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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

1108.0. "Unmasking Incompetent Managers" by ODIXIE::CARNELL (DTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALF) Mon May 14 1990 18:14

    Are incompetent managers the greatest threat facing Digital?
    How are they identified?  How are they damaging Digital?  How 
    can they be unmasked and removed?  What are the criteria for 
    ensuring that Digital selects real leaders who will lead us 
    to greater success, ensuring our prosperity and future?  How 
    do we get leaders with those traits that are positive, 
    leading us to greater success; yet, how do we keep those VERY 
    SAME POSITIVE TRAITS from turning destructive?

    To start this discussion, let me share with you a recent 
    article titled UNMASKING INCOMPETENT MANAGERS, noted below. 
    (permission granted to copy and forward this note to anyone).

    (long note alert -- my apologies but the article is good)

                 UNMASKING INCOMPETENT MANAGERS
                               by
                          Daniel Kagan
                 INSIGHT Magazine, May 21, 1990
               (reprinted here without permission)

    SUMMARY: According to some psychologists, the biggest threat 
    facing U.S. business today is the incompetent manager, most 
    notably the one who displays narcissistic tendencies.  For 
    these executives, their self-interests are far more important 
    than the welfare of the organization.  As a result, experts 
    are working on ways to help recruiters spot potential 
    incompetents -- before they become problems in the office.

    What is the biggest threat facing American business?  Forget 
    rising interest rates and Japanese imports.  Corporate 
    America's worst problem, says psychologist Robert Hogan, may 
    be managerial incompetence: the failure of executives to 
    advance the interests of their companies because they can't 
    motivate their staffs, change their approach when they are in 
    error, plan strategically or force alliances with each other.

    Incompetent executives are not simply failing because their 
    jobs are too tough, says Hogan, director of the Tulsa 
    Institute of Behavioral Sciences.  Managers are usually 
    assumed to be basically competent, because most have been 
    chosen for their confidence, assertiveness, charm, ambition 
    and charisma -- qualities known to correlate highly with good 
    performance.

    But Hogan says that just those qualities often accompany 
    executive incompetence rooted in serious personality 
    disorders, and he warns that the usual means by which 
    managers are hired and promoted -- assessment testing, 
    personality profiles, supervisor evaluations, interviews and 
    so on  -- actually select a significant number of people in 
    whom seemingly positive traits are really symptoms of 
    psychological abnormalities.

    With strong apparent leadership traits, such people move 
    steadily up the promotion ladder because they do well in 
    assessments and interviews, and are good at ingratiating 
    themselves with their superiors and at making themselves look 
    good.  All the while, they are detrimental or even dangerous 
    to their organization.  They may actually destroy a company.

    "Superior self-presentation skills drive careers, not 
    competence," Hogan says ruefully.  Someone with a 
    narcissistic personality disorder, for instance, is motivated 
    to succeed because of an unhealthy craving for attention and 
    recognition, not out of a desire to do a good job.

    In these disorders, traits that are normal and necessary in a 
    manager become twisted or intensified while appearing as a 
    mask of normal behavior.  In narcissistic managers, for 
    example, self-confidence is distorted to the point that they 
    believe no one else has anything of value to say.  They will 
    not listen to criticism and devalue anyone who offers it, and 
    so cannot learn from experience or change behavior that leads 
    to wrong decisions.

    A resentful or revengeful manager with a passive-aggressive 
    or paranoid personality disorder might use persuasiveness and 
    charm to lull subordinates or peers into a false sense of 
    trust, while at the same time quietly gathering damaging 
    information on them and feeding it to others who will use it 
    against them or the company.

    Someone with an avoidant or dependent personality disorder 
    may become the often-promoted but unproductive manager who 
    "falls upward" -- what Hogan calls a "high likability 
    floater."  Self-confident on the surface and charming, poised 
    and congenial, such a manager quells deep insecurity by 
    carefully conforming to the demands of the social 
    environment.  Loyal to a fault, these managers never argue or 
    complain and are well-liked.  But they accomplish almost 
    nothing because they have no goals, no point of view and will 
    not take a stand on issues.  Such people are nearly 
    impossible to fire because they have no enemies and lots of 
    friends.  Says Hogan: "The arteries of large organizations 
    are clogged by such congenial, cautious, conforming mid-level 
    managers."

    In studying 25 years of survey research in industrial and 
    organizational psychology, Hogan found high levels of 
    employee dissatisfaction with superiors, a huge number of 
    people who reported considerable time working for an 
    intolerable boss and polls showing the primary source of 
    stress in the workplace is the tyrannical boss.  "I think a 
    substantial part of American productivity is damaged by 
    this," he says.

    The potentially most damaging disorder among managers is 
    narcissism, because narcissistic traits such as 
    self-confidence, extroversion, ambition, persuasiveness, 
    energy, achievement-orientation and dominance rate so high in 
    the executive selection process.  In healthy amounts, these 
    traits are assets: Chrysler Chairman Lee A. Iacocca is named 
    by experts as a good example of a manager with a high but 
    healthy level of narcissism, which helped him become a 
    genuine success and effective leader.

    But assessment procedures cannot determine whether those 
    traits exist at a pathological level, where self-confidence 
    is a mask for egotism, or dominance and leadership are really 
    expressions of exhibitionism.  The positive trait of 
    persuasiveness may actually reflect manipulativeness, so that 
    subordinates and peers are pawns to be exploited in order to 
    glorify the narcissistic manager, who is indifferent to the 
    feelings of others but will feign interest to get what he 
    wants.  Apparent ambition can mask a drive toward 
    self-glorification, which is the only goal, with the needs of 
    the company coming last.  Narcissists will not accept 
    responsibility for their failures but project them onto 
    others.  Inside they are emotionally empty and riddled with 
    insecurity.

    Yet such a type does not always stand out.  "This kind of 
    dealing often fits in with a company's corporate culture," 
    says Larry Hirschhorn, who heads the Wharton Center for 
    Applied Research.  "Companies are often based on the 
    systematic distortion of truth.  So much of corporate culture 
    is about what can't be said, how appearances must be managed, 
    how things are supposed to be imaged.  The narcissist is good 
    with this kind of fakery, [so he] is not just a problem 
    individual different from the milieu around him.  Often 
    camouflaged by their surroundings, the more they rise, the 
    worse things can get.

    "The higher up we go in an organization, the more the milieu 
    tells us the world revolves around us," says Howard Schwartz, 
    an organizational behavior expert at the Oakland University 
    School of Business in Rochester, Mich.  "This creates a kind 
    of narcissistic separation from reality."

    To complicate matters, some narcissists possess high levels 
    of valuable abilities.  They may rise to become CEOs or 
    corporate raiders whose real goal is to glorify themselves by 
    wielding power over those who work for the companies they 
    acquire.  "Put these characteristics together with real 
    talent and you can have a real success.  But they leave 
    behind them a scorched earth," says Hogan.

    Larry Gould, a psychologist who treats many narcissistic 
    managers, believes such executives are the exceptions.  
    "Severely disordered people rarely rise to the heights.  If 
    they do, they don't last long.  They seem to thrive only in 
    organizations where narcissism is the coin of the realm, 
    where everyone supports everyone else's glory-seeking."

    Most narcissists derail or hit a plateau at the middle or 
    upper-middle management level.  Typically, they do not 
    manifest poisonous traits strongly until they win some 
    authority.  "They get a chance to manage people, their traits 
    blossom and their ineffectiveness becomes obvious.  They get 
    fired, they get blocked in their careers," says Gould, who 
    thinks these types are less of a threat than do other 
    experts.  "They tend to stick out and be destructive and take 
    up too much room.  If they can be politically bumped off, 
    they are."

    Michael Lombardo, director of the leadership development 
    research group at the Center for Creative Leadership, 
    unearthed the concordance between narcissism and executive 
    failure while researching why promising careers go off the 
    track.  "We found that the common reasons for derailment were 
    also traits common to narcissistic personalities," he says.  
    The failed managers were insensitive to others, cold, aloof, 
    arrogant, destructively competitive and overly self-focused 
    in order to please top management; they also showed a lack of 
    composure under stress and betrayed trust.

    Narcissists may terrorize subordinates by manipulating them, 
    playing favorites and cultivating sycophants [a person who 
    attempts to win favor or advance himself by flattering 
    persons of influence; a servile self-seeker].  They create a 
    tense atmosphere in which the staff is afraid to speak 
    truthfully and must show inordinate loyalty.  They denigrate 
    people because they feel superior to them and fail to give 
    subordinates credit.  Morale and productivity falter, 
    absenteeism rises.

    Alternatively, a narcissist may initially charm and dazzle 
    staff into following him [or her].  "When they enter an 
    organization, they often cause a sensation...Initially they 
    infuse a lot of energy," says Hogan.  Their influence can be 
    seductive.

    "People in the orbit of a narcissistic superior feel a pull 
    to want to satisfy them.  It is like being sucked into being 
    a co-dependent with an alcoholic," says Hirschhorn.  "He will 
    use your normal tendencies against you.  He manipulates.  He 
    plays to weak spots in your self-esteem, sucks you in with 
    compliments and stroking.  In the beginning, he may idealize 
    his subordinates, feed their egos.  They tell him what he 
    wants to hear, because he strokes them.  This can create a 
    kind of groupthink among his staff.  He projects failures 
    outside the unit.  It is the fault of the guy down the hall, 
    of the marketplace.  This cements groupthink."

    "Their high outward self-confidence convinces us.  We all 
    subconsciously admire that.  It makes us feel good about 
    them," says Harry Levinson, a psychologist who runs the 
    Levinson Institute in Belmont, Mass.  And the narcissist has 
    an uncanny knack, he says, "to make you believe that if you 
    don't go along with what they want, there is something wrong 
    with you."

    Meanwhile, such managers are carefully cultivating a winning 
    image, manipulating superiors into thinking they are doing a 
    fabulous job as subordinates languish under their thumb or in 
    their shadow.  "They fawn upward and dump downward," Levinson 
    says.  Subordinates will not speak up, figuring that upper 
    management knows what this person is and likes it that way.  
    In some cases, upper management recognizes the narcissism but 
    tolerates it as a trade-off for valued traits, such as the 
    ability to sweet-talk and con difficult clients, government 
    regulatory officials or hostile consumers.

    So the damage mounts.  The narcissist is very good at 
    creating the illusion of success over the short haul.  To 
    attempt to look good by appearing to cut costs, for example, 
    such a manager may take over a troubled unit and show 
    on-paper savings by destroying resources -- firing key 
    personnel or jettisoning critical strategic strengths.  The 
    damage will not surface until after the manager has moved on 
    to avoid responsibility for the collapse of the unit, been 
    promoted again or been fired.

    Or the narcissist will create chronic problems.  James 
    Krantz, assistant professor at the Yale School of 
    Organization and Management, gives the example of a 
    manufacturing plant that has four sections, one of which is 
    managed by a narcissist whose staff is demoralized and 
    unproductive.  "The whole plant has problems, but the cost 
    accounting system can't pinpoint the problem," he says.  Or 
    the narcissist can become bitter and resentful, influencing 
    subordinates against management, complaining to customers 
    about upper management in the role of sort of heroic 
    ombudsman, or actively colluding against management with 
    suppliers or customers.  This can go on for years."

    Eventually, the narcissistic manager is brought down in 
    several ways.  Often, says Levinson, a key subordinate valued 
    by upper management quits in exasperation, telling senior 
    staff the reason for the departure.  Management may confront 
    the narcissist, who may flee rather than take responsibility.  
    In other cases "a union starts, work productivity drops...or 
    [the narcissist] gets caught sexually harassing a female 
    employee.  Sooner or later it all catches up with them," says 
    Hogan.

    Unfortunately, they usually find similar jobs elsewhere.  The 
    firing company will often write glowing recommendations to 
    keep them speaking well of the company and to avoid a 
    lawsuit.  They often bounce from job to job, using their 
    formidable interview skills to talk their way into new 
    positions.  Headhunters and search firms also favor such 
    types by overemphasizing self-presentation qualities and 
    turning executive recruitment into a beauty contest, as Hogan 
    calls it, that favors a manipulative, glamorous narcissist.

    Consequently, experts are trying to develop ways to spot 
    narcissists or sift them out during hiring.  Levinson, who 
    estimates that narcissistic managers are the cause of about 
    15 percent of the problems he is hired to solve as a 
    corporate consultant, uses a specialized interviewing 
    technique to unmask them.

    "I don't ask him [or her] to tell me what he does.  I ask him 
    HOW [personal emphasis] he does it.  What kinds of trouble he 
    has had with peers, subordinates, others," he says.  "And 
    there is consistency of response.  They will talk about other 
    people's inadequacy and how they are not very good.  Or they 
    will say they are the target of the rivalry or jealousy of 
    their peers because they get along so well with others.  Or 
    they will talk about their victories, how they won because 
    they were so bright."

    Levinson has a prescription for spotting narcissists during 
    hiring.  "I tell people to beware the person you like too 
    well too quickly.  I say, 'Ask yourself: What do they do that 
    I like them so much after 10 minutes?'  Are they too cordial?  
    This should be a red flag."

    Hogan and his colleagues have been developing a written 
    personality inventory that can spot abnormally high levels of 
    narcissistic traits -- and traits of other personality 
    disorders as well.  They are doing this because the standard 
    inventories used in executive assessment "have no real 
    predictive power in the real world.  The scores...have 
    nothing to do with the person's actual performance," says 
    Hogan.

    His inventory has so far been tested on 5,000 employees and 
    managers and has shown a high correlation between job 
    performance and strong trends in personality disorders.  
    Those who score high in disorder traits tend not to do well 
    in job areas that would be damaged by those traits.  Several 
    large companies have begun using the inventory experimentally 
    in internal evaluations.

    Hogan thinks the central issue is that executive evaluation 
    methods focus almost exclusively on analyzing the elements 
    that add up to competence, while ignoring the equally 
    influential flaws, ingrained in individuals, that may cause 
    incompetence no matter what positive attributes exist.  More 
    effort should be made, he thinks, to study the personal 
    dynamics of failure rather than the requirements for success.

    "There is a general lack of concentration by organizations on 
    the dark side of management and human nature," says Lombardo.  
    "Organizations are afraid to look at it.  It is a nasty 
    topic."  He decries the tradition of assessing only the 
    positive aspects of leadership.  "It creates the idea of 
    leadership as some kind of mechanical engineering or as an 
    asset sheet.  But the problem is, you get all the assets but 
    none of the liabilities [in the personality].  This takes an 
    unbalanced, naive, mechanical view of the role of human 
    nature."

    End of Article

    Is narcissism the coin of the realm in Digital, image more 
    important than substance, personal agenda and career 
    advancement more important than good of the company in total?

    What are some solutions and ideas to consider?
    
T.RTitleUserPersonal
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1108.1This conference is not restricted. All notes may be forwarded.COVERT::COVERTJohn R. CovertMon May 14 1990 19:3211
>(permission granted to copy and forward this note to anyone)

Well, incompetence starts right there with that statement.

You have no right to withhold that permission; your granting it
shows that you seem to think you need to do so.

Now had you stated "permission granted to repost this note in any
other conference" you would have been saying something useful.

/john
1108.2I'm sorryODIXIE::CARNELLDTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALFMon May 14 1990 19:5811
    Ref:     <<< Note 1108.1 by COVERT::COVERT "John R. Covert" >>>
      -< This conference is not restricted.  All notes may be forwarded. >-

	>><<Well, incompetence starts right there with that statement.>>
    
    My apologies for being incompetent -- I was under the impression that
    no VAXnotes could be copied and forwarded to anyone without the
    express permission of the author.
    
    That said, may we now address the content?
    
1108.4The turkeys are everywhereSVBEV::VECRUMBADo the right thing!Thu May 17 1990 03:5120
    re .3

    
>   I've seen it so many times it's scary to realize it may be endemic.
>   
>   It is far more prevalent now than in the past.  It's real.


    People like people like themselves. It's one of the fundamental principles
    in improving your image when dealing with your supoeriors. It's also
    fundamental in what kind of people managers hire. Unfortunately, that
    means that competent managers bring competent people on board, and
    incompetent ones bring incompetent people on board. Incompetent people
    don't last long working for competent managers; competent people don't
    last long working for incompetent managers.

    Yes, I've seen (and sometimes sufferred under) all of the kinds of
    managers mentioned in the article.

    /Peters
1108.5what now ?SHIRE::GOLDBLATTThu May 17 1990 06:525
    I've seen a few of this type of manager as well.  Unfortunately for
    Digital, we no longer have the income cushion that allows the effects
    of incompetancy to be ignored.
    
    David
1108.6popularity contests ?BEAGLE::WLODEKNetwork pathologist.Thu May 17 1990 08:017
    The real guys( provocation intended) , I*M ,had it for years.

    Managers are evaluated by there people, how it works in practice I
    don't know .

    						
1108.7Not everyone CAN be a managerNEWVAX::MZARUDZKIFeelin' like Road PizzaThu May 17 1990 10:5814
    
     Perhaps Digitals flaw is in the process of choosing a manager?
    I cannot say how one goes about becoming a manager... I really don't
    know. But in a previous lifetime some people were promoted into 
    management slots and *MANY* others were not informed properly.
    Some people are just NOT cut out to be managers. That does't imply 
    they are not good at their present job. It means that not everyone is
    management material. In this day and age IMO managers will make or
    break organizations. So who has input into "So and so has great
    potential, let us make them a manager...."
    
     What gives?
     Mike Z.
    
1108.8ESCROW::KILGOREWild BillThu May 17 1990 11:5816
    
    The solution to incompetent management has been stated in this
    conference before.
    
    As a software engineer, I am judged on the quantity and quality of the
    software I produce. As a manager, I would expect to be judged on how well
    I manage my people. And who better to provide that kind of information
    than the people I manage? But how many of you have been asked to provide
    input to the review of your managers? I'll wager large sums of money that
    you're in an exceedingly small minority.
    
    Peer and subordinate input to management review would quickly point out
    incompetence. It may help to be able to initally select good management,
    but the the key to sustaining good management is relevant feedback and
    review.
    
1108.9If you have a solution idea, send it to Ken OlsenODIXIE::CARNELLDTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALFThu May 17 1990 12:27252
    In the October, 1989, Volume 13, Number 3, issue of DECWORLD sent to 
    employees, Digital President Ken Olsen stated in his letter to
    employees,  "We encourage people to express their opinions and to
    therefore help in the  formulation of policy."  He said that while
    Digital obviously can't accept  everyone's ideas, it does mean that
    Digital still listens to all opinions.

    The implication of this statement (and others before and since by
    Digital  Executive Committee members) is that employee opinions would
    be reviewed on  the content, not the person submitting them, with
    arguments pro and con  based on the merits of the ideas and opinions;
    that there would be no  action by any employee in censoring the ideas
    and opinions, even if  unpopular, created by another employee,
    submitting them for consideration;  that no employee would be "put
    down" for submitting his or her ideas and  opinions; and that no
    employee would be retaliated against for expressing  his or her ideas
    and opinions.
    
