Engineering Management

#83-2/9/09-The Young Are Restless


The Young Are Restless!
“Young People Want Everything Now!”
Posted by Steven Cerri on Monday, February 9, 2009

Hello everyone!

Is it a bad rap?
I often hear managers and training departments in corporations complain about how young people don’t want to wait for their career advancement.

They want to get pay raises after 6 months.  They want to be managers 1 year after graduating from college.  They don’t want to work 5, 6, or 7 years in one position to earn the “right” to be promoted to the next career level.

This last weekend, in my class I heard it again.  One young person said that after joining a company, they found that they were given more and more work, and working longer and longer hours.  They were also doing the same work as others who were getting paid much more and who had been with the company many more years.  When this person asked for a raise, the manager said “No”.  The person subsequently left the company.

Another young person told me that even though they had not yet graduated from college (they would soon) and even though they had been an intern with a large company for several summers, they wanted to be a manager upon graduation.  They didn’t want to wait the seemingly standard period before promotion to management...7 years as an engineer.

Equal pay for equal work.
For most of my career I have believed that equal pay should be given for equal work.  Although, during my career, I was usually focused on equal pay for women who were doing work equivalent to that of men, my first response to young people who want equal pay for equal work has been to agree with the young people.

And yet, this weekend, when I heard my students talking about their perceptions, their expectations, and their experiences, while I initially responded that it was reasonable to expect equal pay for equal work, on the way home, what I had said just didn’t seem to sit well with me.  Did I really believe that equal pay for equal work was always the correct yard-stick?  My head said “yes”, but my gut said “no”.  I felt that it was more complicated than that.

Here’s my story and I’m sticking to it!
You see, when the baby boomers began their careers, most of them began as “employees” of companies.  They even expected to stay employees for most of their career.  They expected to get health benefits, paid vacations, and even fixed benefit retirement plans.  AND they expected to “work their way” up the organization.

You see, “in those days”, when an organization hired an employee there was an unwritten agreement that the company would do it’s best to keep the employee.  That might mean that you might be moved around a little and that you’d do jobs you might not be perfect for, but in return, you’d do the work, you’d gain experience and that experience would actually come in handy over the long haul because you’d be even more flexible and capable of doing other jobs.

And then along came… technology.
The last generation to feel this way and to have this unspoken agreement with the company was the baby boomer generation.

With their children everything began to change.  You see, technology began to put a lot of the “organization” into the hands of individuals.  For baby boomers there were secretaries who wrote memos.  For their children, they wrote their own memos.  And so it went, on and on.

The upshot of this gigantic shift was that work became something that could be “packaged” into much smaller and smaller, quantifiable packets.  With the emergence of the global economy this trend only accelerated. 

At this point, equal pay for equal work took on a very new meaning.  If I could pack my task into a tight, neat package, and define it well enough, I could send it to a variety of workers and now experience wouldn’t matter.  The only question that mattered would be, “Can they do the job?”.  Experience didn’t really matter.  Knowing who was doing the work didn’t even matter.

It didn’t matter if the person doing the work was a 12-year-old kid working in her bedroom after her parents thought she was asleep.  Experience just didn’t matter… only competence at doing the job at hand.

Thus emerged the profound and newly defined category of “contract worker”.

But not the contract worker of old.  A contract worker who was told they could be “independent of the man” (i.e., the corporate boss).The flip side of course is that if you are not beholding to the corporation, then the corporation doesn’t owe the contract worker anything in return. 

So where do we go from here?
Corporations and baby boomers and older employees (in general) still accept that companies hire “employees” and when you are an employee, experience matters.

The children of baby boomers and all those children right up to those born today, have been raised, without any of us or them realizing it, to believe that contract labor is the way all people are being judged

Here comes the class!
So now we’ve got young people who have been raised on “only performance matters”.  Experience doesn’t matter.

These young people are entering a “corporate” and business structure (in most, but not all, cases) where performance is only part of the equation of success.

Is it any wonder that we have a clash? 

If you want to read more about this topic, you can get it in my Ezine/Newsletter at:  Steven’s February 9, 2009 Newsletter

Be well,

Steven Cerri


P.S. By the way.  If you’d like to leave a comment, and I’d sure be interested if you did, I’ve changed the comments software.  Only your comment and your name will show up at the end of the comment.  I have modified the software so that your email address will not show up anywhere.

“What would it be like to be as successful with people as you are with your technology?” Steven trains, coaches, and facilitates engineers and technical managers to BE the answer to that question.  More information can be found at the:http://stevencerri.com/index.php/Home/index/

Copyright©2008 STCerri International and Steven Cerri.  You are free to pass this information on to others and to reproduce it.  If you reproduce it in whole or part please give attribution to Steven Cerri. Thank you.

