MRO, he headed straight to the head-hunter's office where he
signed on with the new employer. The next working day, he turned in his
resignation. His new position pays more, cuts his medical benefits cost by
more than 75%, he has the latest technology on his desk, and his new office is
1 mile from home.
The end result, our product lost a valuable technical resource, the group to
which he was transferred, lost the technical resource they wanted, and to top
it off, we lost a headcount, as the VP transferred the headcount out, but not
back. It's caused our schedules to slip by at least 4 weeks in the short term,
and who knows how much over the long term, since our group lost 20% of our
headcount without any reduction in workload.
All this because of the arrogance of one VP. Almost everyone in my group has
said that they would follow our co-worker out the door if they were treated in
a similar manner. Don't worry about TFSO, just turn this VP loose:-(
Bob
|
3639.7 | | ASABET::EARLY | Lose anything but your sense of humor. | Mon Jan 16 1995 14:41 | 19 |
| I agree with and repeat .2's comment; If this is all true ...
The very fact that they have to ask is telling commentary on its own.
If I were in their shoes and had this concern, I would not delegate the
'information gathering' exercise to layers below me. I would speculate
that the most senior management did not go directly to the consulting
engineers and ask for the data. Based on previous experience, I would
wage that the most senior managers went to the next level down who went
to the next level down until the consulting engineers were the ones
asked. Bad way to collect data. Every layer has an opportunity to put
their own spin on the answer and the "report" will end up saying what
they want it to say which may or may not be close to fact and reality.
Not only does this exhibit an "out of touch" aspect to the problem, to
me it demonstrates a rather large lack of management knowledge/skill
concerning general employee management, reward, and recognition.
|
3639.8 | | MBALDY::LANGSTON | our middle name is 'Equipment' | Mon Jan 16 1995 14:51 | 3 |
| Some ask or tell 'em how to do it at the DVN. It starts in eight minutes.
Bruce
|
3639.9 | Time to change channels... | GLDOA::WERNER | | Mon Jan 16 1995 14:51 | 29 |
| It should come as no surprise to the SLC, since they are the very folks
who decided to gut the old Digital culture. If one looks across enough
early entries here and in many, many early Notes files on a great
variety of topics, one finds a "we against them" mentality, where the
"we" was that loyal band of DECCIES against the "thems" - IBM, HP, SUN,
etc. That was part of the old DEC - a bunch of half-crazed,
Twinkee-eating, butt-kickin' technoids out to rule the world of
computing. Once every couple of years at it's zenith, this tribe would
gather in Boston for a party (called DECWorld) and not one of the
members was afraid of much of anything, especially not internal
political stuff - that was just part of the culture.
Gut that out and replace it with nothing and you end up with a bunch
of folks timidly toiling away with their heads down, afraid that if
they look up that may catch the next ax and you have the new Digital.
In a good economy, headhunters have a field day with companies that
have put their once-loyal employees through that hoop.
Some will argue that the changes were needed, and few will really argue a
gainst the logic. The arguments that hold water are about the methodology
being used and about the lack of a clear vision of where we'll end up on
the other side of all of this change. That includes not only what
businesses we'll be in, but also what the new culture will be when we get
there.
Maybe we'll have a DVN to tell us. Maybe DVN's are the culture! Imagine
the possibilities...
-OFWAMI-
|
3639.10 | An opinion, for what it's worth ... | SPEZKO::FRASER | Mobius Loop; see other side | Mon Jan 16 1995 15:37 | 20 |
| To any VPs/SLT members/Mr. Palmer, if you're reading this, an
open letter.
If you want to know what's happening at line animal level, then
talk to the line animals directly. Bypass the layers of
management and talk to the folks who are still trying to do a
good job for Digital, but for whom the outside world is
looking increasingly rosy. Those are the people who will give
you the answers to why the brain-drain is happening across
engineering, not the "good-news" suits. Ever hear of MBWA?
Management By Walking Around.
Try it sometime, you might not like what you hear, but at least
you'll have some honest information to work with as opposed to
what some people think you want to hear.
Regards,
Andy
|
3639.11 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Mon Jan 16 1995 16:02 | 5 |
| One might also consider NOT talking to consulting engineers but to
principal engineers. I think the drain is highest in that category -
long time engineers who have been shut out of promotion opportunity.
Steve
|
3639.12 | | SPEZKO::FRASER | Mobius Loop; see other side | Mon Jan 16 1995 16:12 | 4 |
| .11 - excellent point!
