T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
4719.1 | | PADC::KOLLING | Karen | Fri Jul 12 1996 16:54 | 7 |
| Let me shed a little ray of reality in here. The way I heard it,
BP does not read this conference. Instead an admin or somesuch
printed for him and he read offline the note thread he commented on,
and s/he presumably also typed in his comments. So, anyone who thinks
the various additional problems that are being discussed in here are
being brought to BP's attention thru this conference, guess again.
|
4719.2 | | CGOOA::BARNABE | Guy Barnabe - Digital Canada | Fri Jul 12 1996 17:14 | 8 |
| Well, for me, I think that we will have a harder time getting over the
negative publicity this time around...
On the positive side, I am sure we will still report a profit from
operations, even though the charge will absorb most of it.
-- Guy
|
4719.3 | Base note well written, but... | COPS01::SPANGLER | | Fri Jul 12 1996 17:18 | 20 |
| I don't think .0 really thinks Mr. Palmer reads this. Sounds like the
audience was all the rest of us, and we already know all that stuff.
But it was well written, and the writer obviously still cares about
Digital, as many of the rest of us do.
It's hard to gauge something like overall company morale from a
notesfile like this, but it seems like the mood has slowly slipped from
pessimism to quiet acceptance that things are hopelessly broken. I
don't know how many people have the attitude I do - keep your head
down, keep your skills updated, work hard for the customer and muddle
through - and if things go down the dumper, they go...C'est la vie...
There, I guess I'm somewhat guilty of the "quiet acceptance" I spoke of
earlier. I want to do more than that...I have a great manager, and I'm
working on some interesting stuff, so I'm not unhappy. But like
everyone, I'd like to be part of a what you could feel is a winning
organization with a great future - it makes hard work so much more fun.
Is there *anything* an individual can do in the current climate to
achieve that? Is the pessimism just among NOTErs, or absolutely
everywhere?
|
4719.4 | Here's a way ! | MPOS01::BJAMES | Ride to Live, Live to Ride | Fri Jul 12 1996 17:28 | 20 |
| There's always the direct approach:
Bob Palmer@MSO
Now, it's perfectly acceptable and fine by me that he has one of his
left-teniuts cruise through this notes file and grab stuff for his
reading attention. I mean afterall, he's a busy guy and you can't read
everything. The important thing here is that someone does bring .0 to
his attention. Hell, if I was walking down the hallway and we were
passing each other, I'd say, "Bob, did you happen to see the open
letter to you in the Digital conference today?" Now he'd probably say
"No I haven't but how do I get it?" To which I'd say, I'll contact the
author Atlant and have him send it to you for you to read." "Fine,
have a great Friday" "You too Bob." Simnple. Done. Onto the tasks
at hand.
So Atlant? What's your thoughts? Will you or will you not e-mail it
to his attention?
Mav
|
4719.5 | | ACISS1::BATTIS | Three fries short of a Happy Meal | Fri Jul 12 1996 17:51 | 5 |
|
.4
good answer. Bob lives at MSO not MPO, so your odds of running into him
in the hallway are kinds remote at best. :-) :-)
|
4719.6 | It is not gloomy everywhere ... | MANM01::JOELJOSOL | | Sat Jul 13 1996 07:28 | 38 |
| I am from Asia-Pacific. While you folks are in this doomsday mood, we
here in Manila are triumphant in dominating our local IT market. We
only shipped 20 units of Alpha in 1993; today, as of July 1996, we have
just shipped for 1996 nearly 150 of various sizes including half-a-dozen
Turbolasers we did not even dreamed of doing a year ago. We have driven a
monthly seminar on various Digital products, even launched the local's
first and biggest Internet product launch in Manila. Internet, databases,
servers, NT - Digital's name is there. Well, a couple of years ago,
people mistook us for a telephone company in Manila. Not anymore.
We are proud of Digital, Alpha, and ourselves.
We are pounding the market with the 64-bit migration issues with
one seminar after the other. People are listening. With the popularity
of the Internet, the Digital brand went with it. We were late to market
but we dislodge Sun from its ISP territory. Fact is we took a coup
by taking the Internet World Manila in September away from Sun and now
we have the URL carrying the Digital logo.
Everywhere we fight we win. I was in Digital in that fateful October
of 1993. We thought we were goners. Against all odds, just like you
folks, we fought back fiercely. Now that we are better we cannot
afford to lose that momentum. Our PCs have doubled their sales, in
fact our best year ever. Just like Claflin said it is selling well
except in the largest market in the world.
In basketball, there is a school of thought that says "the best defense
is a good offense". Now is the time to take the fight to the
competition while we can before they can setup their defense. Once that
defense is setup, we will lose if we just trade baskets.
The news has somehow dampen our victory spirit. But, we feel we need
to celebrate despite the news. We did fine. We gave our best. And while
this great company allows us to do that we will. I am sorry that not
all Digital (or DEC as some of our partners still call us) is
celebrating. Nevertheless, for some of us who can we will.
/joeljosol
|
4719.7 | The view from somewhere | WOTVAX::WILLIAMSM | Born to grep | Sat Jul 13 1996 14:54 | 9 |
| One attitude that I've heard in a number of places, especially amongst
service staff is "Do as much overtime as you can, get as much training
as you can and hope its you."
As for me, my little MTG group from Winnersh is run off its little
feet. But, the Classic service group I just left is really in the
doldrums.
R. Michael, who rather likes this new job.
|
4719.8 | I couldn't stay connected -- others wanted to use the payphone! :-) | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | See http://atlant2.zko.dec.com/ | Sat Jul 13 1996 17:03 | 12 |
| I assure you, I *DID* mail a copy directly to Bob. I'd *NEVER*
post something like this without doing so -- what's the point?
(Now I see today that MTS$ bounced the first mail message because
of a typo, but I'll be sending it again very soon.)
And if anyone knows either the E-Mail or snail mail addresses
for the rst of the Board of Directors, I'll be sending them
copies as well. Monday, I'm sure I can get that answer from
Investor Services if no one answers here sooner.
Atlant
|
4719.9 | Now that I'm back home and away from the payphone... | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | See http://atlant2.zko.dec.com/ | Sat Jul 13 1996 21:17 | 6 |
| > (Now I see today that MTS$ bounced the first mail message because
> of a typo, but I'll be sending it again very soon.)
It didn't bounce this time.
Atlant
|
4719.10 | Good Job... | MASURE::CRAPAROTTA | | Sun Jul 14 1996 00:20 | 7 |
| Atlant,
Well done!!!!!!!!
Joe
(whose setting up his saltwater tank again to chill again...)
|
4719.11 | Small ray of hope yet | GIDDAY::lap8eth.stl.dec.com::THOMPSONS | Welcome to the Jungle | Sun Jul 14 1996 01:49 | 8 |
| RE: Message to Bob
Fantastic. I work in SPT (Australia and New Zealand) and a
particularly large customer asked staight to my face in private. Is
Digital going to survive. I have this impending doom and gloom
everywhere around, I said I sure hope we do
|
4719.12 | | TENNIS::KAM | Kam WWSE 714/261.4133 DTN/535.4133 IVO | Sun Jul 14 1996 05:44 | 32 |
| They are aware that you're getting these questions cuz they already
responded with this:
Digital Update -- July 1996 Presentation
DATE POSTED: 12-JUL-1996 LAST REVIEW: 12-JUL-1996 LENGTH: 0018 Slides
This presentation is designed to help Account Managers and other customer
facing employees respond to customer questions and concerns regarding
Digital's recent re-structuring announcement. The customary Quarterly
Financial Focus presentation will augment this communication 02-AUG-1996.
The EXE contains:
- a PPT presentation (18 slides)
- script in speaker notes sections
- questions and answers in ASCII and DOC format.
Contact:
MARGOT WALTHALL, @MSO, 223-9224, MSO2-1/H24
SCOTT CRAMER, @MSO, 223-9227
CAROL ANN RITZ, @MSO, 223-9248, MSO
File Names Bytes/Blocks Description
OL00E1SC.TXT 13940/ 28 English Language, ASCII document
OL00E1F4.PDF 347316/ 679 Speakers Notes - PDF format
OL00E1D4.PDF 498222/ 974 Visuals PDF Format
OL00E1S4.PS 2119582/ 4140 Speaker Notes With Visuals for Any Digital
Printer
OL00E1P4.PS 4903468/ 9578 PostScript Visuals for any Digital Printer
OL00E1TM.EXE 248746/ 486 Transparency Color PowerPoint Source in Executable
OL00E1CM.EXE 281799/ 551 Full Color PowerPoint Source in Executable File
|
4719.13 | That's for folks we already talk to: what about the rest? | BBPBV1::WALLACE | Unix is digital. Use Digital UNIX. | Sun Jul 14 1996 08:43 | 14 |
| That's nice, but it's looking backwards (to help retain the attention
and budgets of the people we are already dealing with).
Digital has 5% (?) of the general IT market. There's lots of room for
growth. Where's the market-specific attention-grabbing stuff to get
off-base folks to be aware enough and confident enough to call Digital
in and talk? When this is done well, the results can be tremendous: in
one of the sectors I cover, Digital AND ALPHA has come from nowhere to
top-notch player in less than two years, and some of the customers
don't just buy kit, they buy 2hour response MCS service too. Let's hope
this sector doesn't change again that quickly...
regards
john
|
4719.14 | | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | See http://atlant2.zko.dec.com/ | Mon Jul 15 1996 15:33 | 37 |
| > And if anyone knows either the E-Mail or snail mail addresses
> for the rst of the Board of Directors, I'll be sending them
> copies as well. Monday, I'm sure I can get that answer from
> Investor Services if no one answers here sooner.
Me: I'd like to write to the Board of Directors.
Do they have Email or USPS address(es)?
Investor Services: What do you want to write to them about?
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Later, we got to the truth of the matter. According to the Law
Department (where I eventually ended up):
o The BoD doesn't have EMail addresses
o The Corporation won't give out their home addresses (no big
surprise -- angry shareholders might picket them! :-) )
o But you can write to them at:
Digital Equipment Corp. Board of Directors
c/o Office of the Corporate Secretary
111 Powdermill Road, MS MSO2-3/F13
Maynard, MA 01720
Enclose n individually addressed letters, else the Law Department
will have to photocopy the letters themselves, and they didn't
sound too pleased about that prospect. In fact, no one seemed
very pleased that I might want to write to the Board of Directors
at all. I can't imagine why, this being a publicly-held firm and
all. Maybe they don't like the owners daring to express their
opinion.
Atlant
|
4719.15 | Wrong Haircut | RDGENG::WILLIAMS_A | | Mon Jul 15 1996 16:08 | 9 |
|
at the UK sales conference last week, we were treated to two short
videos, one of Harry Copperman, the next of Bob inspiring us for the
next FY,and explaining what happened in Q4...
Bob's video clip was introduced as ".. and now, Bob Palmer, who also
has really great hair..". Which got a great laugh. And probably sums up
the feeling of the field. 64 bit haircut anyone ?
|
4719.16 | | STAR::DZIEDZIC | Tony Dziedzic - DTN 381-2438 | Mon Jul 15 1996 16:25 | 6 |
| Re .15:
The haircut comment was probably a reaction to an article titled
"Can Digital survive latest traumas?" in the July 8th issue of
USA Today. The article referred to "Bob Palmer, he of the slicked
hair, fat diamond rings and short temper."
|
4719.17 | Dilbert, too | GVA05::DAVIS | | Mon Jul 15 1996 17:15 | 2 |
| Not to mention the part in "The Dilbert Principle", where great hair
seems to be one of the main requirements for senior management.
|
4719.18 | Follicularly challenged? | BHAJEE::JAERVINEN | Ora, the Old Rural Amateur | Mon Jul 15 1996 18:35 | 4 |
| _Now_ I know why I never made it!!
:-)
|
4719.19 | somebody must like the way things have been going | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (DTN 227-3978, TAY1) | Mon Jul 15 1996 22:44 | 12 |
| re Note 4719.14 by ATLANT::SCHMIDT:
> In fact, no one seemed
> very pleased that I might want to write to the Board of Directors
> at all. I can't imagine why, this being a publicly-held firm and
> all.
I can -- there is no way that Digital would "stay the course"
established during its decade of disaster if the BoD had good
lines of communication with the employees in the trenches.
Bob
|
4719.20 | Names please | ODIXIE::DWYERR | | Tue Jul 16 1996 00:26 | 4 |
| re .14
Please provide the names of each member of the board. After eight
years I leave Digital this Friday (resignation). I would love to tell
the board about our less than great leadership.
|
4719.21 | Board of Directors | BIS1::GEERAERTS | | Tue Jul 16 1996 08:03 | 48 |
| Re. 20
Board of Directors (as per November 9, 1995 at the annual stockholders
meeting)
Robert B. Palmer Chairman of the Board
President and CEO Digital Equipment Corporation
Vernon R. Alden Director and Trustee of several organizations
Former Chairman, The Boston Company, Inc.
Colby H. Chandler Director of several corporations
Retired Chairman of the Board and CEO, Eastman
Kodak Company
Arnaud de Vitry Engineering consultant and Director and Trustee
of several organizations
Frank P. Doyle Executive Vice President, General Electric
Company, Director of several organizations
Robert R. Everett Retired President of the MITRE Corporation
Kathleen F. Feldstein President of Economics Studies, Inc.
and Director of several corporations
Thomas P. Gerrity Dean, Wharton School of the University of
Pennsylvania and Director of several corporations
Thomas L. Phillips Director of several corporations, Retired
Chairman of the Board and CEO Raython Company
Delbert C. Staley Director of several corporations, retired
Chairman of the Board and CEO, NYNEX Corporation
So, these are at least the names. Addresses I don't have, but based
on the above info it can't be difficult to find out.
I don't want to temper the enthusiasm of those who intend to write to
some or even all of these Directors, but about a year ago members of
the works council in France had the opportunity to personaly discuss
their concerns with Arnaud de Vitry.
It didn't help at all and France was hit hard several times (lay-offs)
Regards,
Frans
|
4719.22 | | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | See http://atlant2.zko.dec.com/ | Tue Jul 16 1996 10:44 | 9 |
| I also agree that writing to the Board (or even to senior management)
is potentially risky, especially if this Corporation's management is
"running scared" (as it certainly ought to be by now, with the stock
at least a 52-week low).
On the other hand, are our jobs any safer if we don't do everything
we can to save DEC? When the R.M.S. Digital sinks, we're all going
to be at risk anyway.
Atlant
|
4719.24 | Excuse me while I scratch my butt | KERNEL::FREKES | | Tue Jul 16 1996 13:30 | 7 |
| If the board or anyone in senior management, really did pay attention
to what we think, how is it then that there has not been a few replies
in here from BP, and the other VP's etc.
Out of 200 or so VP's, am I safe in assuming that none of them
read/have access to notes. If so, come out and show us who you are!!!
|
4719.25 | | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | See http://atlant2.zko.dec.com/ | Tue Jul 16 1996 13:37 | 18 |
| > Out of 200 or so VP's, am I safe in assuming that none of them
> read/have access to notes.
No, you're not safe. Some of the technical leadership of this
corporation (ranked as VPs) can often be found reading/writing
notes.
On the other hand, I can see why an "Officer of the Corporation"
would be reluctant to dash off a quick reply. Even if they're
just giving you their personal opinion, they might be taken as
speaking "ex cathedra", and might somehow bind themselves (or
all of us!) by what they said. Could Bob actually come in here
and say "Yes, the layoffs must stop!"?
It's a lot harder to note when every time you want to type
"REPLY" you have to run it past the lawyers.
Atlant
|
4719.26 | | ACISS1::BATTIS | Three fries short of a Happy Meal | Tue Jul 16 1996 14:15 | 8 |
|
Bob Palmer has more pressing matters to attend to than read this
notesfile. I highly doubt you will see a response from any senior
manager in this company. He sure better be doing something with regards
to our earnings and stock price. Also, don't forget we are in the TFSO
mode right now as well.
Mark
|
4719.27 | | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | See http://atlant2.zko.dec.com/ | Tue Jul 16 1996 15:12 | 33 |
| Mark:
> Bob Palmer has more pressing matters to attend to than read this
> notesfile. I highly doubt you will see a response from any senior
> manager in this company. He sure better be doing something with regards
> to our earnings and stock price. Also, don't forget we are in the TFSO
> mode right now as well.
Does he [have more pressing matters]?
What?
What are our attrition rates? What functions in the corporation
are not suffering from the deadly corporate anorexia that he has
provoked? What are our customers saying about us? What are our
*PROSPECTIVE CUSTOMERS* saying about us? How many still believe
that Digital will exist as a free-standing entity in five years?
How many of us believe it?
I can't help but feel you need to read .0 again.
> Also, don't forget we are in TSFO mode right now as well.
When in the last four or so years have we not been? When have
DECcies been able to kick back and say "I think I can actually
just *DO* my job today, and not worry about whether or not I'll
be TSFO'd tomorrow"?
It's precisely because we're always in TFSO mode that many of
the negative impressions described in .0 came about.
Atlant
|
4719.28 | no escape from it | SWAM1::MEUSE_DA | | Tue Jul 16 1996 15:46 | 13 |
|
re. 0
Heard everything you said out here in the west.
Attending a big track meet, many of those I know were asking me
what the heck is going on at Digital. All of them deal with us
in one form or another. Two were wearing caps with our logo
on it.
Anyway, the track meet was great.
|
4719.29 | unbelievable, even for us! | DV780::LANGFELDT | Coloradical | Tue Jul 16 1996 15:52 | 5 |
|
Not to mention business coming to a halt while the sales people vie
for the few remaining jobs...
Someone very far from the customer designed this re-org.
|
4719.30 | More pressing matters..Ha.... | MASURE::CRAPAROTTA | | Tue Jul 16 1996 16:40 | 11 |
| re:.26
FLAME ON....
Bob has more pressing matters than to read this notes file??? That's
the biggest bunch of CRAP (no pun intended..) I've ever heard of !!!!!
It's pretty obvious the he hasn't done his OTHER pressing matters
rather well. I'm sure he should atleast have some type of PULSE of what WE
(stockholders and Valued Employee's (sic) ) see, hear and feel about Digital
as it once was and is NOW...
Joe Crap
|
4719.31 | Maybe Digital Notesfile is a clear channel these days... | SCASS1::WISNIEWSKI | ADEPT of the Virtual Space. | Tue Jul 16 1996 16:43 | 47 |
| Two years ago one of my notes in Digital was forwarded to Mr. Palmer
by one of his notes savey staff.
I believe (never really verified it) that Mr. Palmer sent me a reply
but it's one of my most treasured E-mail messages (never got an E-mail
personally thanking me from a president of the company before).
With that said, it's been a long time since any rumor or reference has
been in this notesfile that the SLT bothers with anything here.
When I would post stories of some of my exploits, I'd get a couple of
dozen messages of cheer and support. Now after all the downsizing I get
barely a handful and only the "Old-Timers" who seem comfortable with
notes.
I think that's sad, but part of our changing company.
Not to speak blasphemy but perhaps this notesfile is outliving it's
ablity to be an agent for information and change for many people in
our company. Perhaps it's time to retire this notesfile and move
to a WEBforum, or something that is directly accessable to the
PC driven folks (members of the SLT included).
It's time for one common Intranet within Digital. On system that
can address conferencing, E-mail, notes/forums, archives, tools,
information, and business systems. If we do not unify our systems
we run the risk of continued disjointed pools of employees who feel
that "My tools" are the best and have islands of information
inaccessable from other employee's tools of choice.
The best communications system (for better or worse) is a system (like
a telephone) that Everyone can use to communicate with and knowing
that everyone else is using the same system too.
The technically challenged of our company are not interested in taking
the extra step to get to places like the "DIGITAL" notesfile when
Altavista and other tools don't stop there from the click of a mouse
button.
We need to gather everyone back to the same CB channel, WEBpage,
E-mail system, Notes/Forum client, so that we can start talking
to each other again. In times of rapid change... That type of
communication is critical.
Of course that's just my opinion... I may be wrong.
John Wisniewski
|
4719.32 | see kacie::sbu | BBPBV1::WALLACE | Unix is digital. Use Digital UNIX. | Tue Jul 16 1996 17:02 | 2 |
| Well, Harry Copperman's apparently learnt how to use WRITE and REPLY.
If he can, what stops the others...
|
4719.33 | Mebbe not the best for DEC, but could it help XYZ Co.? | MOLAR::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dogface) | Tue Jul 16 1996 17:04 | 9 |
| Just an off-hand observation from .21, having absolutely nothing to do with
the topic -
Did anyone else happen to notice that eight out of ten members of the BoD
are simultaneously a "director of other corporations"?
Does anyone else ever wonder whether "conflict of interest" becomes an
issue for such folks?
|
4719.35 | In defense of Notes... | AXEL::FOLEY | Rebel Without a Clue-foley@zko.dec.com | Tue Jul 16 1996 17:32 | 17 |
| RE: .31
Not to rag on the web forum folks, but it's not there yet. I have
yet to come across a PC or Web-based application that can compete
with (DEC)Notes in maintaining a "conversation". Nor can I find
any that I don't have to "mouse" thru. I can fly thru a bunch
of conferences with Notes and its trusty keypad keys. The same
cannot be said of things like newsreaders, web pages, Windows
Notes clients.
Notes is NOT hard. It has NOT outlived its usefullness. Alot of
products can still learn from an application that hasn't had
any serious development done to it in over 5+ years.
Don't shoot the medium/messenger.
mike
|
4719.36 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Tue Jul 16 1996 17:40 | 4 |
| It is common (indeed, typical) for directors to serve on the boards of
multiple companies.
Steve
|
4719.37 | no one home at ::sbu | WRKSYS::QUEBEC | | Tue Jul 16 1996 17:42 | 4 |
| .32
Have you been in the ::sbu file? Harry introduced himself and that's
all. From what I've seen, everyone is waiting for him to use the
WRITE and REPLY commands
|
4719.38 | He's written near 15% of the replies in the conference! | MOLAR::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dogface) | Tue Jul 16 1996 17:49 | 13 |
| >================================================================================
>Note 4719.37 Dear Bob... 37 of 37
>WRKSYS::QUEBEC 4 lines 16-JUL-1996 13:42
> -< no one home at ::sbu >-
>--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> .32
> Have you been in the ::sbu file? Harry introduced himself and that's
> all. From what I've seen, everyone is waiting for him to use the
> WRITE and REPLY commands
Have _you_ been in there? He seems to have responded at least thrice in
addition to his introductory note. (See 3.1, 5.2 and 11.2). Not bad for
a conference that's only been around less than a month.
|
4719.39 | ok already | WRKSYS::QUEBEC | | Tue Jul 16 1996 18:31 | 2 |
| yes I have --- it had been quiet for quite some time
sorry
|
4719.40 | It was just an observation... | SCASS1::WISNIEWSKI | ADEPT of the Virtual Space. | Tue Jul 16 1996 21:18 | 35 |
| <<< Note 4719.35 by AXEL::FOLEY "Rebel Without a Clue-foley@zko.dec.com" >>>
-< In defense of Notes... >-
RE: .31
> Not to rag on the web forum folks, but it's not there yet. I have
> yet to come across a PC or Web-based application that can compete
> with (DEC)Notes in maintaining a "conversation". Nor can I find
> any that I don't have to "mouse" thru. I can fly thru a bunch
> of conferences with Notes and its trusty keypad keys. The same
> cannot be said of things like newsreaders, web pages, Windows
> Notes clients.
I wasn't doing a technical comparison or the differences (I don't like
the graphical notes readers either) I was just commenting that many of
the folks that are left have never used notes, will never use notes
but may use some other tool...
> Notes is NOT hard. It has NOT outlived its usefullness. Alot of
> products can still learn from an application that hasn't had
> any serious development done to it in over 5+ years.
Notes is not hard, it's just not Universal at DEC (or so it seems)
We either need to make a transparent medium for DEC folks to
communicate with.
> Don't shoot the medium/messenger.
There needs to be a PUBLIC and Private means of Electronic
Conferencing. More and more Notes falls into the Private
catagory with less and less of an audiance. I don't have an
answer... Just that observation...
John W.
|
4719.41 | Ive seen the light... | MARIN::WANNOOR | | Tue Jul 16 1996 22:20 | 23 |
|
Hi Atlant,
I've been holding back to see if you've gotten any life signs from
upstairs... well, apparently not.
I've been doing a lot of acceptance lately (yep, that's my next
religion :-)); one of it being nobody is upstairs to check, let
alone do anything about a note like yours in .0
That was a commendable effort on your part, but I do not get any
impression that upper management wants any of this appalling death
spiral to end. Frankly, I believe that the business model Digital is
getting towards is similar to (not exactly now) some Big 6 whereby
the core headcount are the VP's and their 1st/2nd level lieutenants,
while the actual work is being done via outsourced labor. Why else
would Digital have over 200 VP's (and STILL counting) for stagnant
14B-size company?
Hope you're not getting your hopes too high about getting any
body to bat an eyelash over this.
|
4719.42 | | ODIXIE::DWYERR | | Wed Jul 17 1996 01:37 | 4 |
| re .41
You may be on to something. Today a Digital manager told me that his
goal "is to manage an organization that has no resources."
|
4719.43 | | VANGA::KERRELL | salva res est | Wed Jul 17 1996 07:41 | 9 |
| re.35:
> Not to rag on the web forum folks, but it's not there yet. I have
> yet to come across a PC or Web-based application that can compete
> with (DEC)Notes in maintaining a "conversation".
Webnotes from OS Tech. comes closest.
Dave.
|
4719.44 | | ACISS1::BATTIS | Three fries short of a Happy Meal | Wed Jul 17 1996 13:35 | 10 |
|
Atlant
I was not knocking your note, it was well written. All I was trying
to point out is that you will *NOT* see Bob Palmer or any other senior
executive respond to your note in this topic. I would bet my life
on it, I'm that sure. And, he better be doing something about our stock
price and poor earnings outlook. We are the laughing stock of the
computer industry. If this turnaround fails, he should be fired, plain
and simple. You listening Bob?
|
4719.45 | .31 and the rest | DECWET::WHITE | Surfin' with the Alien | Wed Jul 17 1996 15:56 | 46 |
| .31 is SPOT ON.
Look folks, I've been watching humane::digital for a while now
very quitely. It's been tough...morale has been at an all
time low.
We lost a person on Monday in my group, a person that was hired
only two short months ago. There is no need for me to vent in
here, this speaks for itself.
Digital is probably going to lose me some day. That's too bad...
but it's a fact because 'attrition' is part of the strategy here.
But that does not shake my deep belief in this company and it's
technology. YES, this is a technology company, it's not the
solution, it's the technology, it's the elegance of our Engineering
and I'll be damned if I ever lose sight of that. To the bitter end
I intend to fight for Digital...
Push push push push!! Beat up your direct. I am constantly;
"what can I do to make it better boss?"..."look at this change
I made!" "check out this web page!"
go go go go go!!!
Acceptance?
Never. I believe in Digital, the people in Digital, the technology,
the culture. Is it hard? You bet!! Do I sometimes well up close to
tears as I buck complancency and acceptance...too often I do. Thank
God I have found an outlet outside of work to vent the stress...
As long as we are here people, let's keep fighting to make a difference,
and console eachother in here...maybe the death of notes and the start
of a new Web based forum will be the sign that we all collectively are
not in acceptance mode any longer, I dunno.
I believe that if the Atlants of the world, the Stephen Whites of the
world, ever do resign to acceptance with the current state of the
corporation, we are indeed doomed.
This is much like the end of a very long marathon, and now we need to
somehow find the energy to sprint to the line. Only in this scenario,
the finish line keeps moving away from us!!
-Stephen
|
4719.46 | A sense of purpose | ASABET::BATES | Troppe vite per farne una | Wed Jul 17 1996 16:34 | 46 |
|
Stephen:
I agree that there is something worth saving, above and beyond our
individual jobs. Digital had a reason for coming into existence nearly
40 years ago, and I believe that fundamental purpose still exists.
I think that what we lost sight of sometime ago was the sense of
purpose and mission. After all, technology in itself is admirable, and
we've always been leaders in innovative, high-quality IT products and
services, but I believe our purpose is enabling people at work to
exchange data and information with each other,to communicate whenever,
wherever and however necessary. OUr mission - purpose in action - is
the creation and delivery of the best technology possible to achieve
the mission.
Until we remember why we're here, fundamentally, it's difficult to know
what direction we're headed in. Strategies are the ways we accomplish
our mission and purpose. And among our goals is success for our customers,
partners, and ourselves and - oh, yes - profitability.
I've been in so many meetings recently in which people have said that
our reason for being was to be profitable. Period. But that misses the
point. Profit is the outcome, not the purpose. If you are true to who
and what you are as a company and individually, then success, and
profit follow.
Growth for its own sake is part of what got us into trouble in the
first place. And practicing corporate anorexia, as the Wall St. Journal
described the condition that lots of companies find themselves in,
in downsizing and restructuring isn't THE answer.
I'm encouraged by entries here that describe situations in which people
continue to believe in the rightness of what we have to offer people in
meeting their need to communicate information effectively in their
organizations. I'm trying to remind anyone who'll listen to me that as
long as we focus solely on the bottom line, we'll miss the real
importance of what we're here for.
In a world in which it seems that survival is all there is, those who
survive and endure have something to live for - a sense of purpose in
their lives. We and Digital have an admirable purpose that is still
valid - I maintain that if we take embrace that sense of purpose, and
act on it, we can actually go beyond survival and endurance to triumph.
Gloria
|
4719.47 | reports of our death exaggerated | ESSC::KMANNERINGS | | Wed Jul 17 1996 18:21 | 63 |
| Finally got some time to reply to the basenote, which I might summarise
as follows:
Are we giving the market the impression the company is dying ?
Is the company dying ?
Please stop laying people off, we need them.
Also there is an implicit criticism of Bob Palmer ie do you realise
what you are doing and how it is being recieved ?
There is also the discussion of the role of the Board of Directors.
Regarding the PR for this wave of layoffs, I agree it has been poor.
Noone believes anymore that restructuring will cure the company's
problems on its own, so this line fell as flat as it could have done.
HP took a charge, but there was less hullaballoo about it. We should
have done this with more self assurance and less noise. Let's hope that
the Q4 results will be a pleasant surprise in this context, but there
was a wave of demoralisation following the announcement that does not
help.
Is the company dying ? I don't think so at all. In contrast to previous
restructuring efforts, there are some aspects of this round which are
less gloomy. Firstly, we are restructuring out of a position of profit
and over a longer period. Secondly, it is not all cuts. There is some
investment in Sales, Support, and Marketing going on in Europe. Knowhow
has been brought in and from where I am sitting it is impressive. 97%
of phone calls are answered in 10 seconds, a lot solved in one hour and
after one day there is mostly cleaning up to
do. Thirdly, we have a parnership strategy which has shown some gains
and we have a lead in 64-bit technology. Alright we have blown nearly
five billion in cash since 1991, but we ain't done yet.
Stop the layoffs ? Yes of course, we have skilled people, we should use
them. As a rehire myself, I believe this :-) And if this time we have
skilled people leaving on Friday, and greenhorn contractors sitting at
their desks on Monday, then we should do something about it....
Is it all Bob's fault ? No I don't think so. A lot of really awful
decisions, bordering on corrupt, were taken shortly before he took
over, and you cannot turn round and oil tanker in the dock, it takes
time. He made some questionable decisions trying to deal with the mess,
but it was not his mess, and it seems to me he has learned from it, in
that this round of restructuring is combined with some agressive
investment.
Regarding the Board of Directors, well their record is not very
impressive is it ? Up to 1992 the policy was: Leave it to Ken. Up to
about 1989 that worked fine, but their was a complete failure to deal with
the crisis that developed after that. So I would like to see more
employee control and participation in the company. We know,
collectively, what makes it tick and what is broken. But that knowlege
is not used.
BTW, a mail went round Europe last week asking for questions to the
DVN, so I think the CEO's office does want to know what we are
thinking. I expect I was not alone in replying.
Kevin
|
4719.48 | he's listening | MSE1::PCOTE | Attrition: See Digital Equipement Corp. | Wed Jul 17 1996 18:32 | 7 |
|
> to point out is that you will *NOT* see Bob Palmer or any other senior
> executive respond to your note in this topic. I would bet my life
> on it, I'm that sure.
I think you're going to regret those words.
|
4719.49 | | ACISS1::BATTIS | Windy City idiot | Wed Jul 17 1996 19:47 | 5 |
|
<---- yeah, right. I'll believe it if he responds. Until then, I stand
by my words.
Mark
|
4719.50 | Response to "Dear Bob" notes | PONDA::PALMER | BOB PALMER | Wed Jul 17 1996 22:09 | 15 |
| I have read the responses to the "Dear Bob" note and would like to make
some observations.
Several people suggested that I did not have an opportunity to review
what is on your mind. Others suggested that someone occasionally
prints off what is in the Notesfile, so that I can review when time
permits. The latter is most often the case, but the important thing is
I do get to read your unfiltered comments.
I hope some of you had the opportunity to see the DVN I did from Europe
discussing many of the issues that were raised in the Notesfile. I
plan to find a few minutes tomorrow to add some additional comments.
Regards,
Bob
|
4719.51 | YES | LITE::MORTON | Aliens, the snack food of CHAMPIONS! | Wed Jul 17 1996 22:25 | 1 |
|
|
4719.52 | | MPGS::HAMNQVIST | Video servers eng. | Wed Jul 17 1996 22:30 | 9 |
| re: .44:
| I was not knocking your note, it was well written. All I was trying
| to point out is that you will *NOT* see Bob Palmer or any other senior
| executive respond to your note in this topic. I would bet my life
| on it, I'm that sure.
Speaking of Hara-kiri. 6999 to go :-)
|
4719.53 | We are not alone;-) | SCASS1::WISNIEWSKI | ADEPT of the Virtual Space. | Thu Jul 18 1996 04:10 | 9 |
| Thank you Bob! It's reassuring to know you check in on us and
our frustrations.
The Digital Notesfile has always been part watercooler, confessional,
soapbox, local pub, guild-hall, and padded room.
It's good to know we're not alone...
John W.
|
4719.54 | And them's good eatin'! | ESB02::TATOSIAN | The Compleat Tangler | Thu Jul 18 1996 04:26 | 3 |
| re: .49 (ACISS1::BATTIS "Windy City idiot")
I've heard that crow goes down easier with lots of catsup! ;^)
|
4719.55 | Easy to do business with must be THE goal | IJSAPL::OLTHOF | Spellchecked Henry Although | Thu Jul 18 1996 06:44 | 14 |
| With a friend in the lobby of one of our competitors there was this
big poster with company values/goals:
- easy to do business with
- profitability
- teamwork
- quality
- people
The first bullet is right on, customers and partners still find Digital
to difficult to do business with and therefore go to competitors. BTW,
the competitors name is Sequent (in case you wonder).
Cheers,
Henny
|
4719.56 | | ACISS2::LENNIG | Dave (N8JCX), MIG, @CYO | Thu Jul 18 1996 07:39 | 25 |
| Bob,
Are our attrition rates as bad as I and others perceive it to be?
It is very disheartening to see so many long term employees, the
bedrock of this company, giving up. After so many years of cuts
and belt tightening, with no end in sight (the latest announcement
was a real blow to morale) I can't say as I blame them. (Take a
look at the last hundred or so replies to note 3107 in here.)
Is the latest round *really* necessary, or was it the knee-jerk
reaction it appeared to be to employees and the industry (see the
news clips and discussion in notes 4690.93 through .123). I know
we have great products, but who is going to buy from a company in
such dire straits that a bad quarter triggers an 11% workforce cut?
No, I didn't see the DVN - I don't have the time; I have to get a
product ready to ship (yes, I'm really writing this note at 3:00 AM)
and the rate at which people are choosing to leave the group I'm in
is making this a real challenge (let alone figuring out how in hell
we're going to deliver on what we've been tasked with in the future).
I find Atlant's letter in .0 very apropros and timely, and hope you
will find time to respond to our questions/concerns in some depth.
Regards,
|
4719.58 | It has help. | RICKS::PHIPPS | DTN 225.4959 | Thu Jul 18 1996 10:41 | 8 |
| >This is much like the end of a very long marathon, and now we need to
>somehow find the energy to sprint to the line. Only in this scenario,
>the finish line keeps moving away from us!!
Stephen, it's being pushed away from us.
mikeP
|
4719.59 | KEEP YOUR EYES ON THE BALL...... | WMOIS::HORNE_C | CURT | Thu Jul 18 1996 10:55 | 13 |
| ......two teams work hard all year to get to the championship i.e.
the superbowl....each team is talented in all aspects....one team
will win...the other will lose....
Why will one team win and the other lose......?
the losing team spent the entire season focused on just getting to
the superbowl....while the winning team focused on winning the
superbowl.......
regards to you MR. PALMER
|
4719.60 | patient requires help, not surgery | RDGENG::WILLIAMS_A | | Thu Jul 18 1996 11:54 | 20 |
|
curious..
how did you work out the figure of 7000 persons who would need to be
let go ? Can you show me the math. Thanks. I recall a similarly
precise number around two years ago, context = ABU Europe I believe.
"..I have calculated that we need a staff of 10,000..". Yeah, right.
Then we all Went To Market. And here we are again...
BTW, probably the last thing that needs to happen in the 'troubled'
European territories right now (France, Germany, maybe Switzerland..?)
is to wield the axe (again). We are dying in these territories due to
botched restructurings in the recent past (see paragraph above),
and customers going away from us since then. Try actually *investing*
with part of the restructuring charge, to try to grow the business a
tad, rather than dumping out people in (too much of) a hurry. Or else,
shut the subsidiaries down, and be done with it.
|
4719.61 | Every game a superbowl imitation | EEMELI::SIREN | | Thu Jul 18 1996 12:02 | 20 |
| Re .59
>>the losing team spent the entire season focused on just getting to
>>the superbowl....while the winning team focused on winning the
>>superbowl.......
Translating this internally, it may look like this:
In Digital, the teams, which focus in getting to the superbowl
typically win (ie. the teams/individuals, who concentrate on internal
politics). The teams, which concentrate in winning the superbowl
(the ones, who try to master, what needs to be done) are often closed
out as oddities.
