DEC’s
“Other” Legacy
THE DEVELOPMENT OF LEADERS
This
chapter was published in DEC Is Dead, Long Live DEC:
The Lasting Legacy of Digital Equipment Corporation,
by Edgar H. Schein, Berrett Kohler Publishers, Inc., 2003.
Digital
Equipment Corporation’s technical legacy is well known and
widely respected. Its innovation in mini-computers and networking
were the basis for the evolution of new ways of computing and the
democratization of technology. But DEC also made other significant
contributions to the larger community, technical and otherwise.
Among them was a culture and approach to employee and leadership
development that produced leaders at all levels of the organization.
During their time at DEC, the talents and abilities of many employees
were discovered, nurtured, developed, and honed, and they helped
Digital become the technical and organizational powerhouse and much
sought-after employer-of-choice that it was until the early 90s.
Many of them were profoundly influenced by their experiences at
DEC in ways that have had lasting impact. As these people left the
company, first through normal turnover and attrition, and later
by less voluntary means and in greater numbers, they went on to
other companies and enterprises where many held positions of considerable
influence, and they continued to make significant contributions.
This is DEC’s other legacy.
During
its lifespan, over 130,000 people were employed by Digital. Most
went on to other work situations—in other established corporations,
as entrepreneurs and consultants in private practice, as partners
in start-ups, and to positions in education and community service,
and with them they brought what they had learned. Their styles of
leading, managing, and influencing, their approaches to work and
innovation, and their beliefs about organizations and what is possible
were all shaped by the DEC culture and their experiences as DEC
employees. As it turned out, DEC’s unique culture had provided
a perfect environment for the development of leadership ability
and entrepreneurial behavior.
This
chapter explores those aspects of the DEC culture that created this
crucible or laboratory for leadership development, how it shaped
both personal and professional development, and the lasting impact
of these experiences. The stories of several former DEC employees
illustrate the connection between the developmental effects of their
years at Digital, their subsequent career choices, and the contributions
they have made to other companies and the community at large. The
material for this chapter is drawn from several sources: research
that I conducted in 1986 about the developmental attributes and
processes of transformational leaders, formal interviews with former
employees, and anecdotal data from continued contact with former
colleagues and clients.
Some
Thoughts on Leadership and Leadership Development
Several
key constructs are the basis for understanding what it was about
DEC that contributed to the leadership development of so many of
its employee and how it worked. The subject of leadership—what
it is and isn’t, the related processes and dynamics, the results
and outcomes—has been debated for centuries. In the late 70s
and early 80s, some new formulations and definitions emerged, largely
the work of James MacGregor Burns (1978), Bernard Bass and his colleagues
at SUNY Binghamton (1985), Warren Bennis and Burt Nanus (1985),
and Warren Bennis (1989). Their contributions are important because
they differentiated management and leadership and described the
attributes and effects of each; the work has been both enduring
and relevant through the intervening years. As a result of their
work, and for the purposes of this discussion, the terms transformational
leader and leader and transactional leader and manager, respectively,
are synonymous and used interchangeably.
The
fundamental differences between managers and leaders are well summarized
by Bennis and Nanus (1985):
There is a profound difference between management and leadership,
and both are important. To manage means to bring about, to accomplish,
to have charge of or responsibility for, to conduct. Leading is
influencing, guiding in direction, course, action, opinion. The
distinction is crucial. Managers are people who do things right
and leaders are people who do the right thing. The difference may
be summarized as activities of vision and judgment—effectiveness
versus activities of mastering routines—efficiency. (p. 21,
original emphasis)
The
literature has also been clear and consistent about the attributes,
roles, and contributions of leaders. In this formulation, relevant
business and technical background and expertise is necessary but
not sufficient—the price of admission, so to speak. It is
leadership ability that is the differentiator of who will make significant,
lasting, and transformational contributions to enterprises and communities.
While this does not mean that managers don’t make important
contributions, the sort of leadership that we’re talking about
is more an orientation and a way of being than it is a set of skills
or techniques. The key differences are summarized below in Table
7.1.