Andy
|
3639.13 | re .10 "Ever hear of MBWA?" -- see 2342.* :-) | LJSRV2::KALIKOW | UNISYS: ``Beware .GIFt horses!'' | Mon Jan 16 1995 16:24 | 1 |
| Been there, done that... came up empty.
|
3639.14 | from SRR/MCSD land - Colorado/Atlanta/Stow/Valbonne | TINCUP::KOLBE | Wicked Wench of the Web | Mon Jan 16 1995 16:25 | 8 |
| This note is very interesting. We were called into a last minute
meeting last Friday to discuss this very thing. Our (unit level)
managers knew *exactly* why people are leaving and efforts were
already underway to stem the tide. Since some of this involved
raises and the rebirth of salary planning I have to assume our upper
management knows about it. liesl
p.s. We've had a 30% attrition rate.
|
3639.15 | | WLDBIL::KILGORE | Missed Woodstock -- *twice*! | Mon Jan 16 1995 16:25 | 4 |
|
Why would any technical person stick with a company that increasingly
declares management its core competency?
|
3639.16 | | WLDBIL::KILGORE | Missed Woodstock -- *twice*! | Mon Jan 16 1995 16:27 | 3 |
|
See also note 3345.100.
|
3639.17 | My Top 4 Brain Drainers | HLDE01::VUURBOOM_R | Roelof Vuurboom @ APD, DTN 829 4066 | Mon Jan 16 1995 16:45 | 20 |
| * Lack of Control over Destiny: The quality of the work one does no longer
has much relationship to job security as the continuous mandatory cost
cutting appears to be the only real criterion and which group gets
hit where appears to have more to do with Russian roulette than
any well thought out plan.
* Lack of Promotability: The zero and negative growth Digital has
experienced essentially means few prospects for promotion.
* Doubt as to Digitals long term future: the company may well collapse
due to malfunctioning internal processes, the continual
reorganizations, the continual loss of many skills and
lack of a formulated strategy which has been understood
- let alone accepted - by the entire organization.
* Double Standards: the 15-30% salary raises that the SLT gave itself
while the rest of the company was on a pay freeze was "an action
speaking louder than words" as to what company loyalty meant personally
to the SLT.
|
3639.18 | what he said + more | SWAM2::GOLDMAN_MA | Blondes have more Brains! | Tue Jan 17 1995 12:44 | 8 |
| re: -1 ... I say what he said! It's the absolute truth. I would add
that it should probably be a Top 5, with the cross -functional and
-industrial salary inequities being #5. And for the sales force brain
drain, you can add not only salary inequity, but also the major
frustration factor with ever-changing variable comp plan problems!
M.
|
3639.19 | | ROWLET::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow! | Tue Jan 17 1995 16:00 | 68 |
| The following topic has been contributed by a member of our community
who wishes to remain anonymous. If you wish to contact the author by
mail, please send your message to ROWLET::AINSLEY, specifying the
conference name and note number. Your message will be forwarded with
your name attached unless you request otherwise.
Bob - Co-moderator DIGITAL
================================================================================
Took a class once where the consultant explained how he was
paid an incredible amount of money for his "studies" of plants
that needed his services.
He explained his job:
He walks out to the production floor and asks the employees
what the problem is.
Then he writes up his report using big words, fancy graphs, etc.
And then he laughed... Because the company's own management
couldn't/wouldn't do it themselves, they insisted then needed
to hire him.
We're talking the same thing here.
And yes, he took the "filters" out by reporting the facts
straight from the employees, not weathered up through the
chain of command.
I have several other points I'd like to share:
- I've seen some people leave that I really admired as
engineers. Their output was 110%, but I also felt
their frustrations, where 110% wasn't good enough,
their achievements were over-shadowed or swallowed-up
by their drive to produce output that was "good enough".
The goal was set by their managers, who were equally
frustrated, full of negative remarks about the company,
it's directions, some of the friction of working through
"opportunities" with other groups. Feelings of downward
negative spirals. Stroking an ego here and there by
management would have been so beneficial. "Strokes"
are like complements and some people just can't part
with them.
- I've seen individual contributors, who were once managers
who are now armchair quarterbacks. "This is going wrong
that is going wrong, so much was going right when I was
a part of the gears". Blah-blah-blah, sorry but they
don't seem to be hacking it with their new job description
and tasks. Their bitterness is like poison to the rest of
us trying to get on.
- Lastly, manager's are fighting so hard for survival or what
they perceive as survival, that they are returning to their
groups as war-torn warriors, too tired to acknowledge their
team. And the team too shell shocked to celebrate their return.
A good example of this is having a manager who doesn't recognize
the group's secretary during Secretary's Day/Week, who allows
the holidays to go by without a group party, without so much as
an electronic "Have a Nice Holidays" e-mail message, too busy to
leave his office for a once a year "HI, how are you [what's your
name?]?". Is this the type manager you want to follow or be
lead by? Nope. This is the man who will sign my next review.
He literally doesn't know what I do.
|
3639.20 | Hearing some familiar things... | VIVALD::SHEA | | Tue Jan 17 1995 16:21 | 18 |
| Most of the replies so far mirror our situation here. I would add that employee
loyalty seems to be rapidly assuming the shape that the corporation apparently
has towards those still here. That is more work, less appreciation, no career
opportunities, no salary compensation, etc. Yet the elite receive what is
judged by the workers as undeserved and outrageously unfair raises. What kind of
a message does THAT send?