That may also be the reason, why Digital is such a difficult business
partner.
Of course, a true winning team has both qualities ;-).
--Ritva
|
4719.62 | Adding to the need for spin control on the bad ne | MSE1::SULLIVAN | | Thu Jul 18 1996 13:20 | 13 |
| The following is an mail extract from my sister. She is the director
of the Physical Therapy Department at the University of Hartford (Conn.).
UH is almost completely Digital equiped, happily so. If some of our best
customers are raising these questions....
>I need to order two new computers for new faculty. My assistant asked me if I
>had any preferences so I said I wanted to stick with Digital so they would be
>the same. Her response was "I heard they were going out of business." I tried
>to snuff out the rumor but I am not sure how much affect I had.
>
>-
>Susan Glenney
>Email: glenney@uhavax.hartford.edu
|
4719.63 | | ACISS1::BATTIS | Future Chevy Blazer owner | Thu Jul 18 1996 13:58 | 8 |
|
.50
um, where would you like me to send the body??
open mouth, insert foot. needs ketchup.
Mark
|
4719.64 | Leadership and Management | ACISS2::MARES | you get what you settle for | Thu Jul 18 1996 14:18 | 22 |
| And let's not forget the need for BOTH leadership and management.
A leader has the vision, sets the direction, motivates the troops, and
reflects upon the results of the previous campaign when planning for
the current campaign.
A manager executes the plan, works the details, provides front line
consistency, and removes obstacles for the troops.
We have the former. We are sorely lacking the latter. In fact, in all
my years here at Digital and of all the managers whom I have worked
with, I would only have hired a handful to come work for me -- if I
ever had the opportunity to do so.
The sad reality here at DEC is that so many troops know what needs to
be done and how to do it. We will know that we are on the real road to
recovery when our leader asks for our advice and follows it.
We will churn and burn until that happens.
Randy
|
4719.65 | | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | See http://atlant2.zko.dec.com/ | Thu Jul 18 1996 14:31 | 17 |
| > A leader has the vision, sets the direction, motivates the troops, and
> reflects upon the results of the previous campaign when planning for
> the current campaign.
>
> We have the [leadership].
I disagree. As I mentioned, our customers and prospects
don't seem to know what our vision is. That could be due
to a tactical failure to communicate the vision (a manage-
ment problem) but *I* don't know (anymore) what the vision
is either. And I've been actively listening to top level
management (the ostensible leaders) for just such a vision.
And then there's the question of "motivates the troops".
Many notes here speak to that far more eloquently than
I can.
Atlant
|
4719.66 | | KAOM25::WALL | DEC Is Digital | Thu Jul 18 1996 14:36 | 8 |
| Perhaps the shareholders would be better served if we used some of that
"one time charge" to get some airplay in the media. We have in the past
made investements in producing commercials for TV. Let's continue the
investment and PLAY THEM! Show the world that we are still here.
r
|
4719.67 | our vision ? Sell Alpha Servers..... | FIREBL::LEEDS | From VAXinated to Alphaholic | Thu Jul 18 1996 15:03 | 22 |
| > I disagree. As I mentioned, our customers and prospects
> don't seem to know what our vision is. That could be due
> to a tactical failure to communicate the vision (a manage-
> ment problem) but *I* don't know (anymore) what the vision
> is either. And I've been actively listening to top level
> management (the ostensible leaders) for just such a vision.
>
If you talk to the Sales Reps, based on what they're being told by the SBU
about their FY97 goals, our "vision" is to sell server boxes, period. That's
all they believe they're going to be goaled on. There's talk about bonuses
for PCs, Services, Workstations, etc., but the main budget appears to be
based on Alpha Servers. 'Course we'll be halfway thru with Q1 before the
Reps really know what their goals are, so their behavior for the first 6-7
weeks may be different than the second 6-7 weeks. Sales Reps are focusing
(for now) on selling Servers, and if anything else is an "easy sell",
they'll take it. But at least the Reps I deal with are not going out
of their way to sell PCs, SI, Workstations, etc.
This is not any knock on the Reps - they're being pushed into doing
"whatever it takes" to put food on the table, and right now, it appears that
the only thing guaranteed to make their goals is selling Alpha Servers.
|
4719.68 | The AltaVista folks ought to be among the most secure at Digital. | SPECXN::CONLON | | Thu Jul 18 1996 15:28 | 16 |
| RE: .50 Bob Palmer
Thanks for responding to this topic!! You still have the most
impressive Notes personal name ("BOB PALMER") in the Digital
noting community. :-)
Why are the AltaVista SW Marketing folks being cut this week?
AltaVista is giving Digital a huge 'presence' on the internet, and
we've always needed MORE 'marketing' (not LESS) in the 14.5 years
that I've been with Digital.
Why would any group associated with AltaVista be downsized?
Thanks,
Suzanne Conlon / Software Engineer
|
4719.69 | | POMPY::LESLIE | Andy *^* Leslie | Thu Jul 18 1996 15:34 | 4 |
| I'll second that emotion. To the outside world, Dan Kalikow was an
impressive representative of Digital.
/andy
|
4719.70 | Let's not be victims | SNOFS1::MUNSONBILL | | Thu Jul 18 1996 16:02 | 48 |
| IMHO, we continue to underestimate our leader, Bob. I'm delighted to
see his response, and trust ('cuz I must) that he's integrating
our/your views into his database from which to determine what next to
do. What isn't visible nor apparent is that he "inspects" below his
direct reports, at least based on my observations of actions as
contrasted with statements. I.e., we don't walk the talk, and when
that's the situation, the discrepancy creates FEAR.
Let me explain. 4 years ago, I wrote Bob regarding my observation that
Digital people were in large measure parallized (sp?) by uncertainty.
This manifested itself in "do what you're told" behavior among formerly
"do what's right" people, reduction/elimination of internal challenging
to directives/suggestions, and other symptoms that suggested the
traditional "DEC" personality of (albeit internally-focused) debate and
no-holds-barred discussion regarding management dictates, had been
replaced by an environment of FEAR (False Events Appearing Real). This
manifests itsself in hunkering down of non-contributors, political
activity among fearful managers, and other non-productive behavior
among otherwise productive employees. I.e., WE bought in to not
asserting the creativity and other characteristics that made "DEC"
unique. WE were afraid to tell "the emperor he has no clothes."
I wrote Bob just after seeing the DVN with John Donovan regarding CTG,
where John explained what unsuccessful companies do to repair themselves
(downsize, and 3 others I don't recall). I had asked my then-current
manager how Bob could be on the stage with someone who essentially
"blasted" everything we were doing. She said: "ask Bob." I did. And he
replied (according to Win Hindle, whom I met 1 week later for career
guidance, and told me that Bob had "probably" written the reply
himself, as Win said was his wont, given the "filter" on the many
mesages he receives each day -- i.e., my email was of sufficient
interest to warrant a direct review/reply).
Bob did not, in my view, understand the message I was trying to convey.
It was simply that FEAR is responsible for the under-performance of our
people. This is a phenonmenon more acute in the US than AP, where
I've spent the last 4+ years. We're doing quite well, thank you.
However, I trust that while my first message to Bob was poorly worded,
and this one relatively vague, he'll receive at least a summary, and
consider the essence and review against his actions as our leader, and
"manager." My sincere hope is that he appreciates what took me some
time to learn, which is that a manager can "fail" by him/herself, but
if he/she takes the "risk" of believing that their team will carry them
to success given leadership and support, anything is possible -- even a
$100/share stock price.
Cheers,
Bill
|
4719.71 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Carboy Junkie | Thu Jul 18 1996 16:09 | 2 |
| Everything seems to be driven by earnings per employee these days. I
don't see that changing any time soon.
|
4719.72 | two ways to do it: #1 hasn't worked, so let's try #2 | DYPSS1::DYSERT | Barry - Custom Software Development | Thu Jul 18 1996 17:01 | 18 |
4719.73 | | NQOS01::s_coghill.dyo.dec.com::S_Coghill | Luke 14:28 | Thu Jul 18 1996 18:19 | 9 |
| Re: .62
>the same. Her response was "I heard they were going out of business." I tried
>to snuff out the rumor but I am not sure how much affect I had.
This week's "Computerworld" has already relegated us to the status of Wang Labs.
The title on their editorial this week dealt with asking if IBM is going to be
the next Digital?
|
4719.74 | Revenue and Profit - The bottom line | USCTR1::mrodhcp-35-96-210.mro.dec.com::kaminsky | | Thu Jul 18 1996 18:44 | 46 |
| Revenue/employee is used to compare various companies within our industry.
As any other metric it must be put in context and understood and is not
an end in itself.
To affect the metric you can, as was stated, increase revenue or decrease
employees or both.
Removing employees in some cases can make the metric look better
but have a negative effect on other rather important metrics. Take
for example a case in which you outsource work currently done in-house
and it costs more to do it outside. The profit metric is adversely
affected.
I believe that today, the financial community is looking for just two
things:
1: Revenue growth - can you prove that you can grow revenue (at least at
the rate of industry growth)
2: Profit growth - As you grow revenue, you better at least grow profits
in step with revenue growth.
Example:
Coca Cola just announced quarterly earnings. Profit up 18% on 8% revenue
growth. Exactly what the street wants.
The message the financial community sent us was that they simply don't
believe we can grow revenue at all, and they don't really have any
confidence in even a stable level of profits.
While news that we are cutting heads used to sound good to Wall St when
we were profusely bleeding red ink, we are in a different stage of our
recovery.
Now it means that we are incapable of growth, perhaps even in a death
spiral.
Notice how our management never really targets revenue growth or speaks
about it? We are enamored with Alpha unit growth or some other such metric
that we can twist to imply significant growth. Growth in Wall St. terms
has absolutely nothing to do with units or widgets or anything else.
It is growth in the bottom line... both revenue and profit.
|
4719.75 | Truth Or Consequences! | COOKIE::FROEHLIN | Let's RAID the Internet! | Thu Jul 18 1996 18:46 | 5 |
| re.50:
Could the real Bob Palmer please standup...
Guenther
|
4719.76 | some concerns | VAXRIO::JANSEN | | Thu Jul 18 1996 19:16 | 19 |
| Re: .71
At least in my geography, most employees which have left, were related
to revenue generation functions, while overhead functions were not
affected in the same degree. When i first joined Digital (mid 70's), 3/4
of our local management comittee were revenue generators, today this
relation is 1/4 and the number of members doubled.
Looks like it is a matter of budget. While some functions don't do
their Revenue Budgets and are accountted for that, others, make their
Expense Budget and thats 'ok'. Why some, with no responsability on
revenue, have "the right to spend"?
What we need is to focus in Serving our Customers, as good as possible,
having the best products, the best cost/benefit ratio, the best
services (MCS, SI, OMS) and the best group of workers and, of course,
make the customers believe that we are the best choice.
Jansen.
|
4719.77 | Let's be proactive! | NEMAIL::HEINZ | | Thu Jul 18 1996 19:41 | 18 |
| The company is at a crossroads right now. If we continue to perpetuate
the layoffs and poor morale, and don't change the way we do business
with our customers and partners, we will eventually go down the tubes.
However, if we make the processes simpler, ensure job stability and
provide an opportunity for career growth for the employees, we could
get right back on track. It is now critical that the company institute
process evaluations by non-senior management and concurrently establish
a group of individuals that looks at how morale can be improved and
have those people work directly with Bob Palmer for his decisions.
Otherwise, tree-hugging, politics and the overwhelming filters of
other senior management will prevent positive actions from being taken.
I, for one, would want to help wo k to make this company great again.
It's now or never.
-Bert-
|
4719.78 | | ODIXIE::DWYERR | | Thu Jul 18 1996 20:24 | 21 |
| re .77
"now" as you put it was a long time ago. You suggest that the company
could go down the tubes. I need to tell you that we are already in the
tube and going down fast. This was a great company! I loved it and
tried to make it work. However, management has caused the company to
lose its greatness. Local management is only concerned with where in
the "bird cage" they will land. Local management does not, repeat,
does not do much of anything to improve morale, does not do anything to
help develop business, does not call on customers to help keep
business. Managements only activities seem to be in ensuring that they
have their comfortable jobs.
We could gut the management ranks of many managers that are what I call
the 'good ol boy network' and be much better off. I believe that Bob
has tried, but he has only lifted the cover off the bed. He has failed
to lift the sheets and deal with the bed bugs that need exterminated.
My efforts to help maintain the greatness of this organization have
been to say the least frustrating. So much so that I leave the
remnants of this company tomorrow. Two of my peers are also leaving.
We have lost hope.
|
4719.79 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Carboy Junkie | Thu Jul 18 1996 20:34 | 2 |
| Being able to buy a pencil when you need one might improve morale a
little.
|
4719.80 | Start Bailing | NEMAIL::HEINZ | | Thu Jul 18 1996 20:37 | 14 |
| Re: .78
It is a shame that the company is losing people like you because I can
only assume that you have worked hard and long to contribute to the
betterment of the company. The fact that you are leaving is symptomatic
of what ails this company; the instability, constant fear, lack of
career and income growth potential, etc.. However, I do not think
the ship has sunk. It is taking on water but with the right pumps
and crew teamwork, it can float again and head towards it's destination.
However, the water is getting deep and the captains better let the
crew help bail it out before it sinks.
-Bert-
|
4719.81 | The burnout factor is climbing... | SYOMV::FOLEY | Rebel with a clue-foley@syo.dec.com | Thu Jul 18 1996 20:46 | 26 |
| I hear many complaints with "management" stuck in them, but then only
"Manager" that I know personally is my boss. I have met his boss,
(once) and that's it. My boss has to cover damn near an entire STATE,
top to bottom, left to right, as well as report to New England for
"meetings". I'd like to know how he is expected to go visit customers
(pro-actively) while putting out the fires (P.O. customers) doing
appraisals for people he sees once or twice a year and dealing while
large amounts of email (junk and otherwise).
At this level of "Management" Coverage, there should be 3 layers
between myself and you (Bob). I would like to see a real live up to
date org chart of Digital Equipment - I think there would be a few
surprises there.
If Digital is serious about Customers, existing and otherwise, then the
bloodletting at the bottom must cease. The people that are left are the
good ones, keep them - and tell them so. The only one who can inspire
the troops is the leader, if the Leader is seen only as a despot who
chops heads as the default when things go bad there will be only fear
and loathing in the trenches. If the troops see a plan, a vision of
what will be, they will rally behind the Leader and march on. And kick
some serious butt.
.mike.
|
4719.82 | | CSC32::B_GOODWIN | MCI Mission Critical Support Team | Thu Jul 18 1996 20:56 | 14 |
| re: last couple.
I talk to more and more people out in the field, mostly field engineers, that
have their resumes out on the street looking for a new job. So many of them are
looking over their shoulder waiting to be tapped for the next round of layoff's
or the round that will follow. They can't afford to be out of a job, so they
would rather jump ship now and not wait for the tap, even if it never comes,
they are nervous not knowing whats going to happen. Also they are leaving
because of the hours they are working and the personal and professional stress
this is putting on them. If we lose our valuable field engineers, we might as
well close up shop, because customers are not going to buy our equipment if they
can't get it serviced in a timely fashion.
Brad
|
4719.83 | Proposal | OHFSS1::JAQUAY | | Thu Jul 18 1996 21:30 | 40 |
| Proposal:
Six month headcount freeze to take effect immediately, no layoffs.
Everyone in the company takes an immediate 10% pay cut. That will
get EVERYONE's attention and should stop the bull____ting, finger
pointing, empire building, backstabbing, blame transferring and . . .
There are many more than the 7000 that deserve to shoulder the
burden of this failure than the 10% that are being laid off.
Mandatory minimum 55-60 hour work week. For some 55-60 hours means
you can start your weekend on Wednesday !
All employees have the opportunity to save theirs or their friends
jobs.
E V E R Y O N E get the hell out of the wagon and start pulling !
Don't buy anything that isn't going to contribute directly to
revenue and sell everything that isn't tied down.
Management Team can lead, follow or get out of the way. Successful
and growth companies have empowered employees that don't have to be
pushed towards the work. We need 60,000 individual contributors
willing to share the blame and willing to give credit for success to
someone else. Chances are pretty good that we currently have 59,800
that are already in that category if we would just let them go.
If an agressive profit goal is not reached by xx-xx-xxxx then do
what you have to do.
Hey, Wall Street might even show some sympathy for a company of
60,000 with "foxhole religion".
F.J.
I already have "noter's remourse". Maybe I should just slip this
over a transom.
|
4719.84 | More as promised | PONDA::PALMER | BOB PALMER | Thu Jul 18 1996 22:13 | 91 |
| I wanted to find a few minutes to answer the "Dear Bob" entry in some
detail. First of all, I want to thank you for expressing your opinion.
It is understandable that some people you talk to will have a weak
perception of Digital. It is also understandable that the current
situation has caused an erosion in confidence among many employees.
However, it is appropriate that we all understand as clearly as possible
where we stand, what we have accomplished, and why the long term future
of our company is bright.
Let me address your points directly, starting with tactical things we
must do.
Number one: "develop a realistic strategy and stick to it". The fact is
we have done that. It was different two years ago, where it would have
been nearly impossible for any employee to stand in front of a customer
and articulate our strategy clearly. Everybody at Digital can do it
today. What matters is that our strategy has the following attributes:
it is simple; it has depth; it is directly aligned with where the market
is going. And we have products and services to back it up. We have the
opportunity to attain a leadership position in the industry and obtain a
good return for our shareholders - and our employees. The key is
execution, which brings me to your second point.
"Tell people about our strategy". Yes, you are correct. We have made
progress here but not effective enough. The issue is not just
financial. It is partly cultural and partly motivated by the fact that
a financial turnaround involves serious constraints that you must face
and deal with. We have focused on branding, effectively and within our
means. We have focused on SBU programs, partner campaigns, channel
engagement and, above all, coordination across our business units so
that Digital is presented as one company with clear messages. We
exercised judgment in choosing our target audience, and the measured
return on this investment is high. Do we stop here? No. This is the
start of an ongoing phase that will align our marketing effort with our
strategy - our three fundamental areas: high performance 64-bit UNIX;
Windows NT; and the Internet. To sum it up, today we have outstanding
products and services, and we have begun to tell people about them.
This brings me to your last point: "stop bleeding people". This, of
course, is not the way I refer to the process of aligning resources with
revenues, but the result can be interpreted as such. We have begun to
grow, but even if revenues per employee climb quickly, our cost
structure is below competitive levels. We have taken a restructuring
provision that is required to address this issue, and I do expect the
outcome to have lasting positive results for the corporation. I
understand that shocking headlines in the newspapers are not what you
want to talk to your customers about, but more than that I am more
concerned with the way in which we handle this difficult step,
appreciating that most people are trying hard to make Digital succeed
and showing sensitivity to it. When confronted with the headlines you
describe, it is also appropriate that you take a step back and review
with your customers the very large number of positive headlines we
earned over the last twelve months.
The bottom line to making progress faster is excellence in execution
around the strategy we set for the corporation. Success is being
attained in many areas of the corporation. We have achieved six
consecutive quarters of profitability, and I expect Q4FY96 to be in the
black, from operations, when we announce our results July 30. We have
our Alpha architecture as the highest performance in the industry and
have grown our UNIX, storage and network products business
significantly. These are a few examples of our progress; there are many
others.
The complexity of the challenges we face will take the energy of many
individuals working together so that the team represents much more that
the sum of the individuals who make it up. The Notesfile provides an
example of a tool that brings together people across the organization to
address and resolve customer needs effectively. I was particularly
pleased to see the number of comments suggesting that we all need a
greater focus on our customers. I could not agree more. The vision
statement adopted by our Asia Pacific employees is an excellent
statement that I hope you all will reflect upon: "We do whatever it
takes to ensure every customer engagement is a quality, rewarding,
memorable experience."
Finally, let me close with a reference to note entry 4719.6. What is
taking place in Manila is representative of what is taking place in many
other areas of the world, including the States: a winning attitude,
focused on leveraging our strengths and demonstrating to our customers
that Digital has the right solution and is the right partner to do
business with. Clearly, I look forward to this attitude becoming
contagious at a faster rate. I am confident that we have a bright,
long-term future. My actions are being judged by my Board of Directors.
Regards,
Bob
|
4719.85 | | CSC32::D_PERRIN | | Thu Jul 18 1996 23:01 | 14 |
| First, thanks for the thoughtful reply, Bob. I may be out in left field
here, but I must comment with regards to the thought that "Everybody at
Digital" can articulate our strategy: It doesn't seem that way from
where I sit.
I work at the US CSC and wondering what business(es) Digital is going
to focus on is a common topic of conversation among my peers. We may
have missed out somewhere along the way, but we really aren't clear on
where Digital is going in the future. We'd like to put our paddles in
the water and help row, but we're not sure what direction to go.
So this is just to let you know that there may be a need to communicate
your vision of the future strongly and repeatedly within Digital
until everybody gets it.
|
4719.86 | VTX LIVEWIRE - Digital at a Glance | RICKS::PHIPPS | DTN 225.4959 | Thu Jul 18 1996 23:18 | 19 |
|
THE COMPANY
Digital Equipment Corporation is the world's leader in open
client/server computing solutions from personal computers to
integrated worldwide information systems. Digital's scalable
64-bit Alpha platforms, networking, software and services,
together with industry-focused solutions from business
partners, help organizations compete and win in today's
global marketplace. Digital has built strategic alliances
with customers, value-added resellers, independent software
vendors, systems integrators, and other computer vendors to
address the needs of a rapidly changing marketplace. Digital
is fully invested in and clearly focused on understanding and
responding to customer needs in every industry where it can
add significant value and where it can offer services and
products that help customers succeed. The corporation does
business in 100 countries, developing and manufacturing
products in the Americas, Europe, and the Pacific Rim.
|
4719.87 | | TENNIS::KAM | Kam WWSE 714/261.4133 DTN/535.4133 IVO | Fri Jul 19 1996 00:05 | 20 |
| re .84
Any chance of getting some of this in writing so that we can understand
the messages. There's been some changes since our last strategies
messages. Any chance of getting these and others updated?? I'm not
sure I can really convey the messages to the customers. I need some
documents providing the insight.
1 07-Sep-95 Digital's Corporate Software Strategy SS0002
2 07-Sep-95 Digital's Developed Software Product Roadmap SS0003
3 07-Sep-95 Digital's Systems Integration Software Strategy SS0017
4 07-Sep-95 Digital's Connectivity Software Strategy SS0018
5 07-Sep-95 Digital's Platform Software Strategy SS0019
6 07-Sep-95 Digital's Platform Software Strategy - UNIX SS0020
7 07-Sep-95 Digital's Platform Software Strategy - Windows NT SS0021
8 07-Sep-95 Digital's Platform Software Strategy - OpenVMS SS0022
Regards,
|
4719.88 | Please SAVE the AltaVista SW Marketing group from downsizing! | SPECXN::CONLON | AltaVista: Damn, we're good!! | Fri Jul 19 1996 01:32 | 29 |
| RE: .84 Bob Palmer
Bob, thanks from me, too, for your reply! I'm sure you know what a
morale boost many of us get when you 'Note with the troops' like this.
It's always great to see you here!!
> This is the start of an ongoing phase that will align our marketing
> effort with our strategy - our three fundamental areas: high performance
> 64-bit UNIX; Windows NT; and the Internet. To sum it up, today we have
> outstanding products and services, and we have begun to tell people
> about them.
I love seeing Digital's huge presence on the Internet. Every time
I use AltaVista and every time I see non-Digital sites and publications
talking about AltaVista, I think to myself (as my personal name says),
"Damn, we're good!!" :-)
It's thrilling to see Digital 'out there' this way!
I'm still confused about why the AltaVista SW Marketing group is being
downsized. Surely we need these folks more than ever right now!
Is there any way to correct this? (I know it's impossible to respond
about specific resource alignments as they happen, but surely this
one is worth reconsidering.)
Thanks again for your reply.
Suzanne Conlon / Software Engineer
|
4719.89 | Pay cut: I don't think so... | NEWVAX::PAVLICEK | Zot, the Ethical Hacker | Fri Jul 19 1996 02:08 | 18 |
| re: .83
A 10% paycut will gain people's attention, alright. Those in the field
who haven't floated a resume yet, will.
I don't know an individual contributor in the field who isn't trying to
do the best for the customers. Knocking off another 10% of our pay
will just get people to bail quicker.
It would help if we had a corporate goal that people actually BELIEVED
in. The common perception of Digital's corporate mission is:
We'll sell off 'whatever it takes' to make us profitable.
That doesn't give people too much to hang on to at the day's end,
regardless of statements to the contrary.
-- Russ
|
4719.90 | | NQOS01::nqsrv125.nqo.dec.com::rod.rogers@aci | Rod Rogers | Fri Jul 19 1996 04:00 | 9 |
| How about putting your money where your mouth is...
Join us field types who give up 30% of our pay
and hope to win it back from IBM, HP and SUN when
and if....we beat them...
Try it.....
|
4719.91 | morale is psychological | ARCANA::CONNELLY | Don't try this at home, kids! | Fri Jul 19 1996 05:02 | 27 |
| re : .83
> Six month headcount freeze to take effect immediately, no layoffs.
There was a six month period where there were very few layoffs taking
place...i think it was before the previous "bad quarter" that got Ed
Lucente bounced out the door. What was especially bad about it was
that *no one said anything about it*. If at the beginning of the six
months someone had said "there will be no layoffs for the next six
months", people would've been ecstatic. I'm sure morale would have
improved. The fact that no one took advantage of this opportunity to
improve morale suggests either that: (A) we didn't really have a plan
for those six months and the relative absence of layoffs was a random
result of random actions (or inactions), or (B) the issue of morale
was not considered important enough to warrant any pronouncements.
Clearly the only thing that will both improve morale and help the
company's bottom line at this point is revenue growth (er, make that
*profitable* revenue growth as someone before mentioned). Until we
have revenue growth, the next most assuring thing would probably be
to know what the market segments are that we expect to grow revenue
in and how fast we think we can take off in those segments. I mean,
if it's 64-bit UNIX and NT servers, where do we see those markets
being a couple of years out, and what share of those markets do we
expect to be taking?
- paul
|
4719.92 | Please Don't forget OpenVMS... | SCASS1::WISNIEWSKI | ADEPT of the Virtual Space. | Fri Jul 19 1996 05:15 | 41 |
| Now I'm upset by .84...
Bob...
Where is the plan for sustaining and even growing the OpenVMS business?
You continue to stress growth in the WNT, UNIX, and Internet Markets
but it's the OpenVMS revenues that continue to pay most of the bills.
Is the plan/timeframe to change that? My customers continue to ask for
the retirement timetable for OpenVMS whenever we omit or ignore OpenVMS
in our Marketing, Press releases, or vision statements.
Yes we are selling WNT, Unix, and Internet but OpenVMS continues to
be the cause of most of the revenues (and profits) that I see. Am I
wrong?
Until we are ready to announce OpenVMS's retirement we should be very VERY
sensitive about any communications that appear to give the impression of
ignoring our most Profitable, Feature-Rich, Production Systems OS.
General statements about our company's future that do not include
OpenVMS sends a strong, negative message to Digital employees and
customers alike about OpenVMS's Future as a Digital Product.
We cannot afford to just smother OpenVMS and annoy our loyal customers
to the point of desertion of Digital. Economic and Negative
information is already planting the seeds of doubt in most of our
customers minds.
I'm sorry to harp on this but I have been continually doing damage
control about OpenVMS being discontinued, retired, or sold off...
All because of lack of attention, or a loose quote or press release
from some "Senior" Digital manager about OpenVMS that's taken in the
wrong light...
Thanks for listening,
John Wisniewski
|
4719.93 | Satisfied_customers = Satisfied_management ???? | GIDDAY::FLAWN | | Fri Jul 19 1996 10:14 | 32 |
|
I too hope we become more customer focussed, as Bob mentioned in .84. I
work in customer support and it seems increasingly more emphasis is
placed on making fairly arbitrary numbers (service calls closed etc.).
I can see why that might achieve management satisfaction but I don't
believe goaling people on absolute numbers rather than on actual
productivity and value is going to encourage the kind of teamwork and
customer engagement that's required.
I'd prefer to see us focus on providing the customer with quality service
as a cohesive organisation than ending up with people making the numbers
look good (potentially at the expense of the customer and each other) for
the benefit of internal management.
If the quality of the product and services is good enough, customers will
*happily* part with the crisp folding stuff.
Re .92
I'd have to agree with that - it seems like we're almost dropping OpenVMS
from the product set. While all the surveys predict it'll drop in market
share over the next few years my concern would be whether we'll have a
strong enough holding in the other markets to let OpenVMS "slip". Maybe
we need to be a bit more sensitive with the customers on the traditional
product base and lead them rather than hoping they'll catch up themselves.
I can see we need to focus on market direction, I'm just uncomfortable
about customers getting the impression we're abandoning them.
Dave.
(NOT the Director of Marketing Windows NT - just a coincidence.).
|
4719.94 | | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | See http://atlant2.zko.dec.com/ | Fri Jul 19 1996 10:41 | 42 |
| Bob:
But, see, here's another example of the problem I'm talking about:
In your reply, you identified "the Internet" as one of the areas
we're focused upon. That's good. Through AltaVista (the real
AltaVista search engine, not all the products that have just
inherited the name) we have a very positive presence on the 'net.
With regard to how Digital is perceived in the outside world at
large, it's the best thing we've done in a decade!
But then we read something like this (in another note here in
this conference):
> Well, not only Dan [Kalikow -- AGS] (the marketing person setting
> up the internal webpage), but the entire engineering/documentation/
> testing team of AltaVista Personal Edition ... of about 12 people
> in Australia have been downsized as part of an ISBU restructure.
and we find that Digital's tactics are in *DIRECT OPPOSITION*
to Digital's strategy. And you can bet that this will generate
more of those "Does Digital have a clue" sorts of headlines.
What are we to make of actions like this???
Atlant
Note (to any potential nitpickers):
Yes, I realize that the AltaVista search engine running upon and
targeting a PC isn't the same as the real AltaVista, and that
this product really doesn't require the Internet or an intranet
at all, but I believe that this product will still create a much
closer tie-in in the customers' minds than the Everything_is_Alta-
Vista family of products. Afer all, AltaVista on a PC and the real
Alta Vista do the same thing; only the scale is different.
And if you still don't like my analogy, then substitute any other
part of the ISBU that is being decimated.
|
4719.95 | | IOSG::BILSBOROUGH | SWBFS | Fri Jul 19 1996 11:00 | 20 |
|
In my group we're woking on OfficeServer which is a replacement for
ALL-IN-1. It has internet capabilities and will run on VMS and UNIX.
So it should fit into the fact that UNIX and Internet are important
markets in the future(as well as the fact that VMS is very important
today.
So why has our group apparently been asked by our VP Steve Jenkins to
stop development work and work on CLD's until there are none left.
(which aren't high anyway)
How will that help us when *I think* quality isn't a problem (I should
know I'm a QA engineer!). How does this benefit the general customer
base by the fact that we'll slip this and other products by many
months. It is important that OfficeServer hits the market ASAP without
having to fix more CLDs.
Mike
|
4719.96 | Let's get it on!! | ASABET::SILVERBERG | My Other O/S is UNIX | Fri Jul 19 1996 11:27 | 54 |
| Bob: Appreciate the participation
The UNIX market this year will purchase approx. $30B of new systems,
on top of the approx. $100B of installed base systems running
in every industry in every market around the world.
Digital Equipment Corp. has built the best UNIX operating system and
system software products, BAR NONE.
We have the best alliances with the best-in-class suppliers of
enabling technology. layered products and end-user applications.
We have the best high-performance platforms for the commercial business
market as well as the scientific/technical market.
Every time we get to tell out story directly to a customer/prospect,
they are asmazed at what we have to offer, and wonder why we are
keeping this all a secret (a direct quote from a MCI attendee at a
customer visit = your commercial UNIX capability is the industry's
best kept secret).
While high-performance UNIX solutions in the commercial and technical
markets is one of Digital's strategies for growth, that strategy is
not being executed within the corporation, nor is the message
getting out of the corporation (except for the approx. 500 direct
customer visits our team will do this year).
Our delivery capability is as poor as our promotion capability. We
continue to downsize UNIX field support representatives, and those
who are left are being deployed in other areas. We have removed
Area level UNIX marketing/program resources around the world. We
are not allowed to advertise/promote our leadership capabilities.
We have downsized the UNIX marketing/promotion capability along with
severe budet reductions.
In short, the UNIX market has never been larger. Digital has never
been in better shape to satsify the needs of this growing market. Our
products and alliances have never been better. The corporation needs
this revenue more than ever. Let's unleash the power, creativty and
energy within the corporation to break through the internally created
barriers to greater success and market share. Let's concentrate on
beating our competitors instead of focusing on our internal political
and management problems. Let's advertise/promote our leaderhip
product and solutions capability to overcome the negative press we
are getting. Let's tell the world how good we are. Let's organize
for success and customr satisfaction instead of for control and
political expediency. Every time a reorganization or restructuring
is considered, ask the question: How will this increase customer
satisfaction and increase profitable revenue?
Thanks for listening and regards,
Mark Silverberg
|
4719.97 | on a more positive note... | GIDDAY::BACOT | | Fri Jul 19 1996 13:48 | 31 |
|
re: 4719.95
The reason that you've been asked to stop development work is because
we are giving away our installed base of customers using Digital messaging
products to Microsoft. They can go Exchange or they can go away.
Why else would we change our internal messaging system to Exchange?,
Why don't we mention any of our messaging products in our marketing?
Sorry, we do talk about Microsoft's products.
Why are we actively encouraging customers to move off of VMS onto
NT even when they are quite happy with products/service and are buying
Alpha's to run it all on?
Why would Digital absorb the tremendous cost of moving from
one messaging platform to another in these difficult financial times?
With no clear gains to Digital.
Although I strongly suspect that the actual cost will never be known
as the cost is pushed out from IS and absorbed at the Cost
Center and individual contributer level. Initially additional hardware
on the desktop and training costs. Then additional storage costs, loss of
functionality, loss of data, etc. How important is your mail anyway?
This is a clear message to our customers. What isn't clear is why
they should continue to be Digital customers or how this is good
for Digital.
I've heard it looks good on paper though.
Angela
|
4719.98 | What's missing from "The Strategy" | FOUNDR::DODIER | Double Income, Clan'o Kids | Fri Jul 19 1996 13:56 | 19 |
| re:94
Ditto. Actions speak louder than words, and perception is 95% of the
current battle.
I always thought that the basic premise of managing people was
very simple. Keep your people happy, and they will do their best.
Happy, hard working employees translates into positive outlook and happy
customers. This in turn makes management happy. A cycle we can all live
with.
The proverbial bottom line is, until it's heard from above that the
layoffs are (finally) over, there will continue to be fear and negative
outlook among the troups. This message is a reoccurring theme throughout
this note and this notesfile.
Ray
|
4719.100 | | AMCFAC::RABAHY | dtn 471-5160, outside 1-810-347-5160 | Fri Jul 19 1996 14:53 | 15 |
| re .84, .92:
>... our three fundamental areas: high performance 64-bit UNIX;
>Windows NT; and the Internet ...
It seems to me OpenVMS is more and more often forgotten despite promises made to
remember it after being reminded of the value it contributes to Digital.
Everyone wants to feel as if their work is valuable and meaningful. I envy the
people that moved to Oracle to support Rdb. I envy the Digital employees that
support Digital UNIX and Windows NT.
Won't you please help make me feel as if my support of OpenVMS is valuable and
meaningful? Perhaps by just keeping promises to remember it when listing
fundamental Digital areas or selling it to a company that will?
|
4719.101 | | AMCFAC::RABAHY | dtn 471-5160, outside 1-810-347-5160 | Fri Jul 19 1996 15:05 | 8 |
| re .100:
I suppose alternatively we could official announce that supporting OpenVMS is
not really all that valuable or meaningful and stop all this whining. Don't
string us along with half-hearted, after-the-fact, patronizing appologies - we
deserve better. But if we do continue to behave this way then, being the
unexplainably loyal person that I am, I'll just feel badly and struggle to keep
on turning in multi-million dollar deals.
|
4719.102 | Time to speak up... | PATRLR::MCCUSKER | | Fri Jul 19 1996 15:29 | 39 |
| .98>>until it's heard from above that the
layoffs are (finally) over, there will continue to be fear and negative
outlook among the troups <<
This is hogwash. And I personally am getting sick of listening to all the
whining about it. There will never be a point when layoffs are over. Even
when we get to the point where we may be hiring like crazy in some areas, we
may still be laying off in others. Thats the way it should be as the cycles
of business proceed. If a product/service/whatever isn't making money, and the
determination is made to kill it, the folks staffing it are at risk. If they
don't have skills that can be used elsewhere in the company, for the new areas
of focus for the company, then good bye. Thats the way it should be. Think
about it, does anyone want to work thier tail off trying to be part of
a successful team, just to see your profits carry some non-producing team. I
don't. And if I'm not producing, then I'd expect to be dumped too. I try to
concentrate on getting my job done and keeping my skill set current. Those
are the only things that I can control that can help keep me employed here
at Digital, or somewhere else.
So as far as this negative outlook amongst the troops, get over it. Or move on.
Good luck finding somewhere where you won't have similar concerns at some point.
This is not unique to Digital. All of corporate America is doing it. They
have to to stay competitive. The days of carrying employees just because they've
been on board for X number of years are over. This company (and all others)
exist to make money. If you don't contribute to the profits of the company,
expect to be released.
I'm not saying I like this situation. I wish I was born a generation or so
earlier so I could experience loyalty between employee and employer. But I
wasn't and here I am. I accept the current environment and intend to do
whatever it takes (hmm ;^)) to be successful in it. I am loyal to getting my
tasks completed. I expect Digital to be loyal by compensating me for my
efforts. End of loyalties. Sad but true. But it is workable and it can
be successful. It has to be.
just my $.02
Brad
|
4719.103 | My two cents worth | SNAX::SMITH | I FEEL THE NEED | Fri Jul 19 1996 15:33 | 96 |
|
I think this is the first time I've ever put a response in the Digital notes
conference, but the Dear Bob note got my attention. Not only because of
what was written, but because Bob took the time to respond personally.
