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CEOs Who Invite Email From All Employees

Carl Bialik from the WSJ writes "Cinergy Corp. CEO James E. Rogers, who at 11 one evening was reading email from employees at home while nursing a vodka, is the norm, not the exception at major U.S. companies, the Wall Street Journal reports. 'Advocates say such a policy is a powerful leadership tool that can nip crises in the bud, boost morale, uncover new ideas, and cut through corporate red tape. In the post-Enron era of CEO accountability, reading employee email helps the boss appear hands-on and accessible. But reading and replying to dozens of employee messages each day takes time that could be spent doing something else. Skeptics say the practice distracts CEOs from more-pressing work -- and extends already long workdays.' Of course, portable email devices have made it easier to sift through dozens or hundreds of employee messages each day. While being driven to meetings, Pfizer's CEO says, 'I don't look out the window. I use my BlackBerry and answer my email.'"

29 of 226 comments (clear)

  1. D'oh! by rovingeyes · · Score: 5, Funny
    Pfizer's CEO says, 'I don't look out the window. I use my BlackBerry and answer my email.'"

    Uh oh, he is screwed

  2. Only Eleven? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    If he's only 11 why is he sitting at home drinking vodka????

  3. it's more self-aggrandizing egotistical behavior by yagu · · Score: 5, Interesting

    it's more self-aggrandizing egotistical behavior... than anything else.

    You know what? I worked for a company, one of the telcoms that went through the upheaval of crooked leadership during the Enron days. One of our CEO's walked away with $500M, and they're still chasing him down -- I predict they'll NEVER get him. Our stock went from over $50 to under $2.

    Then our shining knight on a white horse rode into town. He had a reputation for coming in and slashing jobs, but he had genuine likability and charisma about him. He also had an open e-mail policy, claimed he read and answered his e-mail. Guess what? He did!

    I exchanged a few e-mails with him, and he always responded. Cool... two administrations before I'd always had pretty direct access at that level (I was pretty senior), and now it appeared the company was back to bidnez. His responses were short and non-expansive, but, hey, he IS the CEO.

    Then, 9a.m. one morning about a year ago I got marched into a little room and set free. For a previous post with more info, look here.

    Yeah, he read and answered his e-mail... but he always signed it (and I'm not making this up), "dick".

  4. Irony by gowen · · Score: 5, Funny
    Pfizer's CEO says, 'I don't look out the window. I use my BlackBerry and answer my email.'"
    Most of the time his replies read: "Funnily enough, I can get actual Viagra for the price you're selling fake C1AL1S. I'm the CEO of f**king Pfizer, you morons."
    --
    Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
    1. Re:Irony by Surt · · Score: 4, Informative

      Since I'm banned from moderation, a round of applause. Funniest comment I've read in a month.

      --
      "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
  5. is there anything Alcohol can't help? by toupsie · · Score: 5, Funny
    "Cinergy Corp. CEO James E. Rogers, who at 11 one evening was reading email from employees at home while nursing a vodka, is the norm, not the exception at major U.S. companies, the Wall Street Journal reports. 'Advocates say such a policy is a powerful leadership tool that can nip crises in the bud, boost morale, uncover new ideas, and cut through corporate red tape.

    Who knew that drinking vodka could nip crises in the bud, boost morale, uncover new ideas and cut through corporate red tape. I always thought Bourbon was a better choice for that. Guess its Bloody Marys for me!

    --
    Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government.
    1. Re:is there anything Alcohol can't help? by dswan69 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Would it be OK if he was nursing a joint? Just wondering if only addictive, toxic drugs are acceptable for CEOs.

  6. Maybe he should lay off the Vodka... by MikeDataLink · · Score: 5, Funny

    http://finance.yahoo.com/q?s=CIN&d=t based on the Stock Reports he should drink a little less (or maybe more!!!). ;) He's down .69 today already.

    --
    Mike @ The Geek Pub. Let's Make Stuff!
    1. Re:Maybe he should lay off the Vodka... by Brushfireb · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Good CEO's dont care about day to day, or even quarter to quarter fluctuations in their stock price, provided its not ridiculously drastic.

      Good CEO's look long term. So should you.

  7. Long Workdays by Chuckstar · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "and extends already long workdays"

    Oh, cry me a river. So a guy making hundreds of millions has to extend his workday. Isn't that the price you pay for having that job? You want an easier job, just be some other senior executive, make 20-25% as much money, and have an easier life.

    1. Re:Long Workdays by iluvcapra · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Skeptics say the practice distracts CEOs from more-pressing work -- and extends already long workdays

      For 420 times the employee base salary (for reals, not hyperbole), he might be able to reply to a few dozen emails every night.

      --
      Don't blame me, I voted for Baltar.
  8. I don't see an issue by Wireless+Joe · · Score: 5, Insightful
    But reading and replying to dozens of employee messages each day takes time that could be spent doing something else.

    Yes, and I'd be glad to hear that my CEO was returning email instead of (or at least while) taking place in the latest pro-am or attending other "promotional" company-paid vacations.
    Skeptics say the practice distracts CEOs from more-pressing work -- and extends already long workdays.'