Add all this together, and as outside employment opportunities come up, Digital's
formerly valued individual contributors are cheap and easy pickings for
competitors. Then they are gone forever, leaving the work to be done by those
less able to complete it with the same high quality level.
Timing may be working against Digital. As we approach break even, will the fact
that competitors are hiring the best remaining talent work against continued
turn-around success? I think it might, unless conditions described in this note
improve VERY QUICKLY.
Incidently, we lost 6 very capable people out of about 40 over the past 2 weeks.
|
3639.21 | risks just not worth the potential rewards | NRSTAR::HORGAN | Tim Horgan | Tue Jan 17 1995 17:39 | 24 |
| The other factor behind all this is simply that doing an excellent job
is absolutely no guarantee that you will keep your job. (I know that
from personal experience - mine and others). Be in the wrong group at
the wrong time and you are history.
For me that is even more influential than salaries or 'career'
opportunities.
I consulted at a major car manufacturer at the time they had to make
some drastic cuts in white collar workers. It was refreshing to talk to
some of the obviously very talented people there who had the attitude
that the company recognized their talents and they 'knew' they would be
taken care of. And they were. In several cases their programs were
closed down, and they found new positions. Digital used to be like
that, so it was okay to go work on a risky project which might not
survive, because, if you were good, you could move on. No more. Not for
a while anyway.
So the reward for working incredibly hard and taking risks is you get
the same paycheck you got before with no more assurance you'll be here
next month. I'll feel better about working here when this dynamic gets
fixed....if it can be fixed.
th
|
3639.22 | | ROWLET::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow! | Tue Jan 17 1995 21:24 | 65 |
| The following reply has been contributed by a member of our community
who wishes to remain anonymous. If you wish to contact the author by
mail, please send your message to ROWLET::AINSLEY, specifying the
conference name and note number. Your message will be forwarded with
your name attached unless you request otherwise.
Bob - Co-moderator DIGITAL
===========================================================================
As my own departure is imminent, I'll add a few observations in the
hope that somehow, someday, upper management recognizes the problem and
saves some young, up-and-coming idealist who wants to set the world on
fire and (naively) believes that a good job will be rewarded - from
going through what I have.
For far too many years it has been apparent that the so-called parallel
career track is rigged to favor the managerial vs. the technical.
The party line that a technical path is 'equal' in compensation and
opportunity to the 'managerial' in not just a _myth_, it is a con game.
Too, too many times I've worked to see managers with little or no idea
as to what the work is going on, who did little or nothing to support
the work going on, get promoted due to the good work of individual
contributors, er, serfs.
Work like a dog, against the odds to accomplish something and chances
are your manager will be moving on - leaving you with a 'new' manager,
whose main focus is to move up & on. Rewarding 'past' excellence is not
usually a priority unless you need the same ICs to rise once again to
the challenge - long enough to get you promoted onward and upward. Fool
me once... Fool me twice....
Often times, I have seen the management of groups made up of the cream
of crop in talent treated as stepping stones for managers earmarked
from above to be moved up. Often they [new managers] are appointed
just as the fruits of a long development effort are being completed -
and they stay just long enough for it to look like they were somehow
responsible.
In the old days, the best of the best technically were given a shot at
managing if they wanted it - which if handled properly is just
engineering on a broader scale. You had the advantage of having
managers who were elder statesmen in engineering field - that you could
go to for advice. There was an obvious career path for all... role
models to emulate......
But somewhere along the way we bought (or were sold) this paradigm of
the 'administrative' manager. Technical resources became just valuable
draft animals to get the 'manager' where he/she wanted to go.
If I had to sum up the reasons for leaving, I guess I'd have to say
that I tired of having no control over my career or opportunity for
advancement in a company that thinks managers with a B.A in business
are its core competency. I'm well aware that the managment track is
where there $$ are - and I don't expect a lot of change - after all -
how do you think the *current* middle management got where they are ?
I want control of my career and the rewards that should come with it.
This rat is tired of the maze. You won't fool me Thrice.
Rattus Incognitus
|
3639.23 | | LJSRV1::BOURQUARD | Deb | Wed Jan 18 1995 09:43 | 2 |
| I could have written the first, second and final paragraphs
of .21. Since I didn't, I'll just thank Tim.
|
3639.24 | Resignation freeze announced... | ASDG::SBILL | | Wed Jan 18 1995 12:30 | 5 |
|
I've got the solution!!! It's time for a resignation freeze! Nobody can quit! If
you want to leave, you'll have to wait until the freeze is lifted!
Steve
|
3639.25 | | INDY50::ram | Ram Rao, SPARCosaurus hunter | Wed Jan 18 1995 13:12 | 1 |
| Resignation freeze <==> instituting slavery
|
3639.26 | Forgot the smiley :-) | ASDG::SBILL | | Wed Jan 18 1995 13:32 | 13 |
| Sorry folks!