    Here's my opinion (long note alert!) that I sent to Ken Olsen:
    
                  I N T E R O F F I C E   M E M O R A N D U M

                                        Date:     16-May-1990 08:10am EDT
                                        From:     David Carnell @ALF
                                                  CARNELL.DAVID
                                        Dept:     Proposal Designers
                                        Tel No:   385-2901 404772-2901

TO:  Remote Addressee                     ( KEN OLSEN @MLO )

CC:  Remote Addressee                     ( ALAN ZIMMERLE @CFO )

Subject: Some ideas pertaining to building a more successful Digital

    Dear Mr. Olsen:						      

    Accepting your open invitation that any employee is welcome to 
    send you any ideas and opinions, especially related to building a 
    more successful Digital, I would like to share with you a recent 
    article published in the INSIGHT Magazine, titled, UNMASKING 
    INCOMPETENT MANAGERS, which suggests that managers who put 
    personal interests and career ahead of the welfare of the company 
    are today's greatest threat to U.S. businesses.

    If you find merit in the article, then I would like to present 
    after the article some non-traditional ideas for solving the 
    problem outlined in the article, which if implemented, I believe 
    will lead to a more successful Digital in the shortest amount of 
    time.

                      UNMASKING INCOMPETENT MANAGERS
            (article removed since posted in Digital base note 1108.0)
    
    End of Article

    Mr. Olsen:

    In my opinion, to ensure Digital's future prosperity and success, 
    Digital MUST have, at all levels in the organization, managers who 
    are REAL leaders that can LEAD employees to higher levels of 
    performance and achievement, nurturing genuine employee 
    involvement, creativity, constructive constant change, and a sense 
    of ownership with responsibility and authority.

    Digital cannot afford professional, incompetent bureaucrats whose 
    sole priority and skill lies in advancing their personal careers 
    at the expense of both their direct reports and Digital as a total 
    corporate entity.  And Digital certainly cannot afford, as a 
    consequence of a lack of genuine leadership in managers, an 
    apathetic workforce that only shows up to do a job for a salary 
    but takes no ownership in creating and driving change, building a 
    more successful Digital, GREATER than what is.

    You recently said something to the effect that history has shown 
    that a Communistic society is a dismal failure in economic 
    development as compared to a Democratic society.  A society 
    burdened with centralized bureaucracy simply does not work.  You 
    went on to say that Digital is more like a communistic system than 
    a democratic system.

    I would like to convey some non-traditional ideas for changing the 
    discipline in "how" Digital fundamentally works as a company that 
    could make us a showcase in how a REAL democratic business can 
    truly thrive and grow.  These ideas would pertain to virtually all 
    employees, all wages classes, and would include contract workers.

    1.	Decentralize responsibility down to every individual employee.  
        Mandate that Digital will become the company that networks the 
        world in the most effective information technology, satisfying 
        customer wants better than anyone, and linking the "minds" 
        behind every computer terminal where the "qualitative" 
        THINKING value of information and idea exchange via computers 
        will lead both to a new Renaissance in world development and 
        cooperation but also to a Digital that will become THE most 
        successful corporation in terms of revenue and profitability 
        that has ever existed.  Mandate that every individual employee 
        is now charged with "thinking creatively" to come up and get 
        implemented CONTINUOUSLY the tens of thousands of changes 
        necessary in order to accomplish this dream, and all employees 
        will be accountable for creating, contributing, and 
        implementing creative, innovative change in all actions and 
        processes where all will work SMARTER, not harder, increasing 
        our efficiency and effectiveness in satisfying customer wants 
        in information technology and making a LOT of money for doing 
        it perfectly.

    2.	Decentralize authority down to every individual employee.  
        Mandate that every group will meet weekly, via in person or 
        via a private "group" VAXnotes conference, and will evaluate 
        all ideas for change, either generated within the group, or 
        coming in from other employees in Digital, or from customers, 
        and will discuss the merits of each idea to build a more 
        successful Digital; to increase efficiency and effectiveness 
        in any and all actions and processes, products and services; 
        to cut waste and cost; or to build REAL customer satisfaction, 
        more customers, revenue, margin and profit.  Each group will 
        make GO or NO GO decisions, then and there each week, as a 
        group, with majority vote ruling.  The Group's manager will 
        cast tie-breaking votes as needed.  No longer will managers 
        have the elite decision-making authority on change but now 
        every employee will own the responsibility for change with a 
        say in making change happen.

    3.  Make every employee own the responsibility and authority to 
        ensure that their given group is being properly led and 
        supported by real leadership in their group manager.  
        Beginning now, and every six months, all direct reports will 
        do written leadership performance appraisals on the group 
        leader, and then as a group, will discuss those appraisals.  A 
        referendum of confidence will be taken on the group leader and 
        if less than 2/3 positive, a list of actions for improving his 
        or her leadership will be given to the group leader.  If in 
        the referendum held the following six months, the group leader 
        has failed to improve, winning a 2/3 positive referendum, then 
        the group, as a group, will find and select, from within the 
        group or elsewhere in Digital, a new leader, and the current 
        group leader will find a another group to lead or find an 
        individual contributor position.  No longer will any group be 
        able to say "it's management, not us" for now all groups own 
        the authority to ensure professional leadership to help the 
        group plan properly, achieve its goals, and attain higher 
        levels of accomplishment.

    4.  Make every employee own the responsibility for ensuring that 
        all group members contribute their fair share of effort, and 
        their fair share of creative thinking.  Mandate that all 
        employees of a group will be given performance appraisals not 
        only by the group leader but also by every peer within the 
        group.  Every member will be responsible for improving based 
        on the accumulative feedback from other members and will be 
        subject to due process by the group leader if found by 2/3 of 
        the group not to be performing in an acceptable manner as 
        defined by the group, and not willing to improve per the 
        feedback.  No longer will any employee say, "he [or she] is 
        coasting, protected by management" for all group members now 
        own the authority to ensure that everyone is building a more 
        successful Digital TOGETHER, each contributing in both 
        performance -- AND EQUALLY -- in creative thinking to discover 
        new ways to increase efficiency and effectiveness.

    5.	Make every employee an entrepreneur building a single more 
        successful company.  Mandate that every employee's future 
        raises will be determined by both performance and creative 
        thinking appraisal that has lead to increased efficiency and 
        effectiveness, and cooperation and harmony within Digital to 
        build a more successful company.  In addition, as a reward to 
        cooperating, and building large amounts of additional revenue 
        and profit, via working SMARTER, mandate EQUAL profit sharing 
        for all employees.  Mandate any profit over a certain 
        percentage of operating income to revenue (say anything over 
        15%) goes into a common entreprenuer profit sharing bucket 
        that will be shared EQUALLY by the number of employees present 
        at the end of the fiscal year (prorated for those working in 
        Digital less than a full year).  Thus, as an example, if 
        Digital generates next year 20 billion in revenue and 5 
        billion in operating income, then 3 billion goes back into 
        Digital and 2 billion gets divided by say 125,000 employees 
        present at the end of the year, giving each a bonus check of 
        $16,000.  Now there is a profit carrot FOR EVERYONE, together 
        as a SINGLE team, to BUILD something greater than what is, to 
        look beyond just doing a good job getting a wage or salary.  
        There is an incentive to think creatively and to incur change 
        and to drive constructive change into reality,quickly.  And 
        there is an incentive to work TOGETHER in harmony and 
        cooperation since the incentive is interdependently linked to 
        everyone succeeding TOGETHER as a SINGLE DIGITAL FAMILY rather 
        than an incentive for personal gain at the expense of the 
        welfare of the entire organization.  There would be a fire and 
        a passion, the spark that drives entreprenuers to build 
        something great, succeeding together as a real team.

    6.	Give every employee the opportunity to "skunk" new products 
        and services, and most especially, new value-added BIG margin 
        information service "BUSINESSES" that can optimize our 
        proprietary information technology.  Encourage and fund more 
        creativity to "fly" within Digital, especially for independent 
        but related "division" businesses, supported as required 
        according to a burning dream any individual "sees" can be 
        something GREAT for Digital.

    7.	Decentralize marketing and make every employee a "marketeer" 
        with every Account Manager a "marketing manager" responsible 
        for KNOWING what customers want for us TO DO so we satisfy 
        them better than anyone and get all the business at premium 
        prices.  Reverse-engineer Digital's business and marketing 
        plans, beginning from the final desired result: Digital wants 
        customers who willingly buy from us, who willingly pay us 
        premium prices, and who willingly remain loyal, because we 
        satisfy their information technology/value-added information 
        needs and wants better than any other alternative, providing 
        our customers premium value-added benefits with our products, 
        services and total actions of each and every Digital employee.  
        The benefit is by working backwards, writing new plans, level 
        by level, Digital can create new "detailed action change 
        plans" for more effectively building a better and more 
        successful Digital.  Mandate that every employee begin 
        listening to other employees and most especially to every 
        CUSTOMER at EVERY contact, and begin documenting that 
        feedback, and begin moving that "customer intelligence" upward 
        through the Account Managers -- and from them -- to where 
        needed throughout Digital in order that proactive changes be 
        made enabling Digital to become more responsible in matching 
        Digital actions to customer wants and expectations.  At 
        virtually EVERY customer interface between a Digital employee 
        and a customer contact, via phone or in-person, the employee 
        will ask the following:  "Before we end this meeting, I and 
        Digital would like you to candidly share your thinking on four 
        quick questions, from which we might derive recommended 
        changes in Digital products, services or actions, that would 
        not only ensure that we maintain your current satisfaction, 
        but would in fact lead to higher levels of satisfaction, all 
        so Digital can be your vendor of choice, satisfying your wants 
        better than anyone else, and of course, making money in doing 
        so.  The first question: What are your likes?  Second: What 
        are your dislikes?  Third: What are your wants?  Fourth: What 
        are your further suggestions for changes?"  The benefits are 
        that Digital will quickly discover from our six million 
        customer contacts exactly what must be changed in order to 
        fine-tune the total Digital engine, via hundreds of thousands 
        of subtle changes, to make more money via satisfying customer 
        needs and wants better than any competitive alternative.

    These are a few ideas to consider -- I've sent more to Alan 
    Zimmerle over the last year that I'm sure he'll share with you if 
    you find any merit in any of my creative thinking to build a more 
    successful Digital via real and total employee involvement, 
    all working smarter, together in harmony, building a dream of 
    something greater than what already is.

    Regards,
    An employee who wants to make a difference
    David
1108.10REGENT::POWERSThu May 17 1990 12:4023
>               <<< Note 1108.8 by ESCROW::KILGORE "Wild Bill" >>>
    
>    As a software engineer, I am judged on the quantity and quality of the
>    software I produce. As a manager, I would expect to be judged on how well
>    I manage my people. AND WHO BETTER TO PROVIDE THAT KIND OF INFORMATION
>    THAN THE PEOPLE I MANAGE? 

I believe it is a fallacy to expect that the managed can understand
how well they have been managed.  For some people, the process of their
being managed should be invisible.  Others need to deal with the process 
of being managed (and the person responsible for it) with every decision.

A manager doesn't just manage his own people, he manages all the resources
delegated to him: money, equipment, facilities, liaisons, AND people.
To turn Bill's question around:
Who better to judge a manager than the person who did the delegation?
(All the way up the line.)

Input from subordinates IS important, but it must be tempered with the
expectation that the input is potentially biased and based on incomplete
information.
    
- tom]
1108.1133018::MIANOJohn - NY Retail Banking Resource CntrThu May 17 1990 14:328
RE: .9

Well, Mr. Carnell you really have balls.  It sounds like you have been
trying to start a revolution.  I'm sure you'll keep us informed.  There
are probably a lot of people out here who are interested in hearing the
outcome.

John
1108.12if you want change, you need to express yourselfODIXIE::CARNELLDTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALFThu May 17 1990 20:4530
    REF: <<< Note 1108.11 >>>

    >><<There are probably a lot of people out here who are interested in
    hearing the outcome.>>
    
    If you think so, I guess I can share whatever I hear.  Here's something
    relating to an earlier submission.
    
                  I N T E R O F F I C E   M E M O R A N D U M

                                        Date:     16-May-1990 07:51pm EDT
                                        From:     IDEAS USMC
                                                  USMC.IDEAS AT A1 at MCIS3 at MRO
                                        Dept:     JIM PITTS
                                        Tel No:   8-276-8593

TO:  DAVID CARNELL @ALF

CC:  IDEAS CENTRAL @OGO

Subject: DELTA Idea #1286


        David, I have scheduled your idea on "changing the rules" on the 
        USMC DELTA agenda for May 25.  We will be back to you on our 
        discussions.
        
        Thank you on your submission.  
        
        				Regards, Jim Pitts
1108.13Focus on accountability, on people, on future!SVBEV::VECRUMBADo the right thing!Fri May 18 1990 02:0172
re .10

>   I believe it is a fallacy to expect that the managed can understand
>   how well they have been managed.  For some people, the process of their
>   being managed should be invisible.  Others need to deal with the process 
>   of being managed (and the person responsible for it) with every decision.
>    
>   A manager doesn't just manage his own people, he manages all the resources
>   delegated to him: money, equipment, facilities, liaisons, AND people.
>   To turn Bill's question around:
>   Who better to judge a manager than the person who did the delegation?
>   (All the way up the line.)

    Judgment, responsibility and accountability should process all the way
    up the line. Unfortunately, part of the culture today also seems a lack
    of willingness to confront managerial problems head on. Even managers who
    may personally have a problem with a manager working for them will cover
    that up when one of those manager's subordinates complains -- if they made
    that person's appointment to management. The person with the problem manager
    just becomes a "complainer."

    In the outside world, problems are resolved in ways that hopefully benefit
    all concerned. But to do that, you have to objectively assess the
    situation and deal with *all* the facts on the table. Here, we often
    "solve" problems by refusing to acknowledge they exist. By not confronting
    them and solving them, we not only punish the innocent but doom ourselves
    to perpetuate the same mistakes over and over again.

    On a more general note... I've found a real propensity, especially among
    people who have not managed before DEC, to become more preoccupied with
    things than people. Things -- schedules, forecasts, meetings -- scream out
    for attention, like a ringing phone. Without experience and discipline, a
    manager will rush to answer everything and degenerate into a morass of
    crisis management.

    When management from the top communicates and *enforces* the message that
    *people* are our most important resource by making sure that PEOPLE ISSUES
    take precedence over "THING" ISSUES, then the culture will start to move
    toward productive, effective and constructive management.

    What hurts us most, however, is our own low expectations of the changes
    management can effect. We always talk about individuals making a
    difference. If I didn't believe that, I wouldn't still be here putting up
    with what goes on around here. But we *never* talk about individual
    *managers* making a difference. We don't expect anything from managers.
    Indeed, the most effective, most respected individuals are those who can
    navigate around DEC and personally solve all their own issues -- without
    help from management. In fact, in two years as a manager here at DEC
    (coming here with about 5 years of management experience), I realized that
    in fact it was impossible to effect change from the low end of the
    managerial ladder. What time I didn't spend trying to make Digital look
    like a sane organization to customers I spent lobbying for changes I
    thought were obviously necessary but which I could not effect. Why?
    Because the changes I needed to make required a long-term horizon (beyond
    a quarter or fiscal year boundary) and leveraging individuals' experience
    ACROSS an organization, making all individuals more effective and
    productive, instead of always tying them to a sequential series of point
    opportunities having to do with a $ sign.

    And when I actually GOT SOMEONE to work on fixing things, within 3 months
    they were sucked down a project management black hole never to return.
    And my manager said that it was taking too long anyway (longer than a
    quarter to produce fixes).

    What's the common denominator? I just realized it: I was the only manager
    in our entire organization with outside experience managing on the outside.

    A sobering thought for myself and my own prospects at DEC.


    /Peters
    who just became less hopeful :-(
1108.14ESCROW::KILGOREWild BillFri May 18 1990 12:0720
    re .10:
    
> I believe IT IS A FALLACY TO EXPECT THAT THE MANAGED CAN UNDERSTAND
> HOW WELL THEY HAVE BEEN MANAGED.
    
    That sounds a lot like "I believe it is a fallacy that the cattle can
    understand how well they have been prodded."
    
    Certainly a manager should be judged on _all_ facets of management, not
    just a chosen few. And certainly the final judgement of a manager's
    performance belongs to the person who delegated the responsibility.
    But if an important part of a manager's job is to manage _people_, and
    if, as Ken and others have stated so often, people are this company's
    most valuable asset, then I submit that those who pass judgement on
    managers are not sufficiently informed if they do not solicit the input
    of the managed.
    
    And so I ask the question again -- when was the last time _you_ were
    asked to provide meaningful input to the review of your manager?
    
1108.15ESCROW::KILGOREWild BillFri May 18 1990 12:236
    
    Re .11:, Re .9:
    
    Yes, I'd like to hear Ken's reaction to a 514 line memo (~10 pages or
    22 screens) with the ideas buried somewhere in the bottom third...
    
1108.16Since you asked...TIXEL::ARNOLDGotta be a pony here somewhere!Fri May 18 1990 12:3210
    Since you asked:
    
.14>    And so I ask the question again -- when was the last time _you_ were
.14>    asked to provide meaningful input to the review of your manager?
    
    Much to my dismay (and possibly also much to the skewing of several
    managers reviews due to lack of input in this area), I have NEVER been
    asked for meaningful (or otherwise) input.
    
    Jon
1108.17Digital & Managers???FENNEL::LYNCHFri May 18 1990 12:329
    Myself and many I work with believe that Digital focuses on individual
    contribution and neither recognizes or rewards managerial efforts! 
    Everyone at Digital has a voice and evryone one has the option to chose
    what they will or will not do. But is anyone really in charge?  And
    does anyone listen to and respect leaders?  How can you have managerial
    structure when evryone plays musical chairs so often?
    
    I guess you are starting to sense how I feel!
     
1108.18Managers can be Evaluated!DELNI::OVIATTHigh BailiffFri May 18 1990 12:3417
    The BEST group I ever worked for (both inside and outside Digital)
    where people were content and knew they were measured on an objective
    basis, constantly, was my first group when joining Digital 9 years ago.
    
    The line people all had objective numbers they had to meet in order to
    get favorable reviews.
    
    Their managers were measured on their objectivity, how well they set
    and enforced goals, how well they coached their personnel, how well 
    they helped knock down any barriers their subordinates were encountering 
    in doing their job effectively and how well they helped their people grow. 
    
    The system in effect was to have the Manager's Manager do periodic
    interviews with a randomly selected line person.  The system allowed
    for confidentiality and real exploration of how life was in the entire
    organization.  It was one of the most effective, efficient groups I've
    every been associated with.  In a lot of ways, I miss it.
1108.19Cause and effect.AYOU46::D_HUNTERThe dust never settles!Fri May 18 1990 13:0840
    re: .14
    
    
    If that's an open question then I can answer that in 13 years with
    digital I have never, formerly been asked to give meaningful input
    towards the review of my manager. 
    
    re: .13
    
    I think the problem around digital's managers being preoccupied
    with things rather than people is the fact that good engineers
    don't necessarily make good managers. Many of them see things
    in black and white, right or wrong, and understand a full duplex
    multi-plexer better than an under-trained subordinate who tries
    hard but is failing.
    
    re: .0
    
    While being able to spot such narcisstic individuals within a
    company is good, getting society to produce less of these individuals
    would be very good.
    