First of all, I won't even BEGIN to pretend I have all of the answers, or
even a few of them. I don't. Everyone should be VERY happy "I'm" not
managing this company. 8^) Fact is, we're in a mess, not of Bob's making,
and it's going to take something of a magician to get us out of it. I also
wouldn't be too quick to jump on Bob for the job he's doing. His task is
monumental to say the least and, in my opinion, he is directly responsible
for Digital still existing as a company today. I think he's done the
impossible, with still more impossible tasks yet to be accomplished.
That said, I do have some opinions that may or may not make sense, as well
as some comments to others that have replied here.
Firstly, do I like the downsizing that is/has been going on????? Of course
not. If I ever get tagged, I will probably be in deep sneakers. But I live
with it. I basically figure that if I come to work in the morning and they
let me in, I'm good for another day. I just don't let it bother me. I can't.
I'd be in a padded room by now if I did. Maybe it's because I'm a Viet Nam
vet, I don't know. But I've been able to develop the attitude that there are
some things that you just can't change, so your just wasting your time and
energy worrying about them. I just do the best I can for the company each
day they let me in and hope for the best.
I think we all need to realize that there are MANY things that drive what
Bob does. He is not only answerable to us as employees, he's also answerable
to the BOD and major stock holders. Like it or not, the major stock holders
are interested in just one thing. Making money. That's why they are MAJOR
stock holders. Do you think they care if 7000 employees are laid off?????
I seriously doubt it. What they ARE interested in is that their investment
is making money. BUT, this is a FACT OF LIFE. It is true for EVERY MAJOR
COMPANY. Not just Digital. You can accept it or not. Your choice.
What concerns me is that it seems no matter how good our product is, or what
we have to offer, the customer just doesn't seem to be getting it. When
someone (BP) brings a company from the brink of oblivion to 6 profitable
quarters, why does the customer/potential customer think we are going out
of business when we have ONE bad quarter????? On top of that, the stock
market on the whole has taken a beating the last couple of weeks, and alot
of our loss was due to the market being down in general and had nothing to
do with last quarters earnings or the current downsizing. I sit here thinking
"the customer can figure that out just as easily as I can, so WHY DON'T THEY".
Like I said in the beginning, I don't have a clue. But it's one of the things
that makes our turnaround so difficult.
"I" think we have a very definite credibility problem......I know...DA...no
kidding. But what I'm getting at is the fact that I don't think we are going
to successfully overcome that problem "just" by announcing our products. Just
by saying "look what we have to offer". I would like us to DIRECTLY address
the "fears" of our customers/potential customers with an add campaign that
basically says "look, I know what you've been hearing about Digital Equipment
Corp., but let me assure you, WERE HERE TO STAY". Then REINFORCE that with
what we are doing, what products we are developing/have to offer etc. I think
this is what people want to hear. They want to know that WE have confidence
in OURSELVES. If I recall correctly, Lee Iacoca did exactly that when he
took over Chrysler. Chrysler had a credibility problem. People didn't have
any faith in the product, or in the company remaining in existence. He
immediately went on the offensive with the PRIORITY message being "Chrysler
is a GOOD company, with a GOOD product, and DEDICATED employees, and if
you think we are going to close our doors and go away, THINK AGAIN". Then he
REINFORCED that message with the changes the company was making, and the
products they had to offer.
When we announced the latest earnings results and the subsequent downsizing,
the negative press was unbelievable. Like I said earlier, we went from
being the miracle company to going out of business in one quarter. It just
didn't add up, but that generally doesn't make any difference to the press.
Bob had a response, but in my opinion, it was totally in "defense" of what
was happening. This, I believe, gave people the impression that we were
back pedaling, staggering from a right cross that we didn't see coming. I
think it would have been GREAT if Bob had gone on the air and taken the
OFFENSIVE with words like CASH ON HAND, BALANCE SHEETS, STATE OF THE ART
PRODUCTS, and if it were me, TAKE YOUR DOOM AND GLOOM WRITERS AND DOWN SIZE
"THEM". WE'RE NOT GOING ANYWHERE. 8^) Like I said, be glad "I'm" not
running this company. 8^)
Again, if I recall, Lee Iacoca made statements like "some of the changes
will be PAINFUL". "Our turnaround won't be easy" etc. Basically beating the
negative publicity to the punch. When people heard there was a layoff at
Chrysler, they just said "oh yea, we knew about that. Lee already said that
was going to happen". So, instead of being doom and gloom, the press was
saying "Lee Iacoca is living up to his promise and turning the company
around". Positive press instead of negative press. Anyway, I think you get
the picture. The more we can convince people WE are not worried about Digital
Equipment Corp., the more CUSTOMERS will not worry about Digital.
So what do "I" tell people when they ask me "what the heck is going on with
DEC". I tell them "don't worry about us", and by the way, this is a GREAT
time to buy stock. (and hope like hell I just told them the truth). 8^)
Regards,
Steve
|
4719.104 | Only the BOD | PATRLR::MCCUSKER | | Fri Jul 19 1996 15:40 | 6 |
| Re .103
>>He is not only answerable to us as employees, he's also answerable to the BOD <<
Sorry, he is NOT answerable to us employees. He answers to the BOD only.
|
4719.105 | OpenVMS missing is TOO obvious..... | FIREBL::LEEDS | From VAXinated to Alphaholic | Fri Jul 19 1996 15:46 | 35 |
| > - our three fundamental areas: high performance 64-bit UNIX;
> Windows NT; and the Internet. To sum it up, today we have outstanding
> products and services, and we have begun to tell people about them.
I, too, must express my dissappointment with the lack of ANY mention of
OpenVMS in our "fundamental areas".
I have been invloved in a number Digital Unix sales (Best Western for
example). We have a great Unix story.
I have helped several customers replace their growth-limited Novell
environments with Windows NT on Alpha. We have a great NT strategy.
But I still support loyal, BIG customers like Intel who rely on OpenVMS to
run their 24x365 production FABs, spending 10s of millions of dollars each
year with Digital on OpenVMS and related products, and plan on continuing to
do so far into the future. Every time they see a message like the above, it
takes us weeks of "spin control" to convince them that not mentioning the
product that keeps them in business was just a slight oversight on our part,
we're sorry. Without OpenVMS, there are no Pentiums, period !
Please, please, please - ensure that EVERY "corporate strategy" message that
goes out publicly or privately includes some statement about continuing our
support for OpenVMS, maybe even a plan to GROW the OpenVMS business.
Wouldn't it be great if our OpenVMS business, Digital Unix business, and
Windows NT business were each bringing in the revenue to Digital that
OpenVMS brings in today ??? We'd be scrambling to hire 7000 people to
support all the old loyal and NEW customers, and our stock would reflect our
rightful claim to be "the world's leader in open client/server computing
solutions from personal computers to integrated worldwide information
systems."
Arlan
|
4719.106 | Wrong place at the wrong time... | CONSLT::OWEN | Stop Global Whining | Fri Jul 19 1996 15:46 | 10 |
| Dear Bob and re .102,
While I agree that layoffs are part of corporate life that will never
go away, simply dumping product groups is NOT the way to do it. We've
sent too many excellent people out the door simply because they were in
the wrong group at the wrong time. We can not afford to keep doing
this. Where's the motivation to achieve greatness when those who have
achieved it get shown the door when their project gets canceled?
-Steve
|
4719.107 | it filled a need | SWAM1::MEUSE_DA | | Fri Jul 19 1996 15:52 | 8 |
|
-1
The 1984 Chryco minivan and to some extent their K-cars saved
Chryco.
The speeches helped.
|
4719.108 | | SMURF::BINDER | Errabit quicquid errare potest. | Fri Jul 19 1996 15:57 | 53 |
4719.109 | | ASABET::BATES | Sulla cresta dell onda | Fri Jul 19 1996 16:12 | 54 |
|
Brad:
Your points are well-taken about the fact that people will always be
leaving this or any other organization when there's a need to
consolidate because of strategy or business change.
As you can obviously appreciate, it's the apparently arbitrary nature
of recent and current layoffs that disturbs people.
"Am I next?"
"It doesn't matter if you've been a good performer, they're making
across-the-board cuts."
Two good friends of mine, who reported to me when I was in the Storage
Business Unit, are leaving today because they are redundant, in the
estimation of their new management. They are both very capable people,
but the marcomm cuts that are happening in the organization are coming
from the absorbed, not the absorbing business. It's not fair, but there
it is. No one has even considered loyalty in this equation.
And that's too bad, because the way a company treats its employees is
quite often emblematic of the way its customers are treated. There's a
new book by a senior partner at Bain entitled "The Loyalty Factor", and
its primary thesis is that loyalty to employees, customers, and
partners is critical to a company's ongoing success.
It comes back to something I've been talking to people about - this
'stuff' about purpose. The purpose of mercenaries is to do a job for a
fee - their loyalty is to the sack of coins they earn for their
efforts, and possibly to some personal sense of meaning that is
internal and individual. If one looks around these days, it seems as
though the business landscape is filled with outsourced guns-for-hire.
But what about the entity that remains? Isn't there allegiance to some
reason-for-being that motivates the people who have chosen to belong
to that organization? I remember reading in "The HP Way" that David
Packard and Bill Hewlett decided that the purpose of their company was
to advance science, industry and human welfare through technology.
When I talk to HP folks, past and present, they tell me that purpose
and values were integral to "the HP way".
I read another note this morning (4734) about a guy in the midwest who
believed he had a mission, and did what he had to do to achieve it. I
wonder if he was thinking about the security of his job while he was
slogging through the rain and thunder. And I *know* that there are many
more people like him who remain here at Digital, and who are loyal to a
sense of purpose that is both personal and connected to this place
we're involved with for a good portion of our lives.
Could that include you as well?
Gloria
|
4719.110 | re .84 | DECWET::WHITE | Surfin' with the Alien | Fri Jul 19 1996 16:27 | 76 |
| I've worked at both Microsoft and Digital in the
last 4 years or so.
To me, between the lines of Bob's reply is plea for
us to become more engaged as a team. The single
biggest difference between MS and DEC is the commitment
to a company wide strategy, and the ability to move as
one committed organization. Microsoft has it, Digital
just plain does not.
I believe that the answer lies with each individual employee,
and his or her ability to grasp the corporate strategy and
apply this strategy to our every day duties. Digital's
culture allows for a lot of freedom and a lot of diversity.
This is a good thing and we should always value this.
But somehow, we have got to start working together, with
the focus on customer satisfaction and streamlining our
processes so that we are much more nimble. Nimble in our
ability to satisfy our customers, nimble in our ability to
get software and hardware into the market place, nimble in
our ability to apply our own technology to ourselves as an
IT customer, and nimble enough to market our products.
Sitting here reading Mr. Palmer's response and then the
response of others, I get the feeling that this is kind
of a big problem. In my own site I see extremely angry
Engineers, resistent to change, holding on to turf for
dear life. I also see really sharp people building really
cool stuff and processes, only to horde these tools and
processes for thier specific group or agenda.
I've noticed in this company that people can be quite rude.
People do not answer phone calls or email. People quite
often will let an issue 'rot' because it's not thier baliwick.
I'm not saying that this is pervasive, but I think we all
can agree it's out there.
So I believe that there is a lot of room for growth around
teamwork,and that work really needs to be done. I would hope
that middle and upper management would see this need and
start initiatives to foster better inter-organizational team
building, along with a general 'pride in Digital' program.
We really need to get back to loving this company and frankly,
loving eachother.
I keep a cut-out from a Digital Today pasted on my office
window, and I look at this everyay.
Digitals Strategy at a Glance:
To compete in four horizontal businesses:
Client/Server Services
Components
Connectivity Software
Systems Platforms
To focus on three markets for profitable growth:
High Performance 64-bit UNIX platforms
Windows NT across the enterprise
Connectivity winthin and between enterprises
Removing obstacles to growth:
Customer satisfaction
Employee engagement
Speed
****
We really need to get with this program in the worst way.
-Stephen
I
|
4719.111 | Remember OpenVMS... | STAR::BUDA | I am the NRA | Fri Jul 19 1996 17:02 | 23 |
| RE: Note 4719.105 by FIREBL::LEEDS
> -< OpenVMS missing is TOO obvious..... >-
>Wouldn't it be great if our OpenVMS business, Digital Unix business, and
>Windows NT business were each bringing in the revenue to Digital that
>OpenVMS brings in today ???
It's scarey but true.
Once a CURRENT customer leaves Digital, there is a 90% chance they will not
come back. We need to keep people on OpenVMS if it is satisfying their needs,
provide tools to migrate from Unix if OpenVMS satisfies their needs. All too
often when people leave OpenVMS, they move to someone elses box and O/S. In
that case we loose all the way around.
OpenVMS is STILL the bread and butter O/S of Digital. Based on PAST
performance of Unix and NT, it will be for a long time to come.
Do NOT chase away our customers - include OpenVMS.
- mark
|
4719.112 | impressed as all the rest | DSNENG::KOLBE | Wicked Wench of the Web | Fri Jul 19 1996 17:06 | 10 |
| I'd guess from reading this notesfile that Bob has seen the tremendous
willingness we have towards helping each other. Every broken process
eventually bleeds into this file as a request for help that is always
forthcoming. That he can also read about it first hand tells me he has
a better grasp of what is happening than many middle managers might like.
But when we discuss morale and loyalty there is no one thing better than
to see him here and know we are being heard at the top. Our culture is
one of direct involvement and instant communication. To have a CEO that
understands and appreciates that is a great step forward. liesl
|
4719.113 | cancel "home-alone" | FIREBL::LEEDS | From VAXinated to Alphaholic | Fri Jul 19 1996 17:26 | 19 |
| re: .110
>But somehow, we have got to start working together, with
>the focus on customer satisfaction and streamlining our
>processes so that we are much more nimble.
I've noticed that since the Sales Reps I support have gone on the
"home-alone" program, achieving the above has become much more difficult.
There are Sales Reps I support that I haven't seen in 3-4 weeks.... they sit
in their little home offices, their only contact with the rest of us is via
phone or Email... no more hallway conversations about customer issues,
product directions... no more "let's go to lunch and talk about Customer A's
situation".... no more "let's go to the white board for a few minutes and
sketch out this configuration".....
I still have an office, but I think putting the Sales Reps on Home-Alone
really hurt our ability to work together as a team.
Arlan
|
4719.114 | | NETCAD::SHERMAN | Steve NETCAD::Sherman DTN 226-6992, LKG1-2 near pole G17 | Fri Jul 19 1996 17:30 | 10 |
| It seems to me that where there is no loyalty, there is no team. I
have consistently heard how important it is for Digital to operate as a
team. I have also consistently heard that there is no longer loyalty
between Digital employees and Digital. This seems to be an enigma.
Personally, I've resolved this by focusing on building trust and
loyalty between me, my immediate supervisors and my customers. But,
I suspect this sidesteps the problem from Digital's point of view.
Steve
|
4719.115 | layoffs don't work; non-layoffs do | DYPSS1::DYSERT | Barry - Custom Software Development | Fri Jul 19 1996 17:57 | 59 |
4719.116 | just curious: what is the BOD's vested interest? | DYPSS1::DYSERT | Barry - Custom Software Development | Fri Jul 19 1996 18:08 | 18 |
4719.117 | | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | See http://atlant2.zko.dec.com/ | Fri Jul 19 1996 18:23 | 47 |
| > <<< Note 4719.102 by PATRLR::MCCUSKER >>>
> -< Time to speak up... >-
>
> .98>>until it's heard from above that the
> layoffs are (finally) over, there will continue to be fear and negative
> outlook among the troups <<
>
> This is hogwash. And I personally am getting sick of listening to all the
> whining about it. There will never be a point when layoffs are over. Even
> when we get to the point where we may be hiring like crazy in some areas, we
> may still be laying off in others. Thats the way it should be as the cycles
> of business proceed.
> :
> This is not unique to Digital. All of corporate America is doing it.
Well, I'm afraid you missed the central point of my .0 . So I'll
say it again in different words:
*CUSTOMERS* are very concerned that *DIGITAL* won't survive.
Their concerns spring from their perception that our only
response to *ANY* business situation now seems to be cut
and slash, slash and cut. This concerns them because many
of their points of contact with the Corporation are now
broken, due in major part to the fact that the people who
provided those points of contact have been cut and slashed.
They want to buy computation, not help us solve our business
problems. And if we can't sell them computation, there are
plenty of other vendors who can.
And, BTW, while cut and slash is currently a very popular way
to do business in America, there are growing signs that it's
a recipe for failure.
*AND* there are also plenty of examples of other corporations
that see this. HP just closed their entire disk drive manufacturing
operation (in both Penang (Malaysia) and Colorado (??)). They're
"releasing" something like 1500 workers. But the press release
that announced this also stated that these were valuable people
and HP could find lots of other work for them to do *WITHIN THE
CORPORATION*. Note bene: While HP and DEC used to be similarly-
sized corporations, HP is now approximately *THREE TIMES* our
size as measured by gross revenues.
So think carefully before you brand all this as "whining hogwash".
Atlant
|
4719.118 | 96 Olympics | POWDML::TNELSON | The Song Remains The Same | Fri Jul 19 1996 18:26 | 16 |
|
Someone mentioned bad press and I believe name recognition usually
is another problem. I was wondering.....
Are we involved in the Olympics in anyway??? If not why aren't we???
It's only going to be viewed by the WHOLE WORLD! There obviously must
have been an opportunity to be the Computer Vender of the 96 Olympics?
Actually maybe we are and we'll find out about it when they show our
new 15 second confusing commercial on Sunday night, July 28th at 9:02
PM. After another few million dollars spent on researching TV AD time,
this was the best slot! We catch the Murder She Wrote Viewers switching
over to the Olympics after their programs over. ;)
Ted
|
4719.119 | | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | See http://atlant2.zko.dec.com/ | Fri Jul 19 1996 18:29 | 5 |
| The 1996 Olympics is a wholly-owned subsidiary of the IBM Company
and the Coca-Cola Corporation. And IBM's getting good press out
of it, although you could debate whether they'll get their money's
worth.
Atlant
|
4719.120 | Dear Bob | PONDA::PALMER | BOB PALMER | Fri Jul 19 1996 19:16 | 65 |
| .92
John,
In the presentations that I make to customers, analysts, the media,
etc., I always emphasize that we are committed to OpenVMS. When I
am discussing our Windows NT through the enterprise strategy, I
point out that we are continuing to invest in and enhance OpenVMS,
for example in adding 64-bit addressing, and that our most important
commitment is to the customers who have already purchased systems
based on VMS. This message is apparently getting through. The
following is taken from the June issue of the Patricia Seybold Group
newsletter:
"Digital has found a real market opportunity, using
OpenVMS as a way to make Windows NT a safer option for
customers, allowing them to use Windows NT programming
APIs, but deploying mission critical components on a
system that has higher availability, is more manageable,
and has higher performance than native Windows NT
platforms. Customers are actually pursuing this strategy,
such as Corning Telecommunications, New York Mercantile
Exchange, Australian Stock Exchange, and others. They are
developing the distributed components of applications on
Windows NT and using OpenVMS as the data management
component. By using native Windows interfaces to tie the
applications together, these customers have the
flexibility of moving to a complete NT environment if they
so choose, or staying with OpenVMS.
Of All the major system vendors, Digital remains the most
committed to Windows NT. This commitment is perhaps most
striking in the Open VMS group which has made significant
investments in making OpenVMS a useful complement to
Windows NT. Even though Hewlett-Packard and IBM have
adopted more Windows NT-friendly strategies, neither has
as comprehensive a technical strategy as Digital."
It is my intntion to emphasize OpenVMS as one of our major
capabilities in delivering enterprise solutions. As we work on the
materials for our industry analyst meeting in September, I will
ensure that a clear representation of the importance and strategic
impact of OpenVMS is communicated more promptly. Thank you for your
input.
.90
Rod,
The variable portion of my targeted compensation is between 40 and
60 percent. In fiscal year 1995, the Board was satisfied with my
performance, and the variable portion was paid as stated in our 1995
proxy. In FY96, I believe our performance does not justify a full
payment of the variable compensation, and I have requested that it
not be paid. Additionally, many of our senior executives also have
between 25 and 50 percent variable compensation as part of their
competitive pay. This is consistent with other Fortune 200
multinational, public companies. The purpose of these compensation
systems is to ensure that senior management has skin in the game
just as shareholders and other employees.
Regards,
Bob
|
4719.121 | | PATRLR::MCCUSKER | | Fri Jul 19 1996 19:19 | 37 |
| Re .117 - Atlant: I don't think I missed the point of .0. I liked it. My .102 was
not an attempt at saying we should embrace the current environment because its a good
one. I was simply replying to .98 and in particular that until there are no more
layoffs the troops will have a negative outlook. I continue to feel that if you are
going to be negative simply because Digital won't offer you job security then you
should maybe think about moving on.
.117>> And, BTW, while cut and slash is currently a very popular way
to do business in America, there are growing signs that it's
a recipe for failure. <<
Yes! Most definitly. Heck, its even becoming a topic in our presidential races. I
don't endorse it. Just trying to live with it cause I don't feel I have much choice.
And it will likely stick with us until globally speaking, all companies decide to
be more responsible to thier employees.
.115>>You'll not get good performance when people are constantly looking over their
shoulder for the axe-man<<
I guess this is what I don't understand. Why are you looking over your shoulder?
Are you going to run away from the axe man? Hey, if he's coming, you won't be able
to stop it. I believe therefor that you can try to prevent it by continually doing
your job but we are all aware that that is not enough. So then you need to keep your
skill set current so you can land on your feet.
Please, Don't interpret what I said in .102 as an endorsement of what Digital is
doing. I believe the latest round is knee-jerk. I believe that we do not have a
clearly defined direction that this whole company is following. I KNOW that our
customers have no clue where we are going. Marketing? Whats that? I believe our
marketing department is stuck in the early 80's when our sales force was not much
more than order takers. My .102 did not intend to address those issues. It was
simply a response to the folks who say that the threat of layoffs is impacting thier
performance on the job.
Brad
|
4719.122 | invest in people, treasure them | ESSC::KMANNERINGS | | Fri Jul 19 1996 19:19 | 27 |
| re .117
>>> But the press release
that announced this also stated that these were valuable people
and HP could find lots of other work for them to do *WITHIN THE
CORPORATION*
Well said Atlant. The fact is that Digital is and has been letting
excellent people go, while at the same time investing big money hiring
"new blood." This is extremely expensive and does not always work.
I have seen some top quality "new blood", but also some duds, and quite
a lot of fluctuation. Also, curiously, the new "new blood" makes all the
same mistakes the old "new blood" made in its time. Buy in quality
know-how in new areas, by all means, but don't throw away useful people
who represent an expensive investment.
It also has a very demoralising effect, watching new people and
realising that they will need 3 years to get to where fine people we
are letting go already were. So come down off your Soapbox .102, I'm
sure we would agree on no ideological questions at all, but many are
getting sick of the way the dogma you have is destroying company assets
which we have collectively built up over the years. If HP realise this
enough to put it in their press release, then you do not need to share
my political outlook to question the validity of chainsaw style
restructuring.
Kevin
|
4719.123 | | PADC::KOLLING | Karen | Fri Jul 19 1996 19:31 | 41 |
| I was glad to see the clear, crisp, and short strategy statement
in Bob's reply. Although I had read the strategy documents previously
available, I personally was at sea about our strategy, expecially
given the recent upheavals. (However, even as an NT/UNIX person, I
flinched at the effect on our VMS cutomers if the strategy in that
form were to be made public.)
It seems to me that Digital has the following major problems:
1. A couple of years ago we had a clear lead in performance because of
Alpha. We have nearly lost that lead. How can this be corrected?
2. A lack of reality in pricing. Our prices for many of our products
make them not competitive.
3. Customers find it hard to buy from Digital. This notes file
has numerous notes posted by employees who have been told by potential
customers that they have been unable to find anyone in Digital who will
sell them a product that they want to buy.
4. Our previously excellent service organization has degenerated to
a level of poor quality, probably because of understaffing. A
reputation for poor service is fatal for a company unless its products
are of the inexpensive "throw it away when it breaks" variety.
5. Lack of a public presence because of our small amount of and
intermittent advertising. Everyone knows Intel, IBM, and HP.
We have had dynamite products, and few people know it.
6. Employee morale. I suspect the employees of Malden Mills would
gladly take a 10% pay cut and work their behinds off for their
employer, and years ago Digital employees accepted pay freezes and
worked like demons when the company was in trouble. At that time,
however, everyone believed that Digital was committed to its employees'
well-being. Now that is not the case. We have not only a history of
downsizing, but changed benefits which include health care plans that
have various horror stories associated with them like inadequate care
for employees and their children (see Note 4188.33, for example).
Karen Kolling
|
4719.124 | Cheeze + crackers with that whine ? ;-) | FOUNDR::DODIER | Double Income, Clan'o Kids | Fri Jul 19 1996 19:45 | 28 |
| re:102
I did not mean to sound like layoffs, in the sense of the following
context, will (or should) ever go away.
> If a product/service/whatever isn't making money, and the determination
> is made to kill it, the folks staffing it are at risk.
At least these sorts of layoffs are easily understood. That's not what
this was about. People in groups that are making money, are good
performers with a current skill set, and plenty of work are being shown
the door.
Others that are still here don't understand what happened, can't
rationalize it against the corporate strategy, and therefore can't even
defend themselves (and their company) when approached by customers about
it. I can't even say I understood the selection criteria for this last
round.
I don't ever expect to see a "no-layoff" policy like we had years
ago under KO. I would, however, hope to see a day in DEC (again) where
doing all the sorts of things you mentioned, such as working hard and
maintaining a current skill set, would essentially eliminate the fear
of being layed off. I had always believed this to be the case, but my
faith in hard work and skill set maintenance has been shaken a bit from
this last round.
Ray
|
4719.125 | I still can't believe Digital let AltaVista's Dan Kalikow go... | SPECXN::CONLON | | Fri Jul 19 1996 20:06 | 11 |
| RE: .124 Ray
> ...but my faith in hard work and skill set maintenance has been shaken
> a bit from this last round.
This week's TFSO round simply doesn't make sense.
It's like hearing all your life that the best place to stand in an
earthquake is in a doorway, and then finding out one day that the
doorway is really the worst place to be when an earthquake hits.
|
4719.126 | | BUSY::SLABOUNTY | Do you wanna bang heads with me? | Fri Jul 19 1996 20:11 | 14 |
|
RE: .120
Bob, I believe that Rod's .90 was aimed at a few replies just
before his when it was suggested that we all take a 10% pay
cut to save some of the jobs that are destined for "the big
bit bucket in the sky".
As far as I can tell it doesn't appear that he was referring
to you specifically. However, it was rather comforting to
read that you are bearing some of the brunt of this also.
Shawn L.
|
4719.127 | Impact can be subtle too | FOUNDR::DODIER | Double Income, Clan'o Kids | Fri Jul 19 1996 20:18 | 12 |
| re:121
> My .102 ... was simply a response to the folks who say that the
> threat of layoffs is impacting thier performance on the job.
As Atlant mentioned again, it's also "off the job" interaction
coming into play now as well. I don't think people are paralyzed, but
by your definition, we do seem to have a lot of clean hogs around here
(metaphorically speaking ;-)
Ray
|
4719.128 | notes conferencing with the CEO | MSE1::PCOTE | Attrition: See Digital Equipement Corp. | Fri Jul 19 1996 20:27 | 40 |
|
rep .120
Bob, 1st and foremost, I'm delighted that you're taking the time
to read and (I hope) understand the issues facing the (remaining)
dedicated Digital employees.
> It is my intntion to emphasize OpenVMS as one of our major
> capabilities in delivering enterprise solutions. As we work on the
> materials for our industry analyst meeting in September, I will
> ensure that a clear representation of the importance and strategic
> impact of OpenVMS is communicated more promptly. Thank you for your
> input.
This is great! You've recognized one problem and you're taking
action. That's one down. (I'm sure John W. will be thrilled)
See Karen's note (rep .123) for a few more 'key issues'.
One thing you need to understand: Digital was on a roll. We
started building momentum. We're making money again. Someone
even enter a note last year saying that it was "fun" working
at Digital again. (which you replied too).
But, with Q4 results looking unfavorable, you single-handedly kill
all that momentum, all the optimism by one single press release
saying that you're laying off another 7000 people.
Fix the problems Bob - don't mindlessly layoff the people who can
make this company great again. There's too little talent left.
Do you understand this ?
I can go on, but I leave it at that.
thanks for taking the time and listening,
Paul Cote
|
4719.129 | Big Blue (never heard of them!) | POWDML::TNELSON | The Song Remains The Same | Fri Jul 19 1996 20:49 | 24 |
| re:119
> The 1996 Olympics is a wholly-owned subsidiary of the IBM Company
> and the Coca-Cola Corporation. And IBM's getting good press out
> of it, although you could debate whether they'll get their money's
> worth.
Figures.. Some day, someone in upper management is going to realize that
maybe if they blow the cobwebs out of it's public advertising wallet and
go all out in a world wide event like the Olympics it will help wash
away the bad press and put our name in peoples heads that never heard
of us. The idea is to beat our name into peoples heads till they finally
got a clue!!
The standard answer to why we don't is because it costs too much!!! I'd
rather take a few hundred million dollar loss to improve our name
recognition then keep drowning and spend it on restructing layoffs.
Lets fight our way back instead of spending all our time trying to
find someone to hold our hand.
Ted
But obviously someone knows better!
|
4719.130 | Re-wrapped for people like me. | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | See http://atlant2.zko.dec.com/ | Fri Jul 19 1996 22:34 | 44 |
| <<< Note 4719.121 by PATRLR::MCCUSKER >>>
Re .117 - Atlant: I don't think I missed the point of .0. I liked
it. My .102 was not an attempt at saying we should embrace the
current environment because its a good one. I was simply replying to
.98 and in particular that until there are no more layoffs the troops
will have a negative outlook. I continue to feel that if you are
going to be negative simply because Digital won't offer you job
security then you should maybe think about moving on.
.117>> And, BTW, while cut and slash is currently a very popular
way to do business in America, there are growing signs that it's
a recipe for failure. <<
Yes! Most definitly. Heck, its even becoming a topic in our
presidential races. I don't endorse it. Just trying to live with it
cause I don't feel I have much choice. And it will likely stick with
us until globally speaking, all companies decide to be more
responsible to thier employees.
.115>>You'll not get good performance when people are constantly
looking over their shoulder for the axe-man<<
I guess this is what I don't understand. Why are you looking over
your shoulder? Are you going to run away from the axe man? Hey, if
he's coming, you won't be able to stop it. I believe therefor that
you can try to prevent it by continually doing your job but we are all
aware that that is not enough. So then you need to keep your skill
set current so you can land on your feet.
Please, Don't interpret what I said in .102 as an endorsement of what
Digital is doing. I believe the latest round is knee-jerk. I believe
that we do not have a clearly defined direction that this whole
company is following. I KNOW that our customers have no clue where we
are going. Marketing? Whats that? I believe our marketing
department is stuck in the early 80's when our sales force was not
much more than order takers. My .102 did not intend to address those
issues. It was simply a response to the folks who say that the threat
of layoffs is impacting thier performance on the job.
Brad
|
4719.131 | I do still believe in Digital's future. | SPECXN::CONLON | | Sat Jul 20 1996 00:35 | 8 |
| RE: .120 Bob Palmer
Thanks again for your replies to this topic - as rough as this
week has been, it's still been great to see you come in here to
communicate with 'the troops' like this.
Suzanne Conlon / Software Engineer
|
4719.132 | maybe this should move to the 'messaging' note | GIDDAY::BACOT | | Sat Jul 20 1996 01:26 | 87 |
| re: .99
>>Our internal deployment of Exchange is being driven my many factors, including
>>the old "use what we sell". The original implementation of Exchange in
We also sell Digital's messaging/internet products. An internal
environment made up of Digital's products, Microsoft's, Lotus's
and other vendor's products would be brilliant and would also show
that we use what we sell *and* we know how to make them all work together.
>>Digital was driven by a service organisation. The Alliance with Microsoft
>>get's a thumb's up on this one. I personally know of several situations where
>>Digital is the vendor being used to implement Exchange for our customers,
>>based on our internal deployment. Guess what, the "Alliance" did all the
>>marketing for that, virtually a $0 cost to Digital.
Perhaps that will make up for the customers that we are losing due to
the perception that we are abandoning the products in which they
have invested and which we have never really marketed.
>>Electronic mail is unofficially this company's largest production application,
>>yes it's important. I have supported all of Digital's mail products and will
>>gladly debate the "loss of functionality". I also know that, like
>>our external customers, we are concerned with cost and technology. We
>>eliminate a manually maintained message routing infrastructure and move to an
>>"Internet" ready/friendly environment. We will replace costly archaic
>>vaxclusters and disk drives with newer, efficient technology. Yes, some of
None of this is dependent on moving away from Digital' messaging/internet
products. Unless you actually believe Microsoft's marketing hype.
Moving the existing infrastructure to current Digital software/hardware
technology would be *much* more cost effective.
>>the disk storage will be distributed to the desktop PC...it's called
>>client/server.
It's also called inefficient and at risk due to the lack of data being
backed up. We are at odds with ourselves due to costs. It is more efficient
/cost effective to keep one copy of a mail message that several users share
in one accessible place than it is to push that document onto multiple
desktops or file shares. But if IS can limit their cost by 'distributing'
storage to the users then their numbers look better.
The cost to Digital is higher but hidden.
>>In the process we get computer literate employees with very
>>high powered productivity tools at their disposal. In this corporation, we
Digital will have computer literate employees when we train them to
be computer literate. A lot of employees have 'high powered
productivity tools at their disposal' now and they use them to run
vt-emulators.
>>all know "technology" manager's that can't give up their VTxxx and VMSmail,
>>and that's just plain sad.
They can't give them up because they use these 'low powered' tools to
do their jobs. It isn't sad. If it's the appropriate tool for the job
you should use it. Use a postit note if it's appropriate. A 10 page,
colour powerpoint document isn't always necessary.
>>Yes, Digital makes great products, some will be around, some will go away, and
>>the market will drive alot of those decisions for us.
If we kill the products before they go to market it won't.
>>The point is we've got to be able to change with technology and get
>> behind what will keep all of us around.
That's my question, where is the money (for Digital) going to come from
with Exchange and will it replace lost revenues from existing/potential
Digital messaging customers?
>>We can get back to the day's when Digital reputation sell's itself.
I've been with Digital just over 12 years. Working with and supporting
messaging products for 8 years. As a company we know more about this
technology than anyone else. We understand it as a technology and
as a business solution for our customers. We have protected our
customer's investment, taking them from character cell interface to
client/server to publishing documents from that same file cabinet on
to the internet. We built a very good reputation in this area
why else would Microsoft want to capitalize on it and walk into
an established customer base that as come to trust Digital?
Angela
|
4719.133 | Bob ... Use your most valuable assets to solve your (our) problems | JALOPY::CUTLER | | Sat Jul 20 1996 11:46 | 77 |
| Bob,
We have many things that are wrong within our corporation, systems that
are broken, business processes/practices that "cost us more" business than
any of the actions taken by our competitors. Our customers, channels partners
and vars are complaining about "how difficult" it is doing business with
Digital. Our service/support organization is swimming in a sea of complaints
and "potentially" costing us "new" business. Our internal policies of who
can sell what to whom --- "off base" vs. "on base" prevent penetration into
some of our key accounts. Policies dictated by one organization, "stiffle"
others. Upper management must bear the responsibilty of their actions/policies,
we're one company, only when we "focus" on that fact, will we pull out of this
nosedive. If the only thing we feel that we have going for us, is a "fast
chip", ---- then we'd better turn out the lights now. Customers don't
necessarily want performance today, they want solutions, they want "the comfort"
that who they're dealing with is going to be around for a while, they want
a "global partner" who can service their needs, "support their corporation".
This announcement of layoffs, definitely has hurt us, both internally and
externally. I'm curious, I've always worked here in the field, how many of
the people that are making decisions about our business practices, putting
the tools in place to support the sales organization, making decisions
regarding the customer support organization and field service organization
have actually spent time with customers (and I don't mean a cursory visit or
two a year as qualifying as "time spent with customers")?
I realize that when you took over, you inherited a company that was trying
to be all things to all people. It hasn't been easy, but I don't believe that
"cutting more heads" will solve our problems.
Why don't you tap your most valuable assets, your people -- the worker bees,
the engineers, the CSC support folks, people in manufacturing, sales and
sales support. Organize "working committees", having representation from
each of the major areas/organization within Digital.
--- Sales/Sales Support Organization
--- Field Service Organization
--- Manufacturing Organization
--- Engineering (Hardware/Software)
--- Customer Support Organization
Teams of 6-7 people, experienced in their job activities/duties, having
"lived" the Digital work experience, used the tools, worked using the
processes, seeing the problem areas, capable of elaborating where they see room
for improvements, where we may see benefits, if perhaps certain changes were
made here and there....etc. First order of duty for these committees, is to
report on "their view of the world...their perspective...what they like..
what they don't like...what would help them do their job more effectively,
efficiently,...etc.". Each committee must work representing their Organization,
therefore, they must communicate/solicit data from their peers. They must
come to a consensus, not dwell on trivial matters and must narrow down and
prioritize any issues they come up with, let's say they must pick the top
five/ten and report on those. Each committee should have a VP sponser, and
Management (from that Organizaton) participation, all members have equal
votes, no pressure from Management or VP to "skip that issue".
It is not the charter of the committees to "point fingers" at
other organizations, "only to look at what they see as problem areas, they are
familiar/experienced with", the committees cannot report on problem areas,
without having "recommendations/suggestions" on how to improve the situation.
If a problem area is related to an area outside of that groups "sphere" of
influence, then a "cross functional" committee consisting of members from
both organizations, must work to come to a "consensus" as a team to address the
problem. This all must be completed according to a time-line, results to
be delivered to all organizations by a certain date. Reports would be
provided to you and Senior level management, the decisions as to take
certain recommendations or not, will lie with you and your team of VP's. By
doing this, your eyes will be allowed to see/hear "what is going on",
your most valuable assets "are your people", listen to what they have to
say.
