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#21
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![]() Ian Cant wrote: Without wishing to throw out the fresh thought, it might be well-advised to be very cautious before abandoning the physical headquarters concept. A main contributor to the present debacle would appear to be that nobody on the Board, and very few ordinary members, was ever in the office to see what happened day to day. Cat's away, mice play. An internet-distributed office might be an even harder situation to supervize. Has anyone had any first-hand experience at actually running such a 'virtual' headquarters ? How did it work out in practice ? What sort of safeguards were used to ensure productivity and financial integrity were maintained ? My own limited experience with teleconferencing suggested that it was lousy for management purposes, but very effective for engineering. Things that can be reduced to hard numbers can be disseminated easily; anything that has human factors or personalities involved tends not to travel well through the ether. Or perhaps I'm just a reactionary old fuddy-duddy on this. Ian I am on the board of a not-for-profit with 400 employees located in 8 counties of southeastern Washington state that delivers in-home services for the elderly. The board rarely makes trips to the head office, even though it is within a short driving distance. We are briefed monthly by the executive director, finance officer and department heads. The organization turns a small surplus in a notoriously money losing business. This can only be accomplished by very good management and a committed board. Do not confuse head counting with effective management, because it is not. Management of people requires the setting of goals (tasks) and close monitoring of work product. Communication systems have come along way since the speaker phone. I just got back from a demonstration of Cisco's Internet telephony systems. They provide high quality voice and video world wide: http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/...esw/index.html http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/...dies_list.html Major U.S. companies are going this route with at least part of the work force. Telecommuting is a fast growing trend, and I think it can work for the SSA. Whether the members can accept it is another, totally different, question. Tom |
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