    If you're brought up in a society where competition is all and values
    such as compassion, understanding, generosity etc. are ignored or
    even derided, the narcissists will grow and flourish. More and more
    will produced and become a product of the morales of the society
    we have become.
    
    If you're brought up in a society which tells you incensantly that
    you are one of the historically down-trodden ones and that everyone
    throughout history has exploited you in every way imaginable, is it
    any wonder that paranoid tendancies surface in later life.
    
    It isn't digital's fault that these people exist. If there's blame
    to be apportioned, lay it at the door of the Educationists, the
    Theologists, the politicians. Weed it out at source. The Insight
    article only deals with the effect not the cause.
    
    Don H.
    
1108.20answer to "high bailiff"AIMHI::KILBRETHFri May 18 1990 13:322
    Where was this group inside Digital?...
    ......
1108.21Administration is the normSVBEV::VECRUMBADo the right thing!Fri May 18 1990 20:5442
    re .17

>   Myself and many I work with believe that Digital focuses on individual
>   contribution and neither recognizes or rewards managerial efforts! 
>   Everyone at Digital has a voice and everyone one has the option to chose
>   what they will or will not do. But is anyone really in charge?  And
>   does anyone listen to and respect leaders?  How can you have managerial
>   structure when everyone plays musical chairs so often?

    DEC is a culture of individuals. The matrixed organization, people
    often having more than one manager up the line, etc. indicates that the
    essential part is the pool of individuals. It's only how they officially
    get accessed that changes. And how they get informally accessed never
    changes. When the "model" star performer is someone who can navigate
    through DEC without management help, what does that say about our image of
    what managers do? And it doesn't help that many managers administrate only,
    letting all the chaos and turmoil above them pass right through and
    directly impact the people working for them.

    Is anyone really in charge? No. It's some task force somewhere deciding on
    the next round of corporate reorganizing and procedure modifying. If I see
    one more diagram called an "organizational template," I think I'll puke.

    Will anyone listen to and respect leaders? Yes and no. The people who work
    for a real leader will listen to and respect that person. The problem is,
    will the manager above the leader who is *not* a leader listen to and
    respect that person?

    Bingo! There is no structure. Remember the note that Marge DH entered about
    who she reports to? Her job had not changed, K.O.'s job had not changed.
    Yet *every* level of management between Marge and Ken changed in one year.
    If Marge knows her job well enough that such a drastic management change
    doesn't negatively affect her, then why have all those managers in the
    first place, other than to sign papers and write reviews??

    There's a big difference between manage and administer, and, I fear, many
    managers at DEC don't know the difference. That's not even a reflection on
    the individual. You can't know what you haven't had the opportunity to
    learn.


    /Peters
1108.22I worked for a REAL manager - Once.SSDEVO::EKHOLMGreg - party today, tomorrow we die! (Cluster Adjuster)Sat May 19 1990 16:4817
    With my 17 years at Digital, I have had the pleasure of working for
    one TRUELY good manager. He cared about his people and would do
    anything to help them succeed. On the other hand, the people would
    do anything to help him succeed. He went on to become a plant manager
    of a couple of different manufacturing plants and finally ended up
    hitting the upper roadblock and left DEC.
    
    I see the "SAND CASTLE" building done by managememt NOW coming to
    an end! It's to bad that there are "working" people also involved
    in this "SAND CASTLE" as it is coming down. Colorado Springs plant
    is now looking at another 400 people to leave their present jobs
    and the time frame is short.
    
    The NEW Digital will be different than the old. I just hope it's
    better and this problem of management addressed. From statements
    that KEN has made, I think it will be.
    	Greg
1108.23Some remedies needed - not CHEFS::OSBORNECIt's motorcycling weather againSun May 20 1990 20:5634
    
    Been out a lot, so just catching up. Have read this topic from base
    note through. 
    
    Very interesting. Recognise much of myself in the summary in the
    base note, & many elements of other managers. 
    
    May be a raving narcissist - don't know, no-one has ever said so
    (or the reverse). Shades of Basil Fawlty - "Pretentious - moi?"
    
    Have been a manager for a fair number of years, on several continents. 
    Heavily involved in management development & appraisal for a 50,000
    staff company. Many of the premises of the base note feel right
    based on experiental feedback. We used to spend a great deal of
    time identifying as positive many of the behaviours addressed, &
    testing for their prescence. Many of the attributes were felt to
    be inborn, rather than easily learnt - the theory then was that
    you could hone what was there, but not implant what was missing
    completely.        
    
    Is the converse true? Can you convert a narcissist to something
    else? To what, why? What preferred behaviours do you want to 
    achieve to improve profit?
    
    Many of the behaviours in the base note were precisely the skills
    headhunters etc will look for. How do you determine in advance whether
    these skills will be used creatively & effectively, or in a damaging way?
                
    FWIW, this managers view is that Digital is a most difficult company
    in which to manage, compared to others in which I have worked - but 
    that's a different topic (or is this the tendency to blame everyone
    else, as identified in the base note............)
    
    
1108.24Gulf between DEC-only and outside managementSVBEV::VECRUMBADo the right thing!Mon May 21 1990 02:3837
                
>   FWIW, this managers view is that Digital is a most difficult company
>   in which to manage, compared to others in which I have worked - but 
>   that's a different topic (or is this the tendency to blame everyone
>   else, as identified in the base note............)


    I've managed elsewhere, and it *is* more difficult. Digital has a curious
    dichotomy about it.  On the one hand, you can do almost anything. On the
    other hand, your hands are tightly bound in other areas. There is much
    less discretion in the day to day: expenses, supplies, facilities,
    resources, etc, than there is in more major areas, for example,
    establishing new positions in an organization (provided you can get
    approval). The situations that result from this sort of culture require
    patience and creativity. For example, I became our district's expert at
    revenue accrual. But that's hardly a constructive use of one's creative
    impulses!

    What this really means is that where you would normally expect roadblocks,
    there are none. Where you wouldn't expect roadblocks, there are. That's a
    real problem, especially for managers who have managed before coming to
    Digital. As a manager I would expect to deal with problems -- but I
    wouldn't expect to deal with them where they shouldn't/don't exist outside
    DEC.

    So, if you managed before DEC, you get *extremely* frustrated, often
    because you may be working for someone who *only* managed at DEC -- and
    who, by means of their experience, expects "the system" to be just the way
    it is. You can't know what you don't know.

    Personally, I'd suggest that managers who've only managed at DEC should
    be given sabbaticals to manage in some other organization, perhaps
    academic or charitable, to get some fresh perspectives. I just see a
    tremendous gulf between outside and in-DEC management.


    /petes
1108.25For non-managers onlyMOCA::BELDINDick BeldinMon May 21 1990 13:52100







Why all the fuss about Managers?

   From all the discussion about incompetent (and other kinds) of managers, I
   believe that we must be selecting the most disliked persons for promotion to
   these positions.  Otherwise, how would someone be able to generate the
   ill-feeling that seems so prevalent?  Here are some of the hypotheses I have
   dreamed up:

   Substitute for (favorite-ethnic-group) bashing

      Since it is no longer socially acceptable to make ethnic jokes, managers
      are a safe substitute (at least in digital where their power is minimal).
      Notes appears to be the network equivalent of the water-cooler, where
      employees from different offices have traditionally gather to gossip about
      the boss(es).

   Generalization from personal experiences

      Some of the comments appear to be the results of generalization from very
      powerful negative experiences.  (Similarly to the half-truths that become
      racial myths.) Unjustified generalization is a common human failing, even
      among people who aren't managers.

   Convenient scapegoat

      In the last analysis, I have to discount the abstract characterizations of
      managers in general, while recognizing the legitimate concerns about how
      some people treat other people (regardless of race, creed, or ethnic
      origin...)

What is a reasonable role (function) for digital managers?

   It seems that there are not clear expectations about what managers can and
   should be doing.  Perhaps a review of what kinds of functions a manager can
   exercise would be helpful to eliminate some of the myths.

   Leadership

      The one managerial function that gets positive response is Leadership.
      All the adjectives and synonyms used to describe leadership are positive:
      Goal Setting, Inspirational, Vision Building, Charismatic.

      But there is a darker side.  The same kinds of behavior can be described
      as fanatical, obsessional, utopian, single-mindedness.  So leadership is a
      two edged sword.  Any manager cited for leadership can also be accused of
      being a fanatic.

   Administration

      The definition and operation of procedures is an area that many people







      will exclude from management when trying to emphasize the glamorous
      leadership function.  So we distinguish between Leaders and Adminstrators.
      The former and "good managers", the latter merely competent (or even
      mediocre.) But, regardless of the less attractive nature of
      administration, in this role the manager has the biggest opportunity to
      help or hinder his company's competitiveness.

      To get things done, a manager must Identify needed resources, Coordinate
      and set resource priorities, and negotiate to Resolve conflicts between
      various goal-directed activities.

What supporting roles (functions) are needed to make managers useful?

   No manager can do things alone.  If he could, he would be called an
   Individual Contributor.  So, what kinds of supporting roles must be available
   to make a manager useful to the company?  Does any of the discussion in
   previous notes suggest that we may be denying some managers the conditions
   necessary for them to be useful?

   Expert

      Someone (it could be the manager, but doesn't have to be) must have the
      Knowledge of at least one way to achieve any goal which the manage wants
      to achieve.  For many goals, Mastery of some specialized skill(s) is
      required.  So the manager must have access to at least these kinds of
      skilled experts.  (Note, I said have access to, not have as employees!)

   Followers

      Its pretty difficult to be a leader if no one follows.  Every useful
      manager will have some followers who are: capable of Active listening,
      Willing to follow instructions, and Commit to complete tasks assigned to
      them.

 
    
1108.26We're seeking patterns, not stereotypesSVBEV::VECRUMBADo the right thing!Tue May 22 1990 04:0178
    re .25

    I don't think it's an issue of disliking a class of people or engaging
    in some primal urge to engage in bashing.

    I've been at DEC 5+ years, two in the middle as a manager. I was a
    manager at my two jobs prior to DEC. When I became a manager, I NOTEd in
    our local notes file and expressed my opinions on the state of things,
    management philosophy, anything else people wanted to discuss. People
    were shocked. (Not so much at what I said but that I said anything at
    all.) Unfortunately, frankness can also be career limiting at times
    (another topic).

    Generalizations are not negative. They can be, if you are dealing in
    stereotypes. But they can be a positive influence if you are seeking to
    find a pattern, a root cause, of a problem. And we *do* have a problem.
    Now that I'm not a manager anymore -- and people feel they can again talk
    completely freely -- I see a mounting cynicism about management at Digital.
    That the managers who care about their people and set about to do the
    right thing burn themselves out while the ones who buy drinks and lunches
    for their bosses get ahead.

    As for what we expect from managers, I think we agree. Part of the
    confusion about what managers do at Digital is that they are limited by
    bureaucracy. I agree about your assessment about leadership qualities
    being a potential two-edged sword. But the touchstone is a simple
    question: are they working just for their own good, or for the good of
    their people and company (and their own good by extension)?

    Administration is not a negative. Effective and timely administration is
    a critical factor in management. Administration has become a "negative"
    term at DEC because paperwork is done in lieu of managing. Simple
    example. I was a PSS manager. After a quarter or two of falling into the
    "no, you can't take vacation right now" and "no, you can't go to
    training right now because I need two more weeks of billable time to
    make budget," I sent people on vacation when they planned it, and sent
    people to training when they needed it. Period. *I* dealt with the
    problem of needing to make up the revenue. That's *my* job. It's *NOT*
    my job to abrogate my responsibility and make my budget a personal
    concern of my employee. If I do pass through responsibility, I'm not
    managing, I'm just pushing papers somewhere in a corner--"administering."

    I'm more of a hands-on manager, some, equally effective, are more hands
    off. That's a matter of style, and I suppose some might identify one more
    with "managing" and one more as "administering." But, again, the issue is
    that "administering" has become another word for paper-pushing.

    It's interesting you bring up supporting roles. For a long time I've had
    a little slip of paper from a time management course I took about 8 years
    ago. It has the 3 D's of management:

    	DO

    	DUMP

    	DELEGATE

    In two years of DEC management, I had no one to delegate anything to. It
    was just my secretary and me (and doing administrative related work kept
    her busy full-time). There was little I could dump. There is, actually,
    the fourth D of management, DELAY, but I couldn't do much of that either.

    But, as I indicated in an earlier note, I've only realized on reflection
    that there were things I could not get done simply because other
    managers, either peers or superiors, did not think they were necessary.
    I used to blame myself for my lack of persuasiveness, or in more
    frustrating moments, others for their abundance of denseness. The truth
    is somewhere in-between, more like two managerial cultures mixing into
    toxic shock.

    I don't think things will change until we use metrics to measure business,
    not people. Only at DEC can someone with no people skills and no staff
    loyalty succeed year after year because they made their metrics. Right
    now its still the managers who give people with months of accrued vacation
    time the choice of 1 week of training or 1 week of vacation, but not both,
    *because they need to make their numbers (and succeed)* that get ahead.

    /petes
1108.27Point of Problem Origin?CLOVE::LYNCHTue May 22 1990 12:096
    Where does the problem of managerial behavior originate from?  Top?
    Bottom? Middle?  
    
    Metrics or lack thereof certainly contribute!
    
    
1108.28CounterpointAGENT::LYKENSThe Tellurians are coming...Tue May 22 1990 12:276
Suggestion:

	How about a new note titled "Unmasking Competent Managers". Maybe if
employees identified the good ones...naa that would be too counterculture (-;

-Terry
1108.29Management by metrics is another problemSVBEV::VECRUMBADo the right thing!Tue May 22 1990 13:5619
    .27

    In many cases, metrics are all that managers use. Changing that has to come
    from the top down. Metrics are the binary pass/fail -- actually, A+ or F --
    grading system, especially in the field. Make your yearly $1.5 million
    revenue number by 1K or 2 cents, and you're golden. Miss it by the same
    amount, and you're a dog, you kiss a large percentage of excellence (SWS)
    participation goodbye, etc. etc. etc. Metrics and tracking metrics has
    become a pablum substitute at Digital for real management. I know, I've
    been there.

    Metrics are a tool, not an end.
    
    .28

    Do we have any volunteers? Several people have mentioned one or two
    *really* positive experiences.

    /pete[r][s]
1108.30it's who you know, not what you know, that countsODIXIE::CARNELLDTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALFTue May 22 1990 14:14129
    
    Posted on behalf of a Digital employee who wishes to remain anonymous.
    
    REF: 1108.0
    
    Yes, I too read the Insight magazine article.  Strikes close to 
    home doesn't it?  You might also scan "What Leaders Really Do" by 
    John P. Kotter, in the May-June 1990 issue of the Harvard Business 
    Review, for comments on managing complexity and change. 

    Some reactions based on these articles, the continuing malaise at 
    Digital, and nearly thirty years managerial experience in the 
    computer industry are:

    A.  Digital is much more a politicized company than a bureaucratic 
    one.

    Bureaucracy, in and of itself, is not bad.  In fact, once an 
    organization reaches a certain size a bureaucracy is needed.  The 
    trick, of course, is to keep it focused only on process, not let 
    become an end in itself, nor allow it to become the gatekeeper to 
    operational issues.  Sunset clauses always help.

    Adages like "To move along (i.e., ahead), go along" or "It's who 
    you know, not what you know that counts" ring very true at today's 
    Digital.  Proof can be shown in recent senior management 
    appointments which can only be explained as patronage.

    B.  Digital's management style: "Management by Subordinate 
    Commitment" or MSC, and is very similar to that found in the 
    high-flying US aerospace industry of the late 1950's and most of 
    the 1960's (See "Professional Suicide" by Cole).

    This style can be characterized as: coercive, slogan-filled ("Do 
    the right thing."), absolving management of any responsibility, 
    self-inflicted personal stress, etc.

    The "empowerment" theme plays very neatly into MSC. 

    The scenario is: If you, the individual, accept a task, then you 
    are held TOTALLY accountable.  In the event that you fail, YOU 
    FAIL AND ONLY YOU.  If you succeed, great!  The next task becomes 
    even more Herculean, and so on ... until you fail.  Again total 
    management absolution for failure.  At Digital, the people who are 
    "killed" are the ones that truly desire to make a difference, 
    commit to heroic efforts -- and fail (i.e., It's your personal 
    failure -- YOU weren't good enough, YOU couldn't "influence" the 
    right people, ...).  The people who move ahead do not make this 
    mistake; they become very visible meeting goers and "go along" 
    never making decisions.

    The people who were early advocates of UNIX, open I/O busses, 
    industry standard PC's, and other "risks" are mostly "non-people" 
    in today's Digital.  They had it "right" and paid.

    Moral: Always get an agreed to support plan (in detail, in 
           writing) from management when taking on a new task.

    C.  If management has the onus of the stewardship of culture, as 
    Schein says, then it should not be surprising that normative 
    behavior is as it is at Digital.  Things that do not change, 
    remain the same, to paraphrase George Odione.

    It is sometimes useful to turn the question about change at 
    Digital around.  If change is not happening, when most rational 
    person can see, understand, etc. that change is needed -- instead 
    of wringing your hands in frustration, ask what would be a 
    rational reason that it is not changing.  Very different 
    perspective with interesting insights.  [Hint: It most often has 
    nothing to do with moving Digital ahead.]

    During it's history, Digital has been extremely lucky.  Honeywell 
    killed 3C, the PDP-11 resulted only after a threat from Data 
    General, PRIME had 32-bit minicomputer before the VAX, IBM ignored 
    the mid-range, etc.  

    In all of those past instances, DEC employees rallied, independent 
    of most management involvement, and "Did the Right Thing."  Issues 
    were openly discussed, anyone could offer a position on anything 
    (i.e., a finance person could comment on an engineer's plan) -- as 
    long as it could be backed up with homework.  Any idea (positive 
    or negative) had merit, issues and not people were argued.  
    Personal attacks were NOT ALLOWED.  Decisions were openly made, 
    communicated, committed to ,and supported.  The team either "won" 
    or "lost" -- no individual ever failed.  That was DEC culture.

    Today, rallying is not happening.  Is that a surprise?  Digital is 
    not DEC for many well known reasons.  Some most certainly of which 
    are the lack of respect for the individual employee, MSC, "turf 
    wars," etc.  So much for the stewardship of culture.

    What is happening though, from the bottom-up, is a movement to 
    have decision-making forced upon those squarely responsible -- 
    Digital management.  The argument "...put decision-making closest 
    to those affected." is the false plank of the flimflam 
    rationalization for Digital's management by subordinate 
    commitment. 

    Big salaries and restricted stock options for people normally 
    mandate BIG problem-solving and HEAVY decision-making -- ideally 
    based on competence.  Our current transition as stated at the last 
    State of the Company meeting is driving some of these issues.
    
    This will be a very painful transition, but necessary if Digital 
    is to survive.  The litmus test for competence will be clear: 
    decision makers, leaders, and managers working with all of 
    Digital's employees to build a team is the only way to move 
    forward.  The employees know which is which.  The salad days of 
    constant quarterly revenue increases that fostered the "Good old 
    boy's/girl's" to take root and thrive are over.   

    D.  Change at Digital, if history serves, will only come when 
    external threats are sufficient enough to cause it to happen.  
    Digital has never been able to effectively re-direct itself 
    otherwise.

