Thread regarding 3M layoffs

Former CEO Jim McNerney fostered cost-cutting cultures at Boeing and 3M, which had long legacies.

Former CEO Jim McNerney fostered cost-cutting cultures at Boeing and 3M, which had long legacies.
By Liz Fedor
January 30, 2024

While it’s been almost 19 years since McNerney was CEO of Maplewood-based 3M, his imprint on the corporation surfaced in an October Wall Street Journal story.

Boeing engineers contended their power and decision-making ability often was overridden by cost-conscious executives, including McNerney, in recent decades.

Similar concerns were expressed by 3M scientists and engineers in the Wall Street Journal story headlined “The Long Dry Spell at One of America’s Most Innovative Companies.”

The 2023 article said that 3M researchers “are encouraged to pursue incremental improvements to existing products rather than novel, swing-for-the fences breakthroughs.”

Rob Kieschke, a former 3M research director who left the company in 2022, was quoted as saying that elements of McNerney’s approach remain part of 3M’s culture. “McNerney installed ‘Six Sigma,’ a regimen used at GE to measure and standardize business practices but loathed by 3M researchers as a creativity ki-ler,” the article said.

McNerney’s history at 3M trailed him to Boeing. A 2014 article in the Seattle Times examined McNerney’s record at both GE and 3M.

A 3M manager said that McNerney’s attention to cost efficiencies led to “significantly greater [profit] margins,” while a Post-it note inventor said innovation declined drastically on McNerney’s watch.

In recent months, 3M has been dealing with large payouts to address litigation over its production of forever chemicals. Meanwhile, Boeing is in the early weeks of responding to the fallout of its 737 Max 9 door malfunction.

https://tcbmag.com/analysis-boeing-debacle-unmasks-tension-between-safety-and-profits/

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| 3281 views | | 19 replies (last February 2, 2024) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+1qQF3OyN

19 replies (most recent on top)

I upset some SS kool aid drinkers early on by pointing out that their ideas for SS were simply common sense “just do it”, rather than making charts and graphs to prove them. After that came the “enabling programs”, no cost savings, but it enabled you to waste your time with six sigma. After Jimmy went away, as anticipated the over abundance of SS was quietly allowed to die on the vine. SS did bring a uniform quality language amongst development and production, where it belonged.

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Post ID: @2rmp+1qQF3OyN

Not only LSS, but also outsourcing everything. I saw somewhere that 90% of airplane’s parts are coming from outside if US. How about this added to the typical GE virus: no innovation because it is expensive, cost cutting to the bone, layoffs and in addition buying almost everything at the external suppliers because it is too expensive to run own plant…

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Post ID: @2ivh+1qQF3OyN

"Boeing was once known for safety and engineering. But critics say an emphasis on profits changed that"

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/boeing-once-known-safety-engineering-230343748.html

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Post ID: @2mxz+1qQF3OyN

No surprise that making cost reduction/Six Sigma and BP system automation as the top two priorities was a massive strategic error. Then to pile on more bad decisions, 3M promoted leaders within each of these two projects, especially the BB program.
What happened to the emphasis on innovation and doing the right thing?
It has been success at all costs for 20 years. I noticed a marked reduction in ethical behavior the last 5 years. Win at all costs has hurt the culture of 3M. Not hard to see how we got here. What a disaster.

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Post ID: @2cai+1qQF3OyN

@2iem+1qQF3OyN

$100,000, ha, I wish the numbers were that high.

I once saw a six sigma project in CRL that had a highest even theoretical savings of around $2,000 a year. They quite literally had PhDs (more than one) running around trying to save money on copy paper.

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Post ID: @2xky+1qQF3OyN

It's an absolute shame when your brightest minds are focused on saving $100,000 when they could be inventing something that would sell $10,000,000.

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Post ID: @2iem+1qQF3OyN

MV was the Aaero integration leader. You can be sure he sss deposed.

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Post ID: @1xka+1qQF3OyN

Mv was deposed? When? Where? About what?

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Post ID: @1xvd+1qQF3OyN

Yep. Kieschke was quite the micromanager and Mr. Know It All himself. A typical failure at the bench who moved to management. He thought his British accent will win everyone over, it never happened.

