Posted on 03/06/2005 7:51:17 AM PST by HolgerDansk
I snuck out of Hungary in 1973, one week after I was told that if I ever wanted to advance as an engineer, I would have to join the Communist Party.
Being a good party member was far more important than your skill level, and so my boss was a man who had been a pig farmer. After decades spent raising hogs, he suddenly was supervising dozens of machinists, most of whom had engineering degrees and had built bridges and buildings until we were reassigned to "practical and useful" work -- making parts for factory machines.
Working for Carly Fiorina reminded me of my days working for that farmer. I remember the first time she walked into the Hewlett-Packard labs. She said that our new company slogan was "Invent." Then she told us that the technology industry would never again be as exciting and profitable as it was in the '90s. That we'd all need to grow up now and face that fact. [snip]
(Excerpt) Read more at technologyreview.com ...
HP ping
Definitely feminized, and I'm a woman. I'm pretty far down on the employment food chain, but I know that when you have some types of women running the show...it's hell.
I agree
Too many companies that were started by engineers are taken over by bean counters.
The bean counters can raise profits in the short term but hurt the company in the long run.
I was at DEC 1977 to 1994. The last few weren't so great but the first dozen or so were wonderful.
Well, I have thus far only had one female supervisor, and she was the most incompetent manager I have ever seen (this was in R&D of a major chemical company). She knew neither technology nor management.
Yeah, but aren't those cases snazzy?
Term papers were lost :( I bought an eMachine this time.
Out of the fire, into the frying pan.
Can you imagine Fiorina as a World War II battlefield general conversing with Patton?
"George you're too hard on the men. You don't care enough for their self-esteem and you've made no efforts to fully integrate gays and transvestites into your strategy and plans. As a result, you're not getting the full rich diversity of efforts and ideas that would make you successful. In my army division everyone's a winner. If one soldier gets a silver star they all get silver stars because we realize that success is not an individual achievement. And we don't judge heroism or achievement by hills taken, machine gun nests taken out, or number of enemy killed. The mess hall soldier who prepares a thoughtful and colorful centerpiece for the mess hall table is just as important as the soldier who single-handedly takes out a platoon of German infantry. The mess hall soldier's efforts are no less heroic just because he doesn't spill gallons of blood. He brings happiness and joy to others with a splash of color and whimsy, and that's heroic in a special way. I'm warning you, George, you're not going to win any battles until you learn to engage the 'inner children' of your men and make them all feel important and valued for their good intentions irrespective of results."
All of the bad ones were the petty, hysterical type, just looking for someone to do something wrong, even if it were minor.
Of our male supervisors, maybe 2/3 were good ones. A couple of the good ones were extraordinarily good. All the good ones were at least slightly tough but always fair minded.
A quick and easy description of Carly's leadership would a Politically Correct Caretaker.
The healthcare and electronics industry is loaded with Carly's of all 3 sexes. When, they get into control of a company, they destroy the research pipelines, drive away the creative people, punish the 10% who bring in 90% of the sales/business. Then, they reward the politically correct maggots hired and promoted to carry out this self destructive strategy.
In a few years, most of the good people have left the company. The company drops from market and research leadership to a me too. If allowed to stay after 5 years, the company permanently becomes a me too company.
We have seen the same thing happen in the CIA, State Department, FBI, Justice Department and other Federal and state departments. The Clintoons put in their hand picked losers to head these departments. The hand picked losers hired thousands of anti America losers, interested in pushing the PC line instead of the original mission of the department.
Well, the old gal I'm talking about was similar. The only problem was that her orders weren't connected to any form of knowledge or rational thought.
Or, rather, a politically correct undertaker.
The irony for Carly is that HP did not increase its share price as a result of her tenure there.
Actually, the Clinton Adminstration expanded government technology research funding. It started the Advanced Technoloby Program, it changed the name of "Defense Advanced Research Programs Administration" to "Advanced Research Projects Administration" and encouraged more industrial research, and it promoted Cooperative Research and Development Agreements for joint research between government and industrial labs.
ARPA is back to DARPA, ATP has been killed, and I think that CRADAs have been scaled way back under the Bush Adminstration.
Unlikely since Carly is a Republican..
I didn't think I would live to see the day when DEC, HP, and now AT&T no longer existed as corporations. Where's Ken Olsen now?
Tell me about it! The B-school clown to whom our company was entrusted boasted, boasted that he hadn't written any code in 10 years, and that he wasn't about to learn about ours. The company went under within 10 months.
Women *can* make effective CEOs. Martha Stewart, for example (passing over the recent unpleasantness). Carly just wasn't one of them.
They're still out there. It can't be stopped, not by frauds like Carly Fiorina nor any others.
Affirmative action.
I have worked for two female program managers in the last ten years. One was the best manager I have ever worked for I would not hesitate if I ever have the opportunity to work for her again. The other was the worst micromanaging, lot-of-work-and-effort-with-no-value-to-the-program and loss of productivity manager I have ever experienced. Bottom line, there are good women managers and there are bad women managers just as with the male counterparts.
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