My 2 cents worth
Rick C.
|
4719.134 | bingo | KAOFS::W_VIERHOUT | the rural code warrior | Sat Jul 20 1996 13:02 | 15 |
|
>> But, with Q4 results looking unfavorable, you single-handedly kill
>> all that momentum, all the optimism by one single press release
>> saying that you're laying off another 7000 people.
>> Fix the problems Bob - don't mindlessly layoff the people who can
>> make this company great again. There's too little talent left.
>> Do you understand this ?
I could'nt agree more. Thank-you for reading my mind.
|
4719.135 | I'm missing our growth... | DECIDE::MOFFITT | | Sun Jul 21 1996 16:35 | 37 |
| Hi Bob,
Thanks for stopping by. I was interested in one of your comments:
> revenues, but the result can be interpreted as such. We have begun to
> grow, but even if revenues per employee climb quickly, our cost
> structure is below competitive levels.
You speak of growth but I'm having a bit of trouble seeing it. I thought that
perhaps the market was shrinking but after seeing the following, I'm not sure
that's true. Why do we continue to struggle while our competitors grow?
FY 1995 1994 1993 1992
Digital 13,813 13,451 14,371 13,931
86 -2,167 -251 -2,795
IBM 71,940 64,052 62,716 64.523
4,116 2,937 -8,148 -4,965
H-P 31,519 24,991 20,317 16,410
2,422 1,599 1,177 549
Sun 5,904 4,690 4,307 3,589
356 196 157 173
SGI 2,228 1,538 1,133 907
225 142 72 na
Apple 11,062 9,189 7,977 7,086
424 310 87 530
Compaq 14,755 10,866 7,191 4,100
789 867 462 213
All numbers rounded to nearest $Million
First line is reveune, second line is profit
Data from Morningstar
regards,
tim moffitt
|
4719.136 | | YIELD::HARRIS | | Sun Jul 21 1996 19:18 | 16 |
| re: Note 4719.135 by DECIDE::MOFFITT
>I'm missing our growth...
Tim, I think it depends on how you want to count growth. In some of
our previous quarterly reports, we seem to try and talk about some kind
of growth after accounting for the parts of the company that have been
sold off.
In addition, for FY96, we will see overall growth over FY95. My guess
is about 4-6 percent [*not in the same league as our competitors*], based
on Q1-Q3 + a guess of Q4 revenues being between $3.5B and $3.8B.
-Bruce
|
4719.137 | Missed my target, hit the CEO (gulp!) | NQOS01::nqsrv133.nqo.dec.com::rod.rogers@aci | Rod Rogers | Mon Jul 22 1996 02:02 | 17 |
| Regarding variable compensation:
I was referring to a 100%(er) who came up with an
idea to cut everyone's pay 10%.
I PREFER variable compsensation. I BELIEVE that I
will excel. The payback doubles (per percentage
point) for every 1% over 100% of goals. Triples
at 120%. In FY95, I got to 128%, in fy96... not
so hot.
So betting 30% of my pay is a good bet. Always.
Because I'm in charge.
|
4719.138 | Gone is what wasn't needed.... | NQOS01::nqsrv133.nqo.dec.com::rod.rogers@aci | Rod Rogers | Mon Jul 22 1996 02:09 | 29 |
| RE: home alone (.113)
Home alone is the best thing that ever happened to
this job (sales)
Gone is the hallway talks (yea! more productivity)
Gone is the lunch breaks (You bet! less filling, more work)
but especially....
Gone is the 45min commute (both ways)
Gone is getting into a suit for nothing (office day)
Power up the command center at 6:45am
Rolling quotes by 7:15am (in the past I was sitting on I294)
Customers call from 7:30am to 6:00pm, my cordless phone works
everywhere in the house. Fits in my back pocket when I take out
the trash or throw a load into the washer....
Two phone lines, a pager, a realtree fax machine, and the
Ultra runned SWB95. A better CUSTOMER-ORIENTED environment
has never existed.
FAE? calls in a heartbeat, anytime, anyday. It works fine.
I like this job.........
|
4719.139 | | ROWLET::AINSLEY | Less than 150 KTS is TOO slow | Mon Jul 22 1996 13:01 | 10 |
| re: .102
Please explain how laying off people who had recently received their
MSSE certification at great expense to Digital and Microsoft is
consistent with your opinion expressed in .102.
What Digital considers valuable seems to vary from second to second,
with no rational reason for the changes.
Bob
|
4719.140 | Bob Palmer Strategy memo from January 1996 | ACISS2::ECK | | Mon Jul 22 1996 13:31 | 134 |
| This reply is to an earlier question to Bob Palmer asking "What is Digital's
Strategy?". The following is from my All-in-1 file cabinet and is a memo from
BP dated January, 1996. It articulates Digital's strategy for Growth.
My questions to BP
Has anything changed in the corporate stragety for growth?
Has anything changed in SI (Digital Services) focus areas?
Could you please resend this memo with any changes?
Could you please have Marketing put together a 5 - 10 .ppt slide presentation
strategy for growth and Services focus. If it already exists, please
provide pointers to all employees.
I N T E R O F F I C E M E M O R A N D U M
Doc. No: 004781
Date: 08-May-1996 06:22am EST
From: MICHAEL ECK @CYO
ECK.MICHAEL
Dept: NT SOLUTION SALES ABU
Tel No: 432-7599 (513-984-)
TO: Eric Larson @ACI ( LARSON.ERIC@ACISS1A1@ACI )
Subject: FWD: Digital's strategy for growth
Eric, this was the high level strategic messages statement from Palmer that I
was looking for last night. It might be good for our opening tomorrow:
SI Initiatives have been positioned by Rita Foley:
Internet
Windows NT
Enterprise Messaging
Information Management
Client Server Migration
I N T E R O F F I C E M E M O R A N D U M
Date: 23-Jan-1996 02:57pm EST
From: Robert B Palmer @MSO
PRESIDENT@A1@SALES@AKO
Dept: Chairman, President and CEO
Tel No:
TO: See Below
Subject: Digital's strategy for growth
We presented Digital's strategy for growth to financial and industry
analysts last September. In conjunction with that presentation and
over the following months, we communicated this important information
to you in a variety of ways. Despite numerous efforts to explain
Digital's strategy clearly, through a variety of channels, I know that
we have not reached everyone.
The analysts, who represent a very important and influential audience
for us, have praised our progress. They now understand our strategic
positioning as a leader in the industry, and they have expressed
confidence in Digital's capabilities and direction. However, we will
achieve our potential for truly impressive growth and success only
through the work and understanding of employees who are aware of and
fully engaged in our efforts to successfully execute the strategy.
As the implementation of our strategy continues, I expect that your
managers will be helping you to make the connection between what you do
in your job and our strategy for growth. In the meantime, if you are
looking for one brief summary of that strategy that you can clip and
save, here is one that I would personally suggest.
STRATEGY FOR GROWTH SUMMARY
o Digital competes in four cross-industry, "horizontal" businesses:
-- Client/Server Services
-- Connectivity Software
-- System Platforms
-- Components
o Digital targets four major growth opportunities:
-- High-performance enterprise 64-bit UNIX platforms
-- High-performance technical computing
-- Windows NT across the enterprise
-- Connectivity within and between enterprises
Connectivity essentially means connecting people to people, people to
information and companies to companies. In Q3 and Q4, you will see
increased focus on two of the key components of connectivity:
enterprise connectivity software and our Internet business. We have
superior technology, key strategic partnerships and the determination
to be the industry leader in connectivity.
The strategy is already having a strong impact in the market, such as:
* The VLM 64 campaign (Very Large Memory, 64-bit database platforms for
VLM applications). The announcement of FX!32 translation software,
which BYTE magazine called "revolutionary" -- to attract more business
partners to the Alpha platform;
* The announcement of new Internet hardware and software products and
services, including the launch of Digital's super spider technology,
code-named Alta Vista, which one analyst called, "very impressive, very
fast and very comprehensive...a showcase application for Alpha.";
* New Windows NT products and services, including the XL personal
workstation product lines for Alpha and Intel based systems;
* Significant wins, such as the Compaq Computer contract for services
valued at several hundred million dollars, and the $12 million contract
for multiple AlphaServer 8400 systems, together with thousands of PCs,
by Best Western International, the world's largest hotel chain.
You are all key to building on our strong momentum. By understanding
the basic elements of our strategy for growth, and by supporting them
in your own work, you will add energy to that momentum.
My thanks for all you have done to make our historic turnaround
possible and to position us for industry leadership again.
Regards,
Bob
|
4719.141 | | PATRLR::MCCUSKER | | Mon Jul 22 1996 15:19 | 22 |
| First of all I apologize to the 80 col community for note 121. I guess my
window got resized and I didn't realize it.
re: 139
>>>re: .102
Please explain how laying off people who had recently received their
MSSE certification at great expense to Digital and Microsoft is
consistent with your opinion expressed in .102.
<<<
I'm sorry, I can't explain it, there likely is no logical explanation.
I was not addressing mis-management (or the host of other problems I mentioned
in .121).
I was simply addressing this notion that employees will have a negative attitude
until they have job security. Perhaps they will, I don't think they should.
If you disagree with that, fine, its only an opinion.
Brad
|
4719.142 | What Strategy.... | ADOV01::MANUEL | Over the Horizon.... | Mon Jul 22 1996 15:54 | 195 |
| Hi Bob,
Thanks for taking the time to drop by here, it is refreshing to have you
responding to the concerns of those in the front line.
I'd like to comment on "strategy" and to present a case in point about our
capability of communicating our plans to our customers.
Firstly, "strategy" - this is a word which has huge connotations and is often
taken (mistaken) to assume plans, milestones, commitments, measurands and
deliverables are all in place to satisfy one.
Customers are not silly, they fail to believe our strategies because we
are not able define our plans to fulfill these strategies efectively enough to
convince them that they ought to back us for the long term.
I enclose the following memo which I sent to our OpenVMS marketing manager here
in Australia as a case in point, I do not wish to get into the perennial
OpenVMS vs the rest debate but merely use this to illustrate the frustration we
have to deal with daily.
I requested a comprehensive directions statement for one of our largest
customers and received a very fluffy "strategy" statement in reply.
This customer is implementing an Over-The-Horizon Radar Network for the
Australian Dept. of Defence, revenue to Digital is approx $25M, comprising 20
Alphaserver 8400s, hundreds of gigabytes of disk, numerous gigaswitches and
DEChub products and 40 AlphaStation 500s as operator consoles.
Thanks for listening.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
--> STEPHEN MANUEL {Filing: 034200 in JORN-VMS }
M/S: ADO {Title: RE: I: OpenVMS Commitment text }
{Printed at 00:39 on 23-Jul-1996, Text Type:W }
I N T E R O F F I C E M E M O R A N D U M
Digital Equipment Corporation Date: 02-Jul-1996 21:31 AES
(Australia) Pty. Limited From: STEPHEN MANUEL
A.C.N. 000 446 800 MANUEL STEPHEN
Dept: SI
Tel No: 235-7232, MOB 0412-815296
TO: Rolf Jester ( JESTER ROLF AT A1@SNOFS1@SNO )
CC: Alistair Long ( LONG ALISTAIR )
Subject: RE: I: OpenVMS Commitment text
Hi Rolf,
Sorry for the delayed response, Q4 close took over, this reply
gets a bit verbose but it is important in order to present my
views, please feel free to send this un-altered to Wes Melling
if you wish.
This statement is not even close to being adequate, we are
working with customers who are committing to long term projects
of 20 years duration.
If the project became locked at a particular VMS and Hardware
release and was never expected to be upgraded it would regress
over time from a support issue to a "capability of supporting
it" issue, this can be managed and we have a contract clause
which says we "shall" manage it.
However, I am taking a more pragmatic view and looking at the
guidance that I, as the Digital ""expert"", should be giving
the customer for the next 5-6 years at least, this covers the
remainder of the development phase and the operational set to
work phase prior to handover to the RAAF.
If we dump OpenVMS in this period we not only cause the
customer significant problems which equate to direct cost
impacts, but I (most importantly) and Digital lose credibility
by not providing the strategic guidance expected of me/us, this
cannot be taken lightly. This will cause irreparable damage to
our long term relationship with the customer, the Department of
Defence and with whichever Government Departments and Agencies
that get caught up in the ripple on effects of such an action.
The customer has, for all the right reasons, chosen OpenVMS as
his operating system while withstanding significant opposition
from a Unix biased contingent within the project, what he
really needs is assurance that Digital will continue
development of OpenVMS over the above time period, such that
when he hands the system over to the RAAF he hands over a state
of the art architecture supported by a current operating
system.
The intention is to track OS releases as closely as
configuration control and third party software dependancies
allow up to at least the time of deployment, with the option of
either stabilising at that version during set to work or
tracking the operating system releases if features beneficial
to the project are introduced.
Beyond the 5 year window it is difficult to project what may
happen but there is already an enhancement program in progress
and going on past history we can expect hardware upgrades about
every 5 years or so, it would be co-incident with a hardware
upgrade that change of OS decisions would be taken.
Other similar systems which I am involved with seem to stay one
or two releases behind our OS releases, this is usually purely
a logistical issue in that it takes time to generate and test
new s/w baselines and the fact that OS releases never co-incide
with system modification or enhancement requirements, as well
as this, not all minor releases of OpenVMS (or any OS for that
matter) offer such significant enhancements or new features
that the generation of a new baseline is economical.
Enough of the background, I do not expect Wes to be able to
ennunciate a 20 year plan or even commit to OpenVMS being
offered in 20 years time but I do expect him to be able to
ennunciate the following (under non-disclosure provisions
naturally) :-
a/ the short term, 2-3 year release schedule and proposed
enhancements over this period
b/ the medium term plans to 2001 in a broad sense, possible
enhancements and new projects being thought about - without any
implied commitment
c/ the size of the team working on OpenVMS and his staffing
projections over the short term projects at least
d/ the commitment to track and support Alpha H/w releases over
the short to medium term period
e/ the commitment of other s/w development groups and programs
to maintain OpenVMS as a supported OS for their products in the
short to medium term
f/ the OpenVMS strategic plan from a corporate positioning
perspective relative to our other OS offerings, showing
percentage effort/expenditure projections
g/ the OpenVMS market segment projections for both server and
workstation class Alpha hardware over the next few years
h/ the preferred directions that we should be guiding our
OpenVMS customers in, stay with OpenVMS for all platforms/
convert workstations to WNT/ adopt client/server Affinity model
/go to Unix etc. etc..
I realise that this may be seen as a tall order but we have
access to Digital Semiconductor projections to beyond 2000, yes
they get a bit fuzzy out there but we see what the intention
is, but we have no such forward projection information on
OpenVMS or on any other OS or software products for that
matter.
It is an interesting aside that looking at an Alpha chip 1992
projection chart the other day we are considerably in front of
the performance projections and fairly accurate on the release
schedule projected.
The customer quite rightly has a degree of nervousness with the
longevity of OpenVMS because over the life of this project - 4
years to date - he has seen us -
-sell off a large chunk of the storage business
-sell off Rdb and associated TP products
-dump NMCC/DECmcc for Netview
-sell off many of the Polycenter products he was intending to
use to CA
-fail to support several management tools on OpenVMS Alpha
-drop ADA9X development
-partner with Rational for ADA95/APEX but there is NO OpenVMS
version of this being produced - a slight problem for a project
involving 1+ Million lines of ADA code which will need to go to
ADA95 at some stage in the development - the lack of a GEM
based compiler on OpenVMS means that the optimiser will be
inferior to the GEM code generator which causes appropriate
performance concerns
-drop DEC VUIT and adopt a third party product
With products that continue disappearing from the OpenVMS
portfolio IS IT ANY WONDER THAT HE ASKS Digital FOR SOME
STATEMENT OF CONTINUING COMMITMENT TO OpenVMS ? - look at this
issue from the customer's perspective and provide a
comprehensive statement of direction for me to present to my
customer.
Regards,
Steve Manuel
Technical Support
JORN Systems Architecture Consultant
|
4719.143 | what? | DV780::LANGFELDT | Coloradical | Mon Jul 22 1996 16:24 | 33 |
|
re: .141
> I was simply addressing this notion that employees will have a
>negative attitude until they have job security. Perhaps they will,
>I don't think they should.
Excuse me? You don't think that an employee has the right to know that
his/her company has a plan/strategy that would allow them employment
for a quarter or six months at at time?
Security is a basic human need. I realize that lifetime employment
is no longer a guarantee, but continually keeping people on the edge,
causing a life of doubt and uncertainty is no way to encourage them
to produce at a high level. And that is the level Digital needs from
people. Don't guarantee lifetime employment, just give some assurance
that
1) there is more than a short term strategy to keep this
company afloat. Not words, actions.
2) people outside of the greater Maynard area are of value to this
company.
3) people at the Corporate VP, President and CEO levl have a clue
what is going on at the regional and local level.
The local sales people were just put through the wringer for what
appears to be no reason. X sales people told that they had to apply
for the X/2 available positions. Another week of sales activity lost,
only for it to end up with all people in basically the same jobs.
If you have a family and a mortgage, how often are you going to put
up with that, no matter what your loyalty to the Digital?
Sharon
|
4719.144 | | PATRLR::MCCUSKER | | Mon Jul 22 1996 17:10 | 20 |
| re .143.
Please! Everyting you said I agree with. Its common sense! Unfortuantly it
responds to my .141 taken out of context. Go back to .98, and read the thread:
.98>> until it's heard from above that the
layoffs are (finally) over, there will continue to be fear and negative
outlook among the troups. <<
Thats what I commented on. I do not think we will ever have job securtiy that
says the layoffs are finally over. And the author of .98 clarified in .124 what
he meant in .98.
If you feel the need to comment on what I've said, that is great. But please
read back through the thread so you understand the context.
I think we are all pretty much on the same sheet of music, can we please try to
play now?
Brad
|
4719.145 | IBM is too slow, says Olympic Committee | ACISS1::MCLEVENGER | | Mon Jul 22 1996 20:16 | 16 |
| RE: 119
IBM is also getting bad press out of their Olympic computing.
It seems scores and numbers are not being calculated quick enough. On
NBC National news this AM, it was told that issues have come up regarding
IBM's capability to support the Olympics. Computers/calculations are
running too slow and many complaints have been raised to the Olympic
Committee who has called on IBM Brass to improve the IBM performance
for the rest of the games.
Monty
|
4719.146 | | ARCANA::CONNELLY | Don't try this at home, kids! | Tue Jul 23 1996 04:32 | 33 |
|
When we talk about our strategy in terms of technoid stuff (like 64-bit
anything or any particular platform), it leaves me feeling nervous on
two counts, as both an employee and smalltime stockholder:
1. it doesn't pass the Elevator Test
Yeah, it may be easy to say "64-bit UNIX" in the 30 seconds i'm in the
elevator with someone...and some of our previous strategies were way
too wordy to do that. But: who's the target customer, what's the need
that this satisfies from their standpoint, who are we competing against,
and what's the key differentiator that would make our customer want to
buy our offering versus the competition's? There should be a single
sentence accompanying each of these strategies that any employee could
rattle off to a prospective customer, answering all of these items.
2. it gives no sense of the market we see this strategy targeting
Are we inventing a new market? Is it already there? How big is it
now ($$$)? How big do we see it being next year, in 2 years, 5 years?
What percentage of that market are we realistically aiming to capture
tomorrow, in 2 years, in 5 years, etc.? If we're talking 33% of 4
niche markets, then maybe we need to be a 25000 employee company and
that's the reality we should look forward to. If it's 20% of 4
humongous markets, maybe this is the last big layoff and we can see
ourselves growing and adding lots of jobs in the near future. The
math should make this easy to figure out--if our targets are
realistic and if we pull together and make our targets. But what
are our targets?
Anybody from Marketing have some insight into this?
- thanks, paul
|
4719.147 | PERCEPTION | NEMAIL::HEINZ | | Tue Jul 23 1996 13:56 | 24 |
| In addition to providing job stability (relatively speaking), maybe a
career path and someday some more income, and currently simplifying
our processes for our partners and customers, Digital absolutely MUST
improve the perception of the company. I am not exxagerating when I
say that wherever I go, if someone asks me where I work and I tell
them, they say, "Home did you manage to survive?" and "I thought that
Digital was going out of business!" and "I here it's a really crappy
place to work, why don't you look elsewhere?" People are amazed when
I tell them that the company has actually grown (sales) tremendously during
these times and that less than half the people are doing more. They
are amazed!
Therefore, it is not we the employees, it is the total public
perception of Digital that needs to be fixed. First it starts with
the employees so that we can once again sell the virtues of Digital
by word-of-mouth. This is accomplished by treating us better, by far.
Second, upper management must get the message out that Digital is
doing far better than what is perceived. Then a nice, simple, positive
message, not technical mumbo-jumbo that nobody understands, that
states these are our plans and here's how we plan to accomplish them.
-Bert-
|
4719.148 | Perception is important in many ways... | STAR::DIPIRRO | | Tue Jul 23 1996 14:19 | 25 |
| What .-1 said might be a bigger problem than people think. There
was a reply in here about one of the big differences between working at
Microsoft and working at Digital, and it boiled down to team spirit and
working together for the good of the company. When Harry Copperman came
to ZKO to address different engineering groups, he started asking
people in the audience, "When someone asks you what you do for a
living, what do you say?" People were responding with, "I'm an
engineer" or "I'm a programmer" and he kept trying until he got someone
to answer, "I work for Digital." He said that you can ask *anyone* from
IBM what they do for a living, and they'll say, "I work for IBM" with
obvious pride in their voices...that it's not true at Digital...and we
have to make it true. One reason I, for one, don't respond to the
question that way is because of what was pointed out in .-1. I used to
say that I worked for Digital, and the response was always something
like, "And you still have a job?" or "Are they still in business?" Who
wants to hear that? So now I just say that I'm an engineer, and if they
ask where I work, I say Digital. This perception problem must be fixed.
It carries over into other parts of our lives as well. I've moved
around a lot in the past couple of years (still in New England), having
rented, gotten loans, etc.., and landlords and loan officers become
noticably uncomfortable when you say you work for Digital. The
perception is that you may lose your job and be unable to pay...that
you're high risk. That's bad news for all of us. You don't fix the
perception problem by *telling* everyone you're a great company. It's
something you have to demonstrate, and we are not doing it.
|
4719.149 | Some questions I'd like addressed, if possible | AXEL::FOLEY | Rebel Without a Clue-foley@zko.dec.com | Tue Jul 23 1996 14:19 | 38 |
|
Dear Bob,
There's a few points I personally would like to see addressed in
this note, if possible.
o VP's. We are at over 200. It seems we get a new one every other
week. I know that most of them are title only, but it's a
demoralizing issue for some. There is a perception in Corporate
America that the top folks get richer while the grunts get
poorer. VP announcements don't help to disspell that illusion.
My Question: Do we really need that many?
o Marketing. Digital is known, especially internally in the
engineering community, for its "Stealth Marketing". I'm tired
of us having the best product that nobody knows about.
My Question: When is Marketing going to be fixed?
o Customer Relations. Bob, this is probably the most important
question I have. According to many, Digital is too difficult
to deal with. This notesfile is rank with stories of customers
that buy from us IN SPITE OF US. I can only imagine how many
give up in frustration. A fundemental change in how we do
business is needed.
My Question: Do you agree and if so, how do we fix it?
That's it for now. I think I've touched on enough sore spots.
Thanks for listening and really, thanks for participating here.
Management by Noting Around is a reasonable substitution for
Management by Walking Around in a global corporation such as
ours. I appreciate you spending the time.
mike foley
Telephony Partners Engineering Group
|
4719.150 | getting fiesty | SSDEVO::LAMBERT | We ':-)' for the humor impaired | Tue Jul 23 1996 16:09 | 11 |
| re: .149
"VPs in name only". Unfortunately, it's not "name only". When I've been
struggling along in this company for 17+ years, do a good job, and am told
I still can't expect a raise, I can get awfully miffed when some VP gets
announced into his position making a half-mil a year or so. THAT is
demoralizing. What do those people do? Prove to me they do something
that is worth 10 times my salary.
-- Sam
|
4719.151 | too many levels separates us from customers & costs $$$ | DYPSS1::DYSERT | Barry - Custom Software Development | Tue Jul 23 1996 16:38 | 10 |
4719.152 | | BUSY::SLABOUNTY | Tinkerbell vs. bug zapper | Tue Jul 23 1996 17:02 | 5 |
|
Hmmm, I'm only 7 levels away from CEO.
Look out, Bob, here I come!! 8^)
|
4719.153 | | BHAJEE::JAERVINEN | Ora, the Old Rural Amateur | Tue Jul 23 1996 19:32 | 12 |
| re .several:
On a recent business trip to MA, the immigration official at Logan
asked me (as usual) whether I'm on a business trip or a tourist. Honest
as I am, I said "Business - I work for Digital". The answer: "What? Are
they still in business?" This was not with a funny face (though I
admit, the immigration officials rarely smile).
re levels: At the peak, I had 3 levels between me and the CEO (Ken
Olsen). I don't even have a slightest idea how many there are now (I
have a hard time tracking who my manager two or three levels up is).
|
4719.154 | I had a dream... | CSC32::S_WASKEWICZ | | Tue Jul 23 1996 20:44 | 38 |
|
Dear Bob,
Steve here.
Let me tell you about my dream while I was on vacation the last couple weeks.
In this dream...
When I said I worked for DIGITAL, when asked what I did for a living,
I answered it with a great truthful pride, "DIGITAL, I'm in Customer Support".
You'd think I invented the light bulb or Polio vaccine or something.
People all started to gather around, asking various technical questions, which
I nimbly fielded with great aplomb.
I was very humble about it though...brought smiles to everyones faces.
Could they have my card? Could we support their equipment too? On and on they
went, while serving me wine-coolers and hors d'oeuvres, what a good time...
somewhere, later in the week, another night, another dream...
I shouted out "can't we slow those Marketing folks down?" "geez, we must be
paying them too well"
I was referring to all the great TV and print ads I saw, from cable TV in my
hotel room, to the USA TODAY newspaper at my door, constantly telling
the world about 500Mhz chips and all, on every blessed channel and sporting
event on the planet. God, I can't get away from it, even on vacation!
Seeing all those flashy commercials, those simple but slick magazine ads,
that magenta looking DIGITAL logo on everything from race cars to tee-shirts
at the malls. Enough already! the whole world knows us too well!
Fortunately, they ignored me because I was at Busch Gardens, and they couldn't
hear me...
And then I woke up, and read a Wall Street Journal over coffee...
"DIGITAL CUTS 7,000...
Whats going on back there?
That couldn't be Bob, its not like him these last few months...
Forget it, I'm on vacation.
|
4719.155 | running backward.. | TEKVAX::KOPEC | we're gonna need another Timmy! | Tue Jul 23 1996 22:29 | 10 |
| I just had another layer added between myself and the guy at the top
(as part of the realtime -> SBU reorg).
Seems strange: the company is getting smaller, I'm (arguably)
getting more senior, and I keep getting more distance between myself
and the top. (this is the furthest I've been in 15 years..) Hm.
Oh, well, back to building beta kits.. hour 13 today..
...tom
|
4719.156 | | MPGS::enzo.zko.dec.com::HAMNQVIST | Video servers | Wed Jul 24 1996 02:03 | 32 |
| in re .84:
| This brings me to your last point: "stop bleeding people". This, of
| course, is not the way I refer to the process of aligning resources with
| revenues, but the result can be interpreted as such. We have begun to
| grow, but even if revenues per employee climb quickly, our cost
| structure is below competitive levels.
I agree that we need to align resources with revenue and profit, but I personally
treat bleed to mean undesirable attrition as opposed to things you really want to
happen. You cannot, of course, elliminate it, but you can reduce it by being more
clear in communicating and executing your decisions. I have seen it several times
now where it appears as if senior management is divided and unclear.
I don't mind decisions if they are made and then executed. But what I do object to
is when they are "sort of" made .. as in we have prolongued periods where there is
significant room for interpretation in either way. Nobody knows for sure and people
continue to champion their position. And during these periods, productivity goes down
signficantly, not only breeding discomfort, but also frustrating and disappointing our
customers. And it is during these periods that you completely trash excellent people
who feel so disgusted by the whole thing that they just pack up and leave, making
an unclear decision into a de-facto decision.
And, while I'm at it, it is almost a joke with more levels of VPs than non-VPs in
this company. Almost like DCU has a 60,000 people MIS department. Can't you do
something about this? Either make everyone a VP or reduce the number to those who
really have the authority to control our destiny.
Cheers,
>Per
|
4719.157 | ...things get stranger and stranger - said Alice | ULYSSE::REVEMAN | Scan his brain, it must be there somewhere... | Wed Jul 24 1996 14:22 | 12 |
| re: .151 - too many levels of mgmt
It is not only the problem with a VERY high organization tree,
many of the middle levels middle management (MLMM), often report
to more than one manager in turn. It is, in my site, called
"the dotted line syndrome".
And many of the MLMM's are actually proud of the dotted lines.
I have problem seeing this work in conjuction with the No
Excuse mgmt.
/Jojo
|
4719.158 | .156 reformatted | MPGS::HAMNQVIST | Video servers eng. | Wed Jul 24 1996 15:41 | 39 |
| Don't you hate people who exceed 80 columns!!
<<< Note 4719.156 by MPGS::enzo.zko.dec.com::HAMNQVIST "Video servers" >>>
in re .84:
| This brings me to your last point: "stop bleeding people". This, of
| course, is not the way I refer to the process of aligning resources with
| revenues, but the result can be interpreted as such. We have begun to
| grow, but even if revenues per employee climb quickly, our cost
| structure is below competitive levels.
I agree that we need to align resources with revenue and profit, but I
personally treat bleed to mean undesirable attrition as opposed to things you
really want to happen. You cannot, of course, elliminate it, but you can reduce
it by being more clear in communicating and executing your decisions. I have
seen it several times now where it appears as if senior management is divided
and unclear.
I don't mind decisions if they are made and then executed. But what I do object
to is when they are "sort of" made .. as in we have prolongued periods where
there is significant room for interpretation in either way. Nobody knows for
sure and people continue to champion their position. And during these periods,
productivity goes down signficantly, not only breeding discomfort, but also
frustrating and disappointing our customers. And it is during these periods
that you completely trash excellent people who feel so disgusted by the whole
thing that they just pack up and leave, making an unclear decision into a
de-facto decision.
And, while I'm at it, it is almost a joke with more levels of VPs than non-VPs
in this company. Almost like DCU has a 60,000 people MIS department. Can't you
do something about this? Either make everyone a VP or reduce the number to those
who really have the authority to control our destiny.
Cheers,
>Per
|
4719.159 | It Aint that bad, | JULIET::DEMINSKY_PE | | Thu Jul 25 1996 00:00 | 15 |
| I hear a lot of victims here. After thinking about the possibility of
layoffs I reached the conclusion that even if there is an even
distribution of Bob's 7000 there are 9 chances out of 10 that you, or I
will not be one of them. Even if we are, there are fates worse. After
all, who knows that the breath they are taking is not their last, or
how many more they have.
Our company has been bet on 64 bit processing, UNIX and the Internet.
If movement into this future continues, 90% of us are in fine shape as
long as we ride the wave. If some other future comes to pass, we will
have had an exiciting ride.
Anybody know Compaq? Seems like they had to file Chapter 11 before
they turned around. Digital is in better shape than that. If we bet
on the right future, we still have time to get there.
|
4719.160 | I hear, but cannot "see"... | NEWVAX::MZARUDZKI | preparation can mean survival | Thu Jul 25 1996 01:11 | 17 |
|
Re -.1
...64-bits, UNIX and internet....
What Interent business are we in? Are we still in connectivity? I say
yes? Internet is such a big thing..... why are we laying "internet"
people off? We have these well defined nothings in this company. Enough
gray, grey, areas to make people think we know the walk, talk the talk,
pass you by, pass that group by, etc. Then when it comes to delivery,
service and implementation, *those* people are not around any longer.
I see the corporate strategy, I see the implementation to get there.
Two different and no where near connected paths any time soon, in some
areas.
-Mike Z.
|
4719.161 | | JDIDIT::HALL | Bill Hall - ACMS Engineering - TAY1-2 | Thu Jul 25 1996 02:01 | 13 |
|
I wonder what Bob or any of the 200+ VPs say when asked what is
they're occupation? Do they say "I'm CEO or VP of mumbly-fritz at
Digital" or is it just "I'm CEO or VP of a large computer company"
In my 22 years at Digital, I was proud to say I worked at
Digital. After being TFSO'd in 1994 (after 20 yrs) and being
rehired in 1995, I usually tell people I'm a software engineer.
I try not to say Digital if I can help it. Digital went from
being the premier company to work for in New England to the last
one you'd want to be associated with. This must change.. Digital
is still a good company to work for; the products we engineer are
second to none.
|
4719.162 | | POMPY::LESLIE | My God! It's full of QAR's! | Thu Jul 25 1996 07:24 | 8 |
| It's bloody ridiculous to be EMBARASSED to work for a company. If
you're that ashamed of working for DIGITAL, go work for a company that
you like!
This kind of negativity cannot help anyone work effectively.
I worked for Digital from 1983-92 and am now back as a short-term
contractor and I'm HAPPY to be here.
|
4719.163 | | MAIL1::RICCIARDI | Be a graceful Parvenu... | Thu Jul 25 1996 13:29 | 3 |
| -1:
bloody? Hubris?
|
4719.164 | Working... | USPS::FPRUSS | Frank Pruss, 202-232-7347 | Thu Jul 25 1996 13:56 | 43 |
| How could someone be embarassed?
I literally day dreamed about working for DEC for ten years, from 1976
to 1986. I have always been impressed with our products, with a few
notable exceptions.
Now I've been here for 10 years, and have been real happy to have had
the opportunity.
I still love working here, in spite of the Dilbert-esque episodes that
come up. Sometimes something comes up that drives me nuts, and I think
about looking outside. I've never even come up with an idea for
something I'd really prefer to do over contributing to Digital's turn
around.
I still think we have outstanding technology. The development pipeline
seems full of competetive product. Some reasonably competetive, some
potentially breath-taking.
I can't find any serious fault with the corporate strategy. There are
issues around execution that we are still struggling with.
I'm just out in the field doing sales support, but occasionally attend
events where the top brass show up and I'm not bashful about trying to
chat with them.
I think I put in several extra miles for the company, but these guys
are really putting it all out. I also think that one of the key
driving forces for them is a concern for the well being of Digital
employees.
I would expect that among his peers, Bob Palmer is well respected for
the progress Digital has made toward stability and growth under his
leadership.
I too would like to see some "air cover" in advertising. I'd like to
see more outside of the trade rags. It is really hard to get an
identity for a name like digital. Personally, I would have prefered we
put the money into DEC.
JMHO,
Frank
|
4719.165 | | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | See http://atlant2.zko.dec.com/ | Thu Jul 25 1996 14:15 | 13 |
| I'd like to remind folks that .0 really isn't about layoffs,
per se.
It's about the customer perceptions that we're soon going
to be going out of business as a free-standing corporation.
To me, this is a much larger concern than whether or not
I'll survive (a hypothetical) next round of layoffs.
And we've certainly seen enough notes in this conference
corroborating my story to know that this perception exists
in many customers' and pospects' minds.
Atlant
|
4719.166 | The Prayer Remains The Same | NWD002::THOMPSOKR | Kris with a K | Thu Jul 25 1996 18:30 | 112 |
| .154's dream note reminded my of my prayer note below. Note the
date and the sameness of today's issues.
<<< HUMANE::DISK$SCSI:[NOTES$LIBRARY]DIGITAL.NOTE;1 >>>
-< The Digital way of working >-
================================================================================
Note 2027.0 A Salesman's Prayer 11 replies
HOTWTR::THOMPSOKR "Kris with a K" 101 lines 29-JUL-1992 23:14
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dear Lord, help me in these troubling times at my company. Help me
see the light and the end of the dark tunnel and help me to remain
positive in a sea of negativity.
Help me find product information so I can respond to my customer's
questions quickly, completely, and competently, rather than the 5 phone
calls and 2 days it typically takes. Keep me from saying "I don't know
but I'll get back to you" no more than 3 times a day. Give me one source
of product and pricing information, Lord, not 12.
Give me competitive products at a fair price to sell and I'll do the
rest. Oh yeah, the products should be easy to understand and sell, too.
Teach management the value of advertising and teach me the proper
response when my customers say, "Digital sure has great products. You
know, if you would just advertise more we could buy more because manage-
ment would then feel more comfortable with a decision to buy DEC."
Leave me alone and let me do the job I was hired for. Put people - heck,
Lord, make it a culture - in place that ask every day, "What can we do
to sell more?" and "What do the customers REALLY want?" Help other
Digital functions understand sales as it is at other companies. (I
realize the word "appreciate" would be too much to ask for, Lord, so I
would settle for an "understanding" instead. After all, I work for
Digital, the company that is embarassed about selling.)
Good God Almighty, please eliminate the systems and the culture that are
counter-productive, redundant, and inefficient.
Teach me patience and understanding in dealing with DECies that are
incompetent and lazy. Show senior management the debilitating effects
these people have on the morale and motivation of others. Teach
management how to discipline - even fire - people who take advantage of
Digital's laissez-faire culture. Help management learn how to give a
real, honest performance reviews.
Help us understand why some people get paid for essentially sitting at
their desks and do nothing to help generate revenue. Help those that
were hired for a job they were not qualified to perform to find work
outside the company and support them, as it was not their fault they were
hired. Stop the departure of the "good" people and expedite the
departure of the "bad" people. You know who they are, Lord, just like we
do.
We pray to eliminate the bickering and politics that exists and help
management see the paralyzing effect this has. If you find management
still bickering and politicking instead of making business decisions to
save Digital, eliminate them, too, oh Lord.
Protect others in Sales from going though what I did, including 5
managers in 18 months and a late-Q3 budget increase of 30%. Help Digital
sales management learn how to properly recognize and reward people. Help
me keep a positive attitude, Lord.
Teach management to make decisions quickly and to communicate with
clarity and vision. Also, please put a sales guy (someone that actually
sold) near the top, if not in charge. Not someone like slick Chick but
someone like our dear departed Dinucci. He was a regular Joe.