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Post ID: @1ydc+1qQF3OyN

Six sigma as config by mmm was a disaster - implementation. Not sure Kieschke deserving of being quoted by WSJ - he really overstates his importance.

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Post ID: @1cjm+1qQF3OyN

Six Sigma was beginning of the US vs THEM culture and BT just finished the job. It tagged the "important" employees and if you weren't in either category, your job and contributions were insignificant and you were never going to progress in your career unless you did time in either camp. Your input did not hold the same value as your 6S/BT coworkers. It had an impact (still does) on employee morale and how we work together as a team.

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Post ID: @1uwu+1qQF3OyN

It says a lot when the two work assignments reserved for "high potential" employees were six sigma and BT. Where has 3M gotten with either?

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Post ID: @oau+1qQF3OyN

The Three Stooges quotes:
*Ngah-ngah-ngah! (Curly frightened)
*Why you...! (Moe or Curly, to others)
*Come 'ere! (Moe, to others)

Six Sigma Quotes
*You want to grow sales? You need a charter for that. Ngah-ngah-ngah!
*Green Belt: The measurements are not showing improvement. Black Belt: You have the wrong measurements numskull.
*Plant Engineer: Look at the savings and yield improvement we got with this equipment adjustment! Master Black Belt: Come 'ere! Quick do a charter. These savings must be validated and recognized under a Black Belt. Yuk yuk. Plant Engineer: But we already achieved the improvement? Master Black Belt: I'm assigning a Black Belt to this improvement project. Yep Yep.

Do you see any difference between 3M Six Sgma and The 3 Stoges?

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Post ID: @eup+1qQF3OyN

Didn't the recently deposed future CEO MV soar to new heights (while also getting picked up by Woodburys finest in 2001 while in town at Six sigma bootcamp) as one of the very first ever MBBs under Mcnerney?

Talk about a program to promote knuckleheads. I'd rather have Dr. Howard, Dr. Fine, Dr. Howard as my MBBs. Nyuk nyuk

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Post ID: @nqy+1qQF3OyN

Ah yes, the early years of six sigma deployment, when quite literally every activity had to be force-fit into being a six sigma project, regardless of whether or not it made sense to do so.

So much wasted time! with employees spending their days checking the 6 sigma boxes instead of just doing their jobs.

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Post ID: @jml+1qQF3OyN

McNerney will have the unique history of destroying two of the most iconic companies in America. Do you remember all the culty Six Sigma BS which destroyed any semblance of innovation? And these leaders were promoted up to be the leaders today. No sense of vision, innovation, and completely abandoned customers. I bet I could count on one hand how many customers my EMD President has been to. All inward navel gazing.

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Post ID: @jhk+1qQF3OyN

Mcnerney's tenure reminds of the Three Stooges episode where they enter a chemistry lab and start mixing together strange combinations of materials until the mix is sparking and bubbling over and then someone like Larry drinks the potion and is knocked on his butt.

Mcnerney with no appreciation for innovation or creativity takes over a company where research was king and 3M had some of the world best scientists. He enforced a bunch of MBBs into the labs to run similar stooges experiments with 6 sigma being the worst.

Buckley tried to revive the golden goose but was nixed by a board filled with GE lovers. Inge exasperated things by borrowing billions to goose the share price to scare off activist investors who broke up dow and Dupont.

Then Mike (we don't need to win back people) A3M-ed the company into its death throes. At least HC may have a chance to survive with a non GE and non 3M leader

Vegas likely has an over/under of 2027 before remain-co enters chapter 11.

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Post ID: @raf+1qQF3OyN

McNerney was the second worst CEO in 3M history. His introduction of Six Sigma ki-led innovation and led to a bunch of limited-knowledge sycophants running the company. Which got us where we are today.

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Post ID: @llv+1qQF3OyN

The Jim McNerney legacy continues. Cost cutting and layoffs remain the core strategy. Innovation is just too expensive.
Brilliant to hire a GE finance cost cutter as 3M's CFO. Maybe we could bring Jim back from retirement to snuff out the remaining flickering candle of innovation. 🕯

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Post ID: @ebp+1qQF3OyN

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