Posted on 11/01/2002 7:43:37 PM PST by VaBthang4
Edited on 04/13/2004 1:40:04 AM PDT by Jim Robinson. [history]
At a time when fighting the war on terrorism has become arguably the most important issue facing the USA, authorities are looking into an unlikely weapon to aid their fight: Six Sigma.
Six Sigma is nothing like a laser-guided smart bomb but rather a statistics-heavy regimen of analyzing problems that has saved corporations billions.
(Excerpt) Read more at usatoday.com ...
Yup, and I laughed. Zero is a mathematical abstraction and describes absolutely nothing "pun" in the natural world. Weird things happen as the limit approaches Zero. Nature prefers infinity and non repeating decimals.
OTOH, "flexibility" is an oft abused term with "positive" connotations that rivals "diversity" for sinister implications. "Flexibility" can be a political excuse for failure to implement or adhere to (or in some cases, actually undermining) efficient established processes and procedures. Management that "thrives on chaos" is often guilty of generating the problematic environment they're supposed to control. It is not dissimilar to a firefighter going around setting fires.
Bingo. Policy in general is for dealing with the routine and predictable. Having rigid policy and procedures based on stats works in a standardized environment where there is little need for independent decision-making by low-level troops
It falls apart when there are lots of special cases, and lots of independent decision-making by the troops
There are two types of management environments (actually, they form two ends of a continuum): "management makes policy and makes sure people follow it", vs "management finds competent people for the low-level decisionmaking, gives them discretion, and lets them get on with it"
The Instant Buzzword Generator. Just pick a word from each column and hey-presto some technical jargon!
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Column 1 |
Column 2 |
Column 3 |
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integrated |
management |
options |
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total |
organisational |
flexibility |
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systematised |
monitored |
capability |
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parallel |
reciprocal |
mobility |
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functional |
digital |
programming |
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responsive |
logic |
concept |
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optical |
transitional |
time-phase |
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synchronised |
incremental |
projection |
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compatible |
thrid-generation |
hardware |
|
balanced |
policy |
contingency |
I'm assuming that Mr. Dell speaks from experience. His computers are widely used at my workplace and I'm not impressed by their construction, reliability, or the support provided by Dell Computer.
Tony Robbins as Commander-in-Chief?
More bullshit "Think outisde the box" and "New paradigm" bullshit?
Management should be less cultish and more based on sound analysis and evaluation.
Pick two
Such simple truth. Words to live by, work by...
A lot of this stuff is "management by magazine". Enough articles appear in CEO-type magazines, and they start talking about it at the club, the opera, charity events, etc. It becomes a hot button, and they want it pushed at their company so they won't be the last kid on the block without Six Sigma.
There are companies, and divisions of companies, where this stuff could work wonders. At other times and places, it can be lethal. And the "enablers" never give presentations of situations where it would be the absolute worst thing in the world to implement.
I attribute the executive tendency towards fads (unproven or inappropriate procedures) as a form of "magical thinking", where the proper things are sacrificed on an altar (usually the oldest, most experienced workers), and the universe is absolutely forced to give you success. For people self-selected for seeing the subtle, and having unique insights, they can be quite gullible.
Six Sigma can be valuable where you make billions of somethings, like chips, and need to squeeze out every last fraction of a percent of improvement. But like paper-shuffling in general, it can become the end-product itself, and people live or die on the numbers they generate, and not on the physical product that goes out the door.
In my company, the ISO-900[n] Gestapo are so loathed that even senior managers try to find a way to be out of the office when the Kameraden come calling.
It's sort of irrelevant whether or not any of these trendy management system fads have any core of real merit. What happens, in *every* case, is that they are entirely the province of the "seminar droids", people who have no real skills and who therefore survive by attaching themselves to meaningless "high-profile" activities. They attend every superfical seminar and meaningless meeting into which they can insinuate themselves, scrambling around generating reams of reports and piles of paperwork and surfeits of slideshows, impressing only those as stupid as themselves (many of whom have sublimated upward into corporate management).
Then, as others have pointed out, whenever the latest metaphysical miracule cure has lost its romantic appeal,they eagerly gravitate towards the next one, which is always waiting in the wings. They're of the same mentality as those people we all know who are always involved in one pyramid sales scheme or another, jumping from one to the next with the same madcap gleam in their eyes, convinced that this time they're going to become a "diamond" in the pyramid and get rich. Actually, I think at my company they've already jumped off the "Six Sigma" bandwagon and onto another one called "M-II Awareness".
yaawwwwnnnnn.....
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