Forgive those salespeople that talk too much. Teach them brevity.
May those in product management and marketing that insist on using
DECspeak instead of English have their tongues sandblasted. Teach the
teachers to speak clearly so we can clearly sell.
I don't need to make a ton of money to be happy, Lord, but please pay me
the same as my peers in the industry, or help me understand why I make
60% less than them when they sell fewer products and have an easier time
doing so. Shoot, Lord, there are reps at Sun and Oracle and SGI and
Joe's Computers that aren't as good as me and are making THREE TIMES MORE
than I am. Help right that wrong.
Help me motivate myself when management doesn't know how, which,
unfortunately, is often.
Help Mr. Palmer in his new role and encourage him to move quickly. We
need vision. We need leadership. We need action. And we need it now.
Encourage others to support him or show them the way out.
Please help me fathom a $2.8 billion loss. And guide management to make
the necessary cuts, deep enough to be effective and to be the last time.
Give management the courage and the conviction to eliminate jobs that
don't have any real productive function. Provide guidance to management
to understand that we are running a business and not a socialist state.
Give me tools to help me do my job. (And while you're at it, Lord, give
me a quote system that is *actually* productive and whip the AQS
supporters with Sales Updates until they bloody understand the absolute
nightmare this system puts us through.)
Please help us develop a measurement system that does not lead to
conflicting behaviors across functions.
Above all, help us move forward in a positive, collective spirit.
Lastly, Lord, give me a work environment that is positive and challenging
and filled with bright, motivated people. Help the rest to leave the
company.
Bless the unemployed.
Amen.
|
4719.167 | | BUSY::SLAB | You're a train ride to no mportance | Thu Jul 25 1996 20:12 | 3 |
|
Did you get that guy's permission before posting that here?
|
4719.168 | Contributing to same, but couldn't resist ;-) | FOUNDR::DODIER | Double Income, Clan'o Kids | Thu Jul 25 1996 20:17 | 8 |
| re:165
Atlant,
When, in the history of notefiles, has any individual note stayed
relative to the base note after just 60+ replies, much less 160+ ;-)
Ray
|
4719.169 | | THEMAX::SMITH_S | | Thu Jul 25 1996 23:14 | 1 |
| CEO Snarf
|
4719.170 | | USPS::FPRUSS | Frank Pruss, 202-232-7347 | Thu Jul 25 1996 23:36 | 4 |
| re: .-1
I must be incredibly dense...
|
4719.171 | incompatible products | WHOS01::JAUNG | Dave Bowers @WHO | Fri Jul 26 1996 02:24 | 46 |
|
The following has been cross-posted in Digital_UNIX notes conference.
I think it has the same points as note .0 so I want to put here too.
Besides, I do wish if Bob Palmer or some of his ( also ours) VPs can see
this one:
After 10 months, we finally received PO from a startegic customer to
order two Alpha workstations, one 2100 and nearly half million for
software development. Those equipments running with Digital UNIX
arrived yesterday.
As the opportunity/project manager, today I walked into custom's office
( MIS manager with 20 people) welcomed by the following issues:
1. Customers were encouraged by Digital's promoting sales to buy the
bundled package such as Openview3D and other goodies. However, the
Openview3D cannot run on Digital UNIX 4.0. Customer has to use 3.2f
2. In 3.2f, CDE can not communicate with the C2 level security. Customer
has been told by the hotline support that this is a bug in 3.2f and
a patch is needed to correct this.
3. The color of the Alpha workstation is in dark gray-blue but the moinitor
is still the same light color. When these two put together on
customer's walnut desk, we have difficulty to adjust our feeling
about this kind of color contrast.
Question to ourselves:
1. Why are we promoting sales of imcompatible software products?
2. Why are we not putting together all right stuffs of software to
send to customer? Why de we have to wait until customer find out
something is wrong then to send a patched file.
3. Is there any feedback on the color of the Alpha Workstation?
maybe I should post this question in other place.
4. Who is the person I should contact to get real hands-on support
to help my customer not just verbal services?
Thanks in advance.
|
4719.172 | | BIGUN::chmeee::Mayne | Dag. | Fri Jul 26 1996 09:41 | 24 |
| It was also pointed out in the Digital UNIX conference that:
1. Openview3D is not a known product.
2. CDE is not supported on 3.2F, and is explicitly stated in the release notes
that it doesn't work with C2.
3. Colour is a matter of opinion. Personally, I think the standard beige is
awful.
Answers to questions:
1. We aren't (not in this case, anyway).
2. If somebody (whether inside or outside Digital) can't read the explicit
statements about software in the release notes, how can they blame Digital?
3. Alpha workstation product management.
4. Local MCS?
I don't think Mr Palmer need be bothered with this one.
PJDM
|
4719.173 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | you don't love me, pretty baby | Fri Jul 26 1996 12:31 | 64 |
| I think it bears noting that there is an intangible cost associated
with the latest round of bloodletting. The cartoons in the Boston
Globe that paint management as having layoffs as the knee jerk
reaction to unsatisfactory financial results unfortunately reflect the
general sentiment that Digital is a company that only knows one answer
to poor results- to fire the worker bees. This does have the effect of
eliminating the costs associated with employing these workers, but
this is not without cost to the corporation. And that cost is the
undermining of the belief by our customers and potential customers that
this corporation is capable of remaining viable over the long term.
People come up to me all the time to ask me if I'm concerned for my
job since "Digital's laying off again". I routinely reply "No, because
my division is making money," which is a condition which may or may not
continue depending on all kinds of things that are not under my
control. I also note that calls from headhunters seem to be even more
frequent than usual following announcements of impending layoffs; our
competitors are positively gleeful at the prospect of getting talent
from the Digital farm. Here in networks, we have provided a bounty of
talent for other companies, talent which is extremely difficult to
replace in the networking field at this moment in time. This does not
bode particularly well for the future, to lose talent in this way.
We've had to cut back on product development and deployment plans as a
result of too few resources.
There comes a time when we as a company have to suck it up and deal
with the headcount and mobilize the talent to where it's needed simply
because to continue to announce layoffs after we are ostensibly back on
our feet undermines our credibility. My personal opinion is that
announcing the layoff is more damanging to the stock price than the
underperformance of the company relative to expectations. But it's not
the stock price that's my biggest concern, it's the fears of existing
customers that we might not make it, and of potential customers who
decide not to take that chance. Those directly affect top line
revenues, and that's where this company needs to address its efforts.
It's no longer time to trim the workforce to bring expenses in line
with revenues, it's time to grow the revenues. We can't do that if we
don't have the products in place because we let too many people go.
I think that Bob's done a fine job so far, but I'm hoping that we
aren't going to go to the well (of using layoffs to improve financial
results) once too often. I was encouraged by Enrico Pesatori's
resignation, in that it appears that someone other than the worker bees
is being held accountable for failure to produce. I was decidedly less
encouraged, however, when I heard he was going to be paid $1.5M anyway.
Where do _I_ sign to get such a deal?
I do want to express my support and gratitude for "success sharing."
It's exactly the right thing to do, BUT I don't see any reason to put a
limit on the amount that people can earn. If the metrics are properly
set and the group exceeds the metrics by an immense amount, there's no
reason why the group shouldn't be given an immense reward. For example,
the max that we in networks could earn as a bonus was 12%, and that
would be for having an exceptionally good year. I don't understand the
motivation of a max. Human nature being what it is, people are going to
be inclined to take their foot off the accelerator after they max out.
Would it really hurt Digital to pay a bonus equal to 50% of one's
salary if we had such a wildly successful year that people began to
question whether the metrics were set high enough? I don't think so.
And those of us who work hard to provide products worth marketing,
those of us who market the products, support the products, etc would be
delighted to get such a fat chunk of change. And we'd deserve it.
Mark Levesque
|
4719.174 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Fri Jul 26 1996 13:30 | 10 |
| Re: .173
You actually got "success sharing"? We in SBU were promised it, and were told
we had exceeded the goal, and then... silence. Yesterday's mail delivered
a grim note from Harry Copperman, reminding all of us to keep a stiff upper
lip.
I don't like being lied to.
Steve
|
4719.175 | | LEXS01::GINGER | Ron Ginger | Fri Jul 26 1996 14:32 | 7 |
| The prayer note (.166) is a very sobering note. It is 4 years old, and
I could not find one single problem mentioned in it that was fixed today.
We have every problem itemized there, plus a few new ones.
We are not making progress. Does anyone in management ever look back at
old statements to see if we are making progress? Other than the
financial statement of the last year.
|
4719.176 | | AXEL::FOLEY | Rebel Without a Clue-foley@zko.dec.com | Fri Jul 26 1996 14:47 | 8 |
| RE: .174
I knew I should have saved that copy of "Digital Today" that
touted we in the SBU would be getting a bonus.
I too do not appreciate this.
mike
|
4719.177 | | HDLITE::SCHAFER | Mark Schafer, SPE MRO | Fri Jul 26 1996 15:04 | 5 |
| re: .174
And I had just heard that it might not be dead, ... yet.
Mark
|
4719.178 | | STAR::EVANS | | Fri Jul 26 1996 15:10 | 10 |
|
Despite the fact that no one has ever been able to say exactly *what* the
metrics were that the SBU was to meet in order to participate in the
"success sharing", I was told that the SBU did meet its numbers. My
understanding was that we would qualify for a 2% year-end bonus. Does
anyone have any official statement on SBU "success sharing"? If we did
*not* qualify, can anyone state what the goal was and how we did?
Jim
|
4719.179 | | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Fri Jul 26 1996 15:32 | 18 |
| >My personal opinion is that announcing the layoff is more damanging to
>the stock price than the underperformance of the company relative to
>expectations.
So, the question I would ask, is how does our corporate office meet the
employee's request for HONEST communication regarding the state of the
company?
In the past the media has told us what Digital was going to do. And
most people I work with resented that. The effect of the "rumor"
wasn't much different than the effect of the "fact" as viewed from this
perspective.
|
4719.180 | | DECWIN::JUDY | JJ | Fri Jul 26 1996 15:49 | 11 |
|
We've all obviously heard the same things. If I remember
correctly, we exceeded our goals by 9% or something close to
it. And I've been scanning the mail being sent out by
Harry Copperman and Don Harbert for any kind of an inkling
as to whether we can still expect to receive the 'bonus' we've
been promised. No mention of it, directly, at all.
JJ
[EOB]
|
4719.181 | <partial list of metrics> | USCTR1::MARRONE | RALPH MARRONE | Fri Jul 26 1996 15:51 | 19 |
| re:-1
In the Asia Pacific Region (and I believe throughout the SBU) the
metrics used to determine "success sharing" are:
Inventory
Predictability
M&D Survey (Employee Satisfaction)
P&L
Quality - Short Ship, Mis-ship, DOA
There are sub-sets to all of the above, ie. each AP territory is
measured as well as stage II manufacturing, etc.
AP is only a piece of the SBU. I'm not sure if success sharing
depends on the SBU as a whole or if the individual SBU groups making
there metrics is enough to qualify.
Ralph
|
4719.182 | | TLE::EKLUND | Always smiling on the inside! | Fri Jul 26 1996 16:04 | 17 |
| A very important piece of corporate ethics is to NOT
promise something that you cannot deliver. In the past I've
seen DEC bend over backwards to "make things right" with
customers, occasionally losing money (giving away extra
hardware) rather than allowing a customer to be dissatisfied
with what we promised to deliver. This endeared us to a
great many customers, which was a good part of why we were
so successful... It's OK to lose money if you do so to
maintain your reputation - that reputation will be worth far
more in the long run.
I will continue to trust that any success sharing promises
will be honored - for similar reasons.
Cheers!
Dave Eklund
|
4719.183 | I heard different | DECC::VOGEL | | Fri Jul 26 1996 16:31 | 17 |
|
RE: last few concerning SBU success sharing:
I forget who presented the SBU success sharing policy in the ZKO cafe.
However, I do remember him saying that in order to get a bonus, the
corporation as a whole must also make a profit. This was in addition
to the SBU making its numbers. So I don't think I've been lied to.
On the other hand, it does stink that we happen to take a charge
against earnings, and that charge seems to be big enough to make sure
the corporation as a whole does not make a profit.
Will I miss the miss the extra money....probably not...on the other
hand just today a co-worker informed me that he's leaving Digital.
The prime reason was more money offered by another company.
Ed
|
4719.184 | prediction = 2% bonus | FREBRD::POEGEL | Garry Poegel | Fri Jul 26 1996 16:37 | 7 |
|
I think the SBU will bend over backwards and twist the numbers as much
as is needed to make sure we get at least get the minimum bonus for this first
year of "success sharing". Otherwise, who would believe in a bonus program
for the future?
Garry
|
4719.185 | | STAR::EVANS | | Fri Jul 26 1996 17:11 | 13 |
| Does anyone *know* what these metrics *are* for the SBU? When Harry Copperman
presented in the ZKO cafe, he wasn't able to say what they are (were?). As
for the profitabilty issue, I understood that we will show a profit in Q4,
but it is not up to some people's expectations - so a $475M write-off is
being taken to further downsize. Unlike some others, I am not so willing to
brush off a non-payment of this bonus. Part of the justification for fewer
and lower raises is that Digital is going to a variable pay approach. If the
SBU made its numbers and the bonus is *not* going to be paid then I don't see
how anyone in Digital management can expect me to buy into the variable
pay approach.
Jim
|
4719.186 | | MROA::YANNEKIS | Hi, I'm a 10 year NOTES addict | Fri Jul 26 1996 17:20 | 15 |
|
I work in the SBU M&D organization and I have been told this week by
pretty senior management that will receive our goal sharing. Our plan
is dependent on Overall SBU Performance and SBU M&D Performance. The
biggest single factor is SBU profit/loss performance and I believe we
met our goal for FY96. August was the time frame given for annoucement
of the awards with September the date of delivery. The money has
been set aside and all financial accounting includes this expense.
My management certainly believes it will happen. I, always a cynic, will
believe it when I get the check!
Greg
|
4719.187 | ABU bonus was planned also... | FIREBL::LEEDS | From VAXinated to Alphaholic | Fri Jul 26 1996 17:25 | 301 |
| There was also suppossed to be an ABU bonus (memo attached). I have heard
nothing on this since the end of the year.. did the ABU make it goals ??
Arlan
I N T E R O F F I C E M E M O R A N D U M
Date: 28-Mar-1996 12:33pm PDT
From: Kannankote Srikanth
SRIKANTH.KANNANKOTE@A1@SLSPUB
Dept: VP, ABU Americas
Tel No: 508 496-8453, DTN:276-8453
TO: See Below
Subject: ABU Americas U.S. Employees Eligible for Incentive Plan
To: ABU Americas U.S. Employees Eligible for New Group Incentive Plan
I am pleased to inform you of your participation in the ABU "Going for
Growth" Group Incentive Plan for FY96.
This is an annual program, which we are introducing now to provide an
additional performance incentive as we move into a very critical Q4.
This plan is based on our belief that each of you, working with the ABU
Americas team, can have a significant impact on our success in meeting the
Americas FY96 target for operating profit. If we attain our profit goal,
you will receive an award of 2% of your base pay. The attached documents
give full details.
Our strategy is to base employee compensation on both individual and
overall business performance. Our objective is to maintain industry
competitive base salaries while adding a variable component linked to
business performance.
You can affect our financial success in two major ways:
o By reducing costs
o By increasing demand for Digital's products and services
One of the most significant ways to achieve both goals is to streamline
our processes and systems so that we can improve the speed, efficiency,
and effectiveness of doing business with the ABU. I urge all of you to
focus your efforts on this important area.
This new incentive plan recognizes your importance to our overall
performance. My expectation is that we will all work together to exceed
our aggressive ABU Americas goals for FY96, as we realize our Growing for
Growth objectives.
Regards,
Sri
Accounts Business Unit
Americas
FY96 Going for Growth Group Incentive Plan
Plan Summary
Intent of the ABU Group Incentive Plan
The intent of the ABU Group Incentive Plan is to motivate
participating employees to achieve and exceed the ABU's profit goal by
rewarding them for successful attainment. Because the Plan is
intended to reward results, participants can expect that awards will
vary from year to year and across the ABU. The Plan plays a key role
in emphasizing our Going for Growth performance-oriented culture.
Participating in the ABU Group Incentive Plan
All exempt and non-exempt ABU employees in positions not participating
in the Digital Executive Incentive Plan (EIP) or in Sales Incentive
Plans are participants in the ABU Group Incentive Plan.
Your Award Opportunity
The Americas FY96 ABU Group Incentive Plan is funded based on
the following performance measures and weightings--
--75% on Americas ABU Operating Profit
--25% on the sum of the Operating Profits of all the Business
Units in the Americas
Each participant has a 2% of salary incentive opportunity if the
Operating Profit goals are attained.
Achieving 100% of the goal results in a payout equal to 2% of salary.
The funding schedule provides a range of total funding above and below
the 100% performance level. The total available funds will be
adjusted based on this performance. The Plan funds at 1% of salary if
achievement is 90%. The maximum payout under the Plan is 12%. All
over-achievement funding and payments under this Plan are subject to
overall Company affordability as determined in the year-end financial
review.
Any payouts will be made solely at the discretion of the Account
Business Unit, subject to Company and Business Unit performance, and
subject to all other terms and conditions of the plan. The plan may
be revised from time to time at the discretion of the Company and/or
Business Unit.
General Administrative Guidelines
The following are the general administrative guidelines for the Plan:
1. All Regular Employees must be employed for at least the last three
months of the fiscal year (April, May, June 1996) and be employed
at the date of award payment to receive an award.
2. Employees who transfer between Business Units will participate in
their new Business Unit Plan if they have been employed by that
Unit for at least 90 days (the last fiscal year quarter).
Otherwise, they will participate in their prior Unit's Plan.
3. All award payments are contingent upon satisfactory individual
performance. Employees on written warning will not participate.
4. Payments will typically be made in Q1FY97 for the fiscal year
ending June 1996.
5. Payment will be based on the employee's base salary in effect at
the end of FY96, i.e., June 29, 1996.
6. All legally required federal and state taxes will be withheld from
the award payments. Deductions will also be made to SAVE and ESPP.
7. Because this is a group-based incentive plan, all eligible
employees will receive the same percentage of their base salaries.
If you have questions about this Plan, discuss them with your manager,
or your human resource manager.
NEW STRATEGY LINKS PAY TO PROFITS
Digital Today - December 15, 1995
Digital is changing its strategy for compensating employees. The new
strategy will be implemented gradually, over the next several years.
Not all employees will be affected immediately, but eventually all
will.
Sarah Sumner is the newly appointed vice president of Compensation,
reporting to Worldwide Human Resources Vice President Sid Ferrales.
She is responsible for Digital's compensation strategy and
development worldwide.
DT: What's the essence of the change in compensation strategy?
Sumner: In the past, Digital paid employees a base salary, and
performance was rewarded by annual salary increases. These salary
increases were built into base pay and paid in future years
regardless of current individual performance. These increases were
not necessarily linked to business performance.
In today's business environment, we need to compensate employees
differently. We need to maintain the link between financial rewards
and individual performance, and at the same time, create a strong
link between these financial rewards and business performance. This
is what the new compensation strategy does.
At the core of the strategy is an industry-competitive base
salary to which we add a variable component, which then adds up to a
person's target pay. The variable component is a portion of total pay
that can vary greatly, depending on the performance of not only the
individual, but of the group, the business unit, and perhaps even the
company. This component is not automatically paid each year. It is
dependent upon performance.
The economic argument for this type of system is that when
business is down, payroll costs are lower, and when business is good,
payroll costs are higher. So this variable component aligns with the
company's ability to pay its employees. A very business-realistic
arrangement.
It's also a system that is being used more frequently in
industry, but it is relatively new to Digital.
DT: How does this system compare with pay at other companies?
Sumner: It compares favorably in many ways. As I explained about the
alignment with the company's ability to pay, the variable component
will also mean that Digital's average total pay will be greater than
the market - that is, our competitors - when our performance is
better than our competitors', and our average pay total pay will be
less than the market when our performance is worse than our
competitors'.
Our system also reflects the relationship of total pay for
individual Digital jobs versus similar jobs in the market. Typically,
in many countries, sales positions and higher level management jobs
in the market have a higher variable pay portion of their total pay,
versus engineers, accountants, administrators.
Our system will also reflect these differences country by
country, which is important for people to understand. Although jobs
will have different amounts of variable pay, Digital's philosophy is
to keep our average total pay equal to the market's average pay,
unless, as I said, Digital's performance is better then average and
we will pay more, etc.
DT: When will the change start? And when will it be complete?
Sumner: It began several years ago when the sales force went from
base salary to an incentive plan. In the meantime, many countries
such as Canada, the U.K. and Australia have been implementing
variable compensation programs for several years.
Asia Pacific was one of the first to implement a variable pay
strategy for all of its countries and its success has helped us a lot
in developing a global strategy for the company. Europe has also had
experience in several countries for a number of years, and we have
learned from that area's experience as well.
The strategy was approved by the Operations Committee in October
1994, and since then, we have developed a variable compensation
"platform", which is a set of rules and standards that countries and
businesses will follow in the development of their programs for FY96.
In some countries and businesses, the strategy I described has
already been implemented and programs are in place.
Other countries and functions will implement at different times
and at a pace that makes the best business sense for them.
The change will be gradual, but we expect that within the next
two years, all Digital organizations will be working within the new
strategy.
DT: Are there organizations in the U.S. that are familiar with
variable programs?
Sumner: The Storage and Networks Products Business Units had variable
programs in FY95. The PC Business Unit had variable programs in FY94
and FY95.
DT: What makes an employee eligible for variable pay?
Sumner: All employees, over time, will be eligible for variable pay.
The "platform" defines the types of variable programs, along with
eligibility of different employee categories. Countries and
businesses will be developing specific programs, using the platforms,
and after approval they will communicate these programs and
eligibility to their employees.
What is very important to the success of the strategy is having
clear goals, either at a company, business unit, group, or individual
level, that are communicated and understood. However, we have to be
very careful that company and business goals are communicated in a
way that let employees understand them, but not our competitors.
Therefore not all company and business goals will be communicated,
because of this disclosure sensitivity.
Once employees understand their eligibility, it then becomes
important for them to understand their program, how it works, and
their individual goals. It's going to be important that employees
think hard about ways they can contribute to meeting not only their
own goals, but the goals of their business units or functions and the
company as a whole.
DT: How do you expect employees will relate to the transition?
Sumner: This change is going to take a little while, and not every
organization is changing at the same time or pace. So there will be
some of us living differently, compensation-wise, from others for a
time.
Whatever, the fundamental reality is this: The whole industry -
including Digital - must pay excellent compensation for excellent
performance, and vice versa. The scaled down companies of the '90s
must use their compensation systems as a tool to drive excellence and
reward for that achievement.
DT: Do you expect that some employees could interpret this as, "Hey,
I'm already working very hard, does this mean I've got to work twice
as hard to earn the same?"
Sumner: I imagine that some people may ask that. However, just
working hard doesn't necessarily mean the person is working the right
way, nor does it guarantee success. But the assumption should be that
if you are meeting or exceeding your individual performance goals and
your business is doing the same, then you should expect to earn
greater rewards.
This new strategy gives all of us an opportunity to be rewarded
for excellent performance, and that excellent performance will drive
the company in the same fashion, which then loops back to more
rewards, and so on. It's an upward spiral.
DT: Closing comments?
Sumner: Employee compensation is a huge expense line that's critical
to the company's profit and growth, to shareholder return, and to the
quality of life and well being of employees. We're evolving
compensation at Digital through its next logical step, one based upon
business and individual performance, and encourages excellence.
If we pull together to bring Digital back to its place of
leadership in the industry, our compensation strategy and programs
will provide the rewards to all employees who've made it happen.
Distribution:
This message was delivered to you utilizing the Readers Choice delivery
services. You received this message because you are in the Americas ABU
organization. If you have questions regarding this message, please
contact the author.
|
4719.188 | this deserves to be repeated | DYPSS1::DYSERT | Barry - Custom Software Development | Fri Jul 26 1996 17:41 | 9 |
4719.189 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Fri Jul 26 1996 18:10 | 6 |
| Re: .188
Copperman has said this in his speeches. It would seem that neither he nor
others in top Digital management believe it, though.
Steve
|
4719.190 | They don't know what else to do.... | PATRLR::MCCUSKER | | Fri Jul 26 1996 18:19 | 8 |
| <---
I bet they do believe it, but they just don't know how else to address the
problems.
I really think they just don't know what else to do.
And when I say 'they', I refer mostly to BP and his senior managers.
|
4719.191 | How do you book a bonus? | SUBSYS::JAMES | | Fri Jul 26 1996 18:49 | 7 |
|
A question for a financial wizard.
If the hypothetical bonus were paid, would the expense be charged
against Q4 FY96 or against the quarter in which it is paid?
If it is the second, no one should expect more than nice words until Q2.
|
4719.192 | | MROA::YANNEKIS | Hi, I'm a 10 year NOTES addict | Fri Jul 26 1996 18:59 | 8 |
|
> If the hypothetical bonus were paid, would the expense be charged
> against Q4 FY96 or against the quarter in which it is paid?
I'm pretty sure for SBU M&D the FY96 bonus is in Q496.
Greg
|
4719.193 | Financial "Wizard" at your service... | SOLVIT::CARLTON | | Fri Jul 26 1996 19:42 | 17 |
| RE: .191, Financial "wizard" reporting in as requested... The expenses
should be accrued in Q4 and paid in Q1. My understanding (to persons
removed) was that this was indeed being done, so the fiscal impact
happens in Q4 FY96 while the cash impact happens in Q1...
I too have heard rumblings about the bonuses not being paid due to the
weasel words to the effect that it depended on overall company
financial condition (see ABU memo re: .187). I'd be surprised if they
reneged with the SBU, Networks, and any other orgs. that did well in
FY96. My understanding is that the ABU did not make its goals (part of
the reason it's no longer a BU...!) and therefore will make no payout.
Geez, wouldn't it be nice if folks were told what the goals were so
they might actually be able to help contribute to making them?? Not to
mention being told about such things at the BEGINNING of the FY... vs.
late Q3...
Sigh...
|
4719.194 | expense in period covered | CPEEDY::BRADLEY | Chuck Bradley | Fri Jul 26 1996 21:48 | 12 |
|
in general, an accounting system trys to assign expenses to the time
period or operation that caused the expense. the bonus is about fy96
or about q4fy96, or some time period, so that is where it will show up.
there will an entry for bonus expense balanced by bonus's payable.
when it is paid, the entries are to the bonus payable and cash accounts.
if the bonus is for all of fy96, they will restate previous quarters
unless the total amount of the bonus is "not material", meaning
insignificant. it will not be material, else it would not have
been offered.
|
4719.195 | advice for the times... | CSC32::S_WASKEWICZ | | Tue Jul 30 1996 15:57 | 57 |
|
This note, cross-posted in "Where are you leading us, Bob?" seemed
like some good advice for the times.
THE PLUS SIDE OF RESISTANCE
Trying to bulldoze resistance to your ideas is a losing strategy, says
Rick Maurer in "Beyond the Wall of Resistance." Even if you win, you're
left with lots of resentment and little commitment. To avoid that, he says,
you should use the power of resistance to build support. To do so, he
suggests you use what he calls the five touchstones:
o Maintain a clear focus. Don't let attacks on your ideas make you forget
that your goal is to get support, not to get even. Combine focus--"keeping
your eye on the prize"--with perseverance and patience. This powerful
combination will help you resist the temptation to give in when the going
gets tough. And it will give you the gumption to stick it out for as long
as it takes.
o Embrace resistance. The voice of resistance tells you what is wrong.
But you need to know why people are concerned. To find out, you need
answers to questions such as: "Who opposes me?" "What do they oppose about
this idea?" "Do they dislike the idea or just the way I plan to carry it
out?" Unless you talk to opponents, you can only guess at the answers. And
even if you guess wrong, you could face even stronger resistance.
o Respect resisters. You'll rarely lose anything by respecting people.
Two ways to do it: Listen carefully and always tell the truth. Careful
listening means you genuinely want to hear what resisters say and learn
more about them. You don't need to agree with them, but you do need to
understand them. Telling the truth should be a given in all your
interactions. But resistance often melts away just because the person
responsible for the idea speaks only the truth.
o Stay relaxed. Relaxing does not mean you should give up. It simply
means you should stay calm and listen quietly when others attack your
position. Once they've said all they want to say, you'll still be standing.
You've done nothing to alienate them. You've just listened. Relaxing also
means you don't use what you've heard to counterattack. Instead, you use it
to seek common ground.
o Join the resistance. This is not a call to shed your uniform and join
the other side. Rather, it means you blend your intentions with theirs.
To get the most out of this approach, you must find ways to combine the
answers to two questions: "What's in it for me?" and "What's in it for
them?" Seek common fears and common interests that you can use to craft a
common vision. Your goals may differ, but your solutions should include the
concerns of all parties.
Source: "communications briefings," an article from "Beyond the Wall of
Resistance," by Rick Maurer, Bard Books Inc., 5275 McCormick
Mountain Drive, Austin, TX 78734.
|
4719.196 | | STAR::EVANS | | Wed Jul 31 1996 13:35 | 8 |
|
I'll take the silence on the subject to mean that nobody in here knows what
the specific SBU goals were for the "success sharing" plan. Now that the
official quarterly/yearly results have been announced, I would take continued
silence to indicate that there wasn't any "success" to share.
Jim
|
4719.197 | Too Soon To Tell ?? | MROA::EARLY | Lose anything but your sense of humor. | Wed Jul 31 1996 17:03 | 19 |
| --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The company used to hand out Restricted Stock Options. Prob'ly still do. To
some degree these options were based on how well the company did. Other
elements of the equation were your own individual performance as well as
good ol' company politics in some cases.
As I recall, these options usually weren't handed out until some time in
August ... late August, I think.
There seems to be an expectation in this string that the week after the year
was closed a bunch of checks were going to get mailed out. I'm not sure
that's a realistic expectation. Nor would I assume that "silence" means the
plan is dead. I simply think it's a little too soon to be expecting a check.
Just MHO ...
/se
|
4719.198 | | AXEL::FOLEY | Rebel Without a Clue-foley@zko.dec.com | Wed Jul 31 1996 17:54 | 6 |
| RE: .197
I'm not expecting a check, I'm expecting a proper explaination
of what is going on.
mike
|
4719.199 | Just a bunch of mumbo-jumbo... | STAR::DIPIRRO | | Thu Aug 01 1996 15:24 | 8 |
| I've heard people ask management at different levels a number of
times about the specifics of the success-sharing program. What are the
metrics? At what level are they measured? How can we tell if we "met or
exceeded our numbers?" All you hear in response are vague, hand-waving
answers. Personally, I now don't believe anything concrete was ever
established for this or, if it was, only BP and his staff know the
actual data. They simply planned to give us the minimum bonus from the
start to give us a taste of success-sharing and variable compensation.
|
4719.200 | | HDLITE::SCHAFER | Mark Schafer, SPE MRO | Thu Aug 01 1996 16:30 | 4 |
| check out KACIE::SBU. In it, Tom Vacchiano promises that we will get
details of the SBU's FY97 program in 30 days.
Mark
|
4719.201 | Vin Mullarkey teleconference re:success sharing | SUBSYS::CALHOUN | | Thu Aug 01 1996 18:37 | 10 |
| Vin Mullarkey, in his Worldwide teleconference with finance personnel
this morning, said that the $475M restructuring charge is going to be
passed back to the Business units BEFORE any "success sharing" is
calculated. Therefore, any individual BU numbers you have heard so
far, and any conclusions on whether we will or won't get the money is
EXTREMELY premature.
My take, based on this morning...bend over folks, DEC's feelin' frisky
again....
|
4719.202 | | STAR::EVANS | | Thu Aug 01 1996 19:01 | 11 |
|
Bob, is what I'm hearing correct? We worked hard, we made our numbers, the
company made a profit for the quarter and for the year, but senior management
decided that the profit wasn't big enough so we get hit with a $475M
restructuring charge that causes us to not participate in "success sharing"
while the company is so flush with cash that it announces a stock buy-back
plan. If the SBU made its numbers and there is no payout on the "success
sharing", I don't see how Bob and the rest of senior managment can expect
"success sharing" to be much motivation in having us work hard to hit the
next set of numbers. Maybe it's just "DEC feelin' frisky again...."
|
4719.203 | | PATRLR::MCCUSKER | | Thu Aug 01 1996 19:20 | 16 |
| Dear Bob,
If .201 and .202 are correct, don't you, or any of your managers ever, ever
again come talking to me about success sharing. If these past two notes are
true, then I will simply regard success sharing as bull****. Furthermore, I
will, from here on, have trouble believing anything I ever again hear from
mangement. That is sad, because I really, really want to have faith in those
that are leading us.
At a time like this, when you need 120% from each and every employee, and I'll
bet you are getting it from a large number of them, I think its pretty lousey
to screw them out of something they've earned.
What has become of this once great company?
Brad McCusker
|
4719.204 | Networks Success Sharing is reduced | NPSS::BENZ | I'm an idiot, and I vote | Fri Aug 02 1996 03:12 | 11 |
| .201 seems to be true. What's rather absurd about it is that there's
likely to be little, if any, restructuring done in the businesses that
are qualifying for success sharing.
This is bad for moral, and the fallout will be felt in the attrition of
vital people. There's idle speculation that leadership is worrying
about how things will look in 2 months, rather than whether we'll be
able to deliver new products 1 or 2 years from now (which the attrition
will jeopardize).
\chuck
|
4719.205 | | NPSS::GLASER | Steve Glaser DTN 226-7212 LKG1-2/W6 (G17) | Fri Aug 02 1996 05:41 | 20 |
| To amplify .204, acording to Charlie Christ, Success Sharing company
wide will be reduced by the same algorithm. Networks is not being
singled out. Both he and Bob Rennick got it loud and clear that folks
viewed this as the company reneging on a commitment to its employees.
Headhunters have been fairly active up here recently, and I think there
are lots of folks that were waiting to see how the bonus situation
worked out. Now that they know I don't expect things to be pretty.
It was a shame that this news had to come out in Bob's first quarterly
meeting since he took the reins. This stuff was out of his control,
yet he gets to deliver the news and take the heat. He's been in charge
all of a week.
Steveg
P.S. I don't think Larry Walker knew about this before he left.
There's not much creedence being given to the theory that other
pastures looked greener to him partly cause he didn't want to break his
commitments to his troops.
|
4719.208 | | BIGQ::SILVA | quince.ljo.dec.com/www/decplus/ | Fri Aug 02 1996 18:40 | 8 |
|
Does the restructuring charge come into play for vp's and the prez? Or
do they still get the same bonus they would have gotten even if there were no
restructuring charge?
Glen
|
4719.207 | the royal scam? | NPSS::MLEVESQUE | The Doctah | Fri Aug 02 1996 18:43 | 70 |
| >Vin Mullarkey, in his Worldwide teleconference with finance personnel
>this morning, said that the $475M restructuring charge is going to be
>passed back to the Business units BEFORE any "success sharing" is
>calculated.
If this is in fact true, senior management had better get ready to
explain to the stockholders why so much of the talent has evaporated
from the company at the next stockholder meeting, because that's
precisely the effect this sort of legerdemain is going to have. I don't
think it's possible to more effectively undermine morale and destroy
credibility than to promise something and then renege.
As far as I'm concerned, the promise that success sharing represented
is the same as telling the kid who mows your lawn that if he does an
extra good job and weedwhacks too that he'll get an extra $10, and then
after he's done the extra work, telling him that you changed your mind.
It's unconscionable to anyone with a working set of morals.
The company instituted this program, and the workers responded in good
faith. And the workers, the people that make the fat bank accounts for
the few at the top possible, appear to be poised for a good screwing.
To say that "we the people" are outraged is to underestimate the depths
of the damage this action will cause. Most of us are under constant
attack by headhunters who are trying to lure us away to our
competitors. These companies are offering us increased salaries and
signing bonuses, especially for those of us in networks and other "hot"
parts of the industry. There is real competition for the talent that we
have, and screwing us out of the bonuses THAT WE EARNED is precisely
the way to push talent out the door. Once you lose that talent, what do
you think you're going to have to do to attract talent from someone
else? Gee, I don't think the lure of profit sharing is going to do it.
You're going to have to pay above market rates for average talent, and
all because you squandered the talent you have. It is difficult here in
the trenches to see how anyone can consider this to be a good idea
_over the long term_. Anybody up there ever consider looking beyond
Q(n+1)? It's not apparent that such is the case.
From my perspective (and it would appear to be widely shared given the
focus of virtually every conversation I've had or overheard since
yesterday), the very idea of apportioning the downsizing charge PRIOR
to the calculation of "success sharing" is outrageous. It absolutely
ignores the fact that A) you set the metrics and B) we met them, AND it
ignores the fact that this restructuring charge was in your control,
not ours. As far as I'm concerned, the need for Yet Another
Restructuring Charge is a failure on the part of management, and for
you to use OUR MONEY to pay for it is morally wrong. Because when we
get right down to it, that's exactly what you are doing- you are using
the money we earned to pay for your mistakes. That must be why we got
the standard "integrity and honesty" speech at the beginning of
yesterday's "incredible expanding proboscis" speech.
I can see why you call Mr Rennet the "acting" VP of networks. By
giving him this gem of an announcement to make, you've undermined any
chance of him starting things off on the right foot (not that many
expect he'd fill Larry Walker's shoes anyway), and set up his vital
first impression as a management toady. (No, we're pulling no punches
today.) In a way I feel for the guy. It's a tough position to be in.
I strongly encourage you to rethink the strategy of screwing the
workers to make the numbers look a tiny bit better to Wall Street. You
know damn well the Globe et al are going to catch wind of this and the
negative publicity from that alone is going to make the process of
hiring the talent we already need into an uphill battle. And the
attrition this miscalculation _will_ cause will only amplify the
problem. This is such a serious mistake that I feel duty bound to
use the strongest terms to condemn the "strategy". It's hard to imagine
a greater display of disrespect for the workers than this, it really
is.