    Digital's management history indicates their belief that what made 
    Digital successful in the past will do so again.  The risk of 
    change to that implicit assumption is not within their universe of 
    reality. The party-line "leadership in ...." can not mask a 
    lemmingism march over a cliff.  Inherent vulnerables require 
    fundamental changes to occur -- now the stakes are extremely high 
    and the risks are enormous.

    The question is: does Digital have the time to amplify its 
    strengths. I truly hope so.

    Just some thoughts.
    
1108.31terrific insightATLACT::GIBSON_DTue May 22 1990 15:331
    re .30  nicely put.
1108.32IMHOAUSTIN::UNLANDSic Biscuitus DisintegratumWed May 23 1990 06:5152
    re: .30  the MSC trap ...
    
    Ouch!  I and others have learned the hard way about MSC.  All too
    often have I watched a subordinate accept an onerous task and make
    a committment, assuming that the manager delegating the task is also
    committing support for the subordinate.  All too often has the first
    message been "Do what you can, we'll understand" and the followup
    has been "We never committed to you, but *you* committed to us ...".
    
    In business law, a contract that does not have two equitable parts
    (deliverable and renumeration) is considered "unconscionable".  In
    Digital, it has become more and more a way of life.
    
    re:  a comment previous about rewarding management ...
    
    Pete[r][s] Vecrumba raised a point about properly rewarding management.
    I agree that it has been a central problem, but I look at it from a
    slightly different viewpoint:  not as a reward, but as "Just Desserts".
    Management (and the individual contributors, to be fair) rarely get
    their just desserts in today's Digital.  The message is "If you don't
    mess up, you'll keep your job and get raises".  The message *should*
    be "If you don't deliver, you'll lose your job and get nothing!"
    
    I don't mean this in a negative sense, that we should manage by fear
    and intimidation.  But there has to be balance in the universe, yin
    and yang, positive and negative.  As long as a manager can survive and
    prosper by not making commitments or taking responsibility, then there
    will be *no* motivation for a manager to ever do so.  As long as a
    person gets the same amount of raise (or little enough difference as
    not to notice) no matter what his job performance is, then there will
    be little improvement in his productivity, and none at all in our
    overall profits.
    
    It's a thorny problem, especially for middle management.  Many may feel
    that have nothing at all to gain by taking risks and responsibilities,
    and that they have everything to lose.  We can tout loyalty to the
    company, "the greater good", and all the other cliches, but if they
    have to choose between themselves and the company, then it will be
    themselves, and I don't blame them.  The same holds true for middle
    level individual contributors.   So the decision and the action has
    to be taken at the top levels, and the actions have to be clearly
    explained to all the employees so that there is no misunderstanding.
    Morale and confidence in management will only rise if we see actions
    and results.  I don't look forward to that time, because it will be
    messy and emotional.  But I do look forward beyond that time to when
    Digital has a workforce committed to the company's success, and has
    the wherewithal to reward the workforce appropriately.  
    
    IMHO of course,
    
    Geoff Unland
    
1108.33don't pass the buckSALEM::SHEPARDWed May 23 1990 11:4717
     Felt this had a spot here.

     Reprinted here withuot permission from May 1990 issue of Readers 
     Digest.
     			QUIP LASH
     	During a sales meeting, the manager was berating all of us on
     the sales staff for our dismally low sales figures. "I've had just
     about enough of poor performance and excuses," he began. "If you
     can't do the job," he added, "perhaps there are other sales people
     out there who would jump at a chance to sell the worthy products
     that each of you has the privilege to represent." Then pointing to
     our newly recruited, retired pro-football player, he said, " If a
     football team  isn't winning, what happens? The players are replaced
     -right?"
     	The question hung heavy for a few seconds, but then the ex-football
     player answered. "Actually, sir, if the whole team was having trouble
     -we usually got a new coach."
1108.34incompetent or misguided priorities?SHALOT::FAILEThief! Baggins! We hates it!Wed May 23 1990 13:5249
    I've followed all of these replies with interest; however, I hate labeling
    someone incompetent.  As my 16 year old son once told me "Dad, no one
    is useless, at least they can serve as a bad example." ;')

    I've been programming now for about 15 years; 3+ at Digital.  During the 
    time before joining DEC most of my work has been on various customer sites 
    developing software (contracting).  I've seen a lot of managers, management
    techniques, and lack there of.  The absolute best manager I ever had was 
    while I was working for a national consulting firm.  

    He taught me one thing to look for in a good manager; interest in the 
    people you represent/manage.  It was his belief that he couldn't be 
    successful without the support of those he managed (there's a novel idea!).
    His technique was really very simple, he would listen, decide, and take 
    action.  You the individul were important.  There was no double-speak or  
    speeches laced with fancy/worn-out cliches.  I always had a straight 
    answer on any question within a few hours or days.  Can we find managers 
    like this in Digital?  

    IMHO, yes we can.  I'm sure that a certain amount of a manager's job
    is developing his/her political awareness/network just as it's a
    programmer/engineer's responsibility to develop new skills as the industry 
    changes or you become obsolete.  I think problems surface when the
    manager places to much emphasis on the political environment and not 
    enough on people.  The manager becomes more politician and less manager.

    The same result would happen if a programmer read technical manuals in 
    order to stay current with the industry but never produced any code because
    of the time spent reading manuals.  The person might know a lot but hasn't 
    produced a thing.  Managers who place political maneuvering above the
    importance of the people they represent might be recognized in many
    facilities throughout the Digital community and greeted with smiles
    where ever they go except the one place it matters most; their own people.
 
    Are these people incompetent?  Who knows?  I think it's more a question
    of misguided priorities.  If you're going to call yourself a programmer
    you've got to produce code sometime.  If you're going to be a manager,
    accept the responsibility, get involved with your people, and manage.  If 
    you're going to be political opportunist, go ahead and run for office but 
    don't try to manage others at the same time.  

    In short, do the job you agreed to do when you accepted it.  
    
    Cheers,

    Cody
        
    
1108.35Could not have said it better than .34 !MEMV02::OSTIGUYSecure it or SHARE itWed May 23 1990 15:085
    .34
    
    Right on the BUTTON !
    
    Lloyd
1108.36eating the seed cornSMOOT::ROTHThink you can? or you can't? UR right!Wed May 23 1990 17:0618
Re: .34

I once knew the kind of manager you described... they were a TRUE LEADER
and they had it in spades. But the higher-up managers that routinely
spewed forth euphamisims and empty promises choked them.. when this
manager tried to calmy take a realistic approach to many issues they were
told that they were a 'boat rocker' and 'not a team player'. Personal
agendas and pride of higher ups came first. Digital, as a result, lost.

This person is still functioning as a manager but not in any kind of key
role. This once energetic, hopefull, talented individual is now
dis-illusioned, frustrated and bitter. This scenario is being repeated at
many companies, not just DEC.

Digital's future is in its people. We may just be eating our seed corn
folks.

lee
1108.37BAGELS::CARROLLWed May 23 1990 17:3544
    digital has many "managers".  A "good" manager at digital is one who
    only cares about his/her "numbers" and, as long as the "numbers" look
    good to the higher ups, the "manager" looks good.  I know of one who
    got a 1 on his/her review this way.
    
    Digital needs leaders who will take the "numbers" and put them in the
    wastebasket where they belong.  We need leaders who can motivate,
    inspire, properly reward/admonish; people with a real desire to make
    DEC what it should/could be, the number one vendor and the best place
    to work in the industry.
    
    We have the technology (no thanks to management), we have the people
    (partly in thanks to management).  We have the capability of making
    the proverbial 6 million dollar man, BUT MANAGEMENT IS CONTENT TO
    MAINTAIN THE STATUS QUO.  Either they are deaf/blind, incompetent
    or insincere. Whatever the reason, they must be gotten rid of.    
    
    
    How can we resolve this problem? (or any DEC problem)
    
    Management at the very top may be aware of DEC's problems but the 
    farther away from a problem a person is, the more abstract the problem
    becomes and, as such, more difficult to understand.
    
    Middle and lower management will not present to the top exactly what
    the problems are because in doing so, the will be confessing to not
    properly doing their jobs (political suicide in their minds).
    
    Our problems will go unresolved, we at the bottom will have to continue
    to "break the rules" to get our jobs done, and we will wade through
    as we have been doing until a better job comes along(now lets see,
    which vendors haven't I worked for yet, aah, yes, IBM, oh well, I
    better get a higher pair of swampers, looks like I am stuck here)
    
    
    
    
    
    (this is no knock against my manager, she is one of the best I have
    had in my career)
    
    
    
    
1108.38My .02....COMET::MESSAGEI will not go quietly...Wed May 23 1990 20:1610
    
    	.37 hit it on the head, folks...."Managers" try to control
    	situations and people. "Leaders" try to show, by word and deed, 
    	what the desired behaviours (outcomes?) SHOULD be. Title of manager
    	DOES NOT automatically mean that the person with that title is
    	going to be one or the other type, but experience shows that,
    	not just at digitial, the former have the job the majority of
    	the time, for the reasons listed in .0.
    
    	Bill
1108.39One line summary of management?GOFER::HARLEYYvonne, I love you, but he pays me...Wed May 23 1990 20:317
    I recall seeing the following quote a while ago in this conference:
    
    		"Management is a function, not a class"
    
    Seems appropriate for this topic...
    
    /harley
1108.40What do you do when the wrong team is in charge?SVBEV::VECRUMBADo the right thing!Thu May 24 1990 03:3657
    re .32

    Not providing support is central to how we do things at DEC. For example,
    we tell sales reps not to worry about where the resource will come from to
    deliver services. Business sold? Crisis management. One of the reasons I
    do the survival guide on my own time is so that the only commitments I
    make are personal ones to fellow Digital employees. If I commit to
    management, and they send me out on something that requires full-time plus
    attention, then I'm still held accountable for my original commitment. I
    didn't even tell management I was doing it until it was done. Managers
    also have a way of "telling" you what to do on your personal time. I've
    had my management try and pull this on me and people working for me.

    Have a problem? Study it. Define a process to cope with it. Make sure the
    process holds no individual accountable. For example, submit a "911" for a
    resource. No resource? Too bad. I never used the process because there was
    no resource guaranteed at the end of it. In fact, if I *had* used the
    process, I would have had an easy out for not providing resources for
    accounts whose PSS business I was responsible for!! What a gift horse!!
    What bullshit.

    About rewarding management, I completely agree with you. Everyone is
    accountable for their own action or inaction. We need to discourage
    knee-jerking, inaction, and risk avoidance through committee indecision or
    "process" failure.

    re .33

    Great story! Everywhere but DEC (that I've worked) you work there at the
    discretion of your employer. They can just tell you to leave and not come
    back. Not at DEC. Either we promote people up and out or make their lives
    miserable until they decide to leave. Whether the unwanted person gets the
    former or latter depends on their political skills.

    re .34

    I've always been straight-forward with people working for me and that I've
    worked for. I have met very few managers at DEC genuinely interested in
    listening, considering what people have to say, and acting on it. They say
    yes, yes, yes. They do nothing, nothing, nothing. If a manager does
    nothing then they are not competent as managers.

    re .36

    Yup! It breaks my heart to see bright motivated people turned into burnt
    out, stressed out, disillusioned employees -- marked as "boat rockers"
    and not "team players." The problem is, what to do when the right team
    isn't in control?

    re .37

    You don't have to put numbers in the wastebasket. They should just be
    part of what you're responsible for as a manager. The problem is, there
    isn't anything else that counts *more* than the numbers. That's a problem
    that comes from above.


1108.41encouraging leadership to happenODIXIE::CARNELLDTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALFThu May 24 1990 12:1775
             cross-posted from MARKETING VAXnotes conference
                       with permission from author
    
             <<< ASIMOV::$1$DJA3:[NOTES$LIBRARY]MARKETING.NOTE;1 >>>
                   -< Marketing - Digital Internal Use Only >-
================================================================================
Note 1220.9              Now IBM are buying Valid Logic.                 9 of 12
KEEPER::THACKERAY                                    46 lines  21-MAY-1990 12:11
                            -< Another challenge. >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Here is a yet another alarm bell. For those of you who don't know yet,
    Don McInnis has now left Digital to go to Prime/Computervision. We are
    now in a heavy sea and a shark has eaten the rudder. 
    
    Where is our leadership coming from now? Nowhere, as far as I can see.
    Our UNIX strategy is incomprehensible. Our third-party strategy is in
    tatters and failing on a regular basis. Our workstations are great but
    have few applications. What tools there are lag behind SUN and HP and
    IBM. As yet, we have no articulated strategy to compare with IBM's CIM
    Series, which clearly lays down their approach in Engineering,
    Manufacturing and Integration. We are losing to Oracle. We are losing
    to IBM. We are losing heavily to SUN. HP are in their most threatening
    position ever and are going to be bigger than us soon, mostly from
    Engineering and Manufacturing markets.
    
    From this other angle, I repeat my challenge to Digital's Senior
    Management.
    
    Relinquish your grip on our strategy and listen to Tom Peters and Peter
    Drucker. Find the bright, knowledgeable, aggressive, restless,
    frustrated people in ESG, SSE, CTC, sales, etc. and give them the
    tiller and authority. It's obvious who they are. You probably don't
    like them, because they are constantly griping about the barriers of
    internal politics, re-organizations and beaurocracy.
    
    Swallow your pride. You've failed. It's time to try something else. Let
    go of the reins. Things have become too complicated for you. The people
    who know the answers and who are chafing at the bit want to move, but
    are currently powerless because you have a total lock on authority.
    When these people try to do something, you change the rules. It's
    becoming intolerable for those who care. These people are the people
    who work at the details. Who have their hands dirty. Who feel pain when
    they have to implement strategies and tactics they don't believe in but
    are told to do them. Who talk to customers and find out for real what
    they want. Who have to wait FOR MONTHS OR YEARS for "the next"
    re-organization, when "things will be worked out".
    
    For goodness' sake, LET GO!!! Become real managers by encouraging
    leadership to happen; by ALLOWING it to happen. Let those who suggest
    action GO AND DO IT. Open the doors for them. Stop burying them under
    beaurocrats who have no hands-on understanding of the technologies or
    customers. 
    
    Sincerely,
    
    Ray
                  I N T E R O F F I C E   M E M O R A N D U M

                                        Date:     22-May-1990 02:50pm EDT
                                        From:     THACKERAY
                                                  THACKERAY@IE0022@CSDPIE@MRGATE@ODIXIE@ALF
                                        Dept:      
                                        Tel No:    

TO:  CARNELL.DAVID@A1

Subject: RE: Notefile MARKETING Note 1220.9

David, you are welcome to cross-post any note I have already entered into a 
public forum such as Notesfiles, or to copy to any interested parties.

Regards,

Ray
    
1108.42Tough going? Call Competence 911CSG001::MAKSINJoe Maksin 291-0378 PDM1-2/H4Fri May 25 1990 12:3534
    Re: .-1
    
    Excerpt from forthcoming book, "Father, Son & Co.: My Life at IBM
    and Beyond," by Thomas J. Watson, Jr. and Peter Petre (Bantam Books,
    Summer 1990), is taken from June 4, 1990 issue of Fortune magazine,
    page 124:
    
        Over the years Vin had proven again and again that he knew how
        to take hold of a troubled project and bring it off.  I agonized
        about the effect this would have on my brother.  I called Dick
        into my office on a gray December afternoon.  "I've got to tell
        you some things that are not very pleasant," I said.  "The future
        of the business depends on the 360.  It looks bad now, and I'm
        going to have to take the whole project and put it under the
        person I believe is most competent to bring it out of the woods."
        I told him it was going to be Vin, and that Dick would shift
        over to be chief of the corporate staff, with no line-management
        responsibility.
          
    I'd say an intimate glimpse of very consequential decision making,
    leadership, and recognition for the need of competence.  Competence,
    i.e., a proven track-record, gained from experience in problem-solving
    the issues at hand. 

    [The IBM System/360 (circa: 1964) was a watershed for the computer
     industry, acknowledged by C. Gordon Bell and Allen Newell in their
     1971 classic, "Computer Structures: Readings and Examples" in the
     McGraw-Hill Computer Science Series of books.
    
     C. Gordon Bell, often referred to as the father of the VAX --
     another successful family of computers, extended the lessons the
     360 taught.]
    
     Joe
1108.44nice book to readROM01::CIPOLLADEC's margin on an IBM sale is zero!Fri May 25 1990 22:099
    the previous note reminded me that i'm finishing to read 
    "The Managerial Mistique, Restoring Leadership in Business"
    
    by Abraham Zaleznik
    {Harper & Row editors}
    
    as the title says, it focuses on the difference btw leaders and
    managers (i find it absolutely great!)
    Bruno
1108.45SVBEV::VECRUMBADo the right thing!Wed May 30 1990 01:515
    re .44

    Has the book given you any insights you find applicable to Digital?

    /Peters
1108.46wow, this article is the bestRUTLND::GOODMANFri Jun 01 1990 20:1837
    
    This was the best article I've read since I've been at DEC (5
    years now).
    
    
    It really speaks to what I've seen, FELT, and believe about many
    managers.
    
    
    I agree that managers need more guidance
                           to be held accountable for their impact on
                              PEOPLE'S LIVES
                          
                          perhaps we need to reward people not just on
                           how many widgets their group produces, but...
                           on wether or not their group used their 
                           potential, felt valued, and at the very least
                           didn't feel put down, used, or abused.
    
    I believe the pyschologist who had input into the article knew
    what he was talking about.
    
    The tough part for me has been how to voice my concern and how to
    help solve the problem in a positive way (I.e. not a "witch hunt"...
    ...although after working under one of these types of managers for
    a while it sure is tempting to advocate this, ha ha...ouch..).
    
    I believe that a managers review should reflect, in part, their
    subordinates evalutions...
    
    perhaps some of the "negative feedback" many managers would be hearing
    could be presented as invitations to grow as opposed to harsh
    criticism.
    
    A concerned employee,
    Shereen
    
1108.47Managers rarely (really) welcome candorSVBEV::VECRUMBADo the right thing!Fri Jun 01 1990 22:0243
    re .46

>   I agree that managers need more guidance
>                           to be held accountable for their impact on
>                              PEOPLE'S LIVES
>			    [and maximizing people's potential]

    So true. It's not where you work, it's who you work for. Corporate
    "culture," no matter how beneficent, only filters through a manager to
    their staff if the manager feels like it.

    I, for one, found that tolerating a bad situation hoping for improvement
    until it becomes intolerable, then complaining to management just branded
    me as "emotional," probably because my manager's manager had emotional
    responses to everything (so my emotional response was just "letting off
    steam," never mind that by the time I get emotional over a situation
    something is GRAVELY wrong). I was left out to "hang" for a LONG time.
    That's a direct quote.

    What's worse for me, I find, is that once I feel I've been gravely
    wronged, I can't put it behind me, even if the other parties involved
    have put it behind them. For some people, their work and personal lives
    are separate, For others, like me, it's only one life, and if I can't
    respect someone personally, I can't respect them professionally. So, I
    avoid them and, by reducing my own visibility, do my own "career
    blocking." (I once didn't talk to my direct manager for months, in fact,
    until I got a change in managers.)