I forgot to put the smiley in for those who would take my "resignation freeze"
seriously...Please insert Mr. Smiley face in reply .24 :-).
It was basically my warped commentary on all of the freezes that we have endured
these last few years.
BTW I think that the Brain Drain is a REAL problem that has been ignored for too
long. We've seen some really talented people leaving to work for Intel around
here.
Steve B.
|
3639.27 | And then we need a scapegoat | JGODCL::CRONIN | | Wed Jan 18 1995 15:16 | 7 |
| Had the base note been written on the 16-Jan-1993 I could believe it.
But asking me to accept that "our most upper levels of management" had
no idea of a brain drain is a wee bit too much to believe.
The base note almost seems like a "unofficial leak" to get engineering
speculating on what "Rip Van Winkle" will do now that he has woken up..
JC.
|
3639.28 | | WLDBIL::KILGORE | Missed Woodstock -- *twice*! | Wed Jan 18 1995 15:33 | 6 |
|
Actually, the base node was an early indicator of a profitable quarter.
It signified the SLT moving from basic survival up to the next plateau in
their Hierarchy of Needs.
|
3639.29 | | LASSIE::KIMMEL | | Wed Jan 18 1995 16:38 | 1 |
| You mean - justification of another raise?
|
3639.30 | Maslow++ | ZENDIA::MCARLETON | Happy-Happy-Happy Joy-Joy-Joy | Wed Jan 18 1995 17:13 | 14 |
| > It signified the SLT moving from basic survival up to the next plateau in
> their Hierarchy of Needs.
I'd say that it's the engineers that are moving up their Hierarchy of
Needs. During the hard times at Digital and in the Greater Maynard
Area, Digital management knew that engineers would settle for just
survival. They set the environment so that is all you got. Now
that times are better in the GMA, if not in Digital, the internal
environment has not changed much. Engineers are hearing from
ex-colleagues that their needs can be better met at another company.
Knowing there are jobs out there means that you don't need to think
about survival anymore. Thoughts turn to the higher needs that
Digital no longer can meet.
|
3639.31 | The gate is closed, cow is dead | CSC32::SCHIMPF | | Wed Jan 18 1995 20:49 | 23 |
| My 1/2 cent worth.
Where I sit ( in the bowels) of Digital; I see the field engineering
staff cut to the bone. I see my own engineers here in the CSC leaving,
or being TSFO'D. What I am getting at, is more people leaveing,
more work coming; Where is the ACCOUNTABILITY?
In my group, we are held accountable for our work, or lack there of.
People are being fired for not doing their jobs. I can only agree
with policy. But these "non" performers have been around for a
long time. What I would like to know is why those individuals who
have let this kind of activity occur much let set precedence with this
kind of activity, Where is the ACCOUNTABILITY?
Rewards and Recog.; Yep, same story line. But an empty package.
I've seen people work their tales off only too see the "good ole' boy"
network reward those with cranial-rectal problems.
I have already said way to much...WAY TO MUCH!
Jeff
|
3639.32 | Time for expensive poll again. | BONNET::WLODEK | Network pathologist. | Thu Jan 19 1995 04:24 | 11 |
|
A friend of mine quitted a 5.000 people company , he was a technical
guy supporting operations in a services business. Not very high in the
food chain but still an important but not critical resource.
He got called by a VP and interviewed about reasons for leaving, VP
wanted to know if things were going OK in his company.
I guess the point of the story is that some VPs just don't know how to
fill their time.
|
3639.33 | Expensive, maybe, but potentially very worthwhile | PEKING::RICKETTSK | Drop the dead donkey | Fri Jan 20 1995 03:06 | 23 |
| >> -< Time for expensive poll again. >-
>> A friend of mine quitted a 5.000 people company , he was a technical
>> guy supporting operations in a services business. Not very high in the
>> food chain but still an important but not critical resource.
>> He got called by a VP and interviewed about reasons for leaving, VP
>> wanted to know if things were going OK in his company.
>> I guess the point of the story is that some VPs just don't know how to
>> fill their time.
Are you suggesting that a VP is wasting his time doing that sort of
thing? Considering the other notes in here about how out of touch the
SLT is with what's going on 'in the trenches', I think this would be an
excellent way for some of ours (heaven knows we seem to have enough of
them! What DO they do all day?) to fill their time. It has a particular
advantage in that someone who is leaving anyway is much more likely to
give honest and direct answers than someone who intends to stay,
because they will not be concerned about any possible retribution. That
doesn't mean that the VeeP will listen, or do anything with the
information, but at least they would receive it relatively 'unfiltered'
by layers of management, external survey companies etc.
Ken
|
3639.34 | | NOTAPC::SEGER | This space intentionally left blank | Fri Jan 20 1995 10:17 | 29 |
| I've recently read a book called "Built To Last" which is about visionary
companies and one of the biggest things that differentiated them from the rest
was their CULTURE (something Digital USED to have a strong supply of in the
'good old days').
