Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
|
#1
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.programming
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I have spent roughly 200 hours exclusively of my personal time writing an
extensive lab management program for my employer. This was done out of the goodness of my heart and with the intense desire to end the agony of our dysfunctional ways. In spite of receiving tacit approval at one point and having the support of colleagues, management is now completely and deliberately ignoring it. Questions: 1. To cut my losses, is there a practical way to sell the program? 2. Are there concerns about ownership even if it was written 100% by me on my own time but was tailored to the company's needs, was tested at our office on our network and received a cursory review by one manager? 3. Would it return a decent price €“ i.e. would it likely be worth the effort? 4. What about piracy concerns? 5. Additional words of wisdom much apprecitated !!! Greg |
#2
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.programming
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Greg, are you sure you have not simply got a solution that is looking for a
problem to solve? Sounds harsh, doesn't it? Unfortunately, life can be and usually is! If you have you observed road works (in the UK) closely, you would not have failed to notice that there are usually 3/4 people watching whilst 1/2 is actually doing something. This communal activity goes by the name of 'team' work or 'project' management! You seem to have denied the bystanders their due by simply doing it; and now they do not want to know. Where does this leave you? You have an application that has your thinking/understanding embedded in it (unmodified by other points of view), it is untested (you said managers don't want to know) and you have no way of gauging its usability. Undoubtedly, you have neither a functional not user specification. I would say, you have simply got a prototype. To find out what you have got, one option is release the application into the public domain without warranty: the objective is to quantify the takeup rate and to assess the feedback you get in order to determine its commercial viability. Another option is to sell it as is. However, this is costly in that marketing costs money and you would need to provide help desk type support and possibly training also. You will also need to investigate and fix bugs and manage future releases. All of this needs to happen whilst you are at work. How will you manage? So far, you have proved that you can analyse a problem and produce a package solutiion; in the process, you have no doubt learnt a lot. I assume that you use Excel daily as part of your work. Unless you are of a brave disposition, I would suggest that you stop pushing the application in the workplace. With a bit of luck, if the need for the applicatioin is sufficient, the dynamics of the workplace will come looking for it and when (if) this happens, have a strategy that yields some personal dividends for you. Good luck. |
#3
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.programming
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Thanks for your reply.
Your assessment as to the sales viability was what I had expected but I was hoping I was wrong. It is too industry specific and even company specific. I am confident that I have not developed a solution that is in search of a problem. We are very uncompetitive and getting worse. We are, and have been for a long-time, loosing money. We are constantly (and unnecessarily) plagued with difficulty accessing information in particular and are constantly resolving the same problems and wallowing in the same confusion. Our operation is IMO obviously illogical in many ways and is sometimes reprehensible (e.g. using scrap paper in place of worksheets). If I were to agonizingly list all our inefficiencies and if we were to jointly spend an hour discussing strategies to resolve them in terms of a single programmatic package, I think we would come up with something very similar to what I have created. I have answered many posts of my own and know that programmers tend to think alike. I passionately believe that a network based Lab Information Management System (LIMS) is the right approach for us. So this development has been a crushing blow to me, and one that will likely put an end to many years of employment with this firm. I long ago learned that I had to take the bull by the horns and resolve practical problems and produce the innovations by myself. In a nutshell, I came to the conclusion that management was unable or unwilling to comprehend the problem and/or produce the solution to the lab information management issue; and so in my typical fashion, I took on the task of developing the requisite innovation. However, in this case I believe I have transgressed and must be taught a lesson. In short, I believe we have a serious management problem. I am a long-term employee but have finally decided that I will likely join another firm in a few months. They have their act together and dont need the program. Therefore, it is likely headed for the trashcan. Thats why I posted. BTW, the above is hot on the heals of a similar situation where I developed a photo-mapping survey technique inclusive of about 100 hours of my personal time programming and about the same with the mechanics. Managements input was to offer absolutely nothing but moronic suggestions and, with brilliant timing, to raise our rates so that we lost the contract. It got mothballed. My likely next employer is quite interested in its resurrection. Sorry for the long-winded diatribe but I needed to get it off my chest. Good luck to you too. Best regards, Greg "AA2e72E" wrote: Greg, are you sure you have not simply got a solution that is looking for a problem to solve? Sounds harsh, doesn't it? Unfortunately, life can be and usually is! If you have you observed road works (in the UK) closely, you would not have failed to notice that there are usually 3/4 people watching whilst 1/2 is actually doing something. This communal activity goes by the name of 'team' work or 'project' management! You