TABLE
7.1. Attributes of Transformational Leaders and Managers
Transformational Leaders |
Managers (Transactional Leaders) |
• Are visionary and mission
oriented
• Use inspiration, charisma, and inherent excitement of
the vision to enroll and motivate others
• Are individually and developmentally oriented
• Look at old problems in new ways
• Stress and value intellectual ability, problem exploration,
experimentation
• Are future and change oriented
• Question existing culture, norms, values, and beliefs
• Are risk takers |
• Are goal and strategy
oriented
• Bargain or contract for the exchange of effort/output
for rewards as primary way to motivate others
• Stress and value rationality, limiting options and choices,
problem solving
• Are day-to-day and operationally oriented
• Generally accept established norms, values, culture,
and beliefs
• Are risk controllers |
Although
there have been thousands of studies about the content, processes,
and effects of leadership on both followers and organizations, much
less is known about how leaders acquire the attributes associated
with the transformational orientation, the effects of individual
differences on leadership outcomes, and leaders’ on-going
development processes. There are three key points to be made: First,
development is assumed to refer to a process that occurs gradually
and incrementally over time, across the entire life span of the
individual. Therefore, it is important to look at critical events
and influences that have taken place throughout a leader’s
life when seeking to understand the process of leadership development.
Second, we know that one of the key functions of transformational
leadership is the development of followers, so leaders are themselves
agents of others’ development; however, a leader cannot facilitate
the development of another beyond the developmental level that he
or she has achieved. While leadership can therefore occur at all
levels, the developmental level of the leader poses a constraint,
and the continuous development of leaders is essential to ongoing
and continuous transformation of both people and organizations.
Third, a review of both leadership and human development literature
reveals seven factors that explain the origin, acquisition, and
development of transformational leadership:
•
Family Factors: Early experiences, especially those with parents,
that are the basis for opportunities and events that contribute
to the development of a personality structure that favors leadership
ability.
• Once-Born Twice-Born: This theory was formulated by Zaleznik
(1977) and encompasses aspects of both the Family Factors and
Conflict and Disappointment factors. According to Zaleznik, people
who are Once-Born made adjustments to life that were reasonably
straightforward and their lives were mainly peaceful and harmonious
with little discrepancy between expectations and reality. For
those who are Twice-Born, life has been more of a struggle resulting
in a sense of isolation, being special, wariness, and greater
involvement in one’s inner world. Greater self-reliance,
increased expectations of performance and achievement, and sometimes
a desire to do great works are developed. It is leaders who are
twice-born and developed by mastery, and managers who are once-born
and developed by socialization.
• Conflict and Disappointment: This theme refers to the
extent to which individuals have effective ways of dealing with
conflict and disappointment in their lives. Those who deal effectively
with conflict, face disappointments and resolve them, and engage
in self-examination are more effective leaders.
• Developmental Tendencies: Leaders tend to move toward
higher levels of development during their lives and appear to
have engaged in both intra- and interpersonal development activities
to a greater extent than non-leaders.
• Previous Leadership Experiences: Previous opportunities
for leadership, often early in life, and the transferability of
learnings from those experiences are factors in the development
of leaders.
• Influence of Mentors: This theme pertains to the developmental
effects of a strong interpersonal and professional coaching relationship
between an older and/or more experienced individual and a more
junior person in whom the mentor has taken a strong personal interest.
• Workshops and Events: This theme pertains to workshops,
training events, and other formal or structured learning activities
that purport to teach leadership skills or behaviors.
These
interrelated factors include both events and influences of family
and childhood and resulting developmental tendencies or predispositions
as well as other more conscious or deliberate choices in service
of developmental outcomes that occurred during the individual’s
life-to-date, for example, leadership experiences, developmental
events, and the influence of mentors. (For a more thorough discussion
of these factors see Gibbons [1986] and Avolio and Gibbons [1988].)
What
Was So Special About DEC?
Given
this background on leadership development, we can now explore the
unique combination of conditions, cultural attributes, operating
principles, values, and management practices that prevailed at Digital
and that resulted in an environment in which leadership development
flourished.
A culture
that was empowering. There is a list of rules of the road for how
to succeed at DEC that are synonymous with the company. Anybody
who ever worked there knows them, most still subscribe to them,
and many wish that the workplaces of today were more like this.
It is easy to make the list: they are a part of me, and the people
whom I interviewed all routinely mentioned all or most of them when
describing their experiences at DEC and those factors that impacted
their career and leadership development (note that these characteristics
mirror closely the ones identified in Chapter 6 as some of the core
elements of DEC’s culture).