Anyhow, one visionary company it talks about is Johnson and Johnson which as
part of its culture has a CREDO everyone lives up to in which it's stated that
their order of priorities are:
Doctors, nurses, hospitals, mothers and anyone else
who uses their products
Second are workers
Third is management
Fourth are the communities in which they live
Fifth (and LAST) is to the stockholders! While business must
make a profit, that is NOT their first priority.
It then goes on to say that in the early 80's, the CEO stated he estimated he
spent 40% of his time communicating the credo throughout the company.
There are zillions of other examples of senior management getting involved in
the culture of their companies and NOT just worrying about profits. Theirs are
the companies that seem to stand the test of time AND turn big profits as well.
-mark
|
3639.35 | An easy paraphrase of success | STAR::PARKE | True Engineers Combat Obfuscation | Fri Jan 20 1995 11:10 | 8 |
| Re .34, and to summ up for the old DEC and Johnson & Johnson, with a
paraphrase from a movie:
"Build the people (Customers, EMPLOYEES)
and they (PROFITS) will come"
\Bill
|
3639.36 | | KOOLIT::FARINA | | Fri Jan 20 1995 11:52 | 9 |
| .33, Ken, maybe it's wishful thinking on my part, since I don't
actually know the author of .32, but I got the impression that the
comment (VPs don't know how to spend their time) was sarcastic. I
thought the point he was making was that *our* VPs don't seem to see
any value in that, when, in fact, it could prove extremely valuable.
And .32, if that's not what you meant, don't tell me! I like my
interpretation better! ;-)
Susan
|
3639.37 | From the old collegue | EEMELI::AMANNISTO | En�� 6281 p�iv�� el�kkeeseen... | Fri Jan 20 1995 13:26 | 8 |
|
Just today I met an old collegue, who got a packet about a half
year ago. Very skilled person, worked in Digital about 15 years.
I asked him how he felt his new job, and he told me that for him was
difficult to realize that they really listen him and get a value
for his opinions...
Asko
|
3639.38 | | ROWLET::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow! | Fri Jan 20 1995 13:55 | 74 |
| The following reply has been contributed by a member of our community
who wishes to remain anonymous. If you wish to contact the author by
mail, please send your message to ROWLET::AINSLEY, specifying the
conference name and note number. Your message will be forwarded with
your name attached unless you request otherwise.
Bob - Co-moderator DIGITAL
===============================================================================
Here's my take on why front line engineers are leaving.
There are, of course, the obvious reasons why engineers are leaving. For
starters, salaries are low and benefits poor, especially the 401K program,
in comparison with the industry. Then there's the other reasons mentioned
here and elsewhere like time consuming, poorly designed or worthless work
processes, no or slow procurement of necessary tools and equipment, poorly
defined and articulated company goals (this seems to be changing from the
top down, but very slowly), and/or department and project goals, adoption
of personell policies without employee input, no or poor advancement
opportunities, poor employee morale, no job security etc.
For me, middle management would be the biggest reason I'd leave for another
company. Simply put, the Digital middle managers I've personally encountered
have been the worst I've ever seen in my entire career. Here's some of
problems with the middle managers I've worked for:
Insulated within Digital, they didn't keep up with developments in the
rest of the industry. Their positions seemed due more to nepotism than
qualifications. Lacking a broad industry perspective, they wasted development
resources focusing on unprofitable products or products out of step with where
the rest of the industry was going.
They either didn't set organization goals, or set them without feedback
from the front line to assure that everone was working towards and willing
to achieve common goals. They did not use mechanisms for measuring progress
towards those goals.
They hired front line managers who lacked basic management skills (who,
through lack of management skills or lack of exposure to rest of the industry,
themselves hired unsuitable front line engineers and wasted development
resources.) They hired support staff and assigned them to projects, but
did not give the project leader the ability to select the best candidate
for the job and reject unsuitable candidates. They ignored feedback on the
poor productivity and value of their support staff. When TFSO time came,
they tfso'd productive front line contributers instead of unproductive
support staff.
They never sought feedback or ignored feedback from front line engineers
about problems with the front line managers. They themselves or with
front line managers punished front line employees for "rocking the boat"
with TFSO, demotion, or unsuitable or unpalatable assignments. (That is
the reason I have submitted this note anonymously.) When offered solutions
to problems they did not originate or understand, they were adverse to change,
and allowed problems to run unaddressed.
Their entire focus seemed directed towards upper management. They did not
pass up or down information relevent to upper management, projects or
employees either through ignorance or a desire to control the flow of
information. When projects they managed could have been enhanced by
collaboration with other internal Digital groups, they blocked interaction
to protect their own turf.
Of the six managers I have based my observations on, three continue to work
within Digital. I have no explanation why their performance or shortcomings
have not been identified and addressed by upper management.