Mark Levesque
|
4719.209 | | NETCAD::FLOWERS | High Performance Networking; Dan | Fri Aug 02 1996 18:46 | 11 |
| > Does the restructuring charge come into play for vp's and the prez? Or
>do they still get the same bonus they would have gotten even if there were no
>restructuring charge?
According to Charlie Christ, Bob recommended to the board that he (Bob) should
not be awarded a bonus this year. And we'll have to wait to see if the
board agrees with Bob's recommendation.
As for the VPs, I dunno.
Dan
|
4719.210 | | CSC32::MORTON | Aliens, the snack food of CHAMPIONS! | Fri Aug 02 1996 18:48 | 15 |
| Re .207,
Mark,
Do you really think they care that they are pushing the talent out
the door? It's all numbers to them, and that includes talent. They
figure that they can get anyone just out of college, or just off the
street with the qualifications and knowledge to do the job. They have
no idea what our skills are worth, and are betting the corporation that
they are right. THEY DON'T CARE!
Just so you understand. I feel exactly the way you do, but I mean
less than nothing to them, and the same goes for you and everyone else
not in upper management. WE ARE ONLY NUMBERS and as such we will be
ignored.
Jim Morton
|
4719.211 | | NPSS::MDLYONS | Michael D. Lyons DTN 226-6943 | Fri Aug 02 1996 19:03 | 28 |
|
>> Does the restructuring charge come into play for vp's and the prez? Or
>>do they still get the same bonus they would have gotten even if there were no
>>restructuring charge?
>
>According to Charlie Christ, Bob recommended to the board that he (Bob) should
>not be awarded a bonus this year. And we'll have to wait to see if the
>board agrees with Bob's recommendation.
>
>As for the VPs, I dunno.
This is irrelevant. We in NPB made our numbers and should have
gotten the success sharing money as promised. This money should have
come from the profits we generated.
I have no way of knowing what Bob's bonuses are based on, but I'm
sure it has more to do with the overall company than just NPB.
We had a deal. Digital does not see fit to live up to it's end of
the deal. I'm sure that a large number of NPB employees will be
indicating their thoughts by voting with their feet.
I deal with customers every day. How am I expected to make
customers believe that Digital will follow through on it's commitments
to them, when I know they haven't followed through on their commitments
to me. This is a sorry state of affairs.
MDL
|
4719.212 | They got theirs! | BUSY::RSTPIERRE | | Fri Aug 02 1996 19:12 | 7 |
|
So what if BP doesn't and the big boys don't get their bonus, they got
theirs last year when they got their stock options at a rock-bottom
price and when by some "miracle" DEC completed its turnaround and the
stock went up over 70, they all sold!!!
|
4719.213 | | SSAG::SUSSWEIN | an adrenal gland is a terrible thing to waste | Fri Aug 02 1996 19:27 | 10 |
| RE: .201
Question:
Can the success sharing program be interpreted as a legally binding
contract between Digital and it's employees?
Is so:
How long will it be before a class action lawsuit is filed?
|
4719.214 | | tennis.ivo.dec.com::KAM | Kam WWSE 714/261.4133 DTN/535.4133 IVO | Fri Aug 02 1996 19:28 | 36 |
| There was a article in a magazine recently regarding terminating an employee.
The author indicated that when he first terminated someone he started with
the following:
After calling the individual into his office he started the conversation
with: "This is going to hurt me just as much as you", he then proceeded
with informing the individual that their employment was no longer needed.
After the conversation, the employee responded with "No this is NOT going to
hurt you as much as me." As I leave I will NO LONGER have employment or
security and you will. In ten minutes you will return to your daily
activities and rightfully so as you have a responsibility to your Company.
I have to leave and deal with this demoralizing situation of not having a job
or not being wanted.
The author responded with "You're right." The author indicated that he no
longer used the phrase "This is going to hurt me just as much as you." He
now just immediately informs them that their employment is no longer
required and let's me leave.
Do you really think this Company cares about you? I kind of doubt it. You're
just a badge # required to perform a task. If the task is no longer required
you're terminated.
Do you really think they'll take our suggestions? If so, doesn't that
indicate that they don't know what they're doing? And if that's true do you
think their ego's will allow them to admit that??? That someone making PEANUTS
actually understand how and where this company's technologies should be
directed?
Didn't Chrysler take a group of hourly employees and ask them how cars
should be built and manufactured? Management and Employees worked together to
determine the Companies VISION? I'd liked to see Management and a couple of
the Noter's who wrote those outstanding articulations do this.
Regards,
|
4719.215 | agreed | DV780::LANGFELDT | Coloradical | Fri Aug 02 1996 19:30 | 6 |
|
re: .207
Here, here!
Well said.
|
4719.216 | | BUSY::SLAB | DILLIGAF | Fri Aug 02 1996 19:41 | 6 |
|
RE: .214
We're "empowered", right? So why SHOULDN'T management listen to
us if we think we have something worthwhile to contribute?
|
4719.217 | | CSC32::MORTON | Aliens, the snack food of CHAMPIONS! | Fri Aug 02 1996 19:43 | 5 |
| Re .216
You just think you're empowered.
Jim Morton
|
4719.218 | | NPSS::GLASER | Steve Glaser DTN 226-7212 LKG1-2/W6 (G17) | Fri Aug 02 1996 19:47 | 23 |
| I don't think the restructuring charge entered into the decision to
renege on some of the success sharing monies, at least not in the
Networks space. I don't think there is much "restructuring" planned
for Networks. We might get apportioned some of the "corporate
overhead" charges, but I would expect that to be apportioned based on
headcount, total revenue or so some other measure of a group's "size".
The reduction algorithm Charlie and Bob described indicated that we
would get the base number intact (the one for meeting the goal). The
change would be in the "exceeded goal" portion. If we were due $X for
that part, we would get roughly half for that part (i.e. we get $base +
($X/2) instead of $base + $X). Exact numbers were to be announced in a
week or two.
Given that various groups exceed goals by varying degrees, I can't see
this kind of algorithm being the result of a restructuring charge being
apportioned.
From this worker-bee's position, it looks like they're applying a
peanut butter approach (as in "this is how much we will pay overall,
divide the pain equally for some definition of equal").
Steveg
|
4719.219 | | RAGE::JC | Never trust a Prankster | Fri Aug 02 1996 20:13 | 34 |
| re <<< Note 4719.120 by PONDA::PALMER "BOB PALMER" >>>
-< Dear Bob >-
> multinational, public companies. The purpose of these compensation
> systems is to ensure that senior management has skin in the game
> just as shareholders and other employees.
Why not engage everyone in the corporation with more variable
compensation based on the performance of our stock? i'm a principal
engineer, consistent 1 performer, 9 yrs with DEC, and i have never,
ever received stock options. we lose good engineers to small- and mid-cap
companies (like BAY, Cascade, Fore, etc) because they offer large
option grants as incentive. i have brought this up to my management and
my managers management and everyone says there are no options to be
had. yes, i understand issues of diluting the value of of our
earnings by issuing more shares, but if everyone had a significant
amount of options and stood to gain financially from the success of
digital (and upward movement of the stock price), i would think that
the earnings dilution argument is moot. start by granting options to
the 1 performers and key individuals at ALL levels, not just SRI 40+,
all the way down to the college hire who comes in and distinguishes
him/herself in their first year.
let us share in the success of digital.
engage everyone.
works for you and the other sr. managers, why not us down here
in the trenches?
jc
|
4719.220 | | tennis.ivo.dec.com::KAM | Kam WWSE 714/261.4133 DTN/535.4133 IVO | Fri Aug 02 1996 20:34 | 10 |
| re .last
Did you ask your management or manager's management if they got options?
I believe they're granted options and could pass them on to you or let
the buck stop there. A number of years back I worked for a manager that
received options and they stopped there. I was informed later that he
could have passed them to hi-performers in the group but he never did.
He just looked out for himself.
Regards,
|
4719.221 | We have failure sharing alright | MPGS::HAMNQVIST | Video servers eng. | Fri Aug 02 1996 21:02 | 24 |
|
| This is irrelevant. We in NPB made our numbers and should have
| gotten the success sharing money as promised. This money should have
| come from the profits we generated.
You should be lucky you are still in the same organization. Many have been
re-orged over the course of the year to/from nebulous organizations where it
is very hard to define and verify "made the numbers". Unlike percentage of
sales, which is directly linked to what you do, the success-sharing program
is so completely disconnected from what the individual does that you should
either make it a bonus for everyone or nothing at all.
Perhaps we should consider linking the Success sharing directly with the
cost center and its ability to meet a budget. In addition, perhaps we should
consider changing the interval from once a year to once a quarter. And if you
move, or get re-orged, you'd get a pro-rated sharing from your new/previous
CC. Direct reports above could then get a fixed percentage "roll-up" from
the ones below, to divide up amongst their staff. Then let people convert the
success sharing to supplemental ESPP contribution and/or options with
4year/25% vesting.
All you need is a few percent of the $2B to make it happen.
>Per
|
4719.222 | go for the buck | PCBUOA::BEAUDREAU | | Fri Aug 02 1996 21:30 | 12 |
|
Stock options used to be passed down to the working troops by some
of the good managers from times past. Todays breed are greedy
short timers who only care about number 1... and their next job.
It's a sign of the times, boy the 90's s*#%.
Push for cash$$$, stock options aren't that great unless you have inside
info anyway.
gb.... who did get rewarded once, before the bottom fell out.
|
4719.223 | | RAGE::JC | Never trust a Prankster | Fri Aug 02 1996 21:49 | 23 |
| re: .220
i do not think managers have that kind of discretion on options: either
keep them him/herself or pass them down. that is a bad situation to impose
on _any_ manager.
as far as my mgr goes, i asked and he said no, never have received any.
is he telling the truth? i don't know, all i can assume is yes he is.
my bet is that all VPs get them, at a minimum, and some of the lucky
line mgrs.
re: .222
let's take a look at June '94.
options could have been cut for 18 1/2 a share or so? that was our
low then? even today those would be worth 2x and offer and excellent
incentive for someone to keep on working here. 1000 options at 18.5
fully exercisable at 36 or so is worth $18,000. i have never heard of
_anyone_ at my level getting a bonus any where near even $5,000, let alone
$18,000 !!
jc
|
4719.224 | | ARCANA::CONNELLY | Don't try this at home, kids! | Fri Aug 02 1996 22:16 | 15 |
|
re: reneging on "success sharing"
Does anybody think this was a decision that was made to be overruled
at the highest levels, so we would all feel extra-grateful to our
Corporate Management Committee or BOD or whomever for showing that
they put "our" interests first? Or maybe i'm just feeling extra-cynical
today... (But the every-two-week pay decision comes to mind.)
re: stock options
I wouldn't get too het up about getting those. I got some back in '88
and it'll be a cold day in hell before i can ever cash them in.
- paul
|
4719.225 | | MAASUP::MUDGETT | We Need Dinozord Power NOW! | Mon Aug 05 1996 02:11 | 29 |
| Greetings Bob,
I hope things are going well for you. I'm doing well, my wife broke her
elbow recently but it is healing well so we are hoping to soon be 100%
health-wise.
I really don't care if Bob reads this I just thought this was the best
note to whine in. I've even got a proposal. You see as a field service
person our infrastructure is awful important to me and I think it needs
help. So, my proposal, as we have 7000 people that we don't need and
are going to tfso why not:
1. Keep 100 people and make them call answering people. I swear every
customer I deal with are complaining about hold times when they log
calls. I was tracking and reporting it to my boss but it got too
wearying to hear the complaints. I'd just recommend not laying off a
bunch and set them up from home to dispatch. Even if they do it wrong
thats okay as long as someone answers on the second ring would make my
job easier.
2. This one could be tougher. I and several other people spent many
hours this weekend trying to do an upgrade that had at least two
disasterously wrong instructions in them. So, you might say, what would
you do about this? Keen another 100 people, make these people's job be
to try doing what the documentation says it will.
This should be effortless and it would make all our lives easier.
Fred
|
4719.226 | | POMPY::LESLIE | Andy Leslie | DTN 847 6586 | Mon Aug 05 1996 11:36 | 16 |
| > 2. This one could be tougher. I and several other people spent many
> hours this weekend trying to do an upgrade that had at least two
> disasterously wrong instructions in them. So, you might say, what would
> you do about this? Keen another 100 people, make these people's job be
> to try doing what the documentation says it will.
My old group, CSSE, did a lot of this kind of stuff. We tried to do
Product introductions to Services and amongst our responsibilities was
to check these procedures out.
Needless to say, CSSE were downsized and renamed and now nolonger do
this.
(Andy, TFSO'd from CSSE 4 years ago)
|
4719.227 | It's not the bonus. It's the trust. | NETCAD::SHERMAN | Steve NETCAD::Sherman DTN 226-6992, LKG1-2 near pole G17 | Mon Aug 05 1996 13:29 | 52 |
| I'd like to confirm what others are saying about what's happening here
at Networks. Just the day after the fiasco meeting, I got a headhunter
call. The headhunters and our competitors know. This is a dangerous
situation here because the folks here are VERY employable outside and
most of them are not easy to replace (especially considering any hiring
freezes). Some only have to travel less than 5 miles from here to work
for competitors, taking their knowledge with them.
I have heard from several sources about the devastating affect of the
bonus announcement. The issue is not the bonus. It is the apparent
betrayal of trust from a high level. To engineers, trust is a big deal
and not something that can be won in a quarter, though it can be lost
in an instant.
Over the past many months here, in addition to working my best, I've
been working to encourage a team spirit between the different design
groups. I deal with the survivors of other actions taken in the past
as well as attrition. (The biggest problem now for them is the latter,
by the way.) I saw trust in the business and sense of teamwork building
over a period of two years with the hallmark being a bonus that was tied
to performance that we got last summer. I saw folks willing to put forth
extra effort trusting that if successful we all would benefit with some
recognition that was proportional to our success.
The fact that the bonus checks don't come out for a month or so has
bought Digital a little time over here. I am afraid that some folks
are planning to stay just long enough to get whatever bonus comes and
then hop out. Personally, I have about 3 contacts I could phone to get
a job outside in a short time. And, I think I'm an exception. I think
there are others here with much longer lists of folks they can call.
By some standards, we may be fools here, working for less than others
think we are worth. But, for engineers there is something inside that
finds the idea of hopping quickly to the highest bidder to be repugnant
and irresponsible behavior. The engineers I work with typically share
a sense of integrity, honor and responsibility. We expect similar
standards from management.
Fortunately for me, my immediate management is very sensitive to what is
happening and is trying to address the situation, talking straight and
trying to keep communication lines open with the troops. They are trying
to respond in a leadership fashion where those higher up have apparently
stumbled.
Will it be enough? I don't know. The bonus is trivial. In perspective,
the amount of the bonus for all of NPB is trivial. At this point, NPB
could reverse the decision on the bonus, but this would not restore the
trust that has taken more than two years to build.
The loss of trust really has me concerned.
Steve
|
4719.228 | they got it wrong...again ? | VYGER::MILLERA | A mans a man fur aw that.... | Mon Aug 05 1996 14:14 | 29 |
|
re last few,
At the risk of causing offence, IMO, theres something fundamentally
wrong with paying part of the co. large bonuses, supposedly 9.6%,
while as a corporation (all BUs together), we've not done enough.
I'm not undermining the effort that those organisations have put
in over the last year, mine included, but its been said before and
it'll be said again......we're in this together.
Jesus, there's people out there busting a gut for this co. and
haven't so much as had a pay rise, not to mention a bonus and yet
if you "fall" into the right group through whatever reorg etc
....your made.
To heck with this internal market place....
......my BU done this so,I get that....
If there's to be an incentive scheme, my vote would be....
1. Firstly, pay people what they deserve.
2. Secondly, if the corp. makes its numbers, then
pay the bonus across the corp.
corp.
|
4719.229 | | NETCAD::FLOWERS | High Performance Networking; Dan | Mon Aug 05 1996 14:26 | 18 |
| > At the risk of causing offence, IMO, theres something fundamentally
> wrong with paying part of the co. large bonuses, supposedly 9.6%,
> while as a corporation (all BUs together), we've not done enough.
I'm not sure what's the best way to run an incentive program. But had they
laid out the stipulation that the payout was, in the end, subject to
corporate profitability (and not just your BU's), then I don't think
people would have been as upset. But there was no such clause.
As others have said, it's not so much the money as it is the loss of
trust and credibility.
Even if they reinstate the full bonus payout, I for one have been soured
too much by this experience. Fool me once, shame on you; fool me twice
shame on me.
See ya,
Dan
|
4719.230 | it's the contrast | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (DTN 227-3978, TAY1) | Mon Aug 05 1996 15:24 | 7 |
| re Note 4719.228 by VYGER::MILLERA:
The failure to award the promised bonuses is exacerbated by
the fact that certain highly placed individuals have been
rewarded, and rewarded very well, during the past few years.
Bob
|
4719.231 | lets get solvent first | VYGER::MILLERA | A mans a man fur aw that.... | Mon Aug 05 1996 15:52 | 22 |
| re 229
Dan, thats why I think they got it wrong and you're right,
all credibility/trust has gone down the tubes.
IMO, if the intention is to promote our company as a total
solutions provider, then we should promote ourselves
internally the same way.
All BUs are part of that solution.
Its almost feasible (just my opinion), that considering the
BU organisation structure and the obsession (?) to have a
bonus program "just like the market place", they (mgt) haven't
given it a lot of thought, or maybe mgt didn't anticipate goal
/metric achievement so payment wouldn't be an issue,
but then I've just had my cynical implant.
Cordialments,
alex
|
4719.232 | weasel words... | ASD::DICKEY | | Mon Aug 05 1996 16:48 | 22 |
|
It has been stated in previous notes that there was never any
stipulation that the payout was based on corporate profitability.
I hate to break this news, but I have a copy of the MCS SuccessSharing
plan (that I happened to be looking at just now) and right under the
payout schedule, there is a note saying, "All payout percentages
may be adjusted based upon final Digital performance and approval".
I would suprise me greatly to find out that other organizations
didn't have the same wording in their documents. So I believed they
are covered, technically/legally.
On the other hand, I've had this documentation for quite a while
(since Q3), and I'd never noticed this note before. Back then, the
idea that the recovery would suddenly stop cold was far from my mind.
Also, it wouldn't surprise me in the least to find that presentations
of the plans within some of the groups may have left this clause out
entirely.
Please don't shoot the messenger,
Rich
|
4719.233 | | NPSS::MDLYONS | Michael D. Lyons DTN 226-6943 | Mon Aug 05 1996 17:03 | 7 |
| There was no such stipulation in our "group incentive" plan. I
have a copy of Larry Walkers mail from last January (which, of course I
am not at libery to post) which has no language related to performance
outside of NPB. Larry resigned a couple of weeks ago. No, I don't
believe in coincidence either.
MDL
|
4719.234 | DS is legally covered. | PATE::WETHERELL | | Mon Aug 05 1996 17:11 | 14 |
|
In Digital Semiconductor's 1996 Group Incentive Plan (GIP) package, there
is the following fine print, located on the bottom of the page that
defines the Payment Schedule:
* "The Overachievement provisions of all plans are subject to Company
affordability as determined in a year-end financial review."
I take this as their "legal out".
JAW
|
4719.235 | | BIGQ::SILVA | quince.ljo.dec.com/www/decplus/ | Mon Aug 05 1996 19:24 | 5 |
|
Of course they covered their butts. Why should it matter if the people
are upset by their doings? They got what they wanted..... this time anyway. I
wonder how many people will fall for it again????
|
4719.236 | Pattern/Pride | NEMAIL::HEINZ | | Tue Aug 06 1996 20:04 | 30 |
| There is obviously a pattern here. First they lay off over 80,000
people, they reduce the health benefits while costs go up, they take
away accrued vacation time, raises are almost non-existent, job
stability is nowhere to be found.....Now, the possibility of reneging
on a promise. If it were one or two of the above, most employees could
live with that. However, the combination of all of these, plus others
I didn't list, has made things intolerable for many employees. I am
not sure, is it incompetence, a series of human mistakes or a plan
to accelerate attrition?
Now, back somewhere, eons ago, in this notes file, Bob Palmer talked
about the various systems and technical strategies for the company.
Those sound like solid, important deliverables. However, very little
has ever been said or written by senior management concerning
processes and people. Technology and it's consequential marketing
strategies is one piece of the management puzzle. What are we going
to do to make our processes easier, more customer-oriented, more
partner-compatible? Any finally, if productivity is the only concern
that Digital's management has for it's employees, that has to be
addressed also. You don't get maximum productivity as was exampled
in the first paragraph above. You get it my instilling pride. Pride
is achieved by job stability, recognition of your efforts and
accomplishments, being able to trust your management, and lastly,
money. My greatest motivator is pride, then comes money. That is
what the company and it's employee's have lost. That's what upper
management must focus on to get this company going again.
-Bert-
|
4719.237 | | YIELD::HARRIS | | Tue Aug 06 1996 21:20 | 9 |
| > There is obviously a pattern here. First they lay off over 80,000
> people,
Not everyone who left Digital over the past five years has been laid
off. People have left on there own (better offers, afraid of being laid
off, retired...). Digital has also sold part of the company and the
people working in those group went to a different company.
So I wonder how many people have actually been laid off?
|
4719.238 | | TLE::REAGAN | All of this chaos makes perfect sense | Tue Aug 06 1996 21:38 | 7 |
| RE: .236
> they take away accrued vacation time
Nobody lost any accrued vacation time.
-John
|
4719.239 | Our latest efforts have re-doubled people's fears of our death. | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | See http://atlant2.zko.dec.com/ | Wed Aug 07 1996 10:49 | 21 |
| Yesterday, I was at the "MacWEEK MVB" (Most Valuable Buyer) event.
Unfortunately, my badge said "Digital Equipment Corporation" and
throughout the day, I was subjected to the question:
"Will they make it?"
And the people asking were *NOT* referring to Apple.
And the people asking *HAD* seen the Globe's latest story about
Digital reneging on the bonuses.
Many folks followed up their question by reminding me that the
job market was quite good out there.
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Today, I'll be at "MacWorld", but happily, my badge *WON'T* say
Digital Equipment Corporation, so maybe I can talk about Apple
Computer and its products rather than Digital.
Atlant
|
4719.240 | | WLDBIL::KILGORE | Stop Global Whining! | Wed Aug 07 1996 12:16 | 9 |
| .238> RE: .236
.238>
.238>> they take away accrued vacation time
.238>
.238> Nobody lost any accrued vacation time.
True, but they did reduce our ability to accrue vacation, and those of
us who've stuck the longest with this madhouse got shafted the worst.
|
4719.241 | | YIELD::HARRIS | | Wed Aug 07 1996 13:06 | 12 |
| > "Stop Global Whining!"
How about if start by trying to stop the local whining.
> True, but they did reduce our ability to accrue vacation, and those of
> us who've stuck the longest with this madhouse got shafted the worst.
We were all given two years to prepare for this change, I don't see how
anyone was shafted.
-Bruce
|
4719.242 | | STRWRS::KOCH_P | It never hurts to ask... | Wed Aug 07 1996 13:18 | 15 |
|
re: -.1
Well, that's right. However, if you had 320 hours accrued and then had
to start taking it, you needed to take between 6-10 per year of
vacation simply to get down to a point where you could start accruing
again. Also, you have to make sure that if you're approaching an
anniversary year, you're below 160 or you lose those hours also.
Also, if you took too much vacation during the chaos, could you be
considered expendable? So taking vacation may not have been an option.
I was lucky I think in this regard. I took nearly 10 weeks of vacation
in 1995 to get down to about 160 hours before January.
So, that is how people were shafted.
|
4719.243 | | SUBSYS::NEUMYER | Your memory still hangin round | Wed Aug 07 1996 13:34 | 12 |
|
And the original schedule was 1 year. It's not so much that they
changed the rules, even though that is bad, it's the lack of thought
put into the idea.
The plan called for everyone to get below 200 max hours within a
year. For a lot of people that meant taking significant time off. I
guess the SLT relaized after all the protests, that it was a dumb idea
to have so many senior people taking up to 200 hours off within one
year.
ed
|
4719.244 | ACCRUED VACATION TIME | PCBUHD::MAY | | Wed Aug 07 1996 16:17 | 19 |
| RE: .242 This note is quite accurate. In some groups and positions,
the understaffing is so great that is difficult to take more than two
weeks a year off. I know people who took the extra time to get down to
the 200 hours, but then were penalized on performance evaluation for
not meeting schedule and completing assigned work on time.
The problem is that the corporation(particularly human resources) has
an ideal model that they want employees to take their vacation time
to remain healthy. Unfortunately, management just looks at whether the
work gets done. Two conflicting priorities are set by two different
groups of people and there is no coordination or resolution. Since
human resources really has little power, management's priorities are
really what the employee has to react to.
I just got down to 200 hours and lost over two weeks vacation. However,
I am now much better off than some people who took their time since I
have the better performance track record. In some situations there is
not much choice: it's pay now(with time off) or pay later(with your
livelihood).
|
4719.245 | Back on track | NEMAIL::HEINZ | | Wed Aug 07 1996 17:49 | 13 |
| It was not my intention to start a rathole concerning lost vacation
time, lack of raises or career growth, broken promises, instability
and constant fear; rather to make the point that this is a pattern
of either incompetence, insensitivity, or a planned extermination.
If it is incompetence or just a whole lot of mistakes, management
can learn from that and right the ship by re-focussing some of their
energies. If it is insensitivity or a plan, then the ship is going
to sink. You cannot sail the Queen Mary with just a captain and no
crew.
-Bert-
|
4719.246 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | and your little dog, too! | Wed Aug 07 1996 17:57 | 8 |
| thought for the day:
Lead.
If you cannot lead, manage.
If you cannot manage, reorganize.
|
4719.247 | | STAR::EVANS | | Wed Aug 07 1996 19:34 | 9 |
|
Surely someone if printing this information and sending it to Bob.
What I don't understand is why nothing is being said by management
about the reneging on bonuses situation. I'd appreciate *some* statement
from management, even if it was the definitive statement that we weren't
going to get anything - at least we'd know where we stood.
Jim
|
4719.248 | would you believe it anyway? | HDLITE::SCHAFER | Mark Schafer, SPE MRO | Wed Aug 07 1996 20:09 | 8 |
| RE: .247
Jim,
Start with your boss. Work it up the line in your business unit.
I really doubt that anything will be gained by responding to "Dear Bob"...
Mark
|
4719.249 | having something said would be better than this silence | STAR::EVANS | | Wed Aug 07 1996 20:23 | 13 |
| RE: .248
Mark,
I did start with my boss. I brought it up to my VP. I brought it up with
Harry Copperman. I will agree that it is doubtful that anything will be
gained by responding here, but since Enrico isn't here anymore why not
take it to "Dear Bob"? I've pretty much given up any hope that the SBU
will payout any bonuses, but I'd like to see management come forward and
take the heat for their decision.
Jim
|
4719.250 | in dire need of some leadership | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | and your little dog, too! | Thu Aug 08 1996 13:52 | 44 |
| Nearly as aggravating as the slap in the face that this surprise
announcement represents is the leadership void that has followed. It's
simply astounding to me that not a single member of the Army of
Managers has the sack to stand up and tell us A) what the story is
and B) the issues facing them so we can understand what the full
situation was that lead to this highly unpopular and questionable
decision. As the newly nascent morale continues to be crushed by the
heel of deceit and broken promises, we are forced to suffer the slings
and arrows of rumor and innuendo in the silence that has come to
characterize the wake of such ill conceived management decisions. Where
is the leadership? This is a situation begging for someone to step up
to the plate and lay it on the line, yet we hear nothing. We are forced
to consider various unpalatable possibilities for this leviathan
silence.
It could be that this is the latest in a series of management gaffes
in which some fool thinks that a few pennies saved by mistreating
employees will lead to a stronger, more viable company (let's see,
examples of this include the vacation fiasco, the mileage reimbursement
fiasco, tuition reimbursement...) That these decisions were reversed or
at least tempered provides the optimistic with the thought that perhaps
management will recognize the folly of this decision and similarly
amend things in the most morale saving manner. Another possibility is
that management is simply in over their heads, sees a couple of subpar
quarters coming and simply doesn't have a better plan than raiding the
employee cookie jar. In other words, this is an act of desperation,
portending the demise of the company or at least the end of the current
management regime. Yuck. A final, and in some ways least savory
prospect is that management is not responding because they are utterly
unconcerned about anything but the financial aspects of the company
that they can see today, right this minute. In other words they just
don't care about things such as morale, efficiency and productivity.
They don't care about developing the right products for the market.
They care about this quarter, and how it will look to Wall St. I'm not
really sure which of the three scenarios represents reality, but I
strongly believe that one of them's right on. And that's sad.
Hello, Bob. We need some leadership, and we need it now. Nobody else on
your staff seems to have it in them to lead. It's up to you, because
ultimately it's your responsibility. It's time to stand up and show us
why you deserve to be in charge of a $15B enterprise. Are you there,
Bob? Do you care, Bob?
The Doctah
|
4719.251 | No "real" Plan | COPS02::JNOSTIN | | Thu Aug 08 1996 14:30 | 9 |
| Top management does not have a real plan. They simply go into the
"react mode" everytime profits are "not what was expected". The
easiest way to cut expenses is to cut people.
At a recent meeting with a VP, he stated that Digital has an employee
retention problem. Surprise, surprise. I don't think this is true for
VP's however. I see none of them leaving.
|
4719.252 | | DECCXX::WIBECAN | Get a state on it | Thu Aug 08 1996 14:33 | 8 |
| >> I don't think this is true for VP's however. I see none of them leaving.
Huh? Try these notes:
4688 INDYX::ram 1-JUL-1996 58 Enrico Pesatori resigns!
4704 HERON::KAISER 9-JUL-1996 38 Theo Wegbrans resigns?
4727 netrix.lkg.dec.com:: 16-JUL-1996 7 Larry Walker resigns
|
4719.253 | | KERNEL::FREKES | Excuse me while I scratch my butt | Thu Aug 08 1996 14:39 | 10 |
| re: .252
I think you will also see that they got pretty healthy golden
hand shakes too.
That is what really makes me angry. I could spit bricks, management are
there to ensure we have the tools to do the job. Not to get a fat
cheque when they leave.
|
4719.254 | | BHAJEE::JAERVINEN | Ora, the Old Rural Amateur | Thu Aug 08 1996 15:05 | 3 |
|
11% of our >200 VPs should be well over 22...
|
4719.255 | | RAGE::JC | Never trust a Prankster | Thu Aug 08 1996 15:24 | 60 |
| I agree:
NO LEADERSHIP
or perhaps:
INCOMPETENT LEADERSHIP
check this story out.
I was in the ISBU. about 4 wks ago, we were kicked out and the ISBU
had a downsizing (good engineers were let go and guess what? we have open
reqs!). luckily, my team suffered no downsizing. but, let me start
at the beginning.
earlier this year,a ton of POLYCENTER products were sold to CA. my
team, POLYCENTER AssetWORKS was spared and we somehow got into the ISBU.
it was a new beginning. The motto was "Think and act like a startup".
Boy was that a hoax! I changed my mail personal name to "Think and act
like Digital"! anyways, part of the deal was we had to rename AssetWORKS
to AltaVista Manager. a grunt task, most engineers would agree. but, we
did it. it was a one-shot deal; a new beginning; change the name, release
the product. so we worked to get it changed. we worked some seriously
long hours to get it changed (i remember one week when i worked past 2 AM
3 nights in a row). right when we were ready
to submit to the SSB, they said you guys have to move from TAY to LJO.
i asked my mgr to push a delay of the move up to our VP
and the answer was nope, you have to move. this boiled down to having
our product available on Jul 15 instead of the beginning of the FY. Bad
decision #1. missed 2 wks of revenue.
now, our mgmt says time for you guys to hit the road. no more ISBU. and
oh, by the way, you have to rename the product back. WHat??? another
grunt/crap task??? furthermore, our product is on hold in the ssb!! we have
something like $1,000,000++ of revenue waiting in the pipe and many PAYING
customers ready to buy, but again the VP decision is NOPE! you cannot release
until the name is changed. i'm thinking to myself: digital is in the dumper
for revenue, and we have a product that is getting moldy sitting at the SSB,
customers are ready to pay us, and the decision is do not ship!!! reason
given: no reason. you have to wonder who these people work for.... i just
cannot fathom this decision to hold the product when we have customer
READY TO PAY!! incredible.
ok, so now i (i'm the project leader, incidently) tell the team that we
have to rename. 2 attritions later, we're still renaming. it is a huge
product (16 platforms supported, 1.2M lines of code) to rename. our
best bet, most optimistic prediction is an SSB submisison at the end of
this month which will mean FRS mid-Sept. again, optimistic. more likely
end-of-sept for FCS. by that time, July, August and at least HALF of
sept have gone by, all revenue sacrifiuced because a deicsion was made
to hold the product. and finally, to further illustrate a bad decision, we'll
have to do yet another physical move from LJO to who knows. we have 100+
systems to move, reconfig the network, etc. moves really cost some serious
$$$, i would think....
pretty sad state of affairs here.
i'd love to have access to all the #s and add up the cost of all these
decisions.... the cost would probably fund a team of 15 engineers for a year!
|
4719.256 | incentive schemes
| SSMPRD::DGIBBONS | | Thu Aug 08 1996 15:30 | 14 |
| RE notes on incentives
Sounds like a communication problem in some BUs/groups. At start of Fy96 we were
told there were plans for an incentive scheme. At a later date we learned what
the targets were and even on progress to date.
Our group incentive programme is based on three goals at the end of q496:
Cost, Quality, Delivery. We have a table which shows what bonus is trigered for
over/under achievement on each goal. This will then give a bonus in the range of
0 (all underachieve by 10%) to 6% (all overchieve by 10% or more).
Oh, my group: stg2 manufacturing SBU M+D and we are being measured on how we
respond to 'our' customers (Quality and Delivery) and if we are doing it in an
effective way for the bottom line (Cost).
|
4719.257 | Lowvista | GVAADG::PERINO | A bit of serendipity | Thu Aug 08 1996 16:19 | 14 |
4719.258 | Reward performance -NOT! | NPSS::MARTIN | He was such a quiet man... | Thu Aug 08 1996 17:45 | 41 |
| --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
re .252
> Huh? Try these notes:
> 4688 INDYX::ram 1-JUL-1996 58 Enrico Pesatori resigns! ...
> 4727 netrix.lkg.dec.com:: 16-JUL-1996 7 Larry Walker resigns
re .253
> I think you will also see that they got pretty healthy golden
> hand shakes too.
I found the juxtaposition of these two VPs terribly ironic. I would, in
fact, be suprised to hear that Larry Walker left with a golden handshake.
My suspision is he left the same way the rest of us would... last paycheck
+ accrued vacation. There is a sense here in NPB that his resignation was
due, in part, to a retreat from the independence his business unit had earned.
I'm reminded of the last quarterly meeting Larry had with all of us; after
Q3s numbers were released. After only 3 quarters, we had already exceeded
our annual goals. He put up slides showing how we had taken market share
from the likes of 3Com, Bay, Cisco, etc. We were not only growing, but we
were growing faster than our competitors. Towards the end of the meeting,
he put up some slides that showed our 'revenue per employee' and 'profit
per employee'. I don't remember the numbers from that meeting but our
numbers for the whole year were:
revenue per employee = $750K
profit per employee = $96K !!!
At the end of the meeting, he was positively gushing with delight and
said that "these numbers were 'to die for'". The meeting was like a revival...
I can honestly say that the last few months here in LKG were as good as any
I can remember in my 24 years at DEC. People were motivated and focused; we
were hiring; we could actually get the tools we needed to do our job. Life
was good.
What a difference a day makes!
...
Enrico left an organization that lost $200M and left with over a $1M handshake.
Larry left an organization that put $96M into the companies coffers. Frankly,
I hope he got a golden handshake, he earned it!
|
4719.259 | | LEDDEV::BAKER | | Thu Aug 08 1996 17:49 | 2 |
| Anybody know what the industry numbers for
"revenue per employee" and "profit for employee"?
|
4719.260 | CPQ .96/share profit; dunno shares outstanding | PCBUOA::KRATZ | | Thu Aug 08 1996 18:36 | 6 |
| COMPAQ just did $4b revenue this last quarter with 17,000 full time
and 7000 contractors. The PCBU does about 1/6th their business
with about 1/6th the people, but it had to compete with the ABU
sales force and Alpha first before competing in the open market
against COMPAQ, etc.
Kratz
|
4719.261 | | CSC32::B_GOODWIN | MCI Mission Critical Support Team | Thu Aug 08 1996 18:36 | 10 |
| re :.258
It seems astonishing that we can take a high performing part of the company,
NPB. One with high productivity, high profits and high morale and turn it into a
wasteland of disgruntled employees that are starting to bail to other companies.
I hope someone one at the top does something fast before it is too late and we
lose those fine individuals. We already lost their valuable VP. I think if
nothing is done about the situation, we will know the future direction of the
NPB, it will be sold. BTW, I don't work for NPB, but I work with them and all
that I have had the pleasure of working with have been great!
|
4719.262 | | WOTVAX::UNITED::MCDONNELL | | Thu Aug 08 1996 20:28 | 20 |
| re .260
As an ex-ABU rep, let me say that pointing fingers (which is certainly
a Digital core-competency) in this manner is neither helpful, nor
accurate.
Maybe I was just lucky with my customer; their policy is-
desktop : Intel (Windows 3.1x soon to be NT)
file & print : Intel (Novell soon to be NT)
Application servers : Alpha (Unix)
Database servers : Alpha (Unix)
Last year UK ABU reps were goaled on the total revenue stream into our
customers, with the exception of service renewal contracts. We were
most certainly not goaled on what architecture we sold. Was it
different elsewhere?
John.
|
4719.263 | | PCBUOA::KRATZ | | Thu Aug 08 1996 21:31 | 8 |
| One of the big changes is that the sales force (at least here in the
U.S.) is now everyone is rewarded for selling PCBU wares.
(See the Q&A session to Palmer in 4690.60; "What are you doing to
improve the performance of the PC group?").
The UK did absolutely fantastic for the PCBU this last quarter, BTW.