seem to have denied the bystanders their due by simply doing it; and now they do not want to know. Where does this leave you? You have an application that has your thinking/understanding embedded in it (unmodified by other points of view), it is untested (you said managers don't want to know) and you have no way of gauging its usability. Undoubtedly, you have neither a functional not user specification. I would say, you have simply got a prototype. To find out what you have got, one option is release the application into the public domain without warranty: the objective is to quantify the takeup rate and to assess the feedback you get in order to determine its commercial viability. Another option is to sell it as is. However, this is costly in that marketing costs money and you would need to provide help desk type support and possibly training also. You will also need to investigate and fix bugs and manage future releases. All of this needs to happen whilst you are at work. How will you manage? So far, you have proved that you can analyse a problem and produce a package solutiion; in the process, you have no doubt learnt a lot. I assume that you use Excel daily as part of your work. Unless you are of a brave disposition, I would suggest that you stop pushing the application in the workplace. With a bit of luck, if the need for the applicatioin is sufficient, the dynamics of the workplace will come looking for it and when (if) this happens, have a strategy that yields some personal dividends for you. Good luck. |
#4
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.programming
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
IF you developed ANY of tyhis app on your employers dime, it's THEIR
intellectual property. IF they don't care now, they will when you start making money on it.... -- Grumpy Aero Guy "Greg Wilson" wrote in message ... I have spent roughly 200 hours exclusively of my personal time writing an extensive lab management program for my employer. This was done out of the goodness of my heart and with the intense desire to end the agony of our dysfunctional ways. In spite of receiving tacit approval at one point and having the support of colleagues, management is now completely and deliberately ignoring it. Questions: 1. To cut my losses, is there a practical way to sell the program? 2. Are there concerns about ownership even if it was written 100% by me on my own time but was tailored to the company's needs, was tested at our office on our network and received a cursory review by one manager? 3. Would it return a decent price - i.e. would it likely be worth the effort? 4. What about piracy concerns? 5. Additional words of wisdom much apprecitated !!! Greg |
#5
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.programming
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Hi Grumpy,
IF you developed ANY of tyhis app on your employers dime, it's THEIR intellectual property. I read Greg's choice of the word 'exclusively' as intentional and of significant: relevance: I have spent roughly 200 hours exclusively of my personal time --- Regards, Norman "Grumpy Aero Guy" wrote in message ... IF you developed ANY of tyhis app on your employers dime, it's THEIR intellectual property. IF they don't care now, they will when you start making money on it.... -- Grumpy Aero Guy |
#7
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.programming
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Thanks for your input Don. I admit I was likely venting more than anything.
2. Are there concerns about ownership even if it was written 100% by me on my own time but was tailored to the company's needs, was tested at our office on our network and received a cursory review by one manager? Are you saying that they own it in spite of the fact they have made negligible contribution and have demonstated complete disinterest and didn't even request or suggest that it be created? If they still own it, if I sent an email to management requesting their opinion, which I fully expect will be disdainfully rebuffed, would that demonstrate abandonment by them and give me a case? The program belongs to your employer unless they release it to you. or, they are too dumb to know you have it. They are definately cognizant that I have it but I think the symbolic meaning as their response to my position is of more value to them (i.e. the idea is garbage). This motivated by the implication that I don't think they're competant and disagree with the current paper-based system (which is their creation). It was given tacit approval in the beginning and they were aware I was writing it, but I think they woke up once it appeared. Greg "Don Guillett" wrote: Sounds like you are venting. Feel better now? The program belongs to your employer unless they release it to you. or, they are too dumb to know you have it. -- Don Guillett SalesAid Software "Greg Wilson" wrote in message ... I have spent roughly 200 hours exclusively of my personal time writing an extensive lab management program for my employer. This was done out of the goodness of my heart and with the intense desire to end the agony of our dysfunctional ways. In spite of receiving tacit approval at one point and having the support of colleagues, management is now completely and deliberately ignoring it. Questions: 1. To cut my losses, is there a practical way to sell the program? 2. Are there concerns about ownership even if it was written 100% by me on my own time but was tailored to the company's needs, was tested at our office on our network and received a cursory review by one manager? 3. Would it return a decent price - i.e. would it likely be worth the effort? 4. What about piracy concerns? 5. Additional words of wisdom much apprecitated !!! Greg |
#8
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.programming
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I know that you have invested a lot of time and emotional energy with