Posted by Steven Cerri on 02/10 at 07:30 PM CoachingEngineer to Technical ManagerLeadershipEngineering LeadershipManagementEngineering Management • (0) Comments • (0) TrackbacksPermalink

#79-1/12/09-Trust Your Experiences


Trust Your Experiences
“How do you recognize good management advice?”
Posted by Steven Cerri on Monday, January 12, 2009

Hello everyone!

“Who do you trust and what is the truth in management?”

This last week I was reading some of the blogs on the people skills necessary for successful management. One blog, in particular, caught my eye.  It had to do with “behaviors” that are necessary for a good manager.

Some of the behaviors put forth by the author included things like these soft skills:

1. When you are managing, never show your emotions.
2. When you are managing, never raise your voice.  Always have a calm voice.  If you get frustrated you can scream into a pillow in your office.
3. Always have a smile on your face.
4. Walk around and talk to your direct reports.  Ask them how they are doing and give them suggestions on how they can do their job better.

These were just a few of the “best practices” that this author put forward regarding how to behave if you want to be a good manager.  The author had been a manager for five years and wanted to share what he had learned.

Fair enough.

What I find interesting is this; “How is a new manager who is reading this information, to use and apply these suggestions and to know which suggestions are true and which are false?

But wait… the truth!

How do you know that the information put forth is accurate?  Is there any way that you might know if 5 years as manager is enough to give authoritative knowledge?  Is the equivalent of two years of engineering school enough to allow someone to sign off on the design of a bridge or analyze the orbital velocity requirements for rendezvous with the International Space Station?

Actually there is a way to know.

In our own personal experience we know what works for management and what doesn’t.  In our own personal experience we have a sense of what good managers do and what bad managers do or don’t do.

And yet, many, many people choose to discount their own personal experience in order to follow the “leader”.  They discount what they know in their gut to be true, because the “leader” says that something else is true, instead.  And yet, we know it’s not.

So lets take some of those “gems” put forth on the blog post and see if they align with our personal experience.

When you are managing, never show your emotions.
My experience:  Not true.

It’s not a question of showing emotions, its a question of what emotions you do show and the degree to which you do so.  It’s not very useful to be a tyrant and yell at people and insult them in public.  But it’s certainly useful to show compassion, and determination, and even sternness, and maybe levity, politeness, and at times frustration, disappointment, and even anger.  It’s impossible to not show emotions.  The key is to show the right ones and at the appropriate level.  (I could write a book on this.)

When you are managing, never raise your voice.  Always have a calm voice.  If you get frustrated you can scream into a pillow in your office.
My experience: Half true, half not true.

Never raise your voice… well it depends.  I have had direct reports with whom I would never raise my voice.  And I’ve had direct reports with whom a good, hearty, give-and-take, with raised voices and even yelling was the only way to build the rapport and connection that the direct report (and I for that matter) wanted.  To be always calm with this direct report would have actually adversely affected our professional relationship.

And the idea of always having a calm voice… come on.  Have you ever been really upset and in need of help?  So you called a customer service representative and the person at the other end of the line sounded as if they were as calm as could be.  What was your response?

I know that my response has been to be annoyed with them.  They were too calm.  They didn’t understand that my situation was important.

Always being calm is nearly as bad as always yelling, almost.

And yes, if you are going to go off on someone… go scream into a pillow until you calm down.

Always have smile on your face.
My experience: Not true.

First, have you ever been around someone who always has a smile on their face?  Have you ever thought to yourself, “What are they doing… always with a smile on their face.  It can’t be real.” And often it’s not real.

No one wants to be around a doom and gloom person (except other doom and gloom people) but it’s important to be authentic and yet appropriate.

So rules like “always have a smile on your face” are just not useful.  A better suggestion is to always be appropriate and effective in any given situation so that you and the team can achieve your/their desired outcome.  (This is a topic for another book).

Now the important point about my comments is this; the suggestions put in the blog I read were a decent attempt to quantify behaviors that would make a manager a good manager.

However, management is not a simple process.  It is not given to quick and simple rules.  In engineering, F=ma.  The laws of physics are clear, stable, repeatable. Unfortunately or fortunately, management doesn’t have similarly clear, stable, repeatable rules.  The biggest rule in management is “it depends.” The best way to know if what someone is telling you is true, is to match it to your experience.  And if you have no experience in a specific are, then take it “one-step-at-a-time”.

With respect to every suggested soft skill behavior I listed from the blog, we all have personal experiences that contradict what was suggested.

We all know of times when emotion displayed by our managers was just what we wanted to see, hear, and experience.  Therefore, when to display what emotion is context dependent.  It depends.

