9.2.06

The Benefits of Tact

Editor's note: Livi's been on my butt (appropriately so) because I've haven't written any blog entries in the past month. Well, today, I had to tell a story in Speech class about a "learning experience" I had. It had to include a moral. I told the following story.

About 15 years ago, I worked at a Data Processing Service Bureau. It was an exciting time, as my job was to migrate Mainframe computer applications from our clients’ systems onto ours.

One day, I was called into my boss’s office to discuss some problems we were having migrating a particular application that the client had developed in-house.

Now I had discussed this previously with my boss and others, and we had collectively determined that the problem was that the application had been poorly written. It had been written with a number of assumptions about its operating environment “hardcoded” into the program, and since the operating environment was changing, these assumptions were no longer correct. But because they were written into the system, they were very difficult to isolate and correct.

Being young (at the time) and brash, I was in favor of overhauling the entire application, completely re-writing it if necessary, and fixing the problem once and for all.

Anyway, I walked into my boss’s office, and was told that the owner of our company was on the speakerphone and wanted to understand the problems we were having with this client’s migration.

Well, it was at this point that I launched into a tirade about the poor quality of the client’s application, using phrases like “crap-code” and “scrap-completely”, when I heard an unfamiliar voice come out of the speakerphone that shouted “There is absolutely NOTHING wrong with our system, and if there’s anything that is full of CRAP around here, it’s YOU!”

It turns out that the owner of our company had been having a meeting with the IT manager of the company whose systems we were migrating, and the two of them had decided to call my boss to get a status of the overall project.

It gets worse, as it turns out that the IT manager had been the programmer that had originally wrote this system that I had just finished calling crap!

Morals: 1) Beware of speakerphones as you never know who is on the other end, and 2) its always best to temper ones opinions, no matter how correctly held, with plenty of tact.

4 Comments:

At 21/2/06 18:45, Blogger Livi of the Mountain said...

Yikes...that's bad sevej...

The worst thing that happened to me at work was at my current job. A guy from my previous employer applied for a job and was hired and the morning he was to show up my boss came up to me and said, "You know this guy put you down as a reference, was he any good?" and I said, "Who, this guy? (pointing to his resume) I can't remember him at all, are you sure he worked at blah blah blah?"

My bosses face froze...turns out the guy had walked up as I was putting my foot in my mouth. I did work with the guy...for 4 years. He was THAT forgetable...lol

Very embarrassing. He works in the field and hasn't spoken to me since.

 
At 24/2/06 21:02, Blogger .- said...

Livi's been on my butt too -
dangit -
ALWAYS there..
dragging me out of the depths of despair
what is a gal to do!?!?!?

 
At 13/3/06 13:04, Blogger Khiori said...

Livi, that is exactly why I ALWAYS ask before using someone as a reference lol

 
At 19/2/07 09:17, Blogger MickyMcB said...

hey man... didnt have time to read your blog, yet, but since we are the only two on here who listed Wholeness and the implicit order as books we like... I had to drop you a line

big steely dan fan, too... could be be related somehow :)

 

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