Advanced Search >>

Main | Engineering Tips and Tricks – Episode 1: Your first slide needs work! »

03/30/2010

Generation Pi

Christopher Marki headshot3
 





Christopher F. Marki received his B.S.E.E. from Duke University in 2002 and his M.S.E.E. and Ph.D. from University of California, San Diego in 2004 and 2007, respectively. While in graduate school, Christopher studied high speed fiber optics and consulted for San Diego start-up Ziva Corporation. Following graduate school, Christopher decided to forego a life in Photonics and opted, instead, to work with his father at Marki Microwave and learn the “family business” of microwave mixers. While at Marki Microwave, Christopher has served as Director of Research and has been responsible for the design and commercialization of many of Marki’s fastest growing product lines including filters, couplers and power dividers. Dr. Marki has authored and co-authored numerous journal and conference publications and frequently serves as an IEEE reviewer for Photonics Technology Letters and Journal of Lightwave Technology.   MarkiMicrowave.com

To comment or ask Christopher a question, use the comment link at the bottom of the entry.

 

April 01, 2010


Marki 

Welcome to Microwave Journal’s newest guest blog: “Generation Pi”. Following the wonderful feedback Marki Microwave received after our Expert Advice column in December, I am happy to announce that I will be blogging here over the next few months now that Sherry Hess’ tenure is finished. For those of you who enjoyed reading her blog as much as I have, you can check out her latest entries on the AWR website.

    In the coming months, I will use this blog as a platform to discuss topics ranging from the controversial to the comical and hopefully share some of Marki Microwave’s hard-won insights along the way. Based on the outpouring of support my father received regarding his advice column, I am very excited to have the opportunity to continue the dialog he started in December. This time, however, it is from the son’s perspective…and for this first entry, I want to talk about the youth of our industry.

    I’ve heard grumblings about the microwave industry’s age problem—the grey-beards are only getting older and the younglings aren’t rising up to replace them. While I agree with the notion that the industry is in danger of losing much of the older generation’s wisdom if we’re not careful, I’m also a living, breathing example of the counter-argument. To me, it is just a matter of perspective.

Since joining Marki in 2007, I’ve been inundated with questions from reps and customers about my dad and his potential “retirement” and how I plan to follow in his footsteps. The answer is simple: I don’t. It can’t be done, my dad is a special guy and happens to be the greatest empirical scientist I have ever known. From my perspective, these people are asking the wrong question. The question is not how the younger generation will continue the work of the great scientists preceding them; the question is how they will continue the tradition of innovation and creativity those scientists helped foster.

    Technological innovation is an evolutionary process based as much in artistic expression and opportunism as it is in rigid scientific theory. From my father’s perspective (and Marki’s as a whole), it doesn’t matter how you innovate, but that you innovate in the first place. The design approach of Ferenc Marki’s generation is profoundly different from my own and I have no desire to design a mixer or filter the way he would using intuition, trial and error and the occasional piece of aluminum foil (seriously, aluminum foil). In that sense, I don’t seek to follow in his footsteps. I acknowledge that there are a sickening number of tips and trade secrets that only an RF Wizard can teach you, and I promise to share some of our favorites in the coming months, but the modern era has afforded us certain advantages such as Matlab, Microwave Office and HFSS, and I intend to use them. 

    So no, I’ll not be the next Ferenc Marki, or Bill Oldfield, or Tom Russell—but I can assure you next time a grey-beard offers me some advice, I’ll be listening and I’d recommend all of you other younglings do the same.

 
 

Comments

Feed You can follow this conversation by subscribing to the comment feed for this post.

Hey Chris,

read your blog a few weeks back and really enjoyed. I am a firm believer in the creative side of most working engineers and that unfortunately we too often put that creative side away at work.

I didn't think to comment on the blog until I saw this piece on the Newshour with Jim Lehrer last night, "What Drives Motivation in the Workplace". http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/business/jan-june10/makingsense_04-15.html

You can watch the video at the link above or read the transcript which I have copied below. Thanks again Chris, looking forward to your next entry.

so no wax hits the table.

Economics: The faster you do it, the more money you make. Punchline: Conventional economics is wrong, because the greater the monetary incentive, the longer the solution takes, a solution you will see in a bit.

From the Newshour

Executive pay and Wall Street bonuses, which might not enhance, but actually retard, high performance, or so says writer Dan Pink, once Al Gore's chief speechwriter. Pink's first book, "A Whole New Mind," made waves by arguing that skills linked to the creative right side of our brains dominate today's global economy, instead of left hemisphere thinking.

DANIEL PINK, author, "Drive": Logical, linear, sequential, analytical, SAT abilities, spreadsheet abilities, and, today, those abilities are essential, but they're not enough. And it's now abilities characteristic of the right hemisphere: artistry, empathy, inventiveness, big-picture thinking.

And that's changed the game of business, too, because what its done is, it's put a premium on coming up with something new, profoundly new, iterating something the world didn't know it was missing.