K
|
4719.264 | | WOTVAX::UNITED::MCDONNELL | | Fri Aug 09 1996 07:21 | 7 |
| re -.1
And interestingly enough, in the UK we've stopped rewarding the sales
force for selling desktop/laptop PCs.
It's got a nice kind of symmetry hasn't it?
John.
|
4719.265 | Another set of problems in small subs | SAWA::CALKA | Waldemar CALKA @RPW | Fri Aug 09 1996 07:25 | 10 |
| re .262
Yes it was different here. ABU was "adviced" not to sell PC's and was
not measured on PC sales. I had an opportunity to sell 2500 PC and was
informed it will not roll-up to my goal sheet neither I will get a
bonus :-(
IBM won it.
wbc
|
4719.266 | would you buy a PC from us now? | TROOA::MSCHNEIDER | Nothing witty to say | Fri Aug 09 1996 12:39 | 10 |
| Re: Digital desktop PCs
Not a problem now ... since Gartner has advised its readers NOT to buy
Digital desktop systems (would you buy server systems from them then?).
We have managed in just a few short weeks to seriously maim our PC
division. Gee now we get credit for Intel servers just as everyone
believes we're about to abandon the PC marketplace. Should prove to
make PC sales a wild success in FY97.
;^)
|
4719.267 | Then - "DIGITAL" Whatever it takes. Now - "DIGITAL" Last one out lock the door. | STRATA::LAFOREST | RKL | Fri Aug 09 1996 13:12 | 0 |
4719.268 | industry-average revenue per employee | SUBSYS::MISTOVICH | | Fri Aug 09 1996 16:20 | 5 |
| An article I saw recently mentioned somewhere areound $350K as the
industry-average revenue per employee. The same article contained
approximately the following quote "...Digital's Storage Business Unit
achieved an enviable $1M revenue per employee..." It may also have
mentioned the $300M profit we achieved.
|
4719.269 | | PCBUOA::KRATZ | | Fri Aug 09 1996 20:26 | 19 |
| re .262
>Database servers: Alpha (Unix)
Should you want to sell Intel servers into this space, we do very
well. Here's the *fastest* shipping (400Mhz) Alpha-based server
against the *slowest* (166Mhz) Pentium Pro-based server:
TPC/C $/tpc
AlphaServer 5/400 4CPU 64 bit Unix 6056.04 223
Prioris ZX 6166 4CPU NT 5740 116
...so by bidding Alpha, your customers are paying 92% more money for
5% more performance. COMPAQ, which has similiar numbers (slightly
slower and slightly higher priced, BTW), typically ends up the eventual
victor since we don't bid the Prioris. This bid-Alpha-and-not-Intel-
and-hand-the-business-to-Compaq strategy has enabled Compaq to blow
by Digital ($4.0b vs. our $3.7b revenue last quarter).
.02 K
|
4719.270 | NT ! ONLY if you need less than 16GB !! | TRLIAN::baudr8.mko.dec.com::LAIL | Robert G. Lail | Fri Aug 09 1996 21:37 | 10 |
|
RE .269
One minor little nit here. Windows/NT has a 16GB limit on the
size of the NTFS file system. If your customer needs a database that
consumes more than 16GB of disk then NT is OUT until NT V5.0 !!
\Bob Lail
PS: NT V5.0 is not expected to ship until 1998 !!
|
4719.271 | ? | SHRCTR::PJOHNSON | aut disce, aut discede | Sat Aug 10 1996 11:21 | 2 |
| I thought the limit on NTFS was 16 *exabytes*, or something more than
16 *billion* gigabytes.
|
4719.272 | right | LEXS01::PUCHRIK | Unusable Signal | Sat Aug 10 1996 13:28 | 8 |
| 16GB = 2*10**34 bytes. Under NTFS a file can be 16EB, which is 2*10**64.
1,024MB = 1GB (Gigabyte)
1,024GB = 1TB (Terabyte)
1,024TB = 1PB (Petabyte)
1,024PB = 1EB (Exabyte)
When do you think we'll see an NT system with a Terabyte file?
|
4719.273 | | BLOFLY::lap8eth.stl.dec.com::THOMPSONS | Welcome to the Jungle | Sun Aug 11 1996 02:17 | 10 |
| > One minor little nit here. Windows/NT has a 16GB limit on the
> size of the NTFS file system. If your customer needs a database that
> consumes more than 16GB of disk then NT is OUT until NT V5.0 !!
Wow.. had better not tell my machine this.. really though, its 16 Exabytes (BIG!)
not 16GB
Cheerz
|
4719.274 | Thinking of Exchange | USPS::FPRUSS | Frank Pruss, 202-232-7347 | Sun Aug 11 1996 03:04 | 7 |
| I agree, discussion of OS's doesn't really fit here, but:
The earlier comment probably comes from the known limitiation in
Exchange of 16 Gb for any message store. I think this is an attribute
of the database for Exchange, not NTFS.
|
4719.275 | OS futures etc. | ARCANA::CONNELLY | Don't try this at home, kids! | Mon Aug 12 1996 03:37 | 25 |
|
Are we price/performance leaders in any OS other than VMS? How do we
stack up in the UNIX space? From my ill-informed vantagepoint, it
seems like there's market share that could be taken from the Suns and
HPs NOW, whereas NT is still a future (i know most people are betting
on it, but i wouldn't be surprised if it took til NT V5.0 to really
come on strong).
The UNIX server market fits the profile of departmental and small
business computing we've sold into successfully in the past. It's
a natural fit with the burgeoning Internet markets. If we can't
build volume and be price/performance leaders there, then it may be
a pipedream to expect some future NT market to save us.
And while VMS may gain some market share beyond our current installed
base, i can't see how that would approach the volumes needed to lower
our production costs for Alpha.
And if you're only worried about competing with Intel, you may be
writing off the PowerPC platform a little early. It may be looking
down at the mouth now because of its dependence on Apple to do the
volume selling, but somehow i think that will change within the
next couple of years at the very latest.
- paul
|
4719.276 | | BIGUN::chmeee::Mayne | Dag. | Mon Aug 12 1996 06:28 | 12 |
| This morning's Dilbert:
Manager to meeting: If we are to succeed, you must become change masters in an
ever-changing, change-adaptive environment.
Wally: Let me get this straight... every change seems to increase our workload
while decreasing our job security and real earnings after inflation, and the
problem is _our_ lack of flexibility?
Manager: Not entirely. There's also your bad morale.
PJDM
|
4719.277 | Great | WOTVAX::UNITED::MCDONNELL | | Mon Aug 12 1996 07:10 | 12 |
| re .269
Thanks for the input; it looks like a repost of your note in DECHIPS.
Once my customer changes their "Unix=Applications" policy, I'm sure
that we will all enjoy success selling our fine range of PC servers.
As Digital's sales force is primarily goaled on revenue, you can
imagine how much I look forward to that day :-).
Regards,
John.
|
4719.278 | Dilbert on Digital | NCMAIL::YANUSC | | Mon Aug 12 1996 13:00 | 19 |
| RE: .276
Here's a Dilbert that was in Saturday's paper. If this one doesn't
have Digital written all over it, I'm not sure what does:
Manager to Employees: "You employees are the key to our economic
success."
"Anytime we need a little stock-price boost, we
just fire another batch of you. It's like
printing money!"
"In fact, "Incompetence" has become our most
profitable product."
Employee to Manager: "Wow. It beat out "Lying to Customers."
Chuck
|
4719.279 | RE: 4719.268 | DECWET::CARRUTHERS | Life gets easier when you realize you can't have everything. | Mon Aug 12 1996 16:20 | 4 |
| Could you be more specific about which magazine you read the
information concerning revenue per employee?
Thanks
|
4719.280 | RE: .279 oops | SUBSYS::MISTOVICH | | Mon Aug 12 1996 17:01 | 7 |
| I thought I read that number in Digital News & Review "The Re-org that wouldn't
Die" (Jully 1996, p.18), but in looking up the issue/page, I don't see an
industry-average mentioned.
So I retract my statement with an apology -- either I read it somewhere else or,
after readint the article, asked someone and associated their answer with the
article. If I get a chance, I'll try and ask someone from research back here.
|
4719.281 | Change the name to Storage | GENRAL::INDERMUEHLE | Stonehenge Alignment Service | Tue Aug 13 1996 13:21 | 15 |
| re :.261
>>It seems astonishing that we can take a high performing part of the company,
>>NPB. One with high productivity, high profits and high morale and turn it
>>into a wasteland of disgruntled employees that are starting to bail to
>>other companies. I hope someone one at the top does something fast before
>>it is too late and we lose those fine individuals. We already lost their
>>valuable VP. I think if nothing is done about the situation, we will know
>>the future direction of the NPB, it will be sold. BTW, I don't work for
>>NPB, but I work with them and all that I have had the pleasure of working
>>with have been great!
The difference between this and Storage is that manufacturing is going
away. There are no disgruntled employees, just EX-employees.
|
4719.282 | | PHXSS1::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Tue Aug 13 1996 16:48 | 7 |
| | -< industry-average revenue per employee >-
this is a deceiving metric. Our revenue growth is basically flat while
the blood-letting continues. It looks good for individual BU's and for
Digital overall, but we know better.
Mike
|
4719.283 | | SHRCTR::SRINIVASAN | | Thu Aug 15 1996 12:21 | 3 |
| I heard that bonus issue is finally resolved !I also heard that
Networks group got 10%, Storage got 12% and DS got 6% .. Is it true ?
|
4719.284 | | DECWET::KOWALSKI | DECwest SMS engineering | Thu Aug 15 1996 16:06 | 11 |
| Storage employees have received a written communication
that the Corporation reconfirmed the decision to fund
the FY96 GIP to the original PAT goal. This means
a 12% payout to U.S. Storage employees, promised no
later than mid-September.
There seems to have been a significant effort by
current and former Storage managers to get DEC
to go the right thing. Well done, Storage managers!
Mark
|
4719.285 | The 7 -ates | N2DEEP::SHALLOW | Subtract L, invert W | Thu Aug 15 1996 17:43 | 87 |
|
I'd like to submit, for your critique, the following idea, which I believe
could have a very positive financial impact on Digital. This seven step
process, if implemented, could help mend the breach in employee/management
relations, and provide a viable method for identifying and resolving problem
areas.
The Repair Process
1) STIMULATE
o The employee feels like a number, an expendable item. Stimulate feelings of
self-worth and Corporate worth by "bridging the gap" between management, and
the employee, and end the frustrations of the employees who are tired of not
being heard, or having their "suggestions" lost in the void. Make available
a place where employees feel comfortable to comment, and where they know
someone is listening, willing and able to take appropriate action.
2) INVESTIGATE
o Create a notesfile (i.e. HUMAME::FIXIT), an "electronic suggestion box",
the sole purpose of which is to have a vehicle to allow the employee, with
a hands-on perspective of a particular problem, a designated place for
entering a "damage report", or a "process improvement" idea.
3) ELABORATE
o Tap into Digital's "gold mine", the most valuable resource available, the
minds of Digital's employees. Use the notesfile as an area to "brainstorm"
ideas and observations.
4) DELEGATE
o Assign a managerial task force to ensure the notes are read, and the
problem areas are addressed quickly and efficiently. Prioritize the
identified problems by severity, and bypass or eliminate current
bureaucracy (which often is the cause of the problem), and work the issue.
5) COMMUNICATE
o Follow through with corrective measures and inform the employees via the
appropriate notesfile topic. Merge the mindsets of "If it's broke, fix it",
and "If it's working, break it". Create and maintain the process of
continuous improvement. Work together with the employees, and solicit
the comments and ideas of mid-level and upper management.
6) CONCENTRATE
o Monitor the progress of individual topics and ensure a solution is found
and implemented. Accomplish the missions identified and recognized in 3-5.
7) COMPENSATE
o Encourage employee participation in a Beneficial Suggestion program with
incentives, either monetary or shares of stock, based on the financial
benefit to the Company.
The effect of the above process could eventually correct many of the problems
we are faced with as a company, and pull us together as a team. It certainly
wouldn't make matters worse. Trust in management would be improved as the
contributors are recognized, and rewarded for their extra efforts towards a
common goal: a stable company with a promising future. Who knows? Maybe Wall
St. would react quite favorably to news of such internal cooperation. The
stockholders would rejoice, and customers would take notice of our unity,
and our products and services would be sold at a greater volume.
Perhaps this has been tried before, and failed? I cannot remember in the 9
years I've worked here anything like this. Also, I would hate to see some of
the incredibly valuable suggestions and observations that have already been
entered in ::DIGITAL, and other various notesfiles get "lost in the piles"
of many other notes. This plan, if implemented, would not allow for that to
happen, as each topic would have a base note, replies to monitor progress,
and hopefully, a final resolution to the problem.
As not to loose the benefit of those employees who are unfamiliar with notes,
a mail account could be set up, and those e-mails entered into the notes, as
either a base note, or a reply to an existing topic. Awareness of the "process"
would have been communicated via the "chain of command" with e-mails, and maybe
postings on bulletin boards.
Your comments are welcome.
Bob Shallow @IVO
|
4719.286 | | NEWVAX::PAVLICEK | Zot, the Ethical Hacker | Thu Aug 15 1996 18:21 | 45 |
| re: .285
Very nice, but there is a problem.
Your suggestion requires a downward-focussed management structure (i.e.,
the emphasis is on facilitating the workers on the lowest level to produce
"product" and hence yield revenue). This is an EXCELLENT operational
model which, when properly implemented, often yields high customer and
employee satisfaction, along with substantial profits.
Unfortunately, Digital seems stuck in an upward-focussed structure
(i.e., it is an individual's responsibility to waste time sending
reports up the ladder to the levels above, thus reducing productivity
by increasing paperwork; in a downward-focussed organization, it is the
HIGHER level's job to investigate DOWN the chain of command, since his
job is to facilitate output by solving problems). I've seen pockets of
change in the last few years, mostly on the lowest levels, but Digital
still demands that the individual manage the interaction with his
manager, rather than managing the interaction with his subordinate.
In a bottom-focussed structure, a manager who is unaware of problems
below him is fired because he hasn't done his job. He actually is
charged with LOOKING for problems and UNDERSTANDING what his
subordinates are doing. He doesn't waste oodles of time filling out
endless reports for his superiors, since it is his superiors' charge to
understand what he is doing, and so on.
In a bottom-focussed organization, the only real upward reporting
requirement is the escalation of problems which need to be handled at a
higher level. Managers do not have subordinates which serve their
needs, but rather, individuals have managers which facilitate the
individual's output.
It is IMPOSSIBLE to have fiefdoms (sp?) and stovepipes in a downward-
focussed structure. Management success is measured solely in the
ability to solve problems and facilitate revenue-producing output. A
manager who has something that is "mine, not yours!" has failed, since
said manager has CREATED a problem instead of fixing them. Such a
manager has failed and is dealt with accordingly.
We don't have a bottom-focussed organization. Until we do, I doubt
we'll reach the highest goals we hope to achieve in turning this company
around.
-- Russ
|
4719.287 | Digital prefers low-volume, high-margin products? | NETCAD::SHERMAN | Steve NETCAD::Sherman DTN 226-6992, LKG1-2 near pole G17 | Thu Aug 15 1996 19:59 | 19 |
| I've been curious about why Digital hasn't always ramped up more production of
Alpha, popular notebooks, PCs and such. I've also been curious about why
Digital sometimes shuts down seemingly profitable products. I suspect that
Digital is most comfortable doing low-volume, high-margin products.
I think that this may be part of the larger problem that showed up as a
squabble over the bonus within Networks. That is, I think that folks in
Networks want and expect to compete in a high-volume, low-margin market. This
is the market their competitors are facing. Folks at Networks want to feel
they are on more or less even footing with their competitors with the bonus
being tangible evidence.
But, if Digital is more comfortable as a low-volume, high-margin company, it
may be that Digital wants Networks to come back in line with the rest of
the company. This seems more plausible to me in context with some of the
things that are happening.
Steve
|
4719.288 | | ARCANA::CONNELLY | Don't try this at home, kids! | Fri Aug 16 1996 06:30 | 16 |
|
re: .286
Boy, that one hits exactly on why i gave up on being a manager here!
And you wouldn't even have to be totally purist. If we had a span of
control of 1:20, i'd be willing to give each second level and higher
manager 3-4 of those 20 reports who would NOT manage other people but
would just deal with the "upward focus" stuff and other troubleshooting
by proxy.
Combining "downward focused" management with an "outside-in"
organization structure would give you a killer company in terms
of REAL competitiveness. Is there any company that does this??
- paul
|
4719.289 | Might be a tad harsh in places, but... | N2DEEP::SHALLOW | Subtract L, invert W | Fri Aug 16 1996 06:56 | 150 |
|
re: .286
>>Very nice, but there is a problem.
Yes there is, and there is also a solution. Problems are only a challenge.
There could be a possible answer to Digital's problem right under our nose.
The slogan "Whatever it takes" comes to mind. ;-)
>>Your suggestion requires a downward-focussed management structure (i.e.,
>>the emphasis is on facilitating the workers on the lowest level to produce
>>"product" and hence yield revenue). This is an EXCELLENT operational
>>model which, when properly implemented, often yields high customer and
>>employee satisfaction, along with substantial profits.
It seems the upward-focused structure isn't working as well as it should be.
If the "7 -ates" are an excellent operational model, and properly implemented,
CAN cause what you say, who can I send it to besides Mr. Palmer for critique?
Would you recommend I send copies to the BOD? I'd really like to see the
Company continue the turn-around initiated by Mr. Palmer, and if this does
have potential for motivating, and maintaining a company wide continuous
improvement campaign, then I'm even more motivated to get it rolling off the
drawing board and to work ASAP.
>>Unfortunately, Digital seems stuck in an upward-focussed structure
>>(i.e., it is an individual's responsibility to waste time sending
>>reports up the ladder to the levels above, thus reducing productivity
>>by increasing paperwork; in a downward-focussed organization, it is the
>>HIGHER level's job to investigate DOWN the chain of command, since his
>>job is to facilitate output by solving problems). I've seen pockets of
>>change in the last few years, mostly on the lowest levels, but Digital
>>still demands that the individual manage the interaction with his
>>manager, rather than managing the interaction with his subordinate.
Yes, I've seen this myself. Doesn't say much for the "open door" policy.
In fact, the "open door" policy we have seen has cost the Corporation
many extremely talented people over the past 9 years. If management does
decide to take into consideration my idea, one of the topics could be:
"Employees the Co-operation (sp?) need back."
>>In a bottom-focussed structure, a manager who is unaware of problems
>>below him is fired because he hasn't done his job. He actually is
>>charged with LOOKING for problems and UNDERSTANDING what his
>>subordinates are doing. He doesn't waste oodles of time filling out
>>endless reports for his superiors, since it is his superiors' charge to
>>understand what he is doing, and so on.
Some managers may be too focused on their own agendas to see the problems that
have existed, and still exist right now. Is it really considered "wasting
oodles of time" reporting problems if they ARE brought to managerial attention?
If that is their mindset, than it could explain where a problem is that needs
to be dealt with. Maybe we can somehow compromise on some areas in between the
"bottom focused" and "upward focused" mentallity, and think about "customer-
focus"? They DO fit in there somewhere, don't they?
>>In a bottom-focussed organization, the only real upward reporting
>>requirement is the escalation of problems which need to be handled at a
>>higher level. Managers do not have subordinates which serve their
>>needs, but rather, individuals have managers which facilitate the
>>individual's output.
This sounds logical. I've seen escalation of many problems over the years,
especially in emergency situations, and the problems are almost always
dealt with very quickly. Of course, the degree to which the escalation
reaches will have everything to do with how fast it is resolved. So there is
hope here. They have listened to some things in the past. But apparently
only in emergencies. Does anyone else besides me consider the morale of many
of Digital's employees an emergency? I guess some have, and you can read their
goodbyes in another string. 8*( I guess when the effects of this reaches the
customer, THEN it will be an emergency? Wait, I remember hearing something
about customers being on hold for long periods of time trying to get some
body here to solve THEIR problems... and waiting... and waiting, and waiting...
for...CALLBACKS! Then, oh, sorry, the people who used to be there for you are
no longer working here, we're trying to find someone who knows how to help
you, we'll call you back soon. Eventually, the customer will call another
vendor who WILL address their concerns as if it were an emergency. 8-( :^( %*(
>>It is IMPOSSIBLE to have fiefdoms (sp?) and stovepipes in a downward-
>>focussed structure. Management success is measured solely in the
>>ability to solve problems and facilitate revenue-producing output. A
>>manager who has something that is "mine, not yours!" has failed, since
>>said manager has CREATED a problem instead of fixing them. Such a
>>manager has failed and is dealt with accordingly.
Is that like Barney Fife-doms? ;-) I'm glad we never hired him as a VP! Or did
we, but he was using an alias? %^} Explain what you mean by stovepipes, if you
would please? That's a new one for me. Is there something WRONG with dealing
with a manager who has failed? I don't personally know of any who have, or
remember hearing of any who HAVE been dealt with. They must all be doing a
remarkable job, to have performed so well, that the axe has not found them.
>>We don't have a bottom-focussed organization. Until we do, I doubt
>>we'll reach the highest goals we hope to achieve in turning this company
>>around.
Again, Digital should be, and already is in many ways, a "customer-focused"
organization. Fix the things that are in the way of that in the areas we, as
a Company, can recognize as not "customer-focused". I think once the Company
accomplishes that, many of the problems we can see will fade away. We would
find ourselves too busy with business to be playing politics, unless it was
a revenue-generating reason for doing such. Could this be possible???
I have heard some talk about a union. I've worked in a union shop before, and
had to pay initiation fees, and then weekly dues. What we got for our money
was yet another level of "we'll get this to management" good ol boys, who sat
around waiting for something to happen to go and negotiate with. Things do
eventually get fixed but before that happens here, I'd like to see the "unity
of co-operation" get a chance. It could cost much less in the long run, for
all concerned.
Oh and marketing...marketing... yoo-hoo marketing??? Oh sorry, I thought you
were sleeping. Here's an idea for you. Get a bunch of the Olympic coverage;
news articles, commentator clips, WHATEVER you can find that has "IBM isn't
working right now" and throw it into a commercial that ends with something
like...
"That wouldn't have happened if they had been using an Alpha system, from
Digital" Then use footage from, perhaps, a Demo Center machine, cranking
out data at the speed of light, or flashing multiple programs with lots of
colors blinking at a high rate of speed, or SOMETHING!!! And fade to the
ending line... Digital - Whatever it takes... to make it work right for YOU!
Hey, Pepsi does it to Coke, Coke does it to Pepsi. And I can hardly tell the
difference in THEIR products. There is a MAJOR difference in Alpha products,
compared to "the other brand". Let's make this secret known. Stealth marketing
isn't working. And word of mouth hasn't sounded good in a while. You got to
get in their face and tell them what we have! And tell them it's not only good,
it's Grrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrreat! (Sorry Tony ;-) It's ok to brag when you've got
the best there is. I'm really tired of hearing things like, "Oh, you work
for Digital eh? On, NOT Western Digital? Do you make those watches?"
Or maybe get Tom Hanks to come over and say: "Life is like a box with Alpha,
and YOU DO know what you're going to get! Speed, accuracy, no floating point
decimal errors, AND a commitment to service that you won't find anywhere else".
But then, we'll have to ask him to not say that why you won't find it anywhere
else is those companies that don't acknowledge their customers emergencies as
such aren't around anymore.
Ok, maybe that IS a little harsh... I apologize. Those who are left DO try to
do the best they can with what they have available (hey can I borrow a pencil
to write this customer complaint with please, I can't order any due to the
freeze) Oh sorry, we don't need pencils, as we have all these wonderful and
marvelous systems that you can enter the complaint into, and will take care of
the problem without any people needed for customer interaction. Oh, we don't?
Well then, perhaps we could get John Cleese for a commercial? He does do
very interesting Corporate training videos, doesn't he? Then again, maybe
he wouldn't be interested. Guess we won't find out unless someone asks?
Bob
|
4719.290 | Flat vs Bulky org. | NETRIX::"dlee@batman.hgo.dec.com" | | Fri Aug 16 1996 11:48 | 18 |
| Well said on the "upward-focused" vs "downward-focused".
I think if the no. of layers of mgmt is bulky then this would have an
effect. If the no. of layers is flat, then it does not matter much.
Image the following structure:
Troops - Func Mgr -- Reg. Mgr/Dir -- Div. Mgr/VP -- CEO
Because of its flat structure, everyone knows what's happening in the
company and this allows everyone to focus the outside competition.
They are agile and respond to the market like a snake. This is the
model of the companies in 2000, not IBM and HP. Do you know in Sun 6
directors are sharing an adminstrator. This will never happen in HP,
IBM or Digital.
There are "big" companies organised like this. An example is
Sun (7B) and Compaq (14B).
[Posted by WWW Notes gateway]
|
4719.291 | | NETCAD::BRANAM | Steve, Hub Products Engineering, LKG2-2, DTN 226-6043 | Fri Aug 16 1996 13:35 | 14 |
| Re .287 -
> I think that this may be part of the larger problem that showed up as a
> squabble over the bonus within Networks. That is, I think that folks in
> Networks want and expect to compete in a high-volume, low-margin market. This
> is the market their competitors are facing. Folks at Networks want to feel
> they are on more or less even footing with their competitors with the bonus
> being tangible evidence.
It's really a lot simpler than that, which should have been blindingly obvious
beforehand to whoever made the decision to cut back on the bonus. You promise
people money, they are going to expect it to be paid. Period. It's not even a
question of principles or ethics. You just don't screw around with the money you
have promised to people. There is no simpler way to piss people off.
|
4719.292 | | KERNEL::FREKES | Excuse me while I scratch my butt | Fri Aug 16 1996 13:38 | 1 |
| Could not have put it better myslef, I second that!!!
|
4719.293 | | ARCANA::CONNELLY | Don't try this at home, kids! | Sat Aug 17 1996 06:29 | 38 |
|
re: .290
>Well said on the "upward-focused" vs "downward-focused".
>
>I think if the no. of layers of mgmt is bulky then this would have an
>effect. If the no. of layers is flat, then it does not matter much.
That's why span of control is important. With a 1:20 span of control,
even if 4 of those 20 were not people managers (but consultants or
troubleshooters or whatever), you could have an 87000 person company
with only 3 layers of management between the worker bees at the
bottom and the president of the company. And 5% of the employees
would be people who had other people reporting to them, i.e., managers.
Whereas i think we're closer to 10%. The Japanese supposedly are
able to do this, so i wonder why we can't.
I always thought flattening the hierarchy and increasing span of
control should have been one of the first options looked at when
we realized we had to downsize and reduce costs. But then, without
the downward focused management culture, it's easy to see why this
was resisted. The two sort of go hand in hand.
Having an "outside-in" organization where the customer sees ONE
company and all the product and support groups stack up behind
the outer customer interface layer, mostly invisible to the customer,
also offers a lot of opportunities to reduce redundancy and let
the customer drive your business (without the notion of "business
units" getting in the way of customer satisfaction or becoming an
internal organizing principle that creates anti-customer behaviors
--like pricing models that artificially support uncompetitive
technologies and solutions, and try to force them down the
customer's throat). And while "everybody does marketing" in an
organization like that (they really MUST to stay employed!), the
marketing that drives overall company behavior is in the outside
layer that deals with customers every day, not in the back room.
- paul
|
4719.294 | A moment of pondering | N2DEEP::SHALLOW | Titus 3:2 | Sun Aug 18 1996 06:05 | 31 |
|
Before this gets deeper, I need to say something. When I wrote the concept
in .285, it was an idea, inspired by a genuine concern for my co-workers,
with the hope if the "7 -ates" were implemented, it could possibly deter
management from further cuts of a very valuable resource, some of whom are
my friends, some of whom I've met, and some, whom I have yet to meet. I had
no idea at that time of any possible negative repercussions, and was not
knowingly suggesting a radical change to the existing management structure.
However, in my defence of it thus far, I see that may be necessary, if indeed
the plan is considered for implementation. And to me, if that is the only
arguement offered against it, I think of a line from Star Trek's Mr. Spock,
"The needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few, or the one."
Because I believe strongly in the concept, despite the as yet unknown changes
it could cause, I am prepared to continue to defend it. I'm a reasonable man,
and if someone can convince me why it won't work, I'll back off. I'm sure there
are many things I don't understand about managerial principles, and because of
that, the unknown isn't factored into my own method of thinking. That is one
of the reasons I have submitted it here in this string, to allow for the more
educated minds than my own to punch holes in it. At present, I am confident
it is "bulletproof". Show me it isn't, then I'll go back to the drawing board.
In defending this, at some point, I may have to stop "pulling punches", get
"down and dirty", and cease alluding, or "beating around the bush" about views
which may come as a result of the arguements given. I don't desire to step on
anyones toes, nor do I desire to rattle cages. I'm not here to make enemies,
only to offer something I think could be a benefit to the Company. However,
if in this defence, things are brought to light, that have been hidden in the
darkness, and are proven to be wrong, don't expect an apology from me.
Bob
|
4719.295 | I believe we agree in essence | NEWVAX::PAVLICEK | Zot, the Ethical Hacker | Mon Aug 19 1996 02:25 | 39 |
| re: .289
I don't have time for a full reply, but let me state quickly that I
think we agree on most issues. I refrain from using the term
"customer focused", since it is used largely as a buzzword in certain
management circles by individuals who clearly have little comprehension
of the depth of that term. "Bottom focused" _IS_ truly "customer
focused" since you are concentrating on producing the goods and services
that are consumed by customers and the profit that is (or is not)
created thereby.
My point is that your points are good, but if they are put into
practice without first creating a "bottom focused" business theory,
they will likely fail. Why? Because the current corporate environment
is heading the opposite direction. If we want the 7-ates to succeed,
it is best to CHANGE THE CORPORATE FOCUS FIRST, thus creating the
environment where the 7-ates can not only survive, but thrive.
Creating "customer-focused" initiatives in Digital is a bit like trying
to raise goldfish in the Sahara Desert. With great care, you might get
small pockets of fish to survive a little while, but you'd still be
better off trying to implement the project in a suitable environment
with abundant freshwater streams and lakes. So, my suggestion is to
transform Digital to a truly "bottom focused" organization first, so
directives like the 7-ates have a chance for REAL success.
-- Russ
BTW, regarding "stovepipes": just ask any of the old goats around the
office (if any are left, that is). Stovepipes refer to the excessive
vertical reporting structure where an individual in group A can't go to
an individual in group B and get necessary information/equipment/
assistance/etc. without involving senior VPs and the like. It's the
logical conclusion of an upward-focused organization: the organization
is focused on the desires of the senior manager, rather than the needs
of the customers, so customer needs are only addressed IFF they serve
the needs of the senior manager. A customer issue in group A which
requires the cooperation of group B is likely to go unanswered since it
probably does not meet the perceived needs of the management of group B.
|
4719.296 | Season of Change | N2DEEP::SHALLOW | Ecclesiastes 3:1 | Mon Aug 19 1996 05:03 | 12 |
| Hi Russ,
I agree with you. This is going to take a bit of time, and I have
some ideas that may help, but I still don't know if they want to hear
anymore from me at this point. Whether it's up, or down focused, to not
be customer-focused is a mystery to me, if they expect to remain in the
arena. Buzzword or not, it's critical to be that way, or else.
Thanks for the definition of stovepipe.
Bob
|
4719.297 | No mutual respect or trust anymore... | STAR::DIPIRRO | | Mon Aug 19 1996 15:19 | 66 |
| Someone mentioned in another thread that BP didn't know anything
about the bonus fiasco until after it blew up in managements' faces. He
may very well be telling the truth, which is sad, and it's a symptom of
the organizational structure he's created, which makes him at least
partly responsible.
There are about the same number of employees or less now than when
I started with the company in '82. The number of managers between me
and the president now is 2-3 times as long as it was back then, with
about half a dozen VPs in a row. Obviously, many employees find this
pretty silly and inefficient. It creates other problems as well.
What skills does it take to be successful as a middle manager at
Digital, and what gets you promoted to VP? One skill appears to be the
ability to manage up while playing a shell game with your budget and
people below. In other words, it's a talent for justifying your
ever-increasing budget and employee population as you grow your empire.
So now we have 2-3 times as many of these experts between the grunts
and the president of the company. Guess what happens when budgets get
really tight.
The lowest level of manager justifies his people and budget by
telling his boss what he wants to hear, like, "They're all doing
maintenance, and we must maintain this product!" He reports to his boss
that 60% of his people are doing maintenance and the remaining 40% are
working on new features X, Y, and Z which are part of a commitment in
our plan of record. And up it goes, and by the time it gets to BP, he's
hearing that he can't afford to give up any people, that he needs
millions more for budgets just to sustain the existing products, plus
money for the bonuses that had been promised, plus money for lots of
other things you can imagine.
His recourse in this confusion is to ask his staff to each go off
and cut some percentage, and back down it goes to the bottom level
again, where a manager of 10 people is forced to give up one, even
though that work could be absolutely critical to the company's success.
Meanwhile, BP has been managing "up" as well, by trying to appeal
to the board, stockholders, the press, and key customers. Until a few
recent glimpses of him interacting with the employees (like here in
this NOTEs file), he has been aloof, distant, and appears to be trying
to run the company from Mount Olympus, casting down lightning bolts
when things don't turn out the way he'd like.
I think the bonus fiasco "troubled him deeply" for a couple of
reasons. First, because he didn't know about it! Second, because it
dawned on him just how important employee morale is to turning the
company around. You will only fail with 60,000 employees who don't give
a crap.
I've heard many people say now that he and the SLT don't care if
the company succeeds or fails. They'll still jump ship rich beyond the
wildest dreams of most of us. That's a real morale booster for lots of
us.
I think employees need to see a few things at this point to get
back on track. We need to see Bob hop down from Mount Olympus and get
his hands dirty (and his hair mussed). See what's REALLY going on at
the lowest levels of the company. We need to see him (and the SLT) have
a larger stake in the success (or failure) of the company by linking
its performance with theirs, financially. We need a flatter and less
hierarchical organizational structure where it's easier for him to see
what's going on. If the employees are the valuable resource he always
claims they are in his speeches, it's really about time that they are
treated that way, with consistency and respect, to rebuild some sense
of mutual trust which doesn't exist anymore.
Most people I know don't even bother going to Bob's DVN broadcasts
anymore. The prepared speeches have gotten old. With the lack of trust,
people feel the Q&A's are manipulative and simply propaganda. Without
some action by BP and his staff which seems driven to make this company
successful, people will continue to feel that they are only after their
own personal gains at the expense of the rest of us. And as long as
that feeling persists, this process of slowly bleeding to death will
continue as we follow the Wang business model into oblivion.
|
4719.298 | Get on that, would you Bob?!?! | KAOM25::WALL | DEC Is Digital | Mon Aug 19 1996 15:30 | 20 |
| re .293
Interesting concept.
OK. Each level has 20 reports, of which 16 have further reports.
Bob
20 Top VP's
320 VP (16 Top VP's each with 20 reports)
5120 MGR (256 VP's each with 20 reports)
81920 Us (4096 MGR eack with 20 reports)
87381 total
Well, for starters we don't have enough VP's....8^)
|
4719.299 | Minor adjustment to the numbers justifies exactly what we're doing | TOLKIN::KING | | Mon Aug 19 1996 16:53 | 21 |
| re .298's response to .293
To be more realistic, start with closer to approximately how many people
Bob has/should have reporting to him. Then assume the 16/20 reporting
relationship. (I personally think a CEO should not have a staff of 20, not
with the BOD and external constituencies to deal with as well).
1 BP
14 SVPs and other BP direct reports
200 VPs (10 SVPs each with 20 reports)
3200 MGR (160 VP's each with 20 reports)
51200 Us (2560 MGR each with 20 reports)
54615 Total
Let's see...we ended FY96 with between 59-60K employees, less 7K TFSO/Attrits,
add some strategic hires. We're right on target, even at the VP level.
|
4719.300 | huh? | MSBCS::SCHNEIDER | individually twisted | Mon Aug 19 1996 17:32 | 11 |
| I don't detect that .299 is tongue in cheek, so I feel obliged to
challenge it. We are hardly right on target, considering that in fact
we have something like twice as many layers of hierarchical management
as you depict.
Probably many of us could accept a figure of about 200 VPs, if it
weren't for the monstrous excess of layers. It is quite common for
managment chains to include 4 layers of VPs these days, on top of
another 4 or so layers of sub-VPs.
Chuck
|
4719.301 | Perhaps HR could adopt the 7-ates? | N2DEEP::SHALLOW | Deeper than the name implies | Tue Aug 20 1996 04:36 | 80 |
4719.301 | Perhaps HR could adopt the 7-ates? | N2DEEP::SHALLOW | Deeper than the name implies | Tue Aug 20 1996 05:07 | 81 |
|
After reading through some of the string "What's important to you", it dawned
on me that perhaps comments should be solicited on another topic, "What's
important to Digital?" Rather than start another topic, I've decided to put
some comments in this string, as they are relevant in the employees attempts
to communicate to upper management, concepts that can "make a difference" in
the place we are now, if they are willing to listen.
THE CUSTOMER
This should be the primary concern to the Company, as the customer pays the
bills, buys the tools with which to make us effective, and pays the salaries
of those who use the tools. Basically, without the customer, we would not
exist.
What is the customers perception of Digital at this moment? From what I hear,
they are worried about whether or not we can hold what structure remains
together. What does this do to potential customers, or "new business"? If
they hear about our products, they are aware "Digital has it now". If they do
their homework, and they'll find other vendors are catching up in technology,
and according to some benchmarks, have surpassed us. What is important to
customers beyond product reliabilty and technological excellence? The track
record integrity of those backing the product! Do they mean what they say?
Can we depend on them to live up to their word?
The press seems to takes much pleasure in telling the public of bad news. It
is their job, and they work hard at it. Is what the customer hears about us
important? You bet it is! With the recent press release of Digital's handling
of the bonus problem, the integrity of the Company is really being brought
to the forefront. Do they wonder, "If Digital won't be honest and equitable
with their own employees, WHAT makes me think they will be with me"?