>   Perhaps some of the "negative feedback" many managers would be hearing
>   could be presented as invitations to grow as opposed to harsh criticism.

    The managers who need constructive criticism the most are the least
    likely to accept it graciously. Unfortunately, the only solution I've
    found that works is to work for someone else. If the problem extends up,
    then the only solution is to change organizations. Otherwise career
    blocking sets in. (Unfortunately, I rarely follow my own advice. :-( )

    I occasionally think I might be interested in management at Digital again
    if it were in a position where I had the authority to effect real change.
    (A UM it ain't!)

    Best regards,
    Peters
1108.48Here's a mgr who sought helpDYER2::WADDINGTONWadda ya mean, WE?Mon Jun 04 1990 01:0054
    I clipped this article a few weeks ago.  I've just gotten around to
    typing it in:
    
    
    From The Home News (New Brunswick, NJ) May 13, '90 (reprinted without
    permission)
    
    Managers sometimes have to learn to cope with rebellion
       By Andrew Grove
       Knight-Ridder Newspapers
    
    Q. I manage a department of professional employees.  These people have
    all been on their own at one time, and they are an energetic, creative
    but rebellious group.  That seems to be the nature of things with
    people of their ilk everywhere.
    
    In our case, this certainly makes for a lively work situation with a
    rather loose organizational structure:  These people just don't like -
    lets make it stronger, the detest - hierarchy.
    
    Yet in our firm we have a reporting hierarchy, they just ignore it.
    
    My problem is most acute with a certain individual.  He is one of the
    most talented employees, but he is the worst when it comes to showing
    respect for the reporting structure.  This person always questions me -
    he questions the assignments I give him as well as my way of doing
    things.  He conveniently forgets that I have been in the field much
    longer than he has.
    
    Now, I actually don't mind challenge, but this employee continues to
    resist even after I have made my position clear.
    
    How can I insist that this person respect the lines of authority
    without completely demotivating him?
    
    
    A. Make peace with the idea that he is entitled to justifications for
    your decisions beyond your having been in the field longer.  Your
    longer experience should enable you to come up with good reasoning and
    arguments, but it, in and of itself, is not one.
    
    So, take advantage of the fact that you have an employee who puts you
    through your intellectual paces.  This kind of test should greatly
    increase the probability that your decisions are good ones.
    
    If you have argued for your position at length and still failed to
    convince your employee of your position, you have no choice to remind
    him that you are required, in the end, to call the shots.
    
    Be neither aggressive nor apologetic about this - it's just the nature
    of your job.  Explain it to your employee, and simply ask for his
    cooperation.
    
    
1108.49Working here has been a net psychic lossSVBEV::VECRUMBADo the right thing!Mon Jun 04 1990 05:2542
    re .-1

    Certainly sounds like a possible scenario at Digital!

    When a manager deals with a questioning employee, perhaps the most
    important thing to stress is their relationship. Someone who is an
    able and adept individual contributor would not like to have every
    technical decision they make questioned in great detail and be put
    in a position of justigying their actions. Just as they need their
    manager's respect and trust, so must they return that same respect
    and trust to their manager for them to work together as an effective
    team.

    It's always right to let people know why you decide something. However,
    if you put yourself in the position where you so that by taking your
    employee through the entire decision process so they can make the
    same decision independently for themselves to verify your actions,
    then you have *completely* undermined your own authority.

    As for questioning decisions, the example cited is fairly common. What
    I find here at Digital though, is that it is very easy for the roles
    of experience to be reversed, where an inexperienced manager manages
    someone much more experienced. What does the more experienced person
    do in this case?

    I've spent over 5 years at Digital. My greatest frustration is that
    everywhere else I worked, especially as a manager, I had the opportunity
    to nurture my staff and impart my experience, but I worked for managers
    who, in turn, nurtured me and imparted their experience. Here I find that

    	(a) I still get to impart my experience to junior people

    	(b) constructive upward criticism usually has no lasting effect

    	(c) blunt upward criticism can be career blocking

    	(c) I have not "grown", having had no one to grow from

    Without any inflow, the psychic drain is enormous, and it takes its toll.

    /Peters
1108.50Once bitten...COUNT0::WELSHTom Welsh, UK ITACT CASE ConsultantSun Jun 10 1990 12:1225
	re .47:  

>>> What's worse for me, I find, is that once I feel I've been gravely
>>> wronged, I can't put it behind me, even if the other parties involved
>>> have put it behind them.

	This is true of me too, Peters. It's like being bitten by a snake.
	No matter how well the wound heals, you'll always cringe at the
	sight of that kind of snake.

	Having been swindled, conned, shafted, fooled, trodden on,
	treated with contempt and exploited by one or more managers,
	one's attitude to managers in general is bound to change.

	They notice this, and identify a troublemaker. The more you
	are sinned against, the more you get punished. If you complain
	about it, or even resent it, that's your fault too.

	Meanwhile the ones who harmed you have floated on towards the top.

	Of course, since our people are our most valuable asset, any
	manager who treats them badly or gives them a permanent chip
	on the shoulder is dealt with accordingly, right?

	/Tom
1108.51Be sure to include realityMANANA::ARNOLDGotta be a pony here somewhere!Mon Jun 11 1990 15:418
.50>	Of course, since our people are our most valuable asset, any
.50>	manager who treats them badly or gives them a permanent chip
.50>	on the shoulder is dealt with accordingly, right?
    
    Wrong.  Those managers are then promoted.  And this is not intended to
    be a SWAG answer, as I've seen it happen with sad regularity.
    
    Jon
1108.52AUSTIN::UNLANDSic Biscuitus DisintegratumMon Jun 11 1990 17:1117
    The thing I can't understand about our whole management mess is
    that *managers* are employees, too.  They have to be responsible
    to *their* bosses for getting something done, don't they?  Why
    would a middle-manager mindlessly promote an incompetent?  I
    can't believe that a middle manager would not welcome input from
    anywhere in his organization about the performance of his employees.
    
    Unless there has been some factor within Digital that caused the
    company to accumulate incompetent management over a period of YEARS,
    there must be a lot of talent in the management organization somewhere.
    I guess the key is to actively seek it out and work for it, and refuse
    to cooperate in "carrying" an incompetent manager.  Lots of people do
    it, for career or financial reasons, but does it really pay off in
    the end?
    
    On second thought, don't bother with that last question, I already
    know the answer far too well.
1108.53AUDIT THE MANAGEMENT OF OUR MOST IMPORTANT ASSETODIXIE::CARNELLDTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALFMon Jun 11 1990 18:15165
                  I N T E R O F F I C E   M E M O R A N D U M

                                        Date:     11-Jun-1990 12:54pm EDT
                                        From:     David Carnell @ALF
                                                  CARNELL.DAVID
                                        Dept:     Proposal Designers
                                        Tel No:   385-2901 404772-2901

TO:  Remote Addressee                     ( EMPLOYEE INVOLVEMENT @CFO )
TO:  Remote Addressee                     ( IDEAS CENTRAL @OGO )

CC:  Remote Addressee                     ( ALAN ZIMMERLE @CFO )

Subject: Idea Suggestion: Audit our most important asset

    Many executives within Digital have proclaimed that Digital's MOST 
    IMPORTANT ASSET is its employees.  If this is so, then the controls of 
    ensuring the optimization of our "most important asset" should EXCEED 
    all controls now in place regarding other assets: such as cash, capital 
    assets, and property.

    One such control that should be in place is auditors that ensure our 
    most important asset is indeed being optimized by managers.  Are not 
    all managers charged with making the most out of Digital assets, 
    especially their direct report employees, our most important asset?

    Now, what should be audited?  Time?  Should they be auditing to see 
    that everyone is working their required 40 hours per week?

    Or is the "REAL" asset that which resides within all Digital's 
    employees; namely, the intelligence within the minds of each of us, and 
    how we "could" use that intelligence creatively to build a more 
    successful Digital, greater than what is?

    A co-worker posted his words on this in the DIGITAL VAXnotes conference 
    and gave me permission to share his words with you:

    "Our people are of the highest caliber and are our most
    valued asset."

    "This statement is beginning to grate on my nerves.

    "MANY of our people are of the highest calibre and work very hard.
    "Some of our people are of fairly high calibre and work fairly hard.
    "Some of our people are of pretty low calibre.
    "Some of our people are just putting in time.

    "After this, the second half of the statement rests on sand. Whatever
    it may mean, it certainly isn't the case that the minority who are
    of high calibre and produce amazing results are valued. Quite the
    contrary."

    He goes on to say:

    "If people were our most valuable asset (instead of money) then we
    would account for our people and their skills just as assiduously
    as we account for money. Can you imagine THAT! For instance, the
    auditors saying "Hey, Mr Manager, can you explain this deficiency
    of 10,000 units of VMS, workstation, knowledge engineering, CASE
    and Digital organisational know-how last quarter?" And the manager
    replying "Well, you know, the son-of-a-bitch got up my nose with
    his know-it-all ways - it was either him or me.

    "And experience accounting is NOT done by sending round a 12-sheet
    document consisting of 800 lines, each showing one "skill" and
    asking people themselves to fill it in on a scale of 1-5.  Let's
    imagine THAT in financial terms - auditing would consist of making
    up a sheet showing all the assets the managers could think of one
    sunny day, and asking each individual to "estimate" how much money
    he or she was responsible for.

    "No, whatever employees are, they are NOT treated as "our most
    valuable asset". You manage valuable assets, you don't just leave
    them lying around and hope that occasionally one of them will corner
    you and force you to listen to a good idea."

    Exactly.

    How can the intelligence within every employee be properly managed as 
    our most important asset if it is "optional and voluntary" for managers 
    to seek out the ideas of their employees on how Digital could cut 
    costs, increase productivity, develop new and better products and 
    services, and increase our effectiveness, anywhere within any activity, 
    that would lead to getting and keeping more customers, revenue, margin 
    and profit?

    In several major, much larger corporations elsewhere in the world, 
    managers are charged with correctly managing their most important 
    asset: their people and their peoples' ability to THINK creatively.

    These managers, in fact, take PRIDE in the amount and quality of 
    creativity of their direct reports, and on the incremental improvements 
    developed accordingly by people "thinking" -- unlike some groups in 
    other organizations with their people just showing up to work, doing 
    the processes, catering to the ego of the boss, and going home with no 
    ownership of CREATIVE CHANGE in order to continuously improve ALL 
    company activities, increment by increment, fine-tuning the engine that 
    makes money and benefits all.

    My idea suggestion: the executive committee should begin doing audits 
    of our "most important asset" and ensure controls are in place to 
    ensure that Digital's "most important asset" is indeed being properly 
    optimized.

    Have these auditors ask every employee a lot of questions, such as,

    o  How many times in the last three years has your manager (or all 
       managers if more than one in that period) asked you for your ideas 
       to cut costs, increase productivity, develop new and better products 
       and services, and increase Digital's effectiveness, anywhere within 
       any activity, that would lead to getting and keeping more customers, 
       revenue, margin and profit, building a better and more successful 
       Digital greater than what is?

    o  How many of your ideas in the last three years has your manager 
       implemented (or if more than one manager, for each)?

    o  For those ideas outside your manager(s) control, how many of your 
       ideas in the last three years has your manager(s) championed on your 
       behalf?

    o  Describe HOW your manager supports your creativity in applying that 
       ability "to think" to build a better and more successful Digital.

    o  For those of your ideas NOT implemented by Digital, how many did you 
       receive a response detailing the logic of why your idea was not 
       appropriate for implementation?

    o  Digital considers you, and the creative thinking that you are 
       capable of, to be its most important asset -- describe those actions 
       which indicate to you that this is true.

    o  What are your suggestions and ideas for optimizing your creative 
       intelligence such that your ideas for change are fairly reviewed and 
       implemented as appropriate toward building a better and more 
       successful Digital.

    If Digital considers its employees the company's most important asset, 
    then Digital's actions in its management practices should reflect this.

    Consistently, universally throughout Digital.  Without exception.

    If employee involvement and empowerment are to be considered by some in 
    management as just fluff words of no consequence and are allowed to be 
    ignored by pockets of management within Digital, then how is this of 
    any less importance, and just as critical to Digital's future 
    prosperity, than the mis-management of millions of dollars of revenue, 
    margin, profit, or cash?

    Digital executive management would not tolerate the mis-management of 
    money; why does it allow, the mis-use, or lack of use, by some, of our 
    proclaimed most important asset: our employees, and the thinking 
    capability, creativity and enthusiasm within every employee, which has 
    enabled Digital to make money in the first place, and which could 
    enable Digital to make a lot more money in the future.

    Objective auditing might be the first step in identifying a problem in 
    the optimization of Digital's most important asset, and possible 
    solutions to it.

    Regards,
    An employee who wants to make a difference
    David
    
1108.54Just deleted one from a conference it didn't belong inCOVERT::COVERTJohn R. CovertMon Jun 11 1990 18:267
Ohmigosh; another one!

Dilbert had a related suggestion the other day -- he noted that in every case
employees were smarter than their managers, and that switching jobs would
result in an immediate 200% productivity increase.

/john
1108.55Goods ones are out there too!CIVVAX::MZARUDZKIFeelin' like Road PizzaMon Jun 11 1990 23:5310
    
     Perhaps we should create a new note for unmasking competent managers.
    It would seem alot easier. I have known of mid-managers who given the
    chance and proper backing would excell. To my knowlege one I know of
    know seems to be on the way to excelling. How did this come about? It
    looks like their managers were all moved aside or along.
     Sooo, lets round up the good ones cause they DO EXSIST.
    
    -Mike Z.
    
1108.56It must be a worse problem than designing VAX or CDA...COUNT0::WELSHTom Welsh, UK ITACT CASE ConsultantTue Jun 12 1990 13:13178
	re .52:

>>>    The thing I can't understand about our whole management mess is
>>>    that *managers* are employees, too.  They have to be responsible
>>>    to *their* bosses for getting something done, don't they?  Why
>>>    would a middle-manager mindlessly promote an incompetent?  I
>>>    can't believe that a middle manager would not welcome input from
>>>    anywhere in his organization about the performance of his employees.

	We must be very careful when using natural language about these
	issues (English is one of the most flexible and ambiguous languages).
	Symbolic logic would be safer.

	Please distinguish between the following:

	"Employee_1" 		any member of the company
	"Employee_2"		an employee_1 who is not a manager
	"Manager"		a subclass of employee_1

	It's also useful to analyze organizational issues dispassionately,
	like a problem in mechanical dynamics. That is, instead of
	thinking "that wicked man has deliberately harmed those others,
	and betrayed his trust", think "the resultant of the forces acting
	on that man pushed him in a certain direction, and lacking any
	inner convictions, he submitted to them".

	Now let's go over Geoff's remarks quoted above..

>	*managers* are employees, too.

	Managers are employee_1s. They are not employee_2s, by definition.
	Most employee_2s in Digital, according to my observation, are more
	or less free to "do what's right". Sure, there is a lot of stuff
	uttered about JPR and management by objectives, but it's mostly
	just talk. Managers, however, have three unique forces which push
	them away from "doing what's right":

	1. They are, by selection, those people who are most ambitious.
	   (The Digital culture does not, as a rule, reward valuable
	   employees except by promotion, and that is usually to a managerial
	   position). Therefore they are slaves to their own success - they
	   do not see themselves as free to do anything that will not aid
	   them to rise further.

	2. They are measured by simplistic, numerical, yes/no metrics,
	   to the exclusion of common sense or initiative. They have
	   three alternatives:

		(i) Work blindly to maximize their performance according
		    to the metrics placed upon them.

		(ii) To a greater or less extent, ignore the metrics and
		     follow their own judgment.

		(iii) Reason with their bosses to modify, remove, or
		      relax the metrics.

	   Only (i) offers realistic chances of further promotion.

	3. Because Digital's culture equates technical knowledge with
	   juniority, a committed manager must immediately stop seeking
	   it. (Some go as far as forgetting, overnight, the knowledge
	   that took years to acquire. I have heard a manager who, five
	   years before, TAUGHT the VMS System Seminar, look blank at
	   the mention of VMS and reply "You'll have to talk to one of
	   my people - I'm not technical".) This means that, given the
	   date on which a given individual became a manager, one can
	   accurately estimate what he does and does not understand.
	   Most of our top management set their feet on the bottom rung
	   of the golden ladder before software was invented 8-), and
	   that is why they think only in terms of hardware.

>	They have to be responsible to *their* bosses for getting something
>	done, don't they?

	Do they? A useful (though simplified) organizational model
	consists of establishing "formal goals" and "private goals"
	at each level of management. The formal goals are the ones
	stated in public. The private goals are those the individual
	is actually working to attain. An organizational theorem which
	makes sense to me is:

		"The formal goals at a given level reflect
		 the private goals at the next higher level".

	Think about it.

	Ken Olsen says: "We must work to cut down bureaucracy". This
	is a formal goal at the top level. The VPs also have to embrace
	it as their formal goal. But if a VP's principal private goal
	is to build up his organization so as to become as powerful
	as possible, his direct reports will get formal goals that
	are something like this:

		We must work to cut down bureaucracy in the
		company. Since only we really understand the
		company's strategy and culture, this goal
		cannot be met unless we implement it. So our
		first objective must be to gain control of
		the program to reduce bureacracy. This can
		be done by attending all the meetings, making
		convincing presentations, suggesting dynamic
		reorganizations, and setting up a program
		office staffed by our own people.

	Nice thinking, hey? Meanwhile the business goes to hell in a
	handbasket, saved only by the desperate struggles of those who
	have taken their eye off the ball and have failed to realize
	that real power and success will go to those who are seen to
	have led the program to reduce bureacracy.

	So the answer is - yes, managers are responsible to their bosses
	for getting something done. Namely, making their bosses look good.

>	Why would a middle-manager mindlessly promote an incompetent?

	There's nothing mindless about it. The reasons for promoting
	people who are not very good managers, or even very good at
	anything, are well understood and documented in several books:

	1. Someone less able than me won't make me look bad (or even
	   replace me).

	2. Someone less able won't ask awakward questions about the
	   policy and metrics I have set up (or even worse, those my
	   boss has set up).

	3. Someone less able won't rock the boat. Getting myself promoted
	   is a 40-hour-a-week job, and I don't have time to deal with
	   unnecessary distractions.

	4. If I promote someone able, he will start managing and stop
	   producing (aka "delivering" or "performing"). Then I'll need
	   to hire someone else and that will dent my numbers.

	5. I don't want any smartass at my meetings. I get uncomfortable
	   with the things they say. Even when they shut up they get that
	   smug, superior look during my presentations.

	6. "We don't want things done a better way. We want them done
	    our way".

	Enough, already.

	A more radical and distrubing question is "Supposing some reckless
	manager decided to promote a competent employee, how would he go
	about identifying an employee who would make a good manager?" I
	don't know. Do you?

>	I can't believe that a middle manager would not welcome input from
>       anywhere in his organization about the performance of his employees.

	Well, let's go back to basics. Why would a middle manager want to
	know any of that stuff? How would it help him to look good? Either
	his employees are performing well (in which case he doesn't need to
	do anything, or know anything about it). Or else some of them are
	performing badly - which might reflect on him. Why find out? After
	all, the only way his boss is likely to find out about that sort of
	thing is through him. If he collects the information and it looks bad,
	his boss might hear about it and start asking questions.