PAUL SOLMAN: Pink's new book, "Drive," takes the next step: You motivate right brain creativity with more human, less material incentives.

DANIEL PINK: We tend to think that the way you get people to perform at a high level is, you reward what you want and punish what you don't want, carrot and stick. If you do this, then you get that.

That turns out, the science says, to be an extraordinarily effective way of motivating people for those routine tasks, simple, straightforward, where there's a right answer. They end up being a terrible form for motivating people to do creative conceptual tasks.

PAUL SOLMAN: How does the science show this?

DANIEL PINK: If you offer me a reward, $500 reward, you have my attention, absolutely. A contingent reward gets you to focus like this, narrow vision. If the answer is right in front of you, that's terrific. You race a lot faster. But if you have this kind of vision for a creative conceptual problem, you're going to blow it. You're not going to do anything good.

PAUL SOLMAN: Now, before you economists out there click to some stock market channel, a bit more of the candle experiment, run in the '60s by psychologist Sam Glucksberg. He offered $5, maybe 50 bucks in today's money, to those who solved it faster than most people, but $20, $200 today, for the fastest time of all.

With eyes on the prize and time of the essence, many folks melted the side of the candle and tried to stick it to the wall, a quick way, it turned out, to watch your hopes melt.

PAUL SOLMAN: Meanwhile, Dan Pink took us to Hunt Valley, Maryland, to show us non-material incentives in action.

MAURY WEINSTEIN, CEO, System Source: Welcome to our computer museum.

PAUL SOLMAN: Maury Weinstein has been marketing personal computers since their debut in 1981.

MAURY WEINSTEIN: The original IBM P.C...

DANIEL PINK: Oh, man.

MAURY WEINSTEIN: ... with two floppy drives. Behind us, the Commodore PET was very interesting because it had the lift-up hood.

DANIEL PINK: So, it was easy to service.

PAUL SOLMAN: Is this the Lisa or this...

MAURY WEINSTEIN: This is the original Macintosh. Lisa is right next door.

PAUL SOLMAN: The trip down RAM memory lane reminded us that, in the high-tech era, computer sellers have come and gone as fast as the hardware they have peddled. Yet, this firm, System Source, has grown for three decades, a key reason, says the CEO, the decision to drop sales commissions 15 years ago.

He explains, with a hint of Karl Marx.

MAURY WEINSTEIN: We find that money often disrupts relationships. It disrupts customer efforts. And, sometimes, it makes the customer feel like a piece of meat, where you can't trust the salesperson's recommendations. And that's a very slippery slope at that point.

MAN: This is Jason calling from System Source P.C.s.

PAUL SOLMAN: Weinstein says sales spurted 44 percent as soon as commissions were canned in 1994. Profitability rose threefold.

Ed Johnakin, a system source salesman for 17 years, says commissions have a downside.

ED JOHNAKIN, Salesman, System Source: Some salespeople may push customers into things that they might not necessarily need.

PAUL SOLMAN: Did you ever do that?

ED JOHNAKIN: No, no, no, no.

ED JOHNAKIN: Yes, maybe once or twice.

PAUL SOLMAN: So, no commission, no incentive to sell stuff customers might be better off without.

Salesman John Burke.

JOHN BURKE, Salesman, System Source: I'm not looking to strike it rich or hit a pot of gold with one deal and then move on. I'm looking to foster a long-term relationship with a customer.

PAUL SOLMAN: But were we perhaps seeing System Source through Pink-colored glasses?

DANIEL PINK: I think System Source is fundamentally an early adopter for a very new approach to business, which basically says that people have other motivations besides grabbing that carrot, that they actually want to do good work.

PAUL SOLMAN: Speaking of good work, figured out the candle answer yet?

With dollar signs in their eyes and the clock ticking in their heads, some folks tack the candle to the wall. That falls flat -- no surprise, though, to Swarthmore psychologist Barry Schwartz, who's studied motivation for decades.

BARRY SCHWARTZ, psychologist, Swarthmore College: Money isn't a natural part of anything we do. It's not a part of practicing medicine. You know, the natural thing to practicing medicine is healing people. Getting paid for it is unnatural, similarly with law and with any profession, teaching. So, maybe what happens is that what money does is, it disconnects people from the real point and purpose of their activity.

PAUL SOLMAN: Case in point, Wall Street bonuses, which, Schwartz insists, fueled the crash.

BARRY SCHWARTZ: It created in people who ran these companies unbelievable short term-ism, because all that mattered was making the company look good for the next quarter or the next year, so that they would get a huge bonus in the form of stock options, which they would then cash in. And what the consequence was for the company five years down the road was of no concern to them -- a disaster.

PAUL SOLMAN: Now, if cash incentives don't even work for salespeople, says Dan Pink, think how useless they are in a right brain world. Consider Wikipedia, the world's largest source of free information or the free Web browser Firefox, open-source projects created and developed by users for no pay at all.

And why would labor the world over work for free?

SERGE KNYSTAUTAS, open-sourcer: I think by contributing to open-source communities, you can get some gratification and praise and really give yourself a sense of purpose.