your product. But in the end - it's just business. If you really think the product has more generic value, you should formalize a moving forward strategy. That means a consult with a patent attorney to establish what your intellectual property rights are. If the company owns the rights but has no interest in the product, you'd have to arrange a transfer of rights to you. That could cost money. Again, it may not be fair - it's business. When you figure out where you stand on the ownership side, you may want to shop your product around, perhaps to companies that make/distribute lab related software, because you'll probably need a channel partner. So have them license/resell the product for you. You may also need some development support to truly commercialize your product, i.e., generalize the product for other customers. The internet or your attorney could point you to some funding sources. In the end, if your product is truely a one-off product that is highly tailored to your company then walk away and don't look back. Good Luck, SteveM Greg Wilson wrote: Thanks for your input Don. I admit I was likely venting more than anything. 2. Are there concerns about ownership even if it was written 100% by me on my own time but was tailored to the company's needs, was tested at our office on our network and received a cursory review by one manager? Are you saying that they own it in spite of the fact they have made negligible contribution and have demonstated complete disinterest and didn't even request or suggest that it be created? If they still own it, if I sent an email to management requesting their opinion, which I fully expect will be disdainfully rebuffed, would that demonstrate abandonment by them and give me a case? The program belongs to your employer unless they release it to you. or, they are too dumb to know you have it. They are definately cognizant that I have it but I think the symbolic meaning as their response to my position is of more value to them (i.e. the idea is garbage). This motivated by the implication that I don't think they're competant and disagree with the current paper-based system (which is their creation). It was given tacit approval in the beginning and they were aware I was writing it, but I think they woke up once it appeared. Greg "Don Guillett" wrote: Sounds like you are venting. Feel better now? The program belongs to your employer unless they release it to you. or, they are too dumb to know you have it. -- Don Guillett SalesAid Software "Greg Wilson" wrote in message ... I have spent roughly 200 hours exclusively of my personal time writing an extensive lab management program for my employer. This was done out of the goodness of my heart and with the intense desire to end the agony of our dysfunctional ways. In spite of receiving tacit approval at one point and having the support of colleagues, management is now completely and deliberately ignoring it. Questions: 1. To cut my losses, is there a practical way to sell the program? 2. Are there concerns about ownership even if it was written 100% by me on my own time but was tailored to the company's needs, was tested at our office on our network and received a cursory review by one manager? 3. Would it return a decent price - i.e. would it likely be worth the effort? 4. What about piracy concerns? 5. Additional words of wisdom much apprecitated !!! Greg |
#9
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.programming
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Life is too short not to do what makes you happy. I guess that's why, since
I left the Air Force as an officer, I have ONLY worked for me. -- Don Guillett SalesAid Software "Greg Wilson" wrote in message ... Thanks for your input Don. I admit I was likely venting more than anything. 2. Are there concerns about ownership even if it was written 100% by me on my own time but was tailored to the company's needs, was tested at our office on our network and received a cursory review by one manager? Are you saying that they own it in spite of the fact they have made negligible contribution and have demonstated complete disinterest and didn't even request or suggest that it be created? If they still own it, if I sent an email to management requesting their opinion, which I fully expect will be disdainfully rebuffed, would that demonstrate abandonment by them and give me a case? The program belongs to your employer unless they release it to you. or, they are too dumb to know you have it. They are definately cognizant that I have it but I think the symbolic meaning as their response to my position is of more value to them (i.e. the idea is garbage). This motivated by the implication that I don't think they're competant and disagree with the current paper-based system (which is their creation). It was given tacit approval in the beginning and they were aware I was writing it, but I think they woke up once it appeared. Greg "Don Guillett" wrote: Sounds like you are venting. Feel better now? The program belongs to your employer unless they release it to you. or, they are too dumb to know you have it. -- Don Guillett SalesAid Software "Greg Wilson" wrote in message ... I have spent roughly 200 hours exclusively of my personal time writing an extensive lab management program for my employer. This was done out of the goodness of my heart and with the intense desire to end the agony of our dysfunctional ways. In spite of receiving tacit approval at one point and having the support of colleagues, management is now completely and deliberately ignoring it. Questions: 1. To cut my losses, is there a practical way to sell the program? 2. Are there concerns about ownership even if it was written 100% by me on my own time but was tailored to the company's needs, was tested at our office on our network and received a cursory review by one manager? 3. Would it return a decent price - i.e. would it likely be worth the effort? 4. What about piracy concerns? 5. Additional words of wisdom much apprecitated !!! Greg |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Anyone screwed over with student loans? | Excel Discussion (Misc queries) | |||
Employees & Managers | Excel Discussion (Misc queries) | |||
Help Please, screwed up big time | New Users to Excel | |||
How do I set up a weekly schedule for my managers (vacation etc.) | Setting up and Configuration of Excel | |||
User screwed up | Excel Discussion (Misc queries) |