Lifer wrote on Aug 8th, 2010, 4:58pm:Times change. Can't speak about how staff see current management though to my eye they have done a pretty good job.
The time the BBC came closest to disaster was in the late eities and like him or not John Birt pretty well save the BBC as a public service broadcaster.
With respect I think you have to look further than that .
In my opinion John Burt's appointment was to administer the last rights to the BBC as a truly independent Public Broadcaster.
The original master plan started with the Hurd white paper that opened up Broadcasting to a free market based on profit, nothing wrong with that, provided they had a level playing field were Public Service Broadcasting was protected for the good of the Industry as well as the Country, unfortunately that was not the case and the bill was a complete mess, witnessed by the 24th hour inclusion of "programme quality check" on the bidders for the ITV franchises.
As I have already stated the introduction of the 25% independent production slice of the BBC's output was the thin edge of the wedge.
Programmes commissioned from Independant Producers all too often were on the basis of price and not quality the Independants main priority was to deliver those contracts and also make a profit all too often those profits dwarfed the costs of making the programmes and as the licence fee was held at the same levels the only way that 25% could be funded was by cuts within the BBC.
In my opinion the programmes produced by the Independants by and large were not as good value as those produced in house . Also Independant producers unlike the BBC had no responsibility for training or to promote innovation, which can be very clearly be seen and heard in much of what is being broadcast now especially in the lower budget slots where the technical quality is usually very poor.
Going back to John Birt and his role in the present state of the BBC. His mission was to over haul all the structures of the BBC and bring it into line with the concept of the free market and he did this by making senior management an elite and seperate group from the rest of the BBC. He used outside consultants to streamline the BBC's production process and dispense with any form of back up services that they deemed unnessescary hence staff training was severely cut, research and development abandoned and skilled staff were dispensed with, this left the BBC reliant on the free market for many of it's core functions and the cost savings are at the very least questionable.
The new management structure of the BBC introduced by Mr sorry Lord Birt are the same as those of many City Banks and they have imported all the despised practices of Excecutive renumeration packages with large bonuses and seperate pension pots and top ups
Whether the Licence payer receives a good service for their money is a matter of opinion but what is indesputable is the organisation called the BBC that made this Country a World leader in Broadcasting excellence and innovation has been destroyed.
Oh it will go on and it will produce more milestones but we have lost far more than we have gained.
So in my humble when the historians write about all this in fifty years time, I don't think that Mr Burt will be seen as a "saviour" but more like a vandal ;)