1973 – MEASURE Magazine

January 1973

  • Hewlett discusses importance of hiring, employment selection process, employment forecast. 2 3
  • College campus recruiting program, off-campus professional recruitment, recruiting practices in Japan. 4 7
  • Profile of employment receptionist. 8 11
  • Affirmative action in the HP hiring process; helping people gain skills and qualify them for employment; affirmative action program, Santa Clara Valley Skills Center, highlighted. (diversity) 12 15
  • Internal recruitment policy of seeking inside people first. 16

February 1973 Critical Mass

  • Introduction of HP-80 “businessman’s” pocket calculator; phones ringing “off the hook” with orders. 2 9
  • HP’s French connection to Baron Jean Baptiste Fourier, who was a resident of Grenoble; Fourier’s theory of mathematical analysis in 1807. 10 11
  • Foothill College, Los Altos, electronic museum of Perham and De Forest collection; first museum devoted to history of electronics. 12 13
  • Bruce Wholey elected vice president. 14
  • Semi-annual stock dividend is 10 cents/share. 14
  • HP acquires Femcor in McMinnville, Oregon. 14
  • Construction in Waltham to begin for headquarters of Medical Electronics Division. 14
  • Hewlett discusses HP-80 calculator development background. 15
  • HP catalog in mail. 16

March 1973 Fountain Grove: Eden of the West

  • Santa Rosa history, including Thomas Lake Harris and his New Life converts, ranching; plant site proposed for HP’s Microwave Division. 2 6
  • HP opens urban calculator showrooms in San Francisco, New York and Chicago. 7-9
  • Introduction of flexitime, flexible work hours, and employee reactions. 10 13
  • Vice president Ed Porter elected to board. 14
  • First-quarter sales up 30 percent, earnings up 31. 14
  • Barney Oliver, vice president of R&D, designs stereo amplifier; limited production for sale to employees. 14
  • Retirement Profit Sharing Fund increases substantially. 14
  • Scholarship fund drive underway for employees’ children. 14
  • Oakland police use HP-2120 disc operating computer to analyze criminal data. 15
  • Cultural diversity of HP authors in Microwave Division. (diversity) 15
  • 9810A calculator translates into Japanese. 16

April 1973 Canada

  • HP in Canada; U.S. and Canada have much more in common than not, accounting for neighborly relationship. 2 5
  • Profiles on industrial design at HP; evolution of designer from artist to integral part of design interaction with its working environment. 6 11
  • HP acquires Hupe & Bush, leading European manufacturer of analytical equipment; HP introduces the 1010B liquid chromatograph. 12 13
  • Hewlett and Packard receive Founders Medal, IEEE award. 14
  • Dean Morton elected vice president. 14
  • H.I. Rommes elected to board. 14
  • HP 9805A statistical calculator introduced. 14
  • Hewlett asks employees to help welcome new people to company, HP Way. 15
  • “Basic Electronic Instrument Handbook” by Clyde Coombs released. 16

May 1973

  • Introduction of flexible benefits plan, “cafeteria plan,” where employees can tailor benefits to their needs. 2 5
  • Star Trek game on HP time-share computer. 6
  • Leasing HP equipment appeals to customers. 7 9
  • Microwave Division split into Stanford Park Division and Santa Rosa Division. 10 12
  • Ground breaking for new building at Colorado Springs. 13
  • Santa Clara site to expand. 13
  • Edmund Littlefield resigns from board. 13
  • Software Search contest announced for software programs. 13
  • Hewlett discusses employee and vendor teamwork in aftermath of shipping warehouse fire in Palo Alto. 14 15
  • International senior sales seminars. 16

June 1973 The Plot Thickens

  • HP employee profiles on agricultural, farming and gardening endeavors. 2 6
  • Components sales and stocking the industrial distributor. 7 9
  • Acquisition of Field Emission Corp. (Femcor) gets HP in the X-ray equipment business. 10 13
  • Introduction of HP45, 46 scientific calculators. 14
  • Second-quarter sales up 40 percent, earnings up 70. 14
  • HP wins Golden Supplier award by ITT Gilfillan, radar system manufacturer. 14
  • Hewlett discusses importance of traditional product lines and “glamour” products. 15
  • HP ranked 267 in Fortune 500; ranked 8 in return for investor. 15