•
See what needs to be done and do it; develop a vision for what
you want to accomplish
• He/she who proposes does
• Do the right thing; don’t wait to be told what to
do or how to do it
• Make it happen
• Push back if you don’t agree or think the “wrong”
thing is happening
• Invest in and build trusting relationships
• Truth will be discovered through conflict and debate
• Keep/deliver on your commitments
• Get buy-in before moving forward, even in the face of
conflict and competition; influence is the way to do this
The
result was a place that on the one hand actively and explicitly
valued diversity in many ways that were ahead of the times: encouraging
experimentation, risk taking, and creativity; expecting and stimulating
push back, debate, and questions about what didn’t make sense
or seem right; hiring and promoting women and people of color; and
formally supporting the exploration and understanding of differences
of all kinds. On the other hand, DEC had a culture that was widely
and well understood and embraced and set of norms that was practiced
in relatively consistent ways. This paradox contributed to an ideal
environment in which leadership ability could be recognized—oneself
and others—and grown: the “rules” were about the
importance and necessity of freedom and innovation, exercising influence,
taking responsibility, debating the relevant issues on their merit,
respecting and trusting others, and getting buy-in before moving
forward. The meaning, origins, and evolution of each of these principles
are elaborated in the preceding chapters.
From
a leadership development perspective, it would be hard to live in
such a culture and work this way over an extended period of time
and not develop at least some leadership ability. For if we compare
these “rules” to the list of attributes of transformational
leaders found in Table 7.1, we see that there is a great deal of
similarity and congruence between them. So it’s not a surprise
that Digital was a laboratory for leadership development and that
those who were successful at Digital also embodied and practiced
those attributes.
Fast
growth. From the mid-70s to the mid 80s, Digital enjoyed a period
of extraordinary growth that provided unparalleled opportunity technically,
professionally, and managerially. Employees changed jobs frequently,
the result of both promotions and “growmotions”—taking
on added responsibility or getting increased opportunities for innovation
without a formal change in title, job level, or pay. Employees were
encouraged to identify problems and needs and propose solutions,
so there was a continuous supply of intellectual stimulation and
endless outlets for creativity—more than enough to go around—which
in turn continuously fueled the growth and provided challenging
opportunities for the taking. Many new jobs were created during
this time which resulted in large numbers of new hires. With this
influx of newcomers, came the recognition that the culture and mores
of DEC had to be formally transmitted, and many programs to do this
were created. The importance of preserving the culture was on the
minds of man, if not most, and current employees saw it as their
responsibility to orient and integrate (and sometimes initiate)
new people. Digital became the largest private employer in Massachusetts
and New Hampshire and was seen as one of the most desirable places
to work, for both technical and non-technical people alike, since
the opportunities to innovate were not limited only to those who
were designing minicomputers.
From
a leadership development perspective, there were also plenty of
opportunities for people to be in leadership situations and roles
and to learn and grow in this arena. The system rewarded taking
initiative in this way by providing more opportunities, both formal
and informal, offering fast career growth, and delivering generous
monetary rewards.
Recruiting,
attracting, and hiring the best people—very carefully. During
Digital’s fast growth cycles, the recruiting and attracting
pretty much took care of themselves. DEC was seen as the place to
work, and those who wanted a job there worked very hard to make
contacts and get themselves hired. Again, there was considerable
awareness that the fit between a prospective employee and the company’s
culture was very important, and despite the need to fill jobs quickly,
the screening and hiring processes were quite rigorous. A parody
of the standard DEC print employment ad that circulated in the late
70s portrays both the heady arrogance and the rigor of the times.
(See Figure 7.1)
FIGURE
7.1. Parody of a DEC Employment Advertisement
In
fact, there was a willingness to hire people who were a good fit,
even if they turned out not to be a good match for the opening for
which they were being interviewed, and these candidates were quickly
referred for other openings. Sometimes they were hired without a
specific job and either encouraged to create a job for themselves
or considered part of a talent pool and given the right job when
it came along. DEC was clear that it needed technically and professionally
talented and creative people who could make a contribution and that
it was inviting membership in a family that could last for a very
long time. Layoffs were then unheard of, and the average age of
the employee population was twenty-eight. The prevailing belief
was that if things weren’t working out in a particular job,
once you were in the family, there would be a place for you to make
that valuable contribution and you would be encouraged to find or
create it.
What
this resulted in was an employee population that was both self-selected
and carefully screened before it was hired. Because DEC’s
culture and reputation as an employer were well known in the local
area and beyond, prospective employees could assess whether or not
it was a place they wanted to work, and not everyone did want to.
The research on the development of transformational leaders shows
that there is a predisposition toward this orientation that has
its origins early in life that is subsequently reinforced by oneself
and others. Therefore, if an organization were to design a process
for leadership development, it would make sense to seek participants
who had this predisposition and motivation to engage in personal
development. Given the overlap between the attributes of transformational
leadership and the tenets of DEC’s culture, it would seem
that DEC was, however inadvertently, screening and hiring such people.