	Much better to concentrate all eforts on maximizing those old
	metrics.

>>>    Unless there has been some factor within Digital that caused the
>>>    company to accumulate incompetent management over a period of YEARS,
>>>    there must be a lot of talent in the management organization somewhere.

	Well, I go back 16 years and the relevant cultural forces haven't
	changed very much as far as I can see. That's probably long enough.

	Of course there's a lot of talent in the management organisation.
	Unfortunately, very little of it is management talent. That's why
	it would be very constructive if we had a program to help managers
	step out of their dignity and go back to doing whatever it was they
	once did so well they were made managers as a reward.

	/Tom
1108.57Cutting the Gordian KnotCOUNT0::WELSHTom Welsh, UK ITACT CASE ConsultantTue Jun 12 1990 13:5044
	The organizational and cultural problem of incompetent managers
	seems to be self-perpetuating. In terms of Chaos theory, it's
	a stable complex.

	Before anyone asks, though, I do have my own idea of the secret
	weapons which will do most to break up the status quo.

	1. Openness. This conference is a hopeful symptom, but it's only
	   a start. The CAPNET::DELTA_IDEAS conference is another, more
	   positive step in the right direction. If we can do away with
	   secrecy, Star Chambers, information "black holes", and people
	   who attempt to manage by choking off information - we'll be
	   on the right path. Whenever you have to make a decision, ask
	   yourself: "will this enhance or decrease openness?"

	2. Altruism. There are several well known paradoxes, such as the
	   Prisoner's Dilemma and the Tragedy of the Commons, which present
	   the question: shall I make the choice with the best payoff for
	   everyone, or shall I work to minimize my own losses?

	   The Prisoner's Dilemma is something like this: you and a friend
	   are accused of some crime, and imprisoned separately pending
	   trial (your guilt or innocence is irrelevant). The prosecution
	   offers you this deal:

		- If you inform on your friend, you will be set free and
		  he will get 20 years.

		- If he informs on you first, he will be set free and you get
		  20 years.

		- You are quite sure that if neither of you informs, you
		  will both get one year in prison.

	    Obviously, if you could communicate you would both agree to keep
	    quiet. But - can you trust him??

	    There isn't a logical solution. But it occurs to me there is
	    a very convincing answer in the Bible - Jesus' teaching "that
	    ye love one another". (By the way, I'm agnostic). It's ironic
	    that this advice, so often criticized as visionary and idealistic,
	    turns out to be suprememly practical and to transcend logic.

	/Tom
1108.58Amusement parts take money from you ...CUSPID::MCCABEIf Murphy's Law can go wrong .. Tue Jun 12 1990 18:3425
    RE .56
    
    I feel so depressed.  Little did I know that now matter how hard
    I worked I was destined to fall into the ranks of the incompentant.
    
    So, as of today I've brought my walkman in, unplugged my phone,
    taken out my C manual, placed everyone in the group on the Cost
    Center signitory list, and send everyone in the group off to training
    classes just for fun.
    
    God, I Feel better now.  Maybe tommorrow I'll order a VAX 9000 for
    each engineer, give out 20% raises, mandate health club time in
    the middle of the day, cut the work week down to 10-15 hours and
    push out those deadlines so that the stress level around here drops
    through the floor.
    
    I'm gonna even open this up to the whole Digital community.  REQ's
    galor.  Hire everyone who thinks this is the proper working environment
    and,
    
    
    
    Reccommend the lot of em for layoffs!
    
    
1108.59Oh no! I hit an innocent bystander -COUNT0::WELSHTom Welsh, UK ITACT CASE ConsultantThu Jun 14 1990 12:2712
	Re .58:

	Mr McCabe, you have my apologies. Of course I didn't mean YOU!
	If you are reading this conference, you are more likely to be
	part of the solution than part of the problem.

	Actually, I owe everyone an apology. I was so carried away by
	explaining the syndrome I saw, that I forgot to spell out that
	what I said applies only to a minority (well, perhaps a small
	majority). Certainly not to all managers.

	/Tom 8-)
1108.60The DEC Way (or "How Initiative Gets Crushed Out")COUNT0::WELSHTom Welsh, UK ITACT CASE ConsultantThu Jun 14 1990 12:3468
	The following story goes back at least to 1984, which is when
	someone mailed it to me. The story itself seems to be timeless.
	Please notice carefully how it ends - the disturbing element
	(the engineer trying to get something done) has gone away, and
	everyone can go back to life as usua (i.e. routine). To quote
	(or possibly paraphrase) Mr Heinlein,

		"Men fear nothing on earth as they fear thought"

	/Tom


			T H E   D E C   W A Y .
			=======================


	Once upon a time, there was a DEC engineer who thought about computers
until he came up with a good idea.  He called the management together and said,
"If we produce my idea, we shall have a good product to sell.  Who will help me
in this project?"
	"Not I," said his project leader.
	"Not I," said his supervisor.
	"Not I," said his manager.
	"Then I will," said the DEC engineer, and he did it as a 'midnight'
project.  The design grew firm and was ready for implementation.  "Who will
help me implement my design?" asked the DEC engineer.
	"Not I," said his project leader.
	"I've a meeting to go to," said his supervisor.
	"I'd have to commit myself," said his manager.
	"Then I will," said the DEC engineer, and he did.  Time passed and it
the design was implemented.  "Who will help me document my project?" asked the
DEC engineer.
	"I can't spell," said his project leader.
	"I've got another meeting to go to," said his supervisor.
	"I've got to visit the States," said his manager.
	"Then I will," said the DEC engineer.

	He finished the documentation and went about his normal work, using
his midnight project in front of all the management.

	They all wanted to use it, in fact, they demanded that it became a
corporate product.  "Go re-paint the white lines down the M4!" said the
DEC engineer.
	"Selfish sod," said his project leader.
	"Stop complaining," said his supervisor.
	"You won't get a pay rise," said his manager.
	And they all sent him mail messages with ESCAPE sequences to mess up
his terminal.

	When the head of European Engineering came round, he said to the DEC
engineer, "You must release and support the product."
	"But I did all the work," said the DEC engineer, "AND in my own time."
	"Exactly," said the head of European Engineering, "thats the DEC way.
Anyone in DEC can do as much work as he/she likes, but under our modern
managerial system the one who does the most work gets least reward.  The
workers must support the parasites."

	The product prospered, the salary review and hireing freezes were
lifted, and everyone lived happily ever after.  Including the DEC engineer, who
smiled and chuckled, "I do get job satisfaction, I do get job satisfaction,"
and played computer games all day.

	But the management team wondered why he never again did another
'midnight' project.

(With apologies to THE LITTLE RED HEN parable and FINANCIAL WORLD.)

1108.61How to sort out the managers from the mere achieversCOUNT0::WELSHTom Welsh, UK ITACT CASE ConsultantThu Jun 14 1990 12:4040
    To:		Jesus, Son of Joseph, The Carpenters' Shop, Nazareth.
    
    From:	Jordan Management Consultants, Jerusalem.
    
    Dear Sir,
    
    Thank you for submitting the resumes of the twelve men you have
    picked for management positions in your new organisation.  All of
    them have now taken our battery of tests.  We have not only run
    the results through our computer, but also arranged personal interviews
    for each of them with our psychologist and vocational aptitude
    consultant.
    
    It is the staff opinion that most of your nominees are lacking in
    background, education, and vocational aptitude for the type of
    enterprise you are undertaking.  They do not have the team concept.
    We would recommend that you continue your search for persons of
    experience in managerial ability and proven capability.
    
    Simon Peter is emotionally unstable, and given to fits of temper.
    Andrew has absolutely no qualities of leadership.  The two brothers,
    James and John, the sons of Zebedee, place personal interest above
    company loyalty.  Thomas demonstrates a questioning attitude that
    would tend to undermine morale.  We feel that it is our duty to
    tell you that Matthew has been blacklisted by the Greater Jerusalem
    Better Business Bureau.  James, the son of Alphaeus, and Thaddaeus
    definitely have radical leanings, and they both registered a high
    score on the manic depressive scale.
    
    One of the candidates, however, shows great potential.  He is a
    man of ability and resourcefulness, meets people well, has a keen
    business mind and has contacts in high places.  He is highly motivated,
    ambitious and responsible.  We recommend Judas Iscariot as your
    controller and right hand man.  All of the other profiles are
    self-explanatory.
    
    We wish you every success in your new venture.
    
    Yours faithfully,
1108.62Plenty of this to go around...HYEND::DMONTGOMERYThu Jun 14 1990 14:406
    Saw this in a magazine recently:
    
    "Every project, it is said, has three phases:  It will not work;  It
    will cost too much; and I knew it was a good idea all along."
    
    -Don-
1108.63the book, worth it.ROM01::CIPOLLAMe ne frego del campionato!Thu Jun 14 1990 14:4711
    re .45  by SVBEV::VECRUMBA 

>>    Has the book given you any insights you find applicable to Digital?
	(the book is "The Managerial Mistique")
    
	yes, a lot, you can see Digital's type of behavior depicted in 
	every page of the book, it analyzes many "types" of managerial
        habits from a psychological point of view and is well worth
    	reading.
	8-(  BC

1108.64(aside)SNOBRD::CONLIFFECthulhu Barata NiktoThu Jun 14 1990 14:507
Re .59, re.58

You know, that's the first time in almost 10 years that I've seen Kevin McCabe
referred to as an "innocent bystander". 

				Who, me, cynical?
				   Nigel
1108.65BETTER THAN HIDE AND SEEKLUDWIG::JLUSSIERFri Jun 15 1990 09:307
    
    
    			<WRONG TITLE FOR THIS NOTE>
    
    SHOULDN'T THE TITLE BE    UNMASKING COMPETENT MANAGER'S
    
    	P.S.  GOOOOD LUCK
1108.66It's Not Just a DEC PhenomenomSALEM::KUPTONI Love Being a Turtle!!!Fri Jun 15 1990 11:3039
    Not to throw gasoline on a fire, but.....
    
    Having worked for two large corporations prior to DEC, I've found
    that managers often a no more than a product of the environment
    in which they exist.
    
    For example: Croton on Hudson - The General Electric Co. Managerial
    Training Center. I five days, an understanding newly promoted, open
    minded person is tranformed into a coporate robot. Classes begin
    at 7:30 am and run to noon. Noon to 1 is lunch with your classmates.
    Class begins again at 1:00 PM and runs to 5:30. Dress for dinner
    at 6:30. Back to class from 8:00-9:30 and homework that will take
    until midnight. This goes on until Friday. When the class is dismissed
    at 1:30 Friday afternoon, 30 different human beings begin their
    climb to the top (?) of the GE ladder.
    
    At Fairchild, supervisors and managers were required to take 13
    weeks of Zenger-Miller. Or how to deal with every corporate and
    personnel problem the ZM way. Attitudes change after 39 hours of
    supervisory group encounter.
    
    No matter where people work, they tend to become like their management
    whether they like/want to. If your manager works for a sneaky, job
    fearing, incompetent weasel, he'll become sneaky and suspicious
    of the people that work for him. If your manager works for an open
    minded, rewarding, enthusiastic manager, he'll be very similar.
    
    To often, good people are bad managers and develop habits and traits
    that they despised as subordinates. Once their subordinates transmit
    their dislike for his/her methods, the manager becomes defensive
    and retreats or becomes offensive and attacks. Either way, a bond
    of trust will take a great deal to build. It's not easy working
    for self promoting tyrants or managers who were promoted beyond
    their capacity. The problem is the person that promoted them can't
    admit to error of judgement or his credibility is shot. It's a never
    ending, vicious circle that you will find no matter where you work.
    Even if you work for yourself.......
    
    Ken
1108.67A thought on finding the value in differenceWORDY::JONGSteve Jong/T and N PubsFri Jun 15 1990 18:4159
    Anent .8 (Bill Kilgore):  Your reply strikes at the heart of the
    objections to the "Valuing Differences" concept.  Every time I've ever
    heard this program discussed, someone invariably jokes, "I'm a bigot. 
    Value me."  The program seems to have been renamed "Understanding the
    Dynamics of Difference," a New-Age title that nonetheless removes this
    obvious retort.

    But the jokes are obscuring the true value of the program by suggesting
    that we are asked to value that which has no value, such as bigotry. 
    Instead, it seems to me the program is trying to get us to value the
    value of people.  That's an odd phrase, so to illustrate my point, let
    me introduce you to Paul Dunbar.

    Paul is an engineer.  He is fresh from the University of New Hampshire
    and working somewhere in Massachusetts.  He was originally working in
    Spit Brook, but his group was transferred south.  He is enraged at
    having to pay high property taxes in New Hampshire and high income
    taxes in Massachusetts, and lets off steam in Notes conferences by
    suggesting that someone should shoot the governor of Massachusetts.

    Paul knows he is better versed in his trade than some of the older
    engineers he works with, and he's  proud of it.  He's single and
    unattached, so putting in eighty hours a week isn't hard.  In fact, he
    works harder than anyone else in his group, and produces more and
    better results.  He thinks he ought to be the highest-paid engineer in
    his department.  He doesn't say so in as many words, but his coworkers
    pick up his attitude and  dislike him intensely.  He senses their
    disdain and returns the feeling.  

    Paul's supervisor is about at his wit's end.  Paul is an egotistical,
    abrasive, disruptive employee.  It takes more than five hours a week of
    his supervisor's time to deal with Paul and the problems he causes. 
    Two valued, long-time employees have actually cited Paul as a reason
    for transferring to other groups; now the department is down two
    people, with no immediate prospects for filling the open slots.  Paul
    does good work, but the cost seems prohibitive.

    Paul's supervisor used to be the department manager, but he asked out
    of the assignment because he wasn't happy.  He's been with Digital for
    twenty years.  To Paul, the man is an obsolete tool, a proven
    incompetent who couldn't cut it as an engineer and couldn't cut it as a
    manager.  Generally, Paul listens to his boss, nods curtly, and then
    does whatever the hell he pleases.  But for his current assignment,
    Paul would transfer to a group with management he can respect.

    Ah, but the assignment!  Paul is working on a new pipelining
    architecture for the VAX 9000.  Based on some ideas he's had, he is
    confident that he can improve the performance of the CPU by fifty
    percent with no increase in production cost.  

    He has prepared his report, and now it's time to go to his boss...

    I don't want to take up more time to write out the scene, but in many
    corporate (and human) cultures, Paul's idea, regardless of its value,
    is DOA, simply because his boss, for some understandable reasons, hates
    him.  In this situation, by ignoring Paul's idea, the company loses,
    and Paul loses as well.  The supervisor, if he yields to the temptation
    to bury the idea, may drive Paul away from the group; at the moment,
    driving Paul away sounds like a good idea to him.
1108.68I joined DEC. I left ....CUSPID::MCCABEIf Murphy's Law can go wrong .. Fri Jun 15 1990 20:4451
    Now what's valuing new age crystals got to do with this?
    
    Paul Dunbar used to work at Digital.  DEC actually.  He's responsible
    (in other guises of course) for major operating systems, hardware,
    inovations, the few big name money making software products, sold
    the record number of products for product line/reigon ...
    
    He often worked late/early/weekends.  He pissed off his
    supervisor/manager/coworkers to extreams.  He hates process/useless/
    procedures/meetings/paperwork   He does not avoid conflict, and in many
    instances his presence was enough to cause it to occur from thin air. 
    
    He's rude, swears ands is abusive.  From reading this conference
    many people who work here would have left meeting with him because
    of his attitude, language, or failure to conform.
    
    Paul was not an uncommon sight.  Sometimes Paul could be controlled,
    because there were older mellower more experienced Paul's around
    to teach him human behavior, often by teaching him humility.  Few
    people around who'll take the time, or command Paul's respect.
    
    Don't worry about Paul.   We've finally figured out how to deal with
    him.  He'll leave.  Most Paul's have.  The one's who stayed have been
    abused into a state of crippling frustration, given a chance to succeed
    over and over until the manager taking credit for Paul finally burnt
    him out and used himn as a scapegoat.  Or else the process adapted to
    effectivily stifle Paul. 
    
    The manager's likely to be pretty important now.  Might catch them
    fondly remembering Paul at one of the 5 or 10 or 15 year dinners.

    What do we do with Paul in the short term.  Let him tell his boss
    about the big win he can pull off.  Or let him spread it around
    that he can do it.  Impetuous type like Paul are likely to do it
    anyway and tell everyone.  His boss with thank him for the extra
    work, long hours, and midnight hacks, then give him a 3 on his review
    and send him to Positive Power & Influence.  
    
    By definition Digital can't lose.  He's merely one person who we'll
    work very hard to prove to that they are not indespensible.
    
    Oh yes one of the remaining Paul's last projects is getting to be 8
    years old now, a couple of other Paul's did one that now 12 years old,
    another 16,   The multimillion profit stream is drying up.  Maybe after
    this Paul finishes with the 9000 we'll be through with the last of them
    and can get down to doing some serious business with some leadership
    products that do, ah, um, arrgh, em, ...
    
    
    
    .... 
1108.69I know this guyREGENT::BROOMHEADDon't panic -- yet.Mon Jun 18 1990 17:0411
    Oh?  You mean the Paul Dunbar who thinks ergonomics is a pointless
    waste of time and effort?  The one who says he'd read all the
    documentation, but just tosses it in a corner and never looks at
    it again, because he knows best?  The one who refuses to do it the
    way everone told him it should be done, because that was the way
    <X> wanted to do it, and he is NEVER going to let <X> have his way?
    The one who makes his coworkers physically miserable, because the
    thermostat is nearest his office, and he likes it cold?  The one
    who could annoy S--- R---------?
    
    							Ann B.
1108.70Where does the customer fit?CHEFS::OSBORNECIt's motorcycling weather againWed Jun 20 1990 08:1134
    
    What's Paul's view of what the customer wants? Can he recognise
    a customer, or is he a technofreak who wants technology for
    technology's sake -- plenty of them around.
    
    BTW, his manager IS incompetent. It's the manager's job to set
    direction for his team, & ensure success -- that's what the manager is 
    (or should be) judged by. If the manager is not judged that way,
    it's his boss that is incompetent.
    
    Steering difficult staff is the most difficult management challenge
    - but often a daily need. A great deal depends on how the team work
    plan is created - imposed, debated, or non-existent. Individual
    ownership & commitment to the plan is often directly proportional
    to the level of input a staff member was able to make. A maverick
    may have splendid ideas, if you can find ways of using his/her
    creativity. 
    
    If they do not contribute, or are disruptive to the achievement of 
    the team goals, then they need some corrective feedback. If all
    they do is upset the manager's ego, then both have a problem ---
    which may or may not hit our profits. If it does put profits at
    risk, then the managers's manager needs to join the act -- before
    commercial damage is done.
                             
    Much of the pain in the Topic is NOT about managing -- it's often
    about administration. Unfortunately, the difference is not always
    made clear to new managers -- or to their staff.
    
    Colin
    
     
    
    
1108.71What happened to "OUR MOST IMPORTANT PRODUCT"?NCDEL::PEREZJust one of the 4 samurai!Fri Jun 22 1990 04:0112
    re -.1:
    
>    they do is upset the manager's ego, then both have a problem ---
>    which may or may not hit our profits. If it does put profits at
>    risk, then the managers's manager needs to join the act -- before
>    commercial damage is done.
    