We all have experiences when we didn’t want our managers to display a smile.  We want to be able to “read” our managers by hearing the tone of their voice.  We don’t want them to be smiling when they are laying people off.  Once again, it depends.

And, there are times when we certainly don’t want our managers to come around talking to us, looking over our shoulders and giving us suggestions about how we can do things better.  There are times when we will welcome the advice and other times when we’ll probably consider it micromanagement.  So once again it depends.

The bottom line is...
So the bottom line is this.  Management, leadership, even contributing your maximum to your organization is not something you learn in five years of on-the-job training.  (How long was the intense training your received for your engineering degree?)

It’s also not something you learn from a simple set of rules. 

In basic terms…


Engineering is about knowledge; Management is about judgment. 

Engineering is about rules; Management is about context.

Engineering is an application of knowledge in search of certainty; Management is the application of judgment in search of an outcome.


Very different worlds.

Be well,

Steven Cerri


By the way.  If you’d like to leave a comment, and I’d sure be interested if you did, I’ve changed the comments software.  Only your comment and your name will show up at the end of the comment.  I have modified the software so that your email address will not show up anywhere.

“What would it be like to be as successful with people as you are with your technology?” Steven trains, coaches, and facilitates engineers and technical managers to BE the answer to that question.  More information can be found at the:http://stevencerri.com/index.php/Home/index/

Copyright©2008 STCerri International and Steven Cerri.  You are free to pass this information on to others and to reproduce it.  If you reproduce it in whole or part please give attribution to Steven Cerri. Thank you.

Posted by Steven Cerri on 01/12 at 11:15 PM Engineer to Technical ManagerBecoming a managerTechnical ManagerLeadershipEngineering LeadershipManagementEngineering ManagementManagement for engineersInter-Personal People SkillsSoft Skills for engineers • (0) Comments • (0) TrackbacksPermalink

#15-10-30-06:  A Million and One


Have It Your Way

”A Million and One Ways to Lead!”
Posted by Steven Cerri on Monday, October 30, 2006

Good evening!

If you’ve been reading my recent blogs you have probably gotten the seemingly radical message that there are a million and one ways to manage and/or lead.  There is the best way to manage or lead in any given situation and the best way … depends.

It depends on the context, the situation.

This is the reason that, if we are to measure a successful leader by the amount of financial reward he or she accrues, we find that in the world, there must be a million and one different ways to lead because there seem to be all sorts of ways to lead and make money.

In fact, I hear people say things like, “Real leaders care about their people”.  Not necessarily.  Some do and some don’t and whether they do or they don’t doesn’t guarantee success.  I’m sure you’ve known leaders who have cared about their people deeply and failed and leaders who have not really cared about their people, in fact abused them (verbally), and still they produced a hugely successful operation.

So we are back to the same answer… success is not tied to how you treat people…only.  Success is not tied to how well you understand business.  Success is tied to six parameters that all come together to define a context.  The successful leader finds the most effective way to pull the strengths from each of the six parameters to make decisions that lead the organization forward successfully.

One of the six parameters in Contextual Leadership© is the expertise of the direct report or the team compared to the expertise of the manager.  That means that depending upon the quality of the people you bring on board, that will have a huge influence on the management and leadership choices available to you.

In fact, one of the reasons that Jack Welch, the ex-CEO of General Electric was so successful, was that he wanted to function within a specific set of management and leadership styles and that dictated that he keep certain of the six Contextual parameters relatively constant. 

One of those parameters that he needed to keep constant was the quality of the people.  That is, the only way to narrow his management choices consistently was to be certain that he had a specific quality of employees reporting directly to him.  That is why he spent so much time on his employees and that is why he used the A,B,C evaluation system.  Jack’s goal was to provide him with a type of direct and indirect report (one layer below his direct reports) that would allow him to use a specific range of management and leadership styles; those that he preferred. 

Had he been less diligent regarding report selection, he would have had to range further in his application of management and leadership styles. 

By controlling closely the quality of the employees who report to you, you control one of the important parameters that will dictate how flexible you must be in your application of management and leadership styles in order to be successful.

(Note:  I’m not a personal friend of Jack Welch.  I have not interviewed Mr. Welch.  The conclusions I have drawn here are based on my own understanding of management and leadership, new concepts of management and leadership that I have developed, and the books I have read about Jack, interviews I have seen with Mr. Welch, and speeches I have heard given by Jack Welch.)

Be well

Steven Cerri


Posted by Steven Cerri on 10/30 at 08:30 PM ManagementEngineering ManagementManagement for engineersManagement for technologistsTechnical Management • (0) CommentsPermalink

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