Coming
of age—personally and professionally—while at DEC. Many
theories of human development subscribe to a model that says that
certain developmental tasks are related to and typically occur during
phases or stages of life and that there is a predictable sequence
of developmental challenges through which we progress. The mastery
of one task or level is a prerequisite for, and launches us into,
the next level. The tasks associated with people in their twenties
and thirties are focused primarily on differentiating from the family
of origin, establishing an identity as an adult and creating a life
and possibly a family of one’s own, developing mastery of
work and career, “making it,” shifting the locus of
evaluation and control from external to internal, and establishing
a sense of personal and professional competence.
During
the 70s and 80s, a very high proportion of the employee population
at DEC ranged in age from their mid-twenties through their thirties,
and during this time the population more than doubled. The employment
tenure was long by today’s standards—often ten years
or more. This large cohort then moved together through both an exciting
time in DEC’s history and through the same age- and stage-related
developmental tasks. The impact and effect of this convergence of
events on future career choices, preferences for and ways of working,
values about what it means to make a contribution, and definitions
of what constitutes personal and professional competence and integrity
cannot be overstated.
A
high level of cultural attunement and alignment to DEC’s values
and mores characterized the work environment. Because DEC was the
largest employer, there was also a sense of community that extended
beyond the workplace. Family members; parents of children’s
friends; neighbors; members of community, religious, and social
groups; and other clients of local service providers were often
DEC employees. It was not unusual for all or most of one’s
friends also to be Digital employees. Digital treated its employees
with high regard, recognizing that people are different.
Flexibility,
adaptiveness, and responsiveness to individual needs did much to
bind people to the company, and most employees felt tremendously
loyal in return. Overall, employees loved their jobs, the work they
got to do, and the sense that they were making valuable contributions
to an emerging and exciting industry. They were willing to go the
extra miles, spending considerable time and energy in the service
of Digital and their work there. Several of those whom I interviewed
who left DEC voluntarily said, “Leaving DEC was the hardest
decision I’ve ever made.” Today we might say that DECies
had “no life.” But then, for many, life seemed well
balanced and integrated, and they didn’t experience themselves
as being exploited or disposable once they had been used up. It’s
no wonder, then, that the relationships and connections made by
many during their times at DEC are still important to them, even
years later. As one alumnus said, “No one should misunderstand
how important the DEC alumni connection is: once DEC, always DEC.
It made a big impression on peoples’ lives.”
This
was a system that was extraordinarily self-reinforcing. And it was
in this milieu that people experienced the developmental activities,
conscious and intentional or otherwise, that formed indelible and
lasting values, beliefs, and behaviors that continue to define who
they are and how they approach work and career. In the words of
one, echoed by others, “I came of age at Digital.”
High
value on individual development. Beyond the generally developmental
culture and environment at DEC, there was specifically a high value
placed on individual development-- personal, technical, and professional.
From a leadership development perspective this is noteworthy for
two reasons. First, it insured that employees received the formal
training that was essential to being and keeping current in one’s
field—be it technical or professional—and that is a
necessary but not sufficient requirement for leaders. Second, it
enabled considerable interpersonal, intrapersonal, and management
development. Competence in these arenas is also essential to leadership
development.
Digital
expended considerable resources in this arena. It had an extensive
internal employee and organization development capability that was
well utilized and valued. A wide range of custom designed programs
was created, augmented by a menu of courses and programs purchased
from external vendors in support of development initiatives and
individual needs. It also had a very generous tuition reimbursement
plan that made it possible for many to receive academic degrees
in their chosen fields so long as the proposed program could be
related to their current work or the needs of the company. The health
care plan provided access to therapy for those who wanted it, without
the limitations that are typically imposed by the corporations,
Employee Assistance Programs (EAPs), or heath plans of today. Many
used this as a vehicle for personal development work which can be
an important aspect of the development of transformational leaders.
Digital was also a big customer of suppliers of personal development
programs such as NTL Institute and the Center for Creative Leadership.
Employees were encouraged to attend these programs, which made it
easy for those who were so inclined to take advantage of numerous
opportunities for development that would contribute to their leadership
abilities.
There
was at DEC a convergence of culture, values, resources, and rewards
that created an environment in which leadership development could
and did occur.
What
Was Learned and How Was It Used?