I have come to the conclusion that when new projects are initiated, upper
management in conjunction with the development staff should jointly identify
middle management job requirements and set metrics for them. Both should
then jointly select a candidate from an internal pool of managers. Both
would then be certain the best qualified candidate compatible with the
engineering staff was selected.
|
3639.39 | | ROWLET::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow! | Fri Jan 20 1995 15:52 | 42 |
| The following reply has been contributed by a member of our community
who wishes to remain anonymous. If you wish to contact the author by
mail, please send your message to ROWLET::AINSLEY, specifying the
conference name and note number. Your message will be forwarded with
your name attached unless you request otherwise.
Bob - Co-moderator DIGITAL
==============================================================================
Lets review what's happening in some 'profit making' organizations.
The middle mgmt. has taken back all power from the frontline managers for
salary, special adjustments, stock grants, and promotions. The middle managers
think they *know* who the high performers are and a variety of incentives
have been given to them so that they don't leave. Obscene amounts (10 to 30K
in cash or stocks - not options) have been distributed to these select few.
Sometimes, they wait till someone announces that he/she has a job offer and
they match it if they want them to stay. But for most of the other, day-to-day
hardworking folks, who don't try very hard to establish that direct link to
impress these managers, but contribute significantly to the product revenues,
get may be a 4% raise after adding the 6 months to their review time.
This, in my opinion, is one of the main causes for a brain drain in the profit
making organizations. Market is hot. Why tolerate an iffy 4% raise when some
so called *high performers* make out tens of thousands? Bottom line is that
middle mgmt. has obtained too much power. They give and take it away as they
please.
What we need is a profit sharing plan on top of the annual salary plan.
This way, if a manager wants to reward a so called high performer, her base
pay increases compared to rest of the team. Also when the time comes to
share the profit, based on their salary, they will get higher amounts compared
to the rest. But atleast this scheme won't completely screw 90% of the other
hardowrking folks that contribute to the turnaround of this company.
It is quite frustrating actually. They are taking away all avenues for an
engineer to make decent wages. Ofcourse that engineer is going to find another
job which pays much better. And then when the numbers get bad enough, they
go out and hire similar folks, sometimes with less experience, for much higher
wages. Talk about stupidity!
|
3639.40 | 'Quinn' is a pen-name | ROWLET::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow! | Fri Jan 20 1995 17:11 | 55 |
| The following reply has been contributed by a member of our community
who wishes to remain anonymous. If you wish to contact the author by
mail, please send your message to ROWLET::AINSLEY, specifying the
conference name and note number. Your message will be forwarded with
your name attached unless you request otherwise.
Bob - Co-moderator DIGITAL
===============================================================================
Why does anybody ever leave a company? They look for money, benefits,
opportunity, security, respect, a sense of accomplishment or are told to go.
I believe all of these are included in the decisions that people are making to
leave.
Money is an issue. The pay freeze was lifted, but there doesn't seem
to have been much money released for salary increases. I guess that makes
this a virtual pay freeze.
Benefits have been reduced so that we now pay more to get less.
In order to understand what the opportunities and their risks, we need
to understand the direction the company is going. There is some debate, in
the ranks, as to what this company is going to be making. Internal divisions
do not seem to be supporting the other divisions. Walls seem to be growing
between divisions and groups within divisions to protect their jobs. People
who go to a new group are the most likely to be let go in the event of a
layoff. Layoffs happen in every group. There is no opportunity without some
level of security to try something new, information about the existence of
opportunities and an attitude to let inexperienced people to try them. There
is no ability to assess the risks without understanding the direction the
company is going.
Respect is too big an issue for me to attempt. There are too many
instances where the company has shown a lack of respect to go into. I can
not begin to do justice to the subject. I.E. it shows disrespect to replace
full time employees with full time temporary or contract workers doing the
same work.
The single most consistent message that we have been getting for
years in DIGITAL is that the employees are not wanted in DIGITAL. Every time
we have lost money, upper management has quickly responded with "we need to cut
headcount", maybe the sale of some assets, and maybe some different ideas on
what to do to make money. We just announced a profit. Many people worked
incredibly hard to make that happen. The message is that management was
successful, customers like our technology and that we have too many
employees. The single most heard message from Wall Street, the news and
management is that we need to reduce our headcount. Could it be that those
good loyal people are doing what they have been told to do, so many times, for
so many years, "LEAVE". One of the things touted in the new financial report
and as a direction for the immediate future is the reduction in headcount.
The message there is that the brain drain is helping the cost structure.
Quinn
|
3639.41 | No fun .. | KOALA::HAMNQVIST | Reorg city | Fri Jan 20 1995 18:41 | 21 |
| IMO the real reason for most voluntary departures is the lack of fun in
your job. When you stop having fun at work, your not so happy mood
spills over into your private life and you look for ways to compensate
this or to simply change job to have more fun. If you can get a raise at
the same time, the better.