July 1973 Manager’s Meeting

  • Seventeenth annual managers meeting; Hewlett speaks on divisional organization, long-term planning, employee training; Packard discusses management, importance of people, social responsibility, long-term planning, product development; excerpts by Ralph Lee on administrative costs, employee training; John Young and Doyle on product growth opportunities; Bill Terry on re-emphasizing HP fundamentals; Morton on MED five-year growth objectives; E. Rodgers on analytical products; van Bronkhorst on improving the profit-margin; Boniface on effects of marketing organization’s restructuring; Alberding on European predictions; Cottrell on internationalization and decentralization of HP. 2 11
  • Workshop sessions at manager’s meeting. 12 15
  • Workshop discussion on personnel matters concludes that there is no generation gap at HP. 16

August-September 1973

  • HP experience of various employees shows that HP is different. 2 3
  • Fred Terman recollects Hewlett and Packard at Stanford and the early years. 4 8
  • Frank Cavier, vice president and secretary, discusses HP past, HP Way, and decentralization of responsibility. 9
  • Bruce Wholey discusses views on the HP Way. 10
  • Swede Wilde on Equal Employment Opportunity (EEO) use of people and the HP Way. (diversity) 11
  • Present day employee views on the HP Way. 12 24
  • “Housemothers” at HP are liaisons between employees and personnel. (women) 15
  • International view of HP Way. 25 26
  • HP’s future goals, plans, decentralization. 27 29
  • Hewlett discusses the HP Way. 30 31
  • Seven HP objectives. 16

October 1973 HP Goes Metric

  • Longest-term employees, Mary Fredman and Buck Gleason of Medical Electronics Division. 2 3
  • HP switches to metric system, which will be fully converted in 10 years. 4 7
  • New electronic products focus on innovation, internationalization and diversification; 970A probe, battery-powered digital multiplier, 5000A and 1601L logic state analyzers, 4271A 1-MHz digital LCR meter, HP 45 calculator, HP 46 desktop calculator. 8 13
  • 6000th HP minicomputer shipped. 14
  • Third-quarter sales up 31 percent, earnings up 14. 14
  • Government business declines 6 percent in first half; non-government business up 63 percent. 14
  • Santa Clara starts construction on sales office. 14
  • Barney Oliver joins board. 14
  • Hewlett discusses HP ventures in Japan (YHP), Singapore, and Malaysia. 15
  • HP-35 pocket calculator goes to Mt. Everest and Skylab. 16

November 1973

  • Cafeterias and food service at HP generally well liked. 2 5
  • HP 3000 computer system is largest, most complex product development undertaken by HP. 6 8
  • Computer jargon: language, lexicon, vernacular. 9
  • HP in Penang, Malaysia. 10 13
  • HP gets $2.8 million Navy contract for cesium beam frequency oscillators (atomic clocks). 14
  • Price reduced for computer memory products. 14
  • Eberhardt Rechtin named telecommunications manager. 14
  • McMinnville, Oregon, construction started. 14
  • Hewlett discusses Arab oil embargo and energy conservation. 15
  • Company car of the future in view of energy crisis (satire). 16

December 1973 Visit to the Fourth World of the Hope

  • Hopi Indians assemble HP components for Loveland. 2 5
  • 10th anniversary of YHP Japan. 6 7
  • 1973 year in month-by-month review. 8 9
  • HP gets Soviet permission to open sales office in Moscow and Warsaw. 10 13
  • Data Systems leased building in Boise, Idaho. 14
  • Preliminary year-end sales results up 38 percent, earnings up 32. 14
  • Hewlett discusses 1973 performance, profit sharing. 15
  • Boeblingen, Germany, HP worker raises exotic birds. 16