Three weeks in…
Hey everyone… here’s a quick note from 37,000 feet…
I’m just finishing up my 3rd week at Novartis. It has been a crazy, crazy whirlwind time, and will continue to be for at least the next few months.
Michele and the kids are moving out in mid-February.
Until then, I’m parking in a loaner apartment in Boston’s South End, an area I know really well from my Northeastern days. It’s about a mile from Novartis in Cambridge. My days, while in Boston, have basically consisted of getting into work by 6-7am, being in meetings until 6pm, then sitting down and doing email and such until about 11. I’ve been to Basel for a week (with a similar schedule, plus dinner meetings), and will be heading to England, Austria, China, then California in the next four weeks.
The goal during this time period is simply to meet as many of the key folks in the company as I can - both the business leaders and the IT folks in my group - to learn how pharma works, and to figure out what the issues are.
Unfortunately, there are issues. Imagine 4 years with a different CIO every year, along with centralization, mergers, splits, and so on. Imagine how few good folks would be left… So my experience at Argonne with moves and restructuring is turning out to be incredibly valuable. In fact, the similarities are bizarre - enough to make me wonder if I’m doing too much repeating… layoffs at the top, restructuring so that the support groups and developer groups aren’t split, building IT coalitions across the company, creating a web services team, focusing on the science, trying to fix broken financial incentives, …
Plus I have to reorganize a lot more dramatically than there. The organization is a bureaucracy, running damn near everything through MS project and two governance cycles.
The state of high-end computing is way behind what it could be. There’s a tiny group that believes in it and is trying to convince the rest of the company, but there’s not enough of a team to make a difference. I’ll be tackling that with a multi-year effort after I’ve survived the near-term rescue maneuvers.
So, that’s how things are, in general. I oscillate between being stunned at how screwed up things are and being elated at how cool it is to be working in a place that is doing the good stuff that the company is doing. The scientific and executive leadership here is primo - absolutely first class. Despite the IT mess, they’re getting great stuff done and are incredibly entrepreneurial for such a large company. I hadn’t realized the IT situation here was in such a dire need of a turnaround, but on the other hand, if I can fix it, things will be fantastic. Wish me luck…
By the way, I’ve already punted and am carrying around my Mac, and am working on bringing up their PC-environment-from-the-90s under Parallels. To hell with counter-productive ineffective corporate standards.
Take care and stay in touch.