    Again, I would expect nothing less from a competent CEO. I work 10-12 hour days, and at 50-100 times my salary, I would expect the same from them.
  9. Good idea by twiddlingbits · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I always thought a CEO should know as much as possible about what is going on in his/her firm. Sounds like this guy thinks that way too. And he does it HIMSELF, not via his admin assistant. Some CEOs couldn't even turn on a Blackberry, and others don't give a rat's ass what is going on as long as they get thier way and thier bonuses.

    The downside of actually reading his email is that he can't say "I didn't know" if the Feds come asking questions about his company's actions or financial statements.

    Employees shouldn't be dropping him emails when the towels are out in the restroom. Only really imporant issues/crises should be sent to him.

    1. Re:Good idea by moviepig.com · · Score: 5, Funny
      ...Only really imporant issues/crises should be sent to him.

      Maybe the other employees should be able to mod each other's eMails up and down. Hey, wait...

      --
      Seeing bad movies only encourages them. Watch responsibly
  10. Sifted by oconnorcjo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I think that if I was in a CEO position, I would have my email sifted through by a secretary and then only the real meat forwarded to me; giving me more time to do other things. A CEO who spends large amounts of time reading email feels like a micromanager and would give me less confidence in the leadership of the company.

    --
    I miss the Karma Whores.
    1. Re:Sifted by angelo · · Score: 5, Insightful

      As opposed to the 'sifter' micro-managing and reducing morale. It speaks better to the CEO's commitment if they read/reply personally instead of pushing it off to someone else. That's the whole point of this.

  11. Technology makes middle-management obsolete by nharmon · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Half of me thinks that if the middle-managers can't be trusted to take employee e-mails concerning business-related things, they should be replaced. The other half of me thinks that if technology gives the CEO greater span-of-control, then perhaps the middle-managers should be eliminated.

  12. Appearances? by Franklinstein · · Score: 5, Insightful
    "reading employee email helps the boss appear hands-on and accessible"

    And here's what it comes down to...appearances. Yes, I understand that it can have some effect, but how useful is putting on the appearance of being hands-on and accessible when they're really not?

    1. Re:Appearances? by rhetoric · · Score: 5, Insightful
      here's another gem from TA:

      Last year, an hourly worker at a manufacturing plant sent Mr. Parkinson an email asking about Baxter's policy for supplementing the pay of employees called up to active military duty. The CEO discovered the subsidy ended after 24 weeks, even though some Baxter employees were serving on longer assignments. He ordered the differential extended to 50 weeks and made the change retroactive to January 2003. A company spokeswoman says the move affected relatively few employees but boosted overall morale. [emphasis obviously added]


      I'd say that about sums it up...
      --

      "where words meet intent, lies rhetoric's lament"
  13. Re:it's more self-aggrandizing egotistical behavio by cnelzie · · Score: 5, Funny

    That sucks.

        Hopefully, you poorly documented some of that application so that when/if they ever need to make changes to it, they will have no choice, but to hunt you down.

        Then you can stick it to them by charging them 6 times your previous salary to "fix" the program or make the needed updates to it and while you are there, if that CEO is still there, you can send him an email advising him of the "savings" the cost-cutting of letting you go has done for the company he is running...

    --
    If you ignore the other uses of a tool, does that make the tool less useful, or you less useful?
  14. Filtering could do wonders by Gallvs · · Score: 5, Funny

    But reading and replying to dozens of employee messages each day takes time that could be spent doing something else. Skeptics say the practice distracts CEOs from more-pressing work

    Well, just use this procmail recipe to filter 90% of messages out:

    :0
    * ^From.*mycompany.com
    * ^Subject.*raise
    /dev/null

  15. Justify the $$ by Red+Flayer · · Score: 5, Funny

    ""Cinergy Corp. CEO James E. Rogers, who at 11 one evening was reading email from employees at home while nursing a vodka, is the norm, not the exception at major U.S. companies, the Wall Street Journal reports."

    Well, first, it's about time someone makes a big stink about all the long hours that justify the ever-growing disparity between executives' and workers' salaries. I was beginning to feel like the Joe Sixpacks at the plant were beginning to resent my Rolls Royce. Thanks for sticking up for us, Rogers!

    OTOH, why is Rogers allowed to drink while managing employee relations? Last time I tried that, I got slapped with a lawsuit for breach of due diligence, among other things. I mean, sure, I wasn't exactly nursing the vodka so much as slamming it, and the employee relations were more in the nature of physical contact, not email, but really... Some shareholder should call his lawyer.

    --
    "Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
  16. A healthy way to do email as a CEO by davidwr · · Score: 5, Insightful

    1) have a whitelist of senders you always read
    2) have a spam-filter to filter out non-humans
    3) everything else goes to the "let my assistants handle it."

    Of #3, read:
    a) everything your assistants mark for your attention
    b) a RANDOM selection of everything else, so you can get a feel for what people are sending you. Don't spend too much time on these, maybe 15-60 minutes a day. Since your assistants are already doing the replies you don't even need to compose replies.