PAUL SOLMAN: We gathered a group of open-sourcers in Washington.

CELESTE LYN PAUL, Open-Sourcer: You're working with people that you like. You're doing things that you love to do. And it's just very fulfilling. So, money isn't the only reason why somebody might want to contribute to it.

PAUL SOLMAN: You're describing a world that sounds like a marketplace, but it just doesn't have any money in it.

JOHN YODSNUKIS, Open-Sourcer: You know, you need adequate compensation. You have to live. You have to survive, OK? But, if you ask an artist why they became an artist, a lot of them will say, I can't do anything else. I have to do this.

It's the same thing here, you know? It's the fulfillment, the love of doing it is reason enough.

PAUL SOLMAN: Yes, admits Pink, people need enough dollars to survive. Most of these folks have day jobs. But, after that, humans want autonomy, a sense of purpose, mastery.

DANIEL PINK: We do things because they're interesting. We do things because we like them. We do things because we get better at them, because they contribute to the world, even if they don't have a payoff in getting a reward or satisfying some -- some biological drive.

This is not a plea for a kinder, gentler approach to business. This is a plea for saying, let's wake up. Let's get past our outdated assumptions, and let's actually run businesses in concert with what the science shows about human performance.

PAUL SOLMAN: Which brings us back to our experiment, one of many over the years that have come to the same conclusion -- 128 people took part in the original candle experiment. Those offered money averaged 11 minutes to solve it.

But it turned out that, counter to the predictions of classical economics, those people offered no money at all discovered the solution much faster: tacking the box to the wall, to hold the candle and catch any dripping wax. They did it in an average of just seven-and-a-half minutes, instead of 11, and, thus, the punchline of this story and Dan Pink's new book: To succeed in today's global economy, it's the fire within that must be lit.

I have composing lots of involved with areas of the web publication ahead of when,and as well , as i here's greetings to allow them to swiftly the fact that virtually all blogpurchasers purchase the style as being worthless junk,simply mail are almost always don't, i such as you are their this webpage,and afterward getting rid of fully feel exciting and thus could certainly find a thing additional,as well as a the loss of weight context your entire this webpage simply because

Chris, a refreshing blog on microwave matters. I was a R&D engineer in X band in the 60s. Clearly I am now a grey beard(minus the beard). In the 90s I was a sales manager for AT&T and saw that the younger engineers in the Castle in AT&T's Merrimack Valley were floundering on microwave design work that I had successfully completed in the 60s. In '92 the AT&T VP for radio said at a dinner that microwave was dead, 2 weeks later I delivered to him the biggest microwave link contract ever (Mannesmann cellular). The grey beards can be in a range of very short sighted to visionary. Right now I am moving on using microwave to crack the technology of quantum communications. Microwave engineering is a very rewarding career.

Chris,

I very much enjoyed reading your blog, especially the comments about soccer officiating using technology. Regrettably, this is a common pattern: people are reluctant to change their ways, although in the long-run everyone knows they will. Since you wear a marketing hat, you are undoubtedly familiar with the concept of early adopters vs laggards. Like you, I grew up playing the sport (I grew up in Europe) and now my 13-year old twins (boy and girl) are in extremely competitive leagues on traveling teams. I would love to get involved in helping make and use RFID tags to reduce guessing by referees. I am interested in this for me, my company, athletes, and sports fans. I think you might have the right combination of qualities to create a new product/company/service (?) to implement this technology. For that matter, why stop with soccer…

Best regards,

Ted Boimov
VP Marketing at Capital Electro-Circuits, Inc.
301-977-0303, ted@capitalelectro.com

Chris,

It was fun to read your blog on Fantasy Engineering. Like you, I too am an Microwave Engineer at heart and dabble in work related to it.What I found most intersting in my 23 years of experience in the electronics industry is: 'the element of magic and awe' associated with RF design! I remember, when I joined Indian Telephone Industries (makers of digital microwave radio equipments in 80s) as a greenhorn engineer, I found it difficult to understand the practical aspects of MICs with respect to what I had learned as theory in college.My boss, a strict military kind of person taught me a lot of those magics! He used to sit in the lab for hours,with a tuning stick in hand, tuning an amplifier using arzerite and or tin foils.Sometimes, the result he obtained was un-explainable - he used to call it 'band-aid' technology!
To end this comment, I feel there are equivalent number of 'magicians' on the soccer field too, whom we can easily identify, isn't it?

Post a comment.

If you have a TypeKey or TypePad account, please Sign In.

Other Horizon House Sites:

Microwave Journal Online: Home | Current Issue | News | Buyer's Guide | Events | Resources | Archives | Subscriptions | Privacy Policy

Advertiser Information:
2009 Media Planner

Find out why more companies advertise in Microwave Journal than any other publication in the industry.

Read More >>

Microwave Journal
Editorial Information

Editorial Planning Guide and Information for Authors

Read More >>


©2009 Microwave Journal & Horizon House Publications ® All rights reserved.