The
biographies feature the people whom I interviewed for this exploration
of leadership development at DEC. They give a sense of people’s
careers at DEC, their significant sources of impact and learnings,
what they’ve done post-DEC, and the contributions they’ve
made to their companies, professions, communities, clients, and
customers. Their accomplishments are noteworthy and illustrative,
but there were other criteria by which they were selected. Their
entry into DEC, their career progression, the opportunities that
came their way, and their experiences of the significance of their
time at, and relationship with, the company were quite typical.
Most of them came to DEC during their twenties and early thirties,
starting out in entry or mid-level individual contributor or managerial
positions. In this small sample, an effort was made to represent
the variety of corporate functions as well as differences in gender,
ethnicity, and nationality that characterized DEC. In keeping with
the value that was placed on all forms of diversity, each of these
people is a unique individual whose personality and life experiences
shaped his or her development and practice of leadership while at
DEC.
What
they have in common is a particular mix of individual predisposition
and motivation, that combined with the opportunities and environment
afforded by the DEC culture to produce extraordinary leadership
development and significant contributions both at DEC and beyond.
And what they also have in common is their love of DEC and their
recognition of, and appreciation for, the part it played in their
lives and careers.
Three
themes emerged from among them that describe the most lasting and
impactful aspects and significant learnings from their years at
DEC:
• Respectful and trusting relationships: Building and sustaining
respectful and trusting relationships as the basis for working
successfully with others, for transacting business, and for collaborating
to achieve goals; supporting and growing other people.
• Freedom and opportunity: The empowering effect of being
given freedom and opportunity; the invitation and expectation
that you will see what needs to be done based on what is “right”
for the company; following through, taking responsibility, engaging
others, and being accountable for the results of your vision or
proposal.
• Freedom to question assumptions: Questioning assumptions
and pushing back; debating ideas, proposals, and products on their
merit, despite inherent conflict; the belief that truth and the
best path will emerge from this process; focusing on the content
and not attacking or diminishing individuals.
This
is, in the end, the lasting legacy and contribution of the Digital
Equipment Corporation: thousands of people, shaped and impacted
by these values and ways of working let loose on the world to influence
others and make lasting contributions to technology, the practice
of leadership and management, global enterprise, and the community
at large.
Where
Are They Now?
Gordon
Bell
Gordon
Bell worked at DEC from 1960 to 1966, leaving to teach at Carnegie
Mellon University. He returned to DEC in 1972 as VP of Engineering
and was there until 1983. During his time at Digital, was responsible
for helping to develop the PDP family of minicomputers and was the
architect of DEC’s VAX series, a set of products that transformed
both the company and the computer industry. Indeed, it would be
difficult to overstate Bell’s contributions to both Digital
and the industry.
Gordon
joined DEC at the beginning—three years after its founding—so
he was more a shaper of the culture than one influenced by it. “I
don’t think I ever thought about team creation or leadership.
It evolved from the MIT environment; [it was] an engineering-scientific
culture: question everything in an open environment…. We looked
at multiple alternatives, worked to resolve conflict quickly, learned
how not to personalize failure, and built on that.” He had
learned the importance of finding the balance between being firm
about something and destroying a personal relationship while working
in his father’s electrical supply company as a boy.
It
was hard to get buy-in for the VAX strategy, and it put him at odds
with Ken Olsen. “I led from an understanding of the technology
and what should be done from a technical strength point of view,
and I was looking at it issue by issue. Ken and I disagreed. He
was into options and playing them…. I made it happen, just
kept on until the machines changed and the roles of the product
lines changed.” But the stress took a toll, and Bell had a
heart attack and soon after left the company.
His
years and experience at DEC enabled Bell to develop a heuristic,
rule-based model for building products, an approach that says that
most appropriate next step or solution to a problem will emerge
as a result of learning or experience in the preceding steps: “The
product decides the rules, not people. People have to organize to
enable the product to work and be built.”
Since
leaving DEC, Bell has continued to make innumerable contributions
to the industry. He did work at the National Science Foundation
that pulled together all the computing research and also led the
cross-agency group that created the strategy by which the internet
was put in place. “I foresaw the idea of the network and saw
what the structure might mean but not what it might turn into. Three
hundred people missed what it could enable!”
He
has been involved with sixty-five start ups as an angel investor.
In 1988 he established the Gordon Bell Award to recognize significant
achievements in high performance computing. He has published several
books and was involved in the establishment of the Computer History
Museum at Moffett Field in Mountain View, California.
