tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6035010336535558578.post263283095291268580..comments2024-03-29T05:34:00.060+00:00Comments on Radio Moments : Please take care of the BBC. It is precious.Davidlloydradiohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13020918919770051596noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6035010336535558578.post-69490249046928747002014-04-04T17:26:46.206+01:002014-04-04T17:26:46.206+01:00Another well written piece David sorry it has take...Another well written piece David sorry it has taken me till April to read it. My limited experience at the BBC as a Freelance Senior Producer working there for about 18 months echo's your paragraph:<br />Dedicated, gifted, creative, intelligent, hard-working people with a will to generate breathtakingly beautiful, thorough and distinctive output. Alongside wanton waste, byzantine bureaucracy and major mismanagement. <br />I wonder what the future of the BBC might be, one thing for certain, it will have to adapt to a multi-media and multi-market world where I can grab a TV show from YouTube on my phone - I think the most important thing the Beeb can do is 'dare to take risks' make shows like W1A .. I can't think of any other broadcaster in the world who would have the balls to make and transmit such a p*ss take at those bean counters at NBH<br />Steve Campenhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16650464984142332825noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6035010336535558578.post-73872083914486587952014-03-16T23:22:04.881+00:002014-03-16T23:22:04.881+00:00'How can you have poor morale within the fines...'How can you have poor morale within the finest broadcaster in the World with guaranteed revenues across the term of a licence agreement and enviable levels of job security?'<br /><br />Well, job security isn't all that solid - the BBC has got rid of a lot of jobs since Greg Dyke. But I take your basic point. Here's how: <br /><br />Years ago, when John Birt took over as DG and began to impose his misguided internal market nostrums, a certain sort of person, who would normally have found the atmosphere within the BBC uncongenial, found that their outlook - a narrow focus on measurable parameters like cost, and an attitude of disdain, even contempt, for the 'creatives'- were no longer a reason to leave the BBC for some other field such as management accounting, but were in fact valued by the new regime. Bean counters were suddenly what the BBC seemed to want. They have since flourished, but while some of them have been good for the BBC's internal balance sheets (and I emphasise the 'some'), they have been disastrous in terms of people management. <br /><br />I make no bones about this, having worked for the BBC for over 30 years: there are far too many managers whose attitude to their staff, especially actual programme-makers, is appalling. It's not just a matter of terms and conditions; many industries have seen a squeeze on employees' benefits, including pensions. These managers have no respect for their staff; in particular, senior staff who have been around a long while and, in any other industry, would be valued and trusted, would be training and mentoring newer staff and generally ensuring continuity of the BBC's ethos in all its various forms, are disregarded and distrusted. The bean-counting mindset sees us as expensive, overpaid; the 'dead men' whose shoes younger employees are desperate to fill - at considerably less expense, given the erosion of pay and conditions for recently recruited staff. <br /><br />Training is reduced to an absolute minimum; most skills are learnt 'on the job' or not at all. This is so that the marginal costs of training staff is as low as possible. In this way, managers can play 'hardball' with any staff who express their disappointment with the regime. The answer to dissatisfaction is: 'There's the door over there if you don't like it.' And if you go, your boss isn't seeing a huge investment walking out of the Corporation. If anything, he's looking forward to saving money as he replaces you with someone on the bottom rung salary.<br /><br />None of this is novel; it's just relatively novel to the BBC. The sort of aggressive, short-term, hard-nosed, cost-cutting management that has been visited on thousands of British businesses since the 1980s, came to the BBC and stayed. These people now think they ARE the BBC, and we are just hired hands.<br /><br />Of course, the younger staff see all this and are not encouraged. Result: a general disillusionment, in which people try to go about their jobs and keep up standards, in the knowledge that this isn't being noticed or valued by their managers, who are much more interested in maintaining a strict minimum level of service. There is a word for this approach, and the ethos it engenders in a workplace; mediocrity.Ed Westawayhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16005670711147453497noreply@blogger.com