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Conference 7.286::digital

Title:The Digital way of working
Moderator:QUARK::LIONELON
Created:Fri Feb 14 1986
Last Modified:Fri Jun 06 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:5321
Total number of notes:139771

896.0. "Cultural Litmus Tests" by SDSVAX::SWEENEY (Honey, I iconified the kids) Thu Aug 17 1989 12:29

    DEC cultural litmus tests:
    
    Ponder them, suggest your own.
    
    (TEST 1)
    
    At a meeting, is the person who suggests "Let's not study this one to
    death, let's just do it."?
    
    (a) the most senior manager in the room
    (b) the most junior employee in the room
    (c) on his or her way out of the room
    (d) on his or her way out of the company
T.RTitleUserPersonal
Name
DateLines
896.1Group decisions = oxymoronSVBEV::VECRUMBAInfinitely deep bag of tricksThu Aug 17 1989 17:3743
    re .0
    
>   At a meeting, is the person who suggests "Let's not study this one to
>   death, let's just do it."?
>   
>   (a) the most senior manager in the room
>   (b) the most junior employee in the room
>   (c) on his or her way out of the room
>   (d) on his or her way out of the company

    (e) the most junior manager in the room?

    In any event, decision is not made, but after meeting one or more people
    agree to ignore the system and do the right thing. Right thing gets done
    on employees' own time. Popular acclaim by peers, no acknowledgment from
    management, unless lucky. NODdies present at meeting take exception, and
    then regroup to formulate "official" version of "unofficial" (yet completed)
    said "thing."

    On a less cynical note, committees (whether official or unofficial) form
    when:

    	-  no single person is responsible
    	-  no single person wants to be responsible
    	-  no single person gets the reward when "thing" is done
    	-  no one in the room has decision-making authority

    If you've seen the latest "Indiana Jones" movie, you'll recall where
    Indy takes his leap of faith, as it turns out, onto a bridge which
    cannot be seen. A successful manager learns to take the same leap in
    delegating decisions and jobs to subordinates. (Note, I said _both_
    decisions and jobs.) No faith? Manage by committee.

    Committees and cross-functional teams have their place, but more often than
    not, they just prove that no one's in charge. And the only successful
    committees I've seen are where _individuals_ pick up the ball and get the
    job done, at considerable risk and little reward -- they get to keep
    failure all for themselves, but spread success over the entire committee.

    I've seen it happen first-hand.


    /Peters
896.2MSCSSE::LENNARDThu Aug 17 1989 19:311
    (e)  The Executive Committee extending the salary freeze for 9 months.
896.3STAR::MFOLEYRebel without a ClueFri Aug 18 1989 01:3111
       RE: .2
       
       	I laughed but almost wanted to cry! :-)
       
       Re: .0
       
       	The 28 year old employee who's been at DEC for almost 9 years and
       doesn't plan on leaving anytime soon. He speaks what's on his mind
       and believes in "Do the right thing".
       
       						mike
896.4GLDOA::ROMANIKKen RomanikFri Aug 18 1989 05:386
    RE .3  
    "DITO"

    But make it a 35 year old with 11.5 years. 
    And put "DO WHAT IS RIGHT" in cap's.