Since
1991, first as an advisor and now as an employee, he has worked
with Microsoft on future development efforts, continuing his presence
at the forefront of computer technology.
Crawford
Beveridge
A native
of Edinburgh, Crawford Beveridge came to Digital in 1977 following
ten years at Hewlett Packard in Europe and the US. While at DEC,
he oversaw the establishment of European manufacturing sites and
then was personnel manager for Europe.
“At
HP, I learned about management, and at DEC I learned about leadership.”
The assumption at DEC was that everyone should and would do what’s
right, not wait to be told what to do or how to do it. At HP and
other places he’s worked, there were manuals and policies,
and he recognized the importance of developing trusting relationships
and a trust-based culture that enabled people to make mistakes without
the fear of being fired for it. “DEC was a humane place that
looked after peoples’ concerns…. It was a commonwealth,
not an empire. No one insisted on anything. It was the goodwill
of individuals that made entities work…. It loosened me up:
I realized that it wasn’t about policy manuals, it was about
vision, enabling, clearing barriers, and supporting talent. It rebuilt
my head about how to apply what I knew…. [There were more]
degrees of freedom and fewer constraints.”
In
1982, Beveridge was recruited by Analog Devices. “Nothing
about DEC made me leave…I concluded that I wanted to run my
own shop, and this was a VP-level position in a smaller company….
DEC was a coming-of-age for me.”
Beveridge
has done two tours at Sun Microsystems. From 1985 to 1991, he was
VP of Corporate Resources which included responsibility for human
resources (HR), management information systems (MIS), real estate,
purchasing and logistics, security, and corporate affairs. During
his tenure, company sales grew from $100 million to $3 billion,
while the employee population increased from eight hundred to over
twelve thousand. He returned in 2000 as VP and chief human resources
officer. “If I’d come (straight) from HP to Sun, I wouldn’t
have made it.”
In
the intervening nine years, Beveridge went home to Scotland where
he was CEO of Scottish Enterprise, the economic development organization
for Scotland. At this 1700-employee, $800 million organization,
he was responsible for business development, infrastructure development,
skill building, and venture capital. “I realized that I could
be a chief executive. I marshaled all my skills and learnings, especially
leadership skills from DEC, to loosen up a government organization.”
Beveridge
is a member of several boards of directors, including Autodesk,
Memec, Scottish Equity Partners, and Young Enterprise Scotland.
Peter
DeLisi
Pete
left IBM to come to Digital in 1977 and stayed for sixteen years.
Among the positions he held were product line manager for the Distributed
Data Processing Group, sales training manager, and several in the
field services organization.
After
leaving DEC, he started his own consulting company, Organizational
Synergies, specializing in strategy development. DeLisi credits
his success with his company to what he learned at DEC about being
an entrepreneur and running a business.
Coming
to DEC after years in parochial schools, a Jesuit college, the military,
and IBM, DeLisi said was, “a culture shock—no one telling
you what to do…I’d never been anywhere where I hadn’t
been told what to do.” At DEC, he learned the importance of
team, family, collaboration and buy-in. He came to appreciate the
power and value in seeing what needed to be done—not in what
was assigned--proposing it, and doing it, and in so doing leveraging
talent and a unique vantage point. “When you get a group working
together this way, you can have tremendous impact and results…it
broadened my vision of what’s possible.”
Having
learned that “He who proposes does,” DeLisi was emboldened
by this imperative, and he has made many proposals since leaving
DEC that have benefited his company and his clients. One of these
proposals led to a part-time position at Santa Clara University
where he is now academic dean of the Information Technology Leadership
Program.
Barry
James Folsom
Barry
James Folsom worked at DEC in the early 80s as the manager of the
Rainbow (PC) Development Group. Of his time at Digital he says,
“Professionally, this was the best time in my life….
it was the foundation for me and my career.”
Major
learnings included the importance of having a vision with passion
and energy, never giving up despite naysayers, the importance of
improvising and changing the rules, of being flexible, and of creating
the foundation for sustainability. “Part of leadership is
getting people to go there, and also sustaining it. There are lots
of houses of cards lately. [I learned that] you have to build a
foundation that can sustain growth and then decide where you can
and can’t take short cuts…. I also learned about risk
management and always had a contingency plan, and I got it agreed
to by those involved in it ahead of time.”
