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Date:      Tue, 7 Jan 1997 02:50:25 +1100
From:      davidn@unique.usn.blaze.net.au (David Nugent)
To:        freebsd-chat@freebsd.org
Subject:   Humor Break (fwd)
Message-ID:  <Mutt.19970107025025.davidn@labs.blaze.net.au>

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Sorry, I just couldn't resist. :-)

---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Mon, 06 Jan 1997 00:16:25 PST
From: Humor Break Dispatch <morph@voyager.abac.com>
Subject: Humor Break

CHAPTER 12:  MANAGEMENT CONSULTANTS 
_____________________________________ 
     
If the employees of your company are incompetent you might want to get some 
consultants.  A consultant is a person who takes your money and annoys your 
employees while tirelessly searching for the best way to extend the 
consulting contract.
     
Consultants will hold a seemingly endless series of meetings to test various 
hypotheses and assumptions.  These exercises are a vital step toward 
tricking managers into revealing the recommendation that is most likely to
generate  repeat consulting business.
     
After the "correct" recommendation is discovered, it must be justified by a 
lengthy analysis.  The consultants begin working like crazed beavers in a 
coffee lake.  Reams of paper will disappear.  You'll actually be able to 
hear the screams of old-growth forests dying as the consultants churn out
page  after page of backup charts and assumptions.  The analysis will be
cleverly  designed to be as confusing as possible, thus discouraging any 
second-guessing by sniping staff members who are afraid of appearing dense. 
     
When consultants are added to a department, they change the balance and 
chemistry of the group.  You need a new process to take advantage of the 
consultants' skills.  The most efficient process is to use the dullard 
employees as data gatherers to feed the massive brains of the consultants. 
This keeps the employees busy and makes them feel involved while the 
consultants hold meetings with senior managers of the company to complain 
about the support they're getting and to pitch new projects.
     
Consultants use a standard set of decision tools that involve creating 
"alternative scenarios" based on different "assumptions."  Any pesky 
assumptions that don't support the predetermined recommendation are quickly 
discounted as being uneconomical- for the consultants.
     
The remaining assumptions are objectively validated by sending employees off 
to obtain information that is not available.  Later, the assumptions are 
transformed into near-facts through the process of sitting around arguing 
about what is "most likely."
     
Consultants will ultimately recommend that you do whatever you're NOT doing 
now.  Centralize whatever is decentralized.  Flatten whatever is vertical. 
Diversify whatever is concentrated and divest everything that is not "core" 
to the business.  You'll hardly ever find a consultant who recommends that 
you keep everything the same and stop wasting money on consultants.  And 
consultants will rarely deal with the root cause of your company's problems, 
since that's probably the person who hired them.  Instead, they'll look for 
ways to improve the "strategy" and the "process."
     
Consultants don't need much experience in an industry in order to be experts. 
 They learn quickly.  If your twenty-six-year-old consultant drives past the 
Egghead software outlet on the way to an assignment, that would qualify as 
experience in the software industry.  If Egghead has a sale on modems that 
day:  hardware experience.  This type of experience is unavailable to the 
regular staff members who have worked in the industry for twenty years but 
still use yellow sticky notes to identify their various excrementory 
openings.
     
Aside from their massive intellects, consultants bring many advantages to 
your company that regular employees can't match.
     
 - Consultants have credibility because they are not dumb enough to be 
regular employees at your company;
     
 - Consultants eventually leave, which makes them excellent scapegoats for 
major management blunders;
     
 - Consultants can schedule time on your boss's calendar because they don't 
have your reputation as a whiny little troublemaker who constantly brings up 
unsolvable "issues;"
     
 - Consultants are often more attractive than your regular employees.  This 
is not always true, but if you get a batch of homely ones, you can always 
replace them next month;
     
 - Consultants will return your phone calls, because it's all billable time 
to them; AND
     
 - Consultants work preposterously long hours, thus making the regular staff 
feel like worthless toads for working only sixty hours a week.


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-----End of forwarded message-----

Regards,

David Nugent - Unique Computing Pty Ltd - Melbourne, Australia
Voice +61-3-9791-9547  Data/BBS +61-3-9792-3507  3:632/348@fidonet
davidn@freebsd.org davidn@blaze.net.au http://www.blaze.net.au/~davidn/



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