THE EMPLOYEE
This should be the secondary concern to the Company. The employee is front
line of defence, and attack, in the strategy to remain competitive in the
market. When potential new business calls the 800 number, who answers the
phone? When they get through, who is it they will talk to? When they come to
a Digital office, to "make a deal" who greets them? When they walk past
the receptionist, who will they meet with? Who are the people that go out and
try to create business opportunities? When products and services are sold,
who is it that will answer the phones in a timely manner, or come out to help
them resolve THEIR problems?
What is the perception to the customer of the employee of Digital? If they
believe the press (and believe me, they do!), they see a group of people that
are under a great deal of stress for numerous reaasons, and are frustrated
with the very Company they work for. Are these the kind of people the customer
needs to see coming into their environment, with a frown, or a scowl, on their
faces? Does the customer think, "Gee, I wonder if they can do the job I need
them to with all their problems? I wonder if Jim will stay around, or if next
time, Dave will come out to help us, or will it be a temp?"
CHANGE
This is a constant challenge, which management is handling extremely well in
many areas. Due to lack of proper information, I can't make comments on other
areas that others see need change, or how many of them are already undergoing
change by management, unknown to us. The change I seek is management taking
advantage of the collective intelligence of the community, that believe they
can contribute to further progress in the improvement of the Company.
In talking with local employees of various levels and skills, I shared with
them the "7 -ates" for their critique. All whom I have talked with think it is
a great idea. One manager I spoke with told me the only thing he saw missing
was I left step 6 open ended, in regard to to a set time frame for closure.
Rather than repost the entire plan, insert the sentence; If at all possible,
set a deadline for the problem to be resolved., between the existing two
sentences there now.
Another co-worker stated he thought it was a similar model of what HR used to
be, prior to the now in force PSN, where you can leave a message, and someone
will get back to you, sometime. No one can hold what remains of HR responsible
not being sufficiently staffed, but I can suggest they could use the "7 -ates"
for a tool for effectively communicating problems through the chain of command.
A tool where accountability is covered on both ends of the spectrum, from start
to finish. Could add credibility the the term "Human resources". And to the
motto I have seen on advertising sticky pads, "Answers, not excuses". Or
seen somewhere else, "Putting imagination to work". Or "Whatever it takes"
Bob
|
4719.302 | | ARCANA::CONNELLY | Don't try this at home, kids! | Tue Aug 20 1996 05:12 | 29 |
|
re: .299
>Let's see...we ended FY96 with between 59-60K employees, less 7K TFSO/Attrits,
>add some strategic hires. We're right on target, even at the VP level.
It's not clear to me that everyone above the level of my manager needs to
be a VP. Maybe some of those folks in selected organizations where a
title is needed to wow the customers/government/etc., but realistically
the percentage of those folks who need the title should be no more than at
most 25%-30% of the "middle" managers. So that would be in the 50-65 VP
range (sounds like more than enough to me;-)). The next question would be
how many managers do we have--not people who have "manager" in their title
(since that includes a folks with no direct reports but with titles like
"business process manager" or something), but people who have other
people reporting to them. Only Personnel could tell you for sure (and
they most likely wouldn't), but my guess would be closer to 10% of the
employee population rather than 5%. Hence the extra levels we see betwen
ourselves at the bottom and Palmer at the top.
I'd have to look around for references, but the 1:20 ratio may even be
conservative for some Japanese companies. I have no idea how lavish
they are in bestowing the title of VP on middle managers. It has been
said, though, that the salary multiplier for their highest versus lowest
paid employees is less than what we see in this country. And we're
both bastions of capitalism (albeit with substantial government collusion
in various markets), so the difference is not one of economic ideologies.
- paul
|
4719.303 | Some action... | AZUR::LANGENSTEIN | Hubert Langensteiner, @VBE | Tue Aug 20 1996 07:23 | 67 |
| From: NAME: Digital Video Network <DVN@A1@SALES@PKO>
To: See Below
From: Jim Johnson @MSO, DTN 223-9230, 223-9319
Digital Chairman, Bob Palmer, will present his quarterly Employee Message
via Digital Video Network, August 21, 1996, at 3:00pm EDT.
The FY'97 Q1 Employee Forum will originate from the Digital site in Greenbelt,
MD. The program will last approximately 1 hour. If you have the opportunity
to watch, please fill out the attached questionnaire.
BOB PALMER's Q1 EMPLOYEE FORUM of August 21st 1996
===========================================================================
Please indicate your organization:
O Digital Semiconductor O ABU O Advanced Technology Group
O Components & Peripherals O SBU O CIO, OMS, Quality
O Storage & Subsystems O MCS O HRO
O Networks Components O NBU O Other
O Communications O PC BU Please specify...........
Please specify your 3 letter Location Code ... ... ...
==========================================================================
Please circle a number:
Strongly Strongly
1. After viewing this broadcast, I am more Agree Disagree
confident that senior management has a
realistic understanding of the company's
major problems: 5, 4, 3, 2, 1
2. After Viewing this broadcast, I am more
confident that senior management is
committed to fixing the major problems
the company faces: 5, 4, 3, 2, 1
3. After viewing this broadcast, I am more
confident that management is committed
to rebuilding employee morale & trust: 5, 4, 3, 2, 1
4. After viewing this broadcast, I am more
confident that management is committed to
taking the steps needed to improve customer
satisfaction and loyalty: 5, 4, 3, 2, 1
5. After viewing this broadcast, I am more
confident that Digital is positioned
to return to profitability in FY97: 5, 4, 3, 2, 1
6. After viewing this broadcast, I am more
confident that Digital's corporate strategy
is a solid foundation for sustained growth
and profitability: 5, 4, 3, 2, 1
7. What I liked most/least about this program:
8. My overall impression of this broadcast was:
Excellent, Very Good, Good, Fair, Poor. Why?............
===========================================================================
Please fax this filled-in form to DTN: 821-4807
or E-mail to: DVN Feedback @GEO, by August 28th at latest. Thank you.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
To Distribution List:
|
4719.304 | You have a friend | HERON::KAISER | | Wed Aug 21 1996 14:22 | 5 |
| From the transcript of Bob's Q1 Employee Forum, Bob speaking of himself:
"[A]ll employees have a friend at the top of the corporation...."
___Pete
|
4719.305 | It's a wonderful day in the neighborhood! | STAR::DIPIRRO | | Wed Aug 21 1996 14:42 | 5 |
| He didn't say anything about a thousand points of light, did he?
Looks like we're working for a kinder, gentler Digital now. That's
nice. I feel so warm and fuzzy, I could just scream! I wonder if my new
friend would let me borrow a few bucks...I haven't seen my bonus. So
I'm a little short (and no short jokes!)...
|
4719.306 | I feel your pain | COPS01::kiji.cop.dec.com::skinner | | Wed Aug 21 1996 14:47 | 4 |
| At the taping of the DVN last week, Bob did say "I feel your pain" regarding
the layoffs.
Jay
|
4719.307 | | STAR::KLEINSORGE | Fred Kleinsorge | Wed Aug 21 1996 15:00 | 7 |
| >At the taping of the DVN last week, Bob did say "I feel your pain"
>regarding the layoffs.
No, he doesn't. If he did, he might understand why there is no
trust, faith, or loyalty left in the ranks. Why nobody down here
believes that the pain is shared many levels up.
|
4719.308 | | NOVA05::BERGER | | Wed Aug 21 1996 17:20 | 11 |
| > >At the taping of the DVN last week, Bob did say "I feel your pain"
> >regarding the layoffs.
>
> No, he doesn't. If he did, he might understand why there is no
> trust, faith, or loyalty left in the ranks. Why nobody down here
> believes that the pain is shared many levels up.
Hmmm, maybe he meant he was feeling the heat from the BOD and ready to
open his golden parachute ??
|
4719.309 | | PADC::KOLLING | Karen | Wed Aug 21 1996 18:34 | 35 |
| I called General Electric's "Answer Center" 800 number this morning.
It took about a minute before a human being, knowledgable and
intelligent, answered. She could have scheduled a service appointment
for today, but a few minutes discussion turned up a way around a
problem I was having and allowed me to postpone the service call
indefinitely.
From past experience, this is typical. I believe they even have
one of nearly all their products right at the Answer Center
facility(ies?) for the customer rep to refer to. Additionally if
a question is beyond his or her expertise, genuine technicians are
also available there for phone discussions.
This is a 24 hour a day, 7 day a week free service.
Guess which manufacturer's products I buy when my household's
appliances finally wear out?
A conmparison of GE's and DEC's bottom lines and stock prices are
of interest.
Unlike when a customer calls Digital, the dreaded words "Your call is
important to us [please stay on hold for 20 minutes to an hour, or
work your way thru 3 levels of menus only to find out we're currently
closed or to leave a message which isn't returned]" are never heard
when you call the GE Answer Center.
Believe it of not, some of the useless former employees Bob referred to
in his Fortune interview comments used to provide high quality Digital
service to customers.
Not to mention the fact that a non-trivial number of those employees
have been replaced by contract workers.
|
4719.310 | I'm amazed that someone could make that statement. | PCBUOA::WHITEC | Parrot_Trooper | Wed Aug 21 1996 18:41 | 17 |
|
I also agree, NO HE DOESN'T.....
But Bob, if you really want to, then GIVE BACK all the hundreds of
thousands in incremental salaries since you started as CEO, take away
all your preferred stock options, and DON'T GET A RAISE for four years
doing all the work you used to do and then some.
Then you 'might' just be able to feel the pain, a little.
Don't patronize us in addition to insulting our intellegence.
We're NOT STUPID.......Just very patient and some of us even still
a little loyal. But that's dwindling every day.
Let's face it, if the trenchies wanted just money, and didn't care
about loyalty, then you'd be president of the NOTHING EQUIPMENT CORP.
cw
|
4719.311 | Bob's answer on customer loyalty | NQOS01::s_coghill.dyo.dec.com::S_Coghill | Luke 14:28 | Wed Aug 21 1996 19:59 | 161 |
| The Question:
I noticed on your last slide that customer loyalty is a
big issue, as well it should be. The announcement that
we had about Q4 had in it one of the biggest customer
loyalty-killers I've seen in many years out in the field.
The day that the Q4 numbers came out, my customer heard
about it. It took me maybe three minute to allay his
fears. Everything was great. The next day, he heard
about layoffs. He had fear in his eyes. He was already
dismantling plans to buy more Alphas. I had to work with
him probably for a couple of days to get everything back
on track again. The following week, I was at a global
tele-medicine conference. A number of customers came up
to me there and the only thing they were talking about
is, "We can't get the customer service reps out to fix
our machines when we need them. We're having a hard time
getting through to your telephone support. We're having
a hard time tracking down our sales reps. And now you're
cutting people. This means pain for us." And customer
loyalty was taking a nose dive like one of the very few
times I can think of in the last decade working out in
the field. What are we going to do to prevent the next
announcement from deep-sixing things even worse in this
regard?
Bob's Answer:
It's a very good question and I'm glad you raised it for a number
of issues. One is, I couldn't agree more with your observation. Think
about that observation you just made. You can be sure that the last
thing the CEO wanted to approve was doing that restructuring reserve.
That's the last thing I needed in my life. The last thing. As a
person who has empathy for human beings -- I have been an employee all
of my career. I started at the bottom. I did not inherit this job by
birthright. I came up through exactly as you're doing, through the
structure. I feel the pain of these layoffs. And I am personally
bearing that responsibility. I don't like it. If I could have avoided
it, I would have found a way to avoid it.
On the other hand, the customers also want us to be competitive,
and we are not. So, as I said, it's unavoidable. Your question is, what
do we do about it? We've got to get it behind us as quickly as
possible. We've got to try to make sure that we don't ever have to do
it again.
But even so, we've come so far. The restructurings that we took
before were equally as devastating. You may not remember them, but,
boy, I remember 'em. They were equally as devastating and they were
much larger. When we talked about a downsizing of 20,000 people in one
year, that was really hard for you to overcome. But you did it. And I
congratulate you on staying in there and explaining to the customers
how we're going to get beyond it.
You also had a part of your question about support for the
customer. Yesterday I became acquainted with the fact that we receive
in the United States alone 75,000 to 80,000 phone calls a month from a
customer or a partner, which is 70,000 opportunities to irritate the
hell out of them, which is largely what we do because we don't have
software and technology that enables us to rapidly move that customer
with whatever question he or she has, or that partner or that sales
executive, to the place to get the answer efficiently. We don't
capture the question, the data, and build a database that is rich with
information. But I can tell you, we have been investing for more than
nine months to fix it. The rollout of the fix in the United States, the
beta test, is scheduled for Oct. 14. By November, we'll have it
de-bugged and flying and it is going to be dynamite. I've gone through
a review of it. We've spent a lot of money and a lot of energy and I
am really excited about what it's going to improve in terms of our
ability to handle those calls and distinguish ourselves, differentiate
ourselves on service.
A very important point that Harry Copperman observed that I
wholeheartedly support is that we've been a little bit spoiled in the
sense that there's no question anymore anywhere that Alpha has the
highest performance, that our platforms are the benchmark, that
everybody's trying to see, well, my database would run good too if I
could just get it on Alpha. We've won that. I don't know if that's
sustainable or not. In the real world, you've got to expect that
eventually the competition is going to close some of those gaps. We
have to differentiate ourselves not only on technology but on service.
It's a call handling and database collection system. Then we'll
make the data available to you and we can slice and dice and crunch
[the numbers]. It's running on two of our 8000 series [machines], two
TurboLasers, lots of memory. We're going to log every one of those
calls. We're going to capture all of that data and we're going to be
able to analyze the patterns and the buying and the questions. And
we're going to use that to drive our marketing and our engineering.
This will be a very different Digital when we get that
implemented. It's not 10 years from now, it's October. Shortly
thereafter, that system will be rolled out in Europe and Asia Pacific.
This is a big deal. This is one of those areas where I am investing.
I'm investing to make your life easier and to work on improving that
customer satisfaction and loyalty.
The other issue is, we are not having substantial reductions in
those support services that you're talking about. We're looking at
substantial reductions in overhead functions in layers of management
that may not be there to effectively help you. We've got to reduce the
number of layers in our company. We've got to increase the span of
management. We have to empower employees so that they don't need as
much day-to-day management, that they feel comfortable within some
defined boundaries of being self-managing.
Empowering employees, reducing the amount of overhead and
infrastructure -- that's where the bulk of this seven thousand's got to
come from. So these are the things we're working on to try and solve
that problem. In the meantime, you've got to overcome that.
Q1 will be 'close'
Now I know someone's waiting to ask a question, but I want to say
one thing, and then I'll get to your question. We don't need another
headache like the one I just gave you. You don't need that. But I can
tell you, we can create one real quick if we have a loss in Q1. Q1 is
tough for us. It just happens that for whatever reason, we chose to
start our fiscal years with the weakest quarter worldwide for the
computer information technology business. It [will] cost me a lot of
money to change that and I can't afford it, so we're stuck with our
fiscal year starting in July.
As many of you know, most of the industrialized world seems to
take vacations in July and August. In particular, the Europeans take a
lot of vacation time during that time and [so] a lot of your ability to
get orders and to deliver goes away. So you don't have a true 13-week
quarter in Europe or in the United States and in many other areas in
the world. Yet our expenses have a 13-week reality.
It's going to be tough in Q1. I can't tell you, standing here,
that we'll be in the black. I can tell you with confidence that we
have that opportunity. It's close. It depends on you and your
colleagues around the world to get the sales and to get the sales for
delivery this quarter. If we can stay in the black -- even two pennies
in the black -- you won't have that headache. You won't have to spend
your valuable time overcoming, "Yes, I know we lost money in Q1 but
we're gonna fix it in Q2." That's valuable time that's wasted.
It's true, even if happens that we lose money in Q1, we will
overcome it in Q2. But it's a waste of your energy. It's another
hurdle. You don't need that aggravation. Now I can't fix that one for
you. This is out in the field. If there's something I can do to help
you close business, let me know. I'll help. Frequently Jim [O'Neil]
does [ask] and I think Jim, if he were standing here, would say I've
never turned him down. I'll help; other executives will help. But we
all know that typically, you know, the big shot walks in and closes the
thing with a handshake, [but] you've done all the work. There's no
illusion on my part about that, OK? So, there's very little I can
really do except try to get a structure so you can succeed.
We need to make Q1. Please, please, work as hard as you can
individually; make your number. At the end of the day, the answer to
your question is we have to put up good numbers. Good products, good
services, good speeches, good people, if you don't put up good numbers,
are not a compelling story. We've got all of the other. We need good
numbers. I believe in '97 we can deliver them, but Q1 is clearly going
to be the biggest challenge.
I'm sorry it's such a long answer to the question. I obviously
worked in several other things in mind, but now I can take your
question.
|
4719.312 | Please, next quarter in ZKO ? | STAR::PARKE | True Engineers Combat Obfuscation | Wed Aug 21 1996 20:21 | 10 |
| Dear Bob,
How about holding your next DVN Quarterly in ZKO, so we can hear
you. The first half of the DVN was muffled and was obliterated each
time they showed one of your slides. (Perhaps we TFSOed the audio
technician?)
I'm also sure there are engineers with questions, after all we
create what they sell in the field.
|
4719.313 | Call centre for pre-sales only | TROOA::RJUNEAU | | Thu Aug 22 1996 14:02 | 9 |
| RE .311:
In the Q&A session in SHR after the DVN, John Rando told us that the
Call Centre described by BP in the DVN is only for pre-sales calls.
He also made comments about how millions had been spent over the
last few years on unimplemented systemsto improve our customer
service... millions he wishes he had now.
|
4719.314 | Lies, Damn Lies and etc. | JULIET::ROYER | Intergalactic mind trip, on my Visa Card. | Thu Aug 22 1996 14:54 | 17 |
| Is that the same John Rando who shot the CSC by telling the field that
there was no support center? Then he refused to fund the support
center and that caused the layoffs there, followed by the fact that
when you, an engineer who calls for support, to have to wait for 20-30
minutes... and then be told there is no one there to help you?
I think John Rando has "saved" Digital quite enough. Some folks have
never heard the old saw, you have to spend money to make money.
Now the Customers have to wait for up to 50 minutes, that is a lot of
listening to music on hold. Some customers are leaving, the best
support people have left, when is John Rando leaving.... and how big is
his "golden parachute"?
Dave
|
4719.315 | | PADC::KOLLING | Karen | Thu Aug 22 1996 17:04 | 8 |
| Speaking of music while on hold, please, whoever
runs these telephone support systems, clue into the fact that while
people are on hold for an hour, they might possibly get some work
done at the same time if you weren't piping music into their unwilling
ears. That music also rules out putting the phone on the speaker
so that your hands are both free to use your computer, due to the
disturbance it would cause fellow employees.
|
4719.316 | do people really hold for an hour?? | ESSC::KMANNERINGS | | Thu Aug 22 1996 17:36 | 7 |
| >>>>>>clue into the fact that while
people are on hold for an hour, they might possibly get some work
done at the same time if you weren't piping music into their
unwilling ears.
Er, Um, I've got a better idea: lets get the phone answered in under 10
seconds, or are you teasing us in .315
|
4719.317 | | DPE1::ARMSTRONG | | Thu Aug 22 1996 17:58 | 5 |
|
> Er, Um, I've got a better idea: lets get the phone answered in under 10
> seconds, or are you teasing us in .315
Why not just take their number and promise a call back?
|
4719.318 | | PADC::KOLLING | Karen | Thu Aug 22 1996 18:04 | 6 |
| Re: Why not just take their number and promise a call back?
We do that now. We just don't call back. That's why people who've
called more than once know that they have to hang in there on hold ad
infinitum.
|
4719.319 | | CSC32::MORTON | Aliens, the snack food of CHAMPIONS! | Thu Aug 22 1996 18:07 | 17 |
| re .316
Yep some do hold for an hour. Not many though.
re .317
That's what we in the Hardware Support group use to do, but
management said they knew what the customer wanted. They said that the
customer wanted to get to an Engineer on the first call, so guess what.
They have high paid Engineers answering the calls and working the
issues, and maybe logging the calls if the customer gets the wrong
expertise.
So instead of paying $6 to $10 an hour we pay $18 to $30 an hour
to have an engineer answer the phone up front. Consequently the
engineers try and work the call, and the phone lines back up. Yep!
for the most part we can take care of 95% of the calls up front, but
how many do we drop because the customer gets fed up waiting.
Jim Morton
|
4719.320 | They ARE listening, really... | N2DEEP::SHALLOW | John 3:21 | Thu Aug 22 1996 19:00 | 25 |
| F.Y.I.,
They are listening, and they are responding. I received a call from
someone who told me the "7 -ates" are being looked at. This someone
asked to remain anonymous. But the fact is, they are listening, both
with their ears, and with their eyes. As in notes. The "unspoken" word,
so to speak, or rather, type. ;-) So a word of caution, be careful what
you say about anything, or anyone. They might just hear you. %^)
One of the advantages to notes, as opposed to a face to face
discussion, is you can see the words you are "speaking", before you
"open your mouth", and give proof to what some may wonder about.
So before the "open mouth, insert foot" syndrome, read what you say,
before you say it. And if you say something, you have the right as the
author to delete it.
As someone has said, respect is a part of the problem. A lack of
respect on both sides. The employee has a hard time respecting those
who say things, and don't follow through with them. Why the management
doesn't respect us is a mystery to me. They spend umpteen gazillion
dollars on outside consulting firms, while they have us at their
disposal. Hmmmm, maybe that's yet another problem...disposal...
Bob
|
4719.321 | Hello, help... | JULIET::ROYER | Intergalactic mind trip, on my Visa Card. | Thu Aug 22 1996 21:31 | 17 |
| Went to a major customer site last night, BECHTEL/EDS, They paid to
have me do a Stand Alone Backup of their system disk on an Alpha 2150.
4 hours at $230.00 per hour. Not bad, as they had worked with software
support from Atlantarado for several hours with no fix. I found that
the drives on the internal SCSI controller (DRA0 - system disk) were
not showing up. With a bit of stuttering and reading in notes I
completed the back up in about 1.5 hours. The customer was really
pleased as they had to have a backup to do the upgrade to the DECnet.
The support person should have been able to do that in about .5 hours
and no cost to the customer.
Where is the support?
Dave
|
4719.322 | | STAR::KLEINSORGE | Fred Kleinsorge | Thu Aug 22 1996 21:37 | 34 |
| >They are listening, and they are responding. I received a call from
>someone who told me the "7 -ates" are being looked at. This someone
>asked to remain anonymous. But the fact is, they are listening, both
>with their ears, and with their eyes. As in notes. The "unspoken" word,
>so to speak, or rather, type. ;-) So a word of caution, be careful what
>you say about anything, or anyone. They might just hear you. %^)
>...
What you see here is mostly venting. And it's good to have a place
to vent where there is the tiniest possibility that someone will
actually hear your voice. Tilting at windmills and all that.
Never say anything you wouldn't say to someone's face. Good words to
live by. I've actually had a few people walk into my office and
comment on the notesfile activity... mostly positive ;-). But what
strikes me is the people who have in person, or by mail sent a note
saying "boy you got that right", and more -- who won't or can't say
it themselves out loud, but who lurk in the conference. I guess out
of fear that it isn't a career extending move.
Me I figure if someone high enough (which isn't too high) is unhappy
with what I say, they can reach out and squash me like a bug. I'm
pretty low on the food chain (and probably not worth squashing :).
And now that this brief summer respite (waiting for the shakeout of
the latest retrenchment) is almost over, and I've got a new job (a
pretty good one, and still at DEC :) I'll go back to being a mushroom
(this is a lot of fun, but time to get back to *real* work, I might
just be getting a 2% bonus... we still don't know :-o).
I've vented my spleen. I think everyone should try it. I feel
much better now ;-) ;-) ;-) ;-)
_Fred (I think I am a mushroom...
They keep me in the dark and feed me ****).
|
4719.323 | Are the vocal ones the only ones worried? I think not... | SCASS1::WISNIEWSKI | ADEPT of the Virtual Space. | Thu Aug 22 1996 21:54 | 19 |
| re: -.1
Beware the quiet ones, for they've already resolved a course of
action.
- Anonymous
For everyone who pipes up in this and other notesfiles, there are
100s, perhaps 1000s quietly polishing their papers, talking to
recruiters and customers, and making their plans...
We don't have the luxury of another year of of stalled Alpha
initiatives, political infighting, turf wars, worried customers,
and worried employees trying to move forward...
We have to do something...NOW...THIS YEAR...
JMHO
John W.
|
4719.324 | | BBQ::WOODWARDC | ...but words can break my heart | Thu Aug 22 1996 23:35 | 14 |
|
re: <<< Note 4719.318 by PADC::KOLLING "Karen" >>>
...
>called more than once know that they have to hang in there on hold ad
>infinitum. ^
|
+--------------------------------------------------------------------+
now *there's* an idea - we have them captive for an hour, let's feed
them an 'infinity' (so to speak) of ad's ;')
H
p.s. dear Marketing - I am not serious, please don't do this to our
customers
|
4719.325 | Note a vote | N2DEEP::SHALLOW | John 3:21 | Fri Aug 23 1996 01:43 | 17 |
|
I could choose to write long stories, use analogies, mataphors, and
many other things. This may or may not prove anything to anyone. I
think a different approach can "make the difference" in just how hard
they are looking at the plan I have submitted.
After this note, I will write as a new note, the plan in .285, and you
can choose to let Mr. Palmer, and anyone else who is listening if you
think the plan deserves attention. A simple yes, or no, will suffice.
If you are a "read only" noter, and know how to reply, then please do
so. If you know co-workers who are aware of this plan, and don't know
how to note, help them, would you please? If indeed the plan is accepted,
it would be valuable for all employees to know how to use the tool we
have here at our fingertips.
Bob
|
4719.326 | | KERNEL::IMBIERSKIT | Good frames, Bad frames... | Fri Aug 23 1996 08:31 | 19 |
| re .321
That's happened to me many times when I have been both the software
support person *and* the eventual on-site resource. I have had calls
where I spoke to the customer on the phone without being able to resolve
the problem, then went to site and fixed it quickly because, once on
site, I could *see* all sorts of things for myself that the customer
didn't, couldn't, or wouldn't tell me.
Giving software support over the phone is a complex mix of technical
skill, telephone handling, troubleshooting, and good questioning technique.
It's much harder than fixing a problem on site (at least that's my
opinion and I do both). We are normally very good at it, but I'm sorry
it failed you this time.
cheers,
Tony I (from the UK CSC, distant brothers of Atlantarado!)
|
4719.327 | video conferencing with customers? | AIAG::SEGER | This space intentionally left blank | Fri Aug 23 1996 12:47 | 12 |
| speaking of remote support, has anyone looked into CU-SeeMe for video
conferences over the internet? It may not be right for every situation, but
I'll bet there are times if a customers pointed a camera at their screen or
system someone on the other end would get significantly more input than if all
that had to communicate with was a phone.
I'd think this is something some of our more adventurous customers would be
willing to try out and all it would cost us is a couple hundred dollars for
camera and software. hell, we'd pay for that with just a single call that
saved an on-site visit!
-mark
|
4719.328 | timeout for a moment of thanks | R2ME2::DEVRIES | Mark DeVries | Fri Aug 23 1996 13:55 | 12 |
| re .326
> Giving software support over the phone is a complex mix of technical
> skill, telephone handling, troubleshooting, and good questioning technique.
Don't forget luck, a good crystal ball, and sympathetic aches in
one's joints. :-)
In other words, it's a demanding job you guys do, and we folks "back
home" are grateful you folks do it as well as you do.
-Mark
|
4719.329 | | PADC::KOLLING | Karen | Fri Aug 23 1996 17:21 | 20 |
| From note 4795.5, copied here to hopefully maximize the chance
that someone who can do something about this will see it:
There is a huge feeling of being completely disconnected
om upper management. On some level, people want to know
what is happening, and why, from the horses mouth.
There is a huge information filter that works in both directions.
Bad stuff is filtered on the way up, so you end up with a
"suprised" Bob Palmer. Information on the way down is doled out...
I think this is one of the major problems currently. If I'd been CEO
during the bonus mess, I would have at least sent out a Dear
Fellow Employee memo via Reader's Choice explaining what had
happened, what was being done to remedy it, and adding some words
of encouragement. On the other side of the coin, I would do more
Management by Walking Around and talking to people in the trenches,
so that I wasn't totally dependent on what my direct reports told
me.
|
4719.330 | can't use cu-seeme with the firewall | ANGST::tun-20.imc.das.dec.com::angst.zko.dec.com::boebinger | John Boebinger (330) 863-0456 | Fri Aug 23 1996 19:59 | 12 |
| We can't do cu-seeme over the net. Firewall concerns are such that UDP/IP
packets (which is what cu-seeme uses, rather than TCP/IP) are not going to be
allowed in.
We could set up something on the outside of the firewall for cu-seeme, but
that would require 2 machines on a support person's desk, one in the net and
one outside. Since that would cost money, forget it. Even if it would help
reduce customer frustration, do you honestly think this company would spend
money to fix a problem?
john
|
4719.331 | | VMSBIZ::SANDER | OpenVMS Marketing | Fri Aug 23 1996 20:05 | 4 |
| what about cu-seeme on the digital intranet (oh,,, I mean Enet,
sorry Eznet, sorry Engineering Network)
|
4719.332 | never say never... | AIAG::SEGER | This space intentionally left blank | Fri Aug 23 1996 20:07 | 7 |
| re: CU-SeeMe
couldn't you just do a PPP to a customer's site and run CU-SeeMe over that?
If not, I've gotta believe there is some way to make something like this work
even if it took some extra trickery.
-mark
|
4719.333 | | AIAG::SEGER | This space intentionally left blank | Fri Aug 23 1996 20:08 | 6 |
| > what about cu-seeme on the digital intranet (oh,,, I mean Enet,
> sorry Eznet, sorry Engineering Network)
no problem. works fine for me.
-mark
|
4719.334 | | ANGST::tun-20.imc.das.dec.com::angst.zko.dec.com::boebinger | John Boebinger (330) 863-0456 | Fri Aug 23 1996 20:25 | 9 |
| Yes, you can run cu-seeme on the internal net (great way to do DVN, I would
think). You can also use it through the AltaVista Internet Tunnel (another
virtually unmarketted piece of great Digital engineering). And you could do
PPP to a customer site.
But you can't get cu-seeme through the firewall.
john
|
4719.335 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Fri Aug 23 1996 21:25 | 3 |
| Software? Some of us don't even have the hardware for such things...
Steve
|
4719.336 | you could still receive a DVN at your terminal... | AIAG::SEGER | This space intentionally left blank | Tue Aug 27 1996 13:06 | 8 |
| >Software? Some of us don't even have the hardware for such things...
you don't need any hardware to be a ROV (read-only videoer). the software is
available off White Pine's web site with a 30 day temporary license if you want
to try it out. but since it doesn't work across the firewall you need to find
someone inside who can broadcast.
-mark
|
4719.337 | | AXEL::FOLEY | Rebel Without a Clue-foley@zko.dec.com | Tue Aug 27 1996 13:49 | 14 |
| RE: .336
I think Steve meant that he doesn't have PC hardware. Just
VMS, right Steve?
Also, we're talking about DVN's here, so no firewalls come into
play.
I found some Win95 software that allows me to recieve MBONE
broadcasts, but now I can't find the server in ZKO that is
broadcasting them. I can't remember where I read about it. Anyone
else?
mike
|
4719.338 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Tue Aug 27 1996 14:22 | 5 |
| Re: .336, .337
Right - neither of the two systems I have on my desk will run PC software.
Steve
|
4719.339 | Ladies & Gentelmen--focus please | AZUR::LANGENSTEIN | Hubert Langensteiner, @VBE | Wed Aug 28 1996 10:06 | 7 |
| If you would not see it you would not believe it how you side track.
Please, create a separate topic if you want to discuss about video
conferencing (technology, deployment, whatever enjoys your heart).
Thanks,
Hubert.
|
4719.340 | Inquiring minds want to know! | N2DEEP::SHALLOW | I John 3:11 | Wed Sep 04 1996 14:45 | 61 |
|
Mr. Palmer,
It seems you gave an invitation for me to inquire, in your recent DVN;
"I want to encourage you, as I always do, [to] ask whatever question you
really have. Don't be worried about tact or being embarrassed. Just whatever
is on your mind, when you get the chance, ask the question. I'll do my best
to answer that question."
Forgive me for taking the liberty as an employee of this Company, to ask you
one question, for each year I have worked here, since 1987, as I've never asked
you anything in that time period before this. We have only seen each other once,
that I am aware of, at APO, in 1989, and I didn't have the chance (or guts) to
talk to you at that time.
1) Why is it the "scythe" continues to slice through the fields, cutting off
those who work very hard to keep change in both their own, and in your pocket,
while you keep your "sword" sheathed?
2) Why not "wield your sword", to "cut the fat" at the levels most unproductive
to Digital, those who pick Digital's pockets and smile when others are TFSO'd?
3) Do you realize the scenario so well put by the author of 4752.77 is still
continuing?
4) Have you read the current scene described so well in 4752.81?
5) How long do you expect those who work hard FOR Digital, to continue doing
so while the "many first mates" (see 4762.77) reap the bigger hill of beans
(see 4752.108, yet hide the truth out of fear for their positions?
6) Are you aware resume polishing is going strong and high quality people
are leaving in droves as their resumes make contact with a more stable
working environment worthy of their talents and skills?
7) Are you aware that many of these talents and skills mentioned in question
number 6, have been gained while working for years for DEC/Digital?
8) Have you heard the words echoing from the past, "Do the right thing"?
TWO PART BONUS QUESTION TIME! (For the contractor year)
9) What is it Mr. Clinton has 1 of, and you have approximately 225, AND can you
name ALL of yours without looking at an org chart? (this is to ask how well do
you know the men and women who serve you at a VHL (very high level)).
To quote the founder of this Company;
"We must all be intensely customer oriented in all of our dealings. All of us
must be guided by what is best for our customers, and must make it easy for
them to do business with us." - Ken Olsen
I heard you say in a previous note "My actions are being judged by my Board
of Directors." My actions are being judged by One much higher than the BOD.
We all look forward with great anticipation to your reply.
Shalom,
Bob
|
4719.342 | different drummer | R2ME2::DEVRIES | Mark DeVries | Wed Sep 04 1996 16:51 | 6 |
| >"My actions are being judged by my Board of Directors."
Bob (S.), I'm afraid that sums up all the commitment Bob (P.) feels to
respond to your/our questions. :-(
-Mark
|
4719.343 | | BIGQ::SILVA | http://www.yvv.com/decplus/ | Thu Sep 05 1996 12:39 | 3 |
|
Bob.... that bonus question was great!
|
4719.344 | Additional food for thought, Bob... | MSDOA::SCRIVEN | | Fri Sep 06 1996 01:29 | 65 |
| I will be copying below a quote that I found that I do not have
permission to post; however, it is currently posted in my customer's
home page and thought, since it's "accessible to the public", permission
is assumed. If this line of thinking is incorrect, moderator, feel
free to delete this note or set hidden (or whatever it's called).
From "www.milliken.com"
"Continuous improvement occurs because of the concept of empowerment.
Milliken Chief Operating Officer Tom Malone says, "We have learned that
empowerment without abdication of leadership involves the five Ws and one
H. The Ws are leadership functions. The H, a function of empowered
associates. The Ws stand for:
What are you going to do?
Where are you going to do it?
When are you going to do it?
Who is going to do it?
Why are you doing it?
The H asks, "How are you going to do it?"
Providing Milliken associates with the challenge to create positive change
by testing their ideas and implementing the best has set the stage for
advances that simply would not be possible without teamwork, leadership
and empowerment.
Milliken consistently works as a partner with its suppliers, customers
and even competitors to resolve issues and advance concepts that have
great potential for the industry, our nation and our
world. The most pervasive concept throughout Milliken is that of
leadership in quality - moving ahead as members of teams rather than
waiting for "the other guy" to make the first move."
Bob, this, from a multi-million dollar "partner" of Digital's that is
currently questioning our viability. What Dr. Malone states sounds
logical to me;
actually, it sounds rather like something that should be a given, but
it's not, at least at Digital. I can't tell you how many times in the
last year I've heard the words "empowered" and "accountability". I
believe Dr. Malone knows how to empower and "lets" his people do it. I
also know that Milliken holds all their associates totally accountable
for their actions....TOTALLY.... each and every one of them.
I don't know if you've ever been on a tour of the Milliken Research
Center in Spartanburg, South Carolina, but I think you would be
impressed. The recognition that each associate receives for their
contributions to Milliken's success are posted ALL OVER this facility,
from the janitor to the COO. Milliken has OFI's (opportunity for
improvements) that each associate is incented to bring forth and is
"paid" based on how much "improvement" their OFI contributes to the
bottom line... whether it's productivity enhancing, costs more in the
short term but saves money over the long haul, or simple cost
containment ideas or expense reduction ideas. DUH!!! Who knows better
how to save money in an organization than those doing the work? NOT
those directing/managing, but those leading provide the atmosphere for
associates to be a part of the corporation and it's profitability.
I thought Dr. Malone's words enlightening, at least for me. I'd
forgotten what it's like to be treated like a grown-up.
Sincerely.....JPs
|
4719.345 | quick fix alert | COOKIE::KELSEY | Mercenary weed whacker | Mon Sep 09 1996 17:54 | 16 |
| The difficulty in an empowerment scheme is that it takes careful long
range planning - just where and when do you have to draw the line
between democracy and autocracy - and it takes ( to borrow from another
note) leadership skills rather than skills in administering orders and
crunching numbers.
Total Quality Management (which includes such empowerment &
recognition) has a poor track record because it is often implemented as
a mandate, not a re-vision of the corporate culture. Given where we
are today, I suspect retrofitting the Rainbow as an AXP would be easier
than making empowerment work.
I suspect the closest we'll come to empowerment is still having back
doors we can all personally use to get our jobs done.
bk
|
4719.346 | | SYOMV::FOLEY | http://www.dreamscape.com/mtfoley | Thu Sep 12 1996 04:35 | 13 |
4719.347 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | It's just a kiss away | Thu Oct 31 1996 12:51 | 19 |
4719.348 | | POMPY::LESLIE | Andy, living in a Dilbert world | Mon Nov 04 1996 08:26 | 8
|