Folsom
left DEC for Sun Microsystems where was a member of the corporate
management team during its growth from $100 million to $1.7 billion
in sales. He is currently chairman of the board at PlaceWare, a
web conferencing company whose bookings have grown from $3 million
to $50 million since he arrived as CEO in 1997. Prior to taking
his current position, he did several start ups and turn-arounds,
including previous positions as president at Spectrum Holobyte where
revenues grew from $13 million to $70 million in a year and CEO
of Radius where he also turned it around in one year, growing revenues
by 50 percent.
Kevin
Melia
A native
of Ireland and an accountant by training, Kevin Melia joined Digital
at the manufacturing plant in Galway in 1972 and moved to the United
States in 1976. DEC was one of the first companies to locate a plant
in Ireland, and for Kevin it was “like a university, a window
to the world,” offering opportunities for which he is still
grateful to Ken Olsen. He held a variety of positions in finance,
logistics, purchasing, and materials. His last position at Digital
was VP of materials in which he transformed the company’s
approach to supply chain management (SCM, before it was called that).
Though
he believes that by the late 80s DEC was twenty years ahead in SCM
(and he still uses what he learned and experimented with at DEC),
it was his frustration with the inability to make additional changes
that he felt were essential to DEC’s survival that led to
his departure after being recruited by Sun Microsystems in 1989.
There, as VP of worldwide operations, he saw an opportunity to do
many of the things he couldn’t at DEC and encountered less
resistance to creating a globalized, “lean” manufacturing
operation that relied on outsourcing. During his time at Sun, he
also became CFO and president of Sun Microsystems Computer Corporation.
In
1994, back in Boston, Kevin co-founded (with Bob Graham, also a
Digital alumnus) Manufacturers Services Limited (MSL), a global,
full service electronic manufacturing service provider for OEMs.
By acquiring the OEMs’ own manufacturing plants and producing
their products more efficiently, he grew the company from zero to
$1.5 billion in revenues in six years, making it one of the largest
firms in this business.
About
how his experience at DEC helped prepare him for MSL, Kevin said,
“DEC was a very entrepreneurial company which grew very fast.
It gave me a taste for taking on responsibility.” In 2000,
MSL opened a facility in Galway.
Dorothy
Terrell
Dorothy
Terrell came to DEC in 1977 from the not-for-profit sector, starting
as training manager in the Westminster final assembly and test manufacturing
facility. She quickly moved up through a succession of plant and
group personnel positions, and in 1984 became the plant manager
for the Boston manufacturing facility. “Even at DEC, it was
an unusual opportunity to go from personnel to a high level line
management job.” And, even at DEC, more unusual for an African-American
woman. In 1988, in what was another “unusual opportunity,
a chance of a lifetime,” she relocated to Silicon Valley to
start up the Cupertino plant where the VAX 9000 would be manufactured.
About
the most impactful aspects of her career at DEC, Terrell said, “I
joined DEC at the best possible time and place—the late 70s
in Westminster and in final assembly and test. DEC was growing again,
and it was exciting. All the pieces [of the company] came together
[in Westminster].” Echoing a familiar theme, she also recalled
that people were given opportunities to do different things that
went beyond what a position or job might suggest. “People
saw more in me at that time; things I didn’t see in myself.
They looked for talent and gave you as much as you could stand.”
Manufacturing, even more than in other parts of DEC, paid attention
to differences of all kinds (not just the obvious ones) and their
impact on individual and organizational capability and productivity.
In addition to her own learnings from the many innovative programs
in this arena that were developed at DEC, Terrell also influenced,
led, and contributed significantly to others’ understanding
of and transformation about issues of race and gender.
By
1991 Terrell and her staff had succeeded against difficult odds
in bringing the VAX 9000 to market, but the product wasn’t
selling, and the first non-voluntary downsizing in the history of
Digital occurred in Cupertino. Although she recognized that downsizing
was “the right thing to do” for the company, Terrell
described this experience as one of the most wrenching things she
has ever done. At that moment, she realized that DEC would never
be the same.
Later
that year, she left to become the president of Sun Express at Sun
Microsystems where she started Sun’s worldwide aftermarket
and on-line services business unit, joining several other former
DECies on the executive staff. In six years, she grew it to $300
million in revenues, expanding into eleven countries. “DEC
was preparation for Sun, Cupertino [because it was in Silicon Valley]
even more so. I couldn’t have hit the ground running at Sun
without Cupertino,” and it helped to have other DEC people
to call on. She had also learned at DEC that the people whom you
hire are the key ingredient and that surrounding yourself with talented
people who also understand the importance of relationships and trust
are essential to success.