    3b is very important in the life of a CEO - it helps keep you informed of what your suborninates - at least those who are bold enough to email you - are thinking.

    If the George W. Bush did this, he'd have a better idea of what people are thinking. Damn thing is he probably IS reading a sample of letters/faxes/emails but not a RANDOM sample.

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
  17. Be careful if you email while drinking... by bytesmythe · · Score: 5, Funny
    Cinergy Corp. CEO James E. Rogers, who at 11 one evening was reading email from employees at home while nursing a vodka...

    After drinking for a solid hour, he started sending pathetic messages to former employees about how sorry he is they couldn't stay together and how he hopes they aren't bitter and if so then too bad because, hey, *HE'S* the one who dumped *THEM* and if they can't handle that then f*ck off, but maybe he can get together with them some weekend for a little "fun" sometime.

    He then passed out at the keyboard in a puddle of drool.

    --
    bytesmythe
    Hypocrisy is the resin that holds the plywood of society together.
    -- Scott Meyer
  18. Red Dot / Green Dot by exi1ed0ne · · Score: 4, Insightful

    For some reason, everytime I email a C*O it turns out to be a "Resume Generating Event" - Nobody likes being upstaged, especially clueless "Leadership". If it is a good idea, those above you will torpedo you because they are threatened. If it's a bad idea, you just broadcasted it to the top dog.

    Let the retards drive the company into a mess, or do the right thing? It's all about the ethics though. I've always used the "Nuclear Bomb" theory myself when dealing with these situations. Sure, you can only do it once. However, take as many of the bastards with you as you can.

    --
    Pessimists.net - as if life wasn't depressing enough.
    1. Re:Red Dot / Green Dot by StopSayingYouSir · · Score: 5, Insightful
      For some reason, everytime I email a C*O it turns out to be a "Resume Generating Event"

      I wonder why...

      • clueless "Leadership"
      • retards
      • bastards
      Couldn't possibly have anything to do with your attitude, could it?
  19. GWB's mailbox by Hoi+Polloi · · Score: 5, Funny

    God - Cease and Desist notice
    Amazon.com - Your order ("The Baby-sitters Club") has been shipped
    FCC - Revised naughty word list for your approval (added "bottom")
    New Orleans - HELP!
    CIA - Update: Still looking for WMDs
    Disney Corp. - Re: Extending copyrights to "end of time"
    Tom DeLay - Master, why have you forsaken me?
    Osama Bin Laden - Nyaah Nyaah!
    Southern Baptists - Correction, Earth is only 500 years old (not 5000)
    Satan - As per our agreement
    Iraq - LAST NOTICE: You still owe $50,000,000,000
    God - I did NOT tell you to bomb ANYONE!
    RNC - Shuttle trips for doners? What do you think?

    --
    It is by the juice of the coffee bean that thoughts acquire speed, the teeth acquire stains. The stains become a warning
  20. On an entertaining note... by HerculesMO · · Score: 4, Funny

    And please excuuuuuuse me for being a bit sardonic in my wit, I was just joking around.

    The Tyco CEO (Dennis Kozlowski) went to where I graduated, Seton Hall University. He donated millions there and has a building named after him (at least I think he still does). He came to my school about 3 weeks before charges were brought up against him to give a speech, one I was required to attend by my Business Law class.

    The topic? "Business Ethics on a Global Scale"

    And even more entertaining? That's the THIRD building our school has named after a convicted criminal. I think we have a record or something...

    --
    The price is always right if someone else is paying.
  21. I bet it's rather amusing to read that INBOX by kingsqueak · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I think it's a good idea to have an open channel to the top, and I've worked with many principals that really do listen. However from what I've seen, most employees should think long and hard before clicking on 'send'.

    From what I've seen in quite small companies with principals open to direct communication, the majority of the employees do themselves more harm than good simply because they have no real perspective as to where they fit in the business.

    An example. Recently at a company 'meet and greet' dinner so that the local engineers can meet each other and find out what skillsets are there, a co-worker completely confused his place and what was to be gained with the meeting. The CEO, COO, and CTO were present along with a bunch of co-workers from local client sites.

    The co-worker babbled on and on about petty nonsense that was specific to our one particular site. Nothing to do with the other engineers' situations. Nothing having to do with company business at all, just petty political issues and generally self-serving complaints. Basically the co-worker saw what he did as "I showed them, I'm nobody's fool and they will see how powerful and valuable I am". The net result was that the CEO referred to the co-worker as 'a cancer on the company that should be removed at all costs'. The co-worker just doesn't have a clue about what it means to own and run a business and what his place is as an asset to the company.

    This isn't uncommon from what I've seen. People have this weird utopian view of how things should be, without any reality in the mix. Though ultimately it is only the fault of the employee, a direct channel to the top is only the express to unemployment for many confused people.

    If you can't clearly see the role of your CEO, you'd better think carefully before you click 'send'.