Some of us accept the opportunity to improve our market value in lieu of
salary increase. But the irony of it is that when the company does help a
small percentage to brush up their skills those individuals typically
discover that they can have a lot more fun outside of Digital. Some have
lost faith in Digital's committment to their future and are just fed up
with seeing collegues (and themselves) loyally do non-resume enhancing work
and subsequently get dumped.
I don't think that restoring salary increases or benefits will help stop
the bleeding of key people. The bleed won't stop until we can make this a
sustainable fun environment to work in. And that requires more fundamental
things like a vision, clearly articulated strategy, accountability and
a recognition that our staff should be treated as our biggest asset.
>Per
|
3639.42 | I'll buy my own fun ... | BSS::C_BOUTCHER | | Fri Jan 20 1995 18:56 | 11 |
| I can buy my own fun. Compensation has turned from a motivating factor
to a strong de-motivating factor. Speaking for myself, I don't stay or
leave a job based solely upon salary, and I do prefer a job I enjoy,
but when the work I do is not recognized in the form of compensation
(ie. regular salary increases based upon performance and contribution
to the corporation, bonuses for "above and beyond" stuff, et.al.) then
the rest is superfluous.
IMHO
Chuck
|
3639.43 | Quinn is a pen-name | ROWLET::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow! | Sat Jan 21 1995 12:32 | 7 |
| I have received several mail messages from well-meaning noters pointing out
that there is a name at the bottom of .40. I questioned the author before
posting the reply and they informed me that it was being used as a pen-name.
So, thank you to everyone that was concerned about .40 remaining anonymous.
Bob - Co-moderator DIGITAL
|
3639.44 | | HERON::KAISER | | Mon Jan 23 1995 02:43 | 8 |
| > I don't actually know the author of .32, but I got the impression that
> the comment (VPs don't know how to spend their time) was sarcastic.
I know Wlodek, and I assure you that as a loyal employee of Digital, he
does not employ a sense of humor while at the office. (Nor, of course, do
I.) Therefore he couldn't possibly have been being sarcastic.
___Pete
|
3639.45 | Not surprised at all.... | POBOX::CORSON | Higher, and a bit more to the right | Mon Jan 23 1995 17:58 | 14 |
|
Having just returned from the Digital partners executive Conference
in Palm Desert, CA and having just read the Enrico SBU DVN, I'm not the
least bit surprised at all.
Never in the DVN, nor at all the presentations at the EC, did
Digital senior management mention people. The three top focuses are
expense control, completing the reorganization, and then "growing"
their respective businesses.
To get #1 under control, most of us non-manager types are
completely expendable. C'est la vie, sports fans.
the Greyhawk
|
3639.46 | get a job in field service | GRANPA::BBELL | | Tue Jan 24 1995 13:18 | 14 |
|
After having attended two 'sessions' of the 'change forum' that MCS is
putting on, I have to say that MCS does seem to care about the people.
Having been with Digital for a good long while (and still like to call
us 'field service'), I believe upper management sees that people do
make the difference and that if your people aren't having any fun any
more it is pretty difficult to not to fail. I hear what you are saying
about contract employees and I have somehow lived through the last
three years of performance paralysis. But there is a significant
investment being made by MCS to bring back the old spirit and I am sure
that some of the messages in the change forum would be different if
they didn't think it was important for us to enjoy it and dive in.
Bob
|
3639.47 | Yes, MCS is doing it right | TINCUP::GUEST1 | | Tue Jan 24 1995 20:18 | 11 |
| re .46: I agree with the noter. MCS(D in my case) is using whomever
has the experience and/or expertise to design the work and hold them
responsible for working that way and improving it.
We have not seen those big increases/bonuses yet, however, we are
well on our way to positioning MCS for major cost/quality improvements
and revenue opportunities. When we succeed, perhaps we'll be
remembered? This is a hint, btw.
Al
|
3639.48 | The real question is: Will it stop? | NUTS2U::LITTLE | ATG/EOS/Object Infrastructure/me | Wed Jan 25 1995 01:24 | 26 |
| Brain drain? What brain drain? I thought the folks leaving were
doing so to help the companies bottom line. After all, if you
make conditions poor enough, people will leave without a package
and Digital won't incur another restructuring charge. Brilliant
piece of bean counting if you ask me, although incredibly stupid
for the long term viability of the company.
The people I know that have left (which is more than the number of
people I know that were TFSO'd) have left for multiple reasons.
Clearly money, benefits, and recognition are a part of it. But I
think more significantly is the total feeling of helplessness.
Most felt that they had little chance at affecting Digital's
bottom line. The company's direction has vascilated so much or
been so poorly articulated that seeing a link between good
individual performance and company performance is essentially
impossible.
I also find it unbelievable that this brain drain is either
unexpected or unintentional. Instead of moving quickly 2-3 years
ago to stem the red ink, we chose to bleed the company to death.