In
1997, Terrell moved to NMS Communications, a telecom infrastructure
and services provider. There she was senior VP of both corporate
operations and world wide sales and president of platforms and services.
About her diverse range of responsibilities she said, “I did
so many different things at DEC—big different things. That
was part of the opportunity. I was empowered to do them.”
During her tenure at NMS she drove a 100 percent increase in year
over year revenue. In 2001, Terrell was recognized as one of Technology’s
Most Remarkable Women by Upside Magazine and one of the 50 Most
Important African-Americans in Technology by the editors of blackmoney.com.
Recently
retired, Terrell is a member of many community and corporate boards,
including General Mills, Sears, Roebuck, Herman Miller, the Commonwealth
Institute, the Massachusetts General Hospital, and the Massachusetts
Software Council.
Fred
Traversi
Fred
Traversi came to DEC in 1979, following five years at General Electric
(during which he took a year off to obtain an MBA from Harvard).
Since leaving DEC in 1994, he has held senior positions at Taco
Bell and Lexmark and is now president and CEO of AdvizeX Technologies.
“And [of all of these,] DEC was the most influential in shaping
my management and leadership philosophy and approach.”
Key
learnings that Traversi took with him to subsequent positions included
the benefits of decentralized decision making and local option;
applications of business process discipline (business process discipline
is determining a standard, repeatable way of performing a particular
activity or process that gets a consistent result); the importance
of solid, trusting relationships to getting things done; the usefulness
of constructive tension and conflict; and the effectiveness of giving
people the freedom to see what needs to be done and the opportunity
to do it without a complicated approval process.
While
VP of operations at Taco Bell, he introduced the structure and processes
for decentralized decision making that enabled regions to operate
in ways that better matched their local markets. He also opened
restaurants in each geography to test new concepts and products,
enabling faster new product introductions.
Traversi
summarized the impact of his tenure at DEC: “My most significant
personal and professional relationships are from the DEC years.
None from other companies are still important.”
Tracy
Gibbons
After
a first career as a program director and branch executive for the
YMCA, Tracy came to DEC in 1977. Starting as an employee and organization
development specialist in the Westminster final assembly and test
facility, she held a variety of positions as organization development
consultant and manager. In 1989 and 90, while a member of the Corporate
Organization Consulting Group, she worked with the plant manager
and staff in Cupertino, California to start up the manufacturing
facility for the VAX 9000.
While
at Digital, Gibbons earned a Ph.D. in Human and Organization Systems
at the Fielding Graduate Institute. Her research investigated and
modeled the developmental origins and processes of transformational
leaders. “It was my experience at DEC that piqued my curiosity
about both organization transformation and leadership, and it provided
both the opportunity and an amazing laboratory in which to study
both.”
In
1991, Gibbons joined Advanced Micro Devices as senior organization
development consultant where she worked for several years with DEC
alumnus Bob Krueger to create a team-based engineering and marketing
organization. It was also there that she began to discover and appreciate
that the work that she and her HR and OD colleagues had done at
DEC was—and continues to be—state-of-the-art. “We
had enormous freedom and encouragement to innovate. The work I did
and what I learned while I was at DEC is still the foundation for
my practice, especially the stuff about complex, interdependent,
matrixed organizations. What DEC was doing twenty or more years
ago is still new to some of my clients.”
In
1997, Gibbons realized a longtime career goal of being in private
practice as a consultant. She is now President of CoastWise Consulting,
a bicoastal firm that focuses on creating competitive advantage
by leveraging the power of organization design, strategic alignment,
and collaboration.
Resources
Avolio,
B.J. & Gibbons, T.C. (1988). Developing transformational leaders:
A lifespan approach. In Conger, J.A., Kanungo, R.N.(Eds.), Charismatic
Leadership: The elusive factor in organization effectiveness.
San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.
Bass,
B.M. (1985). Leadership and performance beyond expectations.
NY: The Free Press.
Bennis,
W. (1989). On becoming a leader. Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley
Publishing Company, Inc.
Bennis,
W. & Nanus, B. (1985). Leaders: The strategies for taking
charge. NY: Harper and Row Publishers.
Burns,
J.M. (1978). Leadership. NY: Harper and Row Publishers.
Gibbons, T.C. (1986). Born vs. made: Toward a theory of
development of transformational leaders. Unpublished doctoral
dissertation. The Fielding Graduate Institute.
Zaleznik,
A. (1977). Managers and leaders: Are they different?
Harvard Business Review, May, June 1977, pp. 67-78.
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