    Lots of mention of "profits"...  this is a TOTAL and recurring theme
    here too - to the exclusion of all else.  Just out of curiosity, where
    do the things not mentioned like employee morale,  ethical leadership,
    employee empowerment, and MOST of all bidirectional respect and trust
    fit into this picture?
1108.72get real buddy, this is the NEW Digital!SMOOT::ROTHGrits: Not just for banquets anymore!Fri Jun 22 1990 12:1914
Re:< Note 1108.71 by NCDEL::PEREZ "Just one of the 4 samurai!" >
    
>    Lots of mention of "profits"...  this is a TOTAL and recurring theme
>    here too - to the exclusion of all else.  Just out of curiosity, where
>    do the things not mentioned like employee morale,  ethical leadership,
>    employee empowerment, and MOST of all bidirectional respect and trust
>    fit into this picture?

Those are noble concepts but they cannot be measured. Profit, headcount,
margin, customer survey- these are numerics, and therefore, are reality.
That's what managers are measured on so skip that other fluff. Control
the numbers and you control reality. Numbers. Think numbers. Don't do
more, don't do less. Just make your numbers and be content.

1108.73BRING BACK THE BARBARIANSNCDEL::PEREZJust one of the 4 samurai!Sat Jun 23 1990 04:5514
    re -.1:
    
>Those are noble concepts but they cannot be measured. Profit, headcount,
>margin, customer survey- these are numerics, and therefore, are reality.
>That's what managers are measured on so skip that other fluff. Control
>the numbers and you control reality. Numbers. Think numbers. Don't do
>more, don't do less. Just make your numbers and be content.

    Thank you.  That is PRECISELY the point I was hoping would be
    abundantly clear to everyone.  I agree absolutely with you, and I think
    if the current trend (as epitomized by the above) continues, this
    company will wind up staffed by overhead, deadwood, and a bunch of
    people that couldn't have an original thought if their life depended on
    it.  
1108.74Survival mattersCHEFS::OSBORNECIt's motorcycling weather againSat Jun 23 1990 17:1813
    
    I used the word "profit" intentionally. 
    
    I have been a manager for many years, in several companies. I have
    managed very large international staff groups. I value people, 
    motivation, leadership, & involvement.
    
    For those reasons, it concerns me that I rarely hear profit mentioned 
    in my work environment, or in Notes.
    
    Shame, because all the social factors that we value need profits 
    to feed them. One recalls apocryphal stories about the band playing
    whilst the Titanic went down ...............
1108.75Winning pennies and losing dollars is not profitable!AUSTIN::UNLANDSic Biscuitus DisintegratumSat Jun 23 1990 18:5431
    re:  Note 1108.74 by CHEFS::OSBORNEC "It's motorcycling weather again" 
    
    
>   I used the word "profit" intentionally. 
    
>   Shame, because all the social factors that we value need profits 
>   to feed them. One recalls apocryphal stories about the band playing
>   whilst the Titanic went down ...............

    This is *exactly* the point some of us are trying to make.  In your
    very apt analogy, the band is accomplishing its short-term goals
    ("play music") while ignoring the long-term consequences.  Many of
    us feel that management within DEC is doing the same thing.  There
    are many managers who *know* this is the bad thing to do, but they
    have a metaphorical gun at their heads.  If they refuse to be like
    the band on the Titanic, and "play music", then they will get shot
    on the spot, without a hope of rescue.
    
    Perhaps another analogy would be how we treat illness.  In today's
    enlightened society, if someone is ill, we spend extra money on
    medicine and good food to aid the healing process.  Instead, what
    if we were to *reduce* food intake (don't want to waste valuable
    food), refuse medicinal help, and try to get as much work out of
    the person as possible.  What are the chances of survival and
    recovery in this situation?
    
    This is the "new" DEC way of treating problems in the Field, and
    I think that it will be our downfall.
    
    Geoff
    
1108.761 vote for noble concepts hereSVBEV::VECRUMBADo the right thing!Mon Jun 25 1990 16:0282
    Been away on vacation...

    re .66

>   Having worked for two large corporations prior to DEC, I've found
>   that managers often a no more than a product of the environment
>   in which they exist.

    This is, in large part true. A manager's behavior is molded by the criteria
    which determine his/her success.

    I've probably mentioned this already, but after two years of unit
    management, I found that things I had done as a manager prior to DEC, that
    I had accepted as unconcious deeply-ingrained habit, I was no longer doing.

    Other things that I did do, like send people to training even though not
    sending them would guarantee me making my numbers and sending them made it
    close, if not impossible, I kept doing because at some level I could only
    sink so low. It was only my experience as a manager before DEC that kept
    me going all the way down the Digital black hole of management.

    re: last several [being driven by numbers, not noble concepts], .75

>                                                          ...  In your
>   very apt analogy, the band is accomplishing its short-term goals
>   ("play music") while ignoring the long-term consequences.  Many of
>   us feel that management within DEC is doing the same thing.  There
>   are many managers who *know* this is the bad thing to do, but they
>   have a metaphorical gun at their heads.  If they refuse to be like
>   the band on the Titanic, and "play music", then they will get shot
>   on the spot, without a hope of rescue.

    We just had a district meeting last Friday. One of the presentors was
    from outside DEC, Jan Pedderson, who does presentations/training on
    changing corporate culture. She described the 3 phases of life of a
    corporation. First, is startup -- take risks, make decisions, forgiveness
    for bad decisions, etc. Second is the mature corporation -- beuroracy,
    risk avoidance, overmanagement, etc. Third, and this is where companies
    survive, or don't, is the successful or failed attempt to break beyond
    into a company where values reemerge, where "noble concepts" (quoting
    a previous note) take precedence over metrics.

    Jan had done training for our district's unit managers, district managers,
    area managers (SWS). First, each level of management said: "This is great.
    If only you could get this message to _our_ managers we could start to
    change things." Second, I threw down the gauntlet so to speak and asked
    her: the things that drive the corporation how are all goals which can
    be quantified and measured. The goals we should be striving for are not
    as easily quantifiable or measureable. So, how do you change goals people
    are measured on from quantifiable to non-quantifiable? DEC is very
    adaptable to change -- if the goals changed, IMHO, a lot of "bad" behavior
    would change overnight.

    For example, there's DEC 100 for sales [making 100% of one's CERTS budget].
    Now, a bumbling idiot could fall into a huge order and make their budget,
    they're golden. An extremely competent and motivated individual could miss
    an order because of a customer's budgeting schedule, they're in the
    doghouse. In the "correct" DEC, the latter should be rewarded, not the
    former. How do you change that? What do you "measure" to make sure you
    recognize and reward the person who _really_ deserves it?

    Even Jan didn't have an answer to that one. But, she did answer it in
    another way. When someone asked her about the "desired" behavior at her
    previous regular employer (Xerox), she said that it just happenned, that
    everyone just did it.

    I'm not sure what this means about how we change our metricized
    management culture. Maybe, for starters, we declare that:

        MEETING ALL METRICS COUNTS FOR NO MORE THAN HALF OF *ANYTHING*

    i.e., no more than half towards awards, awards, performance appraisals,
    promotion criteria, etc.

    This would make all of those processes require more work on the part of
    management, like paying attention to and being able to cogently describe
    to their peers what's _behind_ the numbers and their evaluations.

    BTW, Jan said it typically takes 6-8 years to change corporate culture,
    but that's too long a time now for any company that needs to change to
    survive.
1108.77The Titanic band is not a good example of blindnessMINAR::BISHOPMon Jun 25 1990 18:338
    Trivial point:
    
    The band played on the Titanic as it sank to maintain morale,
    and was a consciously self-sacrificial act on the part of the
    musicians.  Many people died; more would have died if there
    had been a panicy struggle for lifeboats rather than a tense
    but orderly allocation.
    				-John Bishop
1108.78SMOOT::ROTHGrits: Not just for banquets anymore!Tue Jun 26 1990 11:5910
re:< Note 1108.76 by SVBEV::VECRUMBA "Do the right thing!" >

>    BTW, Jan said it typically takes 6-8 years to change corporate culture,
>    but that's too long a time now for any company that needs to change to
>    survive.

That's about how long ago DEC (at least here in the field) began to 
'go metric'.

Lee
1108.79Beyond competence ==> ethicsSVBEV::VECRUMBADo the right thing!Wed Jun 27 1990 23:49153
    I've noticed an alarming amount of discussions in DIGITAL about the
    wrong things -- bad things -- being done. I'm coming to realize that
    we're not just talking about issues of competence: we're really talking
    about issues of personal and business ethics.

    We've bemoned that our culture is going downhill. We've talked about
    being guided by "noble concepts" without being able to put our finger
    on them. I submit that the "noble concept" we live by is ethical
    behavior, no more, no less.

    I was going through a difficult time at DEC about a year and a half ago.
    Browsing through a bookstore, I noticed a small paperback titled:

    	The POWER of ETHICAL MANAGEMENT

    by Ken Blanchard, most known for "The One-Minute Manager", and Norman
    Vincent Peale who wrote "The Power of Positive Thinking". [I knew one or
    two people who could have used a copy of this book.]

    I think it offers positive guidelines that each of us can apply, that
    can begin to effect the kind of necessary cultural change we're striving
    for. It's 136 pages of quick reading, but here it is in about 136 lines.
    All emphasis in quoted materials is in the original.

    ----

    When you first run into a situation where you're not sure what the right
    thing to do is, apply the "Ethics Check Questions":

       "1. Is it legal?
    	     Will I be violating either civil law or company policy?

    	2. Is it balanced?
    	     Is it fair to all concerned in the short term as well as the long
    	     term? Does it promote win-win situations?

    	3. How will it make me feel about myself?
    	     Will it make me proud? Would I feel good if my decision was
    	     published in a newspaper? Would I feel good if my family knew
    	     about it?"

    The book talks about the importance of setting an example (both your
    actions and *inactions* count!), taking a stand on issues, and the very
    real conflict between what is "right" and what is (accepted) "reality."

    So, with all the pressures to do what's expedient, what do you do to
    reinforce doing what's right [ethical behavior]? You apply the Five
    P's of Ethical Power:

    	"Purpose"	what you're striving towards, *not* a "goal"; a goal
    			is an end -- purpose is *ongoing*

    	"Pride"		sense of satisfaction, self-esteem; no false
    			pride: "People with Humility Don't Think Less of
    			Themselves... They Just Think About Themselves Less";
    			no self-doubt: "No One Can Make You Feel Inferior
    			Without Your Permission"

    	"Patience"	having a sense of balance, having a sense of faith --
    			of positive thinking -- that you will ultimately
    			succeed: "Nice Guys May Appear to Finish Last, But
    			Usually They're Running a Different Race."

    	"Persistence"	To quote Winston Churchill's *ENTIRE* speech given
    			late in his life at the prep school he once attended
    			as a child: "Never! Never! Never! Never Give Up!"
    			It's not *trying* to do something, it's actually
    			*doing* it: "Trying is Just a Noisy Way of Not Doing
    			Something."

    	"Perspective"	seeing what's really important -- this binds all the
    			"P's" together -- it's the spot from where you look
    			at the other P's and watch what's important

    These principles apply to you as an individual in the conduct of your
    affairs:

        "The Five Principles of Ethical Power for Individuals

    	1. Purpose: I see myself as an ethically sounds person. I let my
    	   conscience be my guide. No matter what happens, I am always able to
    	   face the mirror, look myself straight in the eye, and feel good
    	   about myself.

    	2. Pride: I feel good about myself. I don't need the acceptance of
    	   other people to feel important. A balanced self-esteem keeps my ego
    	   and my desire to be accepted from influencing my decisions.

    	3. Patience: I believe that things will eventually work out well. I
    	   don't need everything to happen right now. I am at peace with what
    	   comes my way!

        4. Persistence: I stick to my purpose, especially when it seems
    	   inconvenient to do so! My behavior is consistent with my intentions.
    	   As Churchill said, "Never! Never! Never! Never! Give Up!"

    	5. Perspective: I take time to enter each day quietly in a mood of
    	   reflection. This helps me get focused and allows me to listen to
    	   my inner self and to see things more clearly."

    The Five P's also apply to organizations; it is an organization's
    responsibility to promulgate and promote your personal application
    of these principles. Accordingly:

        "The Five Principles of Ethical Power for Organizations

    	1. Purpose: The mission of our organizaiton is communicated from the
    	   top. Our organization is guided by the values, hopes, and a
    	   vision that helps us determine what is acceptable and unacceptable
    	   behavior.

    	2. Pride: We feel proud of ourselves and of our organization. We know
    	   that when we feel this way, we can resist temptations to behave
    	   unethically.

    	3. Patience: We believe that holding to our ethical values will lead
    	   us to success in the long term. This involves maintaining a balance
    	   between obtaining results and caring about how we achieve these
    	   results.

    	4. Persistence: We have a commitment to live by ethical principles. We
    	   are committed to our committment. We make sure our actions are
    	   consistent with our purpose.

    	5. Perspective: Our managers and employees take time to pause and
    	   reflect, take stock of where we are, evaluate where we are going
    	   and determine how we are going to get there."

    Some general observations about behavior as an organization:

    	"Managing ONLY For Profit Is Like Playing Tennis With Your Eye On
    	 The Scoreboard And Not On The Ball"

    	"If We Take Care In The Beginning, The End Will Take Care Of Itself"

    	"Sometimes When The Numbers Look Right The Decision Is Still Wrong!"


    And, finally, when you feel you have no options to change the situation
    by doing what's right and no one around you is doing what's right:

    	"It Is Better to Light One Candle Than Curse The Darkness"

    ----

    I thought we could use some positive things to think about and some
    positive principles to work toward. I hope you find this valuable and
    useful. I highly recommend the book as an effective tool for keeping
    your perspective when everyone around you has lost theirs.


    /Peters
1108.80Ahhh... how refreshing!DCVAX::MZARUDZKIFeelin' like Road PizzaThu Jun 28 1990 00:429
    
    RE -.1
    
     Please! Someone write lock this topic while we are on a positive note!
    
     Excellence comes from within!
    
    -Mike Z.
    
1108.81from the net-wavesATLACT::GIBSON_DMon Jul 02 1990 14:2431
BOEING DISCOVERS NEW ELEMENT
 
The heaviest element known to science was recently discovered by Boeing
physicists. The element, tentatively named Administratium, has no protons or
electrons and thus has an atomic number of 0. However, it
does have 1 neutron, 125 assistant neutrons, 75 vice neutrons and 111
assistant vice neutrons. This gives it an atomic mass of 312. These 312
particles are held together by a force that involves the continuous
exchange of meson-like particles called morons.
 
Since it has no electrons, Administratium is inert. However, it can be
detected chemically as it impedes every reaction it comes in contact
with. According to the discoverers, a minute amount of Administratium
caused one reaction to take over four days to complete when it would
have normally occurred in less than one second. Administratium has a normal
half-life of approximately three years, at which time it does not actually
decay but instead undergoes a reorganization in which assistant neutrons, vice
neutrons and assistant vice neutrons exchange places. Some studies have shown
that the atomic mass actually increases after each reorganization.
 
Research at other laboratories indicates that Administratium occurs
naturally in the atmosphere. It tends to concentrate at certain points
such as government agencies, large corporations and universities and can
usually be found in the newest, best appointed and best maintained
buildings.
 
Scientists point out that Administratium is known to be toxic at any
level of concentration and can easily destroy any productive reaction
where it is allowed to accumulate. Attempts are being made to determine how
Administratium can be controlled to prevent irreversible damage, but results to
date are not promising.
1108.82Anonymous replyQUARK::LIONELFree advice is worth every centTue Jul 03 1990 18:34185
The following reply is from a member of our community who wishes to remain
anonymous.


One possible way to improve management performance .....

2. Please describe the following aspects of your idea:

Opportunity or issue your idea addresses.

        Management performance is not currently evaluated on the
        "downward managing" aspects of the job.  I.e., management is
        evaluated mostly on their ability to manage upward, and in
        meeting metrics that do not reflect the importance of properly
        managing their direct reports.

        Managers who are "successful" by measurements of metrics may be
        unsuccessful in managing their staffs, but there is no system in
        place to detect and correct these situations.

        Typically, the problem is only addressed when the problems have
        developed to the stage where staff turnover results and morale
        becomes critically low.

        This is the source of significant problems within the company,
        and can be readily addressed by empowering employees to have
        input into the evaluation process for their managers.

        The solution is to detect problems earlier so that corrective
        action can be taken.

        Result will be better management/employee relations, higher
        morale, increased staff productivity, lower turnover, etc.

Describe proposed remedy and any support your idea needs in order to succeed.

        Require that staff provide direct input to their manager's
        evaluation ("performance appraisal").  This needs to be done in a
        manner that provides anonymity and requires that corrective
        actions be taken.

        I suggest the following approach:

     o  Every six months, the staff in convened for a short meeting of
        perhaps no more than 30 minutes, without the manager present.
        Perhaps this meeting is hosted by a representative from the human
        resources organization.  This should be done every six months to
        provide input for the semiannual PA cycle, and also to catch
        problems early so they can be corrected.

     o  Each employee is given a short evaluation form, which will be
        completed and turned in.  No employee identification will be present
        on the evaluations, assuring anonymity.

     o  For those employees who are unable to attend the meeting, they will
        have the opportunity of completing a form and returning it to human
        resources.

     o  Completion of these evaluations should be a requirement on the
        employee's own PA.  This is an important process, and managers to
        need feedback from their employees to gauge how they're doing; just
        as employees also need feedback from their managers.

     o  The forms will contain a sequence of questions designed to
        thoroughly evaluate the management's skills in managing his/her
        staff.  Typical questions might include:

        "Please evaluate how accessible your manager is to you:
                1 = Excellent
                2 = Good
                3 = Average
                4 = Poor
                5 = Poor, unsatisfactory"

        "I feel my manager listens to me:
                1 = Almost always
                3 = Sometimes
                5 = Not at all"

        "I feel that I can disagree with my manager without fear of
        reprisal:
                1 = Yes, I am comfortable in expressing a different opinion
                5 = No, I fear for my job"

        "Has your manager ever attempted to influence your input to this
        evaluation process:
                1 = No
                5 = Yes"

        "Overall, I would rate my manager's performance as:
                1 = Excellent, top-notch
                2 = Above average
                3 = Average
                4 = Poor, but can improve
                5 = Should not be a manager"

     o  In addition, the employee should also be given the opportunity to
        express comments that may not fall within the scope of the
        questions, via free format areas, such as:

        "A few of the things my manager does especially well are ..."