Triage should have been performed 3-4 years ago and allowed those
remaining to get on with rebuilding. Sure, hindsight is 20-20 but
blinding, starving, and shooting your employees over a 3 year
period of time certainly has a predictable outcome.
-tl
|
3639.49 | Spelling Correction to .48, proposed in an attempt to clarify: | LJSRV2::KALIKOW | BuggyChipMakers=>BuggyWhipMakers | Wed Jan 25 1995 06:41 | 2 |
| vascilated => VAXillated
|
3639.50 | Better Paid Bob & Entourage | POLAR::PARKER | Great White North! | Wed Jan 25 1995 13:31 | 19 |
| I can't help but notice that the SLT is widening the gap between the real
workers and themselves. For instance, I believe Lee Iaccoca of Chrysler
accepted a $1.00/yr salary when the company was experiencing rocky times.
The Digital SLT, on the other hand, awards themselves (with BOD approval)
handsome raises while the rest of us peons are rewarded with salary freezes.
(The salary increases for the SLT was published in VNS a while back.)
I can only say that I was INCENSED. It is this very behaviour by our exalted
ones that undermines the confidence and to a certain extent, the self worth
of us DECies. Although an isolated example, it is indicative of the
pervasive malaise within Digital, and certainly contributes to the exodus
underway through out Digital.
I work hard, usually only gripe through the NOTES files, have added
responsibilities due to TFSO's, and without a salary increase in sight.
What's to become of Digital?
|
3639.51 | MCS where? | BVILLE::FOLEY | Instant Gratification takes too long... | Wed Jan 25 1995 13:41 | 9 |
| re MC(Field)S... I'd like to know what you are hearing that is new
exciting or different, all we hear is the same old lines. Do more with
less, faster! and "Meet BOB, he's our new sub-contractor working at
<mumble>". I fear the axe has not yet hit the ground, and the
executioner still has his hood on, for that is one large consequence of
the flailings we have endured, I will trust no one, pretty much ever
again.
.mike.
|
3639.52 | SURE! | MIMS::SANDERS_J | | Thu Jan 26 1995 15:28 | 13 |
| re. 50
Don't be so naive. Lee Iaccoca would no more work for one dollar than
you would. It was probably one dollar and a hell of a lot of options.
Options that he cashed in a year or two later and made a fortune on.
The options were probably set up so that he could not possibly lose.
Lee is a good marketeer and no doubt he marketed himself to you very
well.
I will be willing to bet that Lee Iaccoca has made and will make more
money off of Chrysler than Bob Palmer will ever make at Digital. And
you can bet that Iaccoca laid off a ton of auto workers and middle
management.
|
3639.53 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | proud counter-culture McGovernik | Thu Jan 26 1995 15:36 | 21 |
| I also believe that if upper management wants to know what is going on,
they need to get out of their offices and in to the pits with the rest
of us.
My recomendation to any of the upeer management types who might be
reading this:
Take off your suit, and get into your old engineering uniform and come
sit down and handle phone calls with us. Walk into the cubicles, lines
and whatever, and ask questions one-on-one, you may get what you think
you want from large meetings with us, but it won't be what you need to
put a stop to the hemorage of talent that I see happening.
Please hurry up and do this. I am rapidly reaching the point, as are
others on my team where our sense of ethics around customer support
will cause us to leave. If you really ask you will find out what
training, equipment, documentation, and people we need to get this job
done for us, our customers, and for you. consider it the trickle up
theory of business.
meg
|
3639.54 | Can field offices play too, or... | ANGLIN::PEREZ | Trust, but ALWAYS verify! | Fri Jan 27 1995 11:23 | 9 |
| This note largely has the look and feel of
"engineering-and-support-are-all-there-is"... I'd also recommend that
anyone wanting to know what is REALLY going on out there get hold of
some of the people in the FIELD offices, since the drain here has to be
as bad as in engineering and/or support. Of course, that may not be a
portion of the corp that Enrico is concerned about? If anybody does
give a damn, I'm sure there are LOTS of people that'll be glad to
answer their phones and tell whoever asks why DC or SI or whatever we
are has places where 70 -80% have left voluntarily in the past year.
|
3639.55 | And leave the suits at home too. | BVILLE::FOLEY | Instant Gratification takes too long... | Fri Jan 27 1995 13:13 | 6 |
| I might add that actually going to "field" office does not preclude
going to an "MCS" office (remember "Field" service?) and actually going
along on a few service calls. I think that hanging out with the real
people in the trenches would open some eyes.
.mike.
|
3639.56 | Brain Drain not unique to us | ANGLIN::BJAMES | I feel the need, the need for SPEED | Wed Feb 08 1995 16:57 | 8 |
| There is a good article in this weeks Fortune magazine, entitled
"Abandoning Corporate America, Why American businesses can not attract
the best and the brightest"
If you want to understand the brain drain not only in our company but
across the other Fortune 500 firms this article pretty much sums it up.
Maverick
|