        "A few specific things my manager can do to become a better manager
        are ..."

     o  Evaluation of the forms might be done either by the manager's
        manager or human relations, or both.  I'd suggest that human
        resources be involved, to prevent a manager's manager from doctoring
        the scores to make them look better or worse than the staff reports.
        After all, it is the evaluation by the employees that this process
        is measuring.

     o  The results will be communicated to both the manager and his/her
        manager in the form of numeric values (i.e. "you were rated overall
        by your people with a 2.3 rating, your scores on accessibility were
        3.5, ...) as well as transcribed feedback (i.e. "your staff suggests
        the following things you can work on, and the following areas you do
        especially well" -- these are transcribed for obvious reasons, the
        original employee forms should be destroyed once the scoring and
        transcription is made).

     o  The employee feedback should be a significant portion of the metrics
        upon which the manager is measured.  If it isn't, it will be
        ignored.

     o  Some mechanism needs to be incorporated to ensure that problems
        identified in this process are acted upon in a timely fashion.  This
        can be through the involvement of human resources, by adding a
        metric to the manager's manager to ensure actions are take to
        correct problems.

     o  Education of employees about this process is critical.  The
        importance to the company of this process should be stressed, to
        encourage honest evaluations.  While there will be some
        'axe-grinding', most employees will be professional in their
        evaluations.  Especially, employees need to understand to only hold
        their managers accountable for things under their control.  For
        example, if the corporate guidelines on raises is x% (presumably a
        small number), the manager shouldn't be blamed for being unable to
        procure 2*x% raises.

     o  While this should be a positive process to improve our management's
        skills, it will have a negative connotation to management because it
        is providing a new accountability -- to their staffs.  There will be
        managers who are resistant to this idea.

     o  Likewise, this shouldn't become a "popularity contest" for managers
        to campaign their staffs.  Human resources should clearly state that
        _any_ attempt to influence employee feedback on the evaluations will
        be considered harassment.

     o  Strong support needs to be given to this program by top company
        management to make it work.  Employees have to believe that they are
        empowered to work to solve problems with management.

     o  Special circumstances might require special handling.  For example,
        a manager with very few direct reports might be able to discern the
        input from a particular employee.  In this case, some variation of
        this program will be necessary.

     o  A shortcoming of this approach is that problems at difference levels
        of management other than between managers and their direct reports
        will not be addressed.  There are occasions when employees are aware
        of problems in the management structure other than with their direct
        manager -- either laterally or upwardly.  This approach will not
        address those situations and another scheme needs to be developed to
        address them.

Results you expect your idea to produce, or results your idea has already
produced.  Please be as specific and quantitative as possible.

        Employees know their manager best.  Problems in organizations can
        easily by hidden by a manager and not be dealt with.  In
        addition, good managers are not always recognized by their
        management.  Having employee feedback on file can often help a
        good, but unrewarded manager.

        Resolved, employees are free to concentrate on doing their jobs.
        With better staff/manager interaction, the company will directly
        benefit.

        Lower turnover should result.

        Employee satisfaction should improve, as measured by whatever
        survey mechanism is employed by the company.
1108.83one manager already gets employee reviewsJULIET::GRANT_GALive free or WISH you had.Wed Jul 04 1990 01:4013
I agree wholeheartedly with -.1.  Measure our managers on how well they
manage, not how easy they are to manage. 

Bill Keating, one of my all-time heroes at DEC, ALREADY DOES THIS!  On his 
own, because HE WANTS TO KNOW.  Would be willing to bet that the turnover in 
SDT is one of the lowest around.  You can go levels down in the organization
and still find a fierce and proud loyalty to Bill.  Why?

He cares, he has vision that he communicates to his group and he is a good
manager.  And he wants to know if he is doing anything wrong so he can fix 
it.  He listens.

g.
1108.84"Sad delusion of thinking you are irreplaceable"COUNT0::WELSHTom Welsh, UK ITACT CASE ConsultantFri Jul 06 1990 09:3376
	The following article is about psychotherapists who assume
	their own usefulness and rightness, without any justification.
	I wonder if the syndrome described could be widespread anywhere
	else? (It gave me a bad time wondering how much of it applies to
	me, until I realized that the fact I was admitting such doubts
	was evidence that I was still reasonably open-minded)

	/Tom

	<London "Times", 3rd July 1990>

	SAD DELUSION OF THINKING YOU ARE IRREPLACEABLE
	----------------------------------------------

	By Pearce Wright
	Science Editor

	Thousands of high-flyers in the financial and business worlds
	are suffering from "really useful syndrome", a senior clinical
	psychologist has found. They have fallen into a state of mind
	which he calls "assumed usefulness". The main symptom is
	unwarranted self-confidence. There is no obvious cure.

	Paul Whitby, senior clinical psychologist at Tonna Hospital,
	West Glamorgan, has pinpointed other symptoms, including high
	self-esteem and a behaviour apttern of persistent activity and
	enthusiasm, fostered by the occasional and random reward of a
	good profit, which arrives independently of the person's efforts.
	The dominating emotional state of people suffering the condition
	is their conviction that what they are doing is really useful.
	Dr Whitby says the phenomenon of unwarranted self-confidence is
	not restricted to people in commerce. The implications could be
	even more serious when it afflicted those working in other fields.

	He explains his ideas in the latest issue of the "Psychologist",
	the monthly bulletin of the British Psychological Society,
	published today. His article carries a warning for other
	psychotherapists. He suggests that they and other physicians who
	tend to blame patients for the failure of therapies are probably
	suffering the "assumed usefulness" syndrome themselves.

	Dr Whitby says that where a depressed patient thinks "I am
	responsible for all bad things and failures" a mistakenly
	self-confident therapist has a frame of mind that believes
	"I am responsible for all good things, improvements and cures".
	Whereas depressed people are likely to see any performance
	which falls short of perfection as abject failure, the self-confident
	psychotherapist may see any performance which falls short of
	complete failure as satisfactory.

	Dr Whitby suggests that his idea of assumed usefulness can be
	employed to analyse the thoughts and behaviour of psychotherapists
	in the type of study that has mostly been applied to examining
	the condition of their patients suffering personality disorders and
	neuroses.

	He has conceived the notion in an effort to resolve a controversy
	over the effectiveness of psychotherapy. He says: "Without a
	twinge of embarrassment nurses, doctors, psychologists, social
	workers and others describe themselves as psychotherapists."
	Yet, judged on any objective criteria of the available research,
	the psychotherapies were not even moderately successful. "If
	psychotherapy is so ineffective then sensible people would
	not practise it, but they do."

	Rather than depend on the subjective reports of patients in
	unravelling the benefits of psychotherapy, Dr Whitby's approach
	puts the therapists on the couch. That should reveal which of them
	suffers "the assumed usefulness syndrome of dogmatism, sense of
	mission, scorn for non-believers and an unwarranted faith in
	their own interventions."

	He says: "Unless these effects are overcome, psychotherapy will	
	continue to be a field of antagonistic cults riven with
	disagreement which rarely rsie above the level of Swift's
	Big-Endians versus Little-Endians."
1108.85Apologies to "The Times"COUNT0::WELSHTom Welsh, UK ITACT CASE ConsultantFri Jul 06 1990 09:436
	re .84:

	My apologies to "The Times". The typos in .84 are mine, not
	theirs. It was transcribed in haste.

	/Tom
1108.86Measure the right resultLABC::MCCLUSKYFri Jul 06 1990 16:2324
    re: .82
    What a fantastic waste of time and effort.  Good managers know what
    people reporting to their direct reports think of them and their
    managers.  They see the results of the team's efforts and they
    adjust to increase their success.  
    
    Managers should be measured on their management skills and the end
    result.  Isn't it interesting that I have not heard a serious
    criticizm of John Wooden as the coach (manager) of the UCLA basketball 
    team.  I am not aware of a single player that has said John was a
    bad coach (manager), or of players that left the University to play
    somewhere for a coach (manager) that thought more of his people or had
    better people skills.  It is interesting that if you measured John
    Wooden on the end result, you would necessarily rank him as the BEST
    COACH OF ALL TIME!!!!  His end results are unparalleled in college
    basketball.
    
    Cut out the bureaucracy and carefully define what you want from a
    manager in terms of the end result to the organization.  Measure his
    performance against that goal.  Know about his people and how they see
    things.  They will let you know.  Usually incompetent managers are
    hidden by another incompetent manager.  
    
    Daryl
1108.87all are not goodATLACT::GIBSON_DFri Jul 06 1990 18:3126
    re .86
    
>LABC::MCCLUSKY            -< Measure the right result >-
    
>    re: .82
>    What a fantastic waste of time and effort.  Good managers know what
>    people reporting to their direct reports think of them and their
>    managers.  They see the results of the team's efforts and they
>    adjust to increase their success.  
    
    .82 is not referring to good managers.  .82 refers to all managers.
    Good managers MAY know the things you refer to.  All managers do not,
    nor do they adjust to increase the success of the team before
    themselves.
    
>    Cut out the bureaucracy and carefully define what you want from a
>    manager in terms of the end result to the organization.  Measure his
>    performance against that goal.  Know about his people and how they see
>    things.  They will let you know.  Usually incompetent managers are
>    hidden by another incompetent manager.  
    
    It appears to me that is exactly what .82 is trying to do.  You should
    reread it.  It is not a waste of time or effort.  (BTW, I'm not the
    writer nor do I know the writer.)  I do think he/she proposed an
    under-defined solution.  However, it's a step in the right direction and 
    often simple steps are the most effective.
1108.88Total reliance on peer networking == eventual doomSVBEV::VECRUMBADo the right thing!Tue Jul 10 1990 15:4972
    re: last several

    There's a lot of administratium that goes along with management, but I
    think that's a symptom of the real issue.

    Who's the best "single contributor?" Someone who is: self-starting,
    self-motivated... Someone who builds their own support network, finds
    all the answers they need to do their job. Someone who can survive on
    their own wits.

    So, what does management do for this person?

    At the risk of repeating myself:

    Who's the best "nmanager?" Someone who is: self-starting,
    self-motivated... Someone who builds their own support network, finds
    all the resources they need to do their job. Someone who can survive on
    their own wits.

    So, what do higher layers of management do for this person?

    And just when it seems like we're starting to understand how we work
    internally, we re-organize. Most people in my geographic area don't even
    know how our own area is put together or who is responsible for what.
    I just burned the midnight oil doing a proposal -- only to find out, when
    I got done, _and through sheer dumb luck_, that someone else in the area
    had gone through the previous iteration (on a third party co-bid setup)
    with the previous vendor.

    The manager involved in the opportunity didn't know about _US_ having
    done the previous proposal, in our hands, either. ARRGGHHH!!!!!

    Every time there's an organizational problem to solve, we solve the
    problem with new acronyms and new groups. So, the network the individual
    or manager needs to maintain to be effective widens and grows. And the
    time needed to resolve an issue lengthens.

    So, what we have is:

                         O	...Hopefully Ken is not contemplating his
                       / | \       navel, though down at the bottom I
                      /  |  \      honestly sometimes can't tell the difference
                  Vision and Purpose
                    /    |    \
                       . . .

                   O    ---   O    ...upper management talking
                       . . .          to each other
     
              O    ---   O   ---   O    ... managers networked (throwback
                       . . .                to days as an individual)

      O --- O --- O --- O --- O --- O --- O --- O   ... individuals networked


    How can you run a company effectively when no one relies on communicating
    up or down to try and communicate or solve problems?

    Or, when "that's not possible" or "there's no way/no one to do that"
    is an acceptable answer to a problem that has been escalated? Or when
    "I followed your instructions, what else do you want me to do?" is an
    out for somone who was supposed to fix a problem?

    We need less organizations and more responsibility/accountability.

    If we all keep working the way we've been working -- be as self-reliant
    and self-sufficient as possible -- we're dooming ourselves.



    /Peters
1108.90re: 88 - looks good to meSALMON::BLACKI always run out of time and space to finish ..Wed Jul 11 1990 17:1810
    
    Re: .88 
    
    Yesssss, you've got it!
    
    The point about peer to peer relationships perhaps weakening the up and
    down flow is very important. Since we can't have complete peer to peer
    access (too many of us) the up and down flow is essential!
    
    
1108.91Three simple sentences to better management.SVBEV::VECRUMBADo the right thing!Fri Jul 13 1990 20:3025
    On the lighter side, here's a quote from that great football coach,
    Bear Bryant, that I recently came across:

    "I'm just a plowhand from Arkansas, but I have learned how to hold a
    team together. How to lift some men up, how to calm down others, until
    finally they've got one heartbeat together, a team. There's just three
    things I'd ever say:


                     If anything goes bad, I did it.

    	       If anything goes semi-good, then we did it.

               If anything goes real good, then you did it.


    That's all it takes to get people to win football games for you."


    I think every manager should have these words over their desk. Works
    for me!


    /Peters
1108.92Should have thought of this sooner ;-)SVBEV::VECRUMBADo the right thing!Mon Jul 16 1990 16:0827
    re .88 (my own)                                             

    Having elsewhere introduced a new acronym, YAP, for "Yet Another
    Process", I can now properly refine my diagram of inter-personal
    networking:

>                        O	...Hopefully Ken is not contemplating his
>                      / | \       navel, though down at the bottom I
>                     /  |  \      honestly sometimes can't tell the difference
>                 Vision and Purpose
>                   /    |    \
>                      . . .
>
>                  O    ---   O    ...upper management >>YAPPING<<
>                      . . .          with each other
>    
>             O    ---   O   ---   O    ... managers networked (throwback
>                      . . .                to days as an individual)
>
>     O --- O --- O --- O --- O --- O --- O --- O   ... individuals networked


    Sorry, I just couldn't resist! ;-)


    /Peters    
1108.93"Trading Up" - one woman's experience in a bankCOUNT0::WELSHTom Welsh, UK ITACT CASE ConsultantTue Jul 17 1990 09:45101
	I bought the book "Trading Up" at a bookstall and found it
	excellent - as an insight into the "Wall Street" world of
	financial trading, as an inside view of a major bank,
	and last but not least, as a literate description of incompetent
	management throttling the best efforts of a brilliant, energetic,
	self-motivated employee. (Whether it all happened exactly as
	described is neither here nor there - although it sounds too
	lurid to be fiction).

	Here are the two passages (towards the end of the book) which
	rang dozens of bells with me. Try reading through them, and
	see how many similarities you can find with episodes in your
	life at Digital. (Incidentally, one thing this book does is
	to show how much worse it can be in other companies!)

	Having thought about these passages quite a bit, I have come to
	the conclusion that there is one underlying syndrome: managers
	who have settled into a mindset which is overwhelmingly selfish.
	They are not out to do their best for the company, or to do their
	best for themselves by doing their best for the company.
	They are out to do their best for themselves, plain and simple.
	And anybody else in the same space is seen as potential competition,
	and hence as an enemy.

	/Tom

					--0--


	"'Nancy,' said John Anderson, 'I'm afraid I have some bad news'.

	'What is it?' I asked, bracing myself.

	'William Hambrecht absolutely refuses to raise Sam's salary by
	the necessary $10,000. He says your back office can survive
	perfectly well without him.'

	'How would he know?' I asked sharply. 'He's never even been in
	my back office.'

	'He says that no one is irreplaceable. I'm afraid I have to agree
	with him.'

	.....

	'Look,' said John with a grin, 'if it makes you feel any better,
	William has absolutely guaranteed the smooth functioning of your
	back office. He promised me that you wouldn't even notice that 
	Sam was gone.'

	.....

	For the first week that Sam was gone we did not get one single report
	produced on time. No reports got to London. The reports that we did
	get were wrong. I don't remember the exact amount of money that we
	lost that week. I do remember that it was significantly in excess
	of the $10,000 that it would have cost to keep Sam."


					--0--


	"I wearily opened my mouth to reiterate how important this system
	was to my operation, how I couldn't trade without it, how it
	couldn't be put off another day, another hour, another minute.
	I looked from one blank face to another. Slowly, I closed my mouth.

	I'm the kind of person who feels first and thinks second. Suddenly,
	I had a feeling.

	*I don't belong here.*

	This truth freed my thought process. It was so instantaneously
	obvious that I wondered how I had ever felt different. In that
	moment, for the first time in months, I was able to look at the
	situation with some semblance of objectivity. Look at them! I
	thought. They don't care what's happening. They all know what a
	problem it is by this time. They all know that it's costing the
	bank money. I'm the only one who cares. Each of them is caught
	up in his own little fiefdom. They are actually enjoying watching
	me suffer. They view passive obstruction as a means of increasing
	power and influence. It's more important to them that they reaffirm
	their individual superiority than that they do their jobs in the
	general	interest of the bank.

	I don't, I mused, have anything in common with any of them, do I?
	It's as if I'm from another planet. I actually believe that they
	resent me for bringing this problem to their attention and making
	such a fuss about it. They think I'm just making waves.

	Look at them! I thought again. Why, they think -- they think --

	I stopped.

	They think *I'm* the problem!"


					--0--


	<from "Trading Up" by Nancy Goldstone, ISBN 0 330 30312 0>
1108.94too familiarATLACT::GIBSON_DTue Jul 17 1990 14:534
    re .93
    
    Ah gee Nancy, didn't you know "they that propose, must dispose!"  How
    dare you suggest the emperor might need new clothes?
1108.95SVBEV::VECRUMBADo the right thing!Tue Jul 17 1990 15:0255

    re .93

>               ... I'm the only one who cares. Each of them is caught
>	up in his own little fiefdom. They are actually enjoying watching
>	me suffer. They view passive obstruction as a means of increasing
>	power and influence. It's more important to them that they reaffirm
>	their individual superiority than that they do their jobs in the
>	general	interest of the bank.
>
>	I don't, I mused, have anything in common with any of them, do I?
>	It's as if I'm from another planet. I actually believe that they
>	resent me for bringing this problem to their attention and making
>	such a fuss about it. They think I'm just making waves.
>
>	Look at them! I thought again. Why, they think -- they think --
>
>	I stopped.
>
>	They think *I'm* the problem!"

    At a recent meeting, an outside consultant was doing a presentation on
    changing corporate culture. [I discussed some of this earlier.] I agreed
    whole-heartedly with the goodness of what she was espousing, but I asked
    her for concrete ways we can, right now, start changing our culture
    (away from the numbers mania).

    My district manager, who wants to change things, made some comments
    about "destructive whining" after her presentation was done. Talk about
    shooting myself in the foot. Of course, I did a follow-up performance
    shooting my other foot later in a smaller group where I said that SWS is
    still numbers-driven. That was taken as a personal affront to his
    efforts to get the district more resources, etc. He put his unit managers
    on the spot by asking them if numbers were still as important as when
    I was a manager (working for him and his predecessor).

    Motherhood and apple pie are nice, but when you start talking about

    	- raising a child

    	- running a bakery

    you're saying, O.K., let's get on with it, this is what we need to think
    about, what else do we need to think about? -- whereas you're perceived
    as throwing up roadblocks inhibiting the osmotic absorption of "the
    Message."

    Sometimes I think we need a chapter of CLC (Career Limiting Caring)
    Anonymous. Though, personally, I don't think I'm going to change
    behavior that brought me success everywhere else (except here). I've
    been at this stuff too long, as an individual and manager, to change spots.


    /Peters
1108.96REF: NOTE 1108GRANPA::GSLATEFri Aug 17 1990 17:045
    
    I THINK WHAT THE AUTHOR WAS TRYING TO SAY IN THE LENGTHY ARTCLE CAN BE
    SUMMED UP IN TWO WORDS "YUPPIE MANAGEMENT".  NOT JUST DIGITAL IS
    PRIVILEGED TO HAVE THESE MANAGERS... WE JUST HAVE MORE THEN OUR SHARE.
    AND YES THEY ARE KILLING THIS COMPANY.