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 Scott
Raymond Adams is perhaps Americas most unlikely management
commentator. A self-confessed complete failure in corporate
America, he has taken his humunculus, Dilbert, from the margins
of his workplace notepad to the pages of more than 800 newspapers.
This is not to imply that hes not qualified to pontificate
on the idiosyncrasies of the business world. As one who spent his
entire working life in it, Adams stubbornly retained a rebellious
outsiders perspective that enables him to perceive the flaws
and foibles in a corporate structure and to present them in such
a stark manner as to be funny and, on occasion, even jolting.
In Dilbert, Adams is tilling new ground in two of comics most-plowed
fields: the workplace strip and the hapless-soul strip. While strips
centered around the workplace have especially been a staple of the
comics page since America began its migration from factories to
office buildings after World War II, Dilbert clearly has its finger
on the pulse: in holding a mirror up to the face of corporate management,
Adams, 38, has given voice to a huge cross-section of Americas
workforce. He has, in effect, created a vessel into which his readers
pour their mutual feelings of frustration, helplessness, bleak humor
and amusement.
Adams has been shrewd in exposing Dilbert to new readers: not only
is the strip one of the fastest-growing on the comics pages, but
it has also galloped out front in cyberspace: Dilberts presence
on the Internets World Wide Web, United Medias Web site
and America OnLine generates heavy traffic and serves as a gathering
place for his fans. In harnessing the nascent power of computer
networks, Adams has made his creation accessible to readers who
might otherwise fail to see it, creating demand where none had existed
and generating more than 100 e-mail messages daily. His newsletter,
which contains behind-the-scenes anecdotes and humorous minutae,
goes out to more than 30,000 subscribers. It can truthfully be said
that Adams, a Windham, New York, native who resides in northern
California, owes his career in cartooning in part to good timing:
his rise to cartooning stardom is a study in both happy coincidence
and the inexorable grip the medium exerts on certain individuals.
Having hung up his T-square on more than one occasion, Adams was
repeatedly drawn back to cartooning. Success in the field that seemed
to choose him as much as he chose it has been much less elusive
than it had been in the corporate environment, although it had ironically
been the irritation of the corporate world that caused the pearl
that is Dilbert to form.
So strong is Dilberts appeal that the strip has been embraced
by merchandisers, who are producing mugs, T-shirts, calendars and
of course a half-dozen book collections, including the most recent,
Its Obvious You Wont Survive By Your Wits Alone. (Dilbert
and Dogbert dolls are in the works, which may become the suction-cup
Garfields of the cubicle set.) Adams has also parlayed his workplace-wise
humor into a lucrative second career: speaking to business groups,
promising to teach them absolutely nothing and delivering fully.
The irony of any of this is not lost on Adams, who is in the enviable
position of having the raw materials for his strip given to him
by grateful fans who sense a kindred soul. While not a business
guru in the terms traditionally narrow sense, Adams
certainly serves as a therapist of sorts for his readers who feel
that heand he alonepossesses a special insight into
their workplace life.
This interview was conducted, transcribed and edited by Tom Heintjes.
Tom Heintjes: Shortly before this interview, you were asked
to leave your job at Pacific Bell. Do you think your rebellious
Dilbert cartoons had anything to do with it?
Scott Adams: They said it was because of budgetary reasons,
but . . . you draw your own conclusions.
Heintjes: Are you surprised that leaving your job resulted
in news stories in newspapers across the country?
Adams: I kind of expected it, frankly. It's the kind of ironic
news that newspapers love to report.
Heintjes: Are you losing a plentiful source of Dilbert material?
Adams: No, for probably the last two years I hadn't used
any fodder from the day job. It was almost all suggestions from
electronic mail and from my own 15 years of experience up to that
point.
Heintjes: I imagine that your supervisors at PacBell dreaded inviting
you to meetings for fear that they would find themselves in your
sights.
Adams: [laughter] There was always a little bit of concern
about that.
Heintjes: Did you get the feeling during your years in the
corporate world that your managers were always thinking, I
know you're sitting there dreaming up malicious stuff about managersjust
wait until your next salary review? Or were they able not
to personalize your strip work?
Adams: I think every manager I've ever had definitely thought
about that every time they talked to me. It worked both ways, too.
Sometimes my coworkers would be hesitant to do silly things in front
of me, but other times they would be delighted for me to make fun
of them, because it would be their 15 minutes of fame. But you've
got to think that all the stupid and absurd things I make fun of,
if the people who were doing them knew they were stupid and absurd,
they wouldnt do them. People dont realize they have
the ability toregulate their behavior in a meaningful way.
Heintjes: How does it feel to have gone from a comic-strip
artist to being perceived as something of a management guru? Does
that ever strike you as odd?
Adams: That strikes me as odd every day. On Tuesday, there
will be a Wall Street Journal article. They asked me my thoughts
on careers. Now here I am, a person who has never succeeded in a
corporate job in any meaningful way
Heintjes: Do you perceive that as true?
Adams: Oh God, yes. I was a total failure in corporate America
in terms of my own career.
Heintjes: But you worked in it for years.
Adams: But I never got to a serious management-level position.
I never supervised an employee in the nine years I was at Pacific
Bell. I think that would be a kind of marker of whether you were
advancing or not. Obviously, a lot of that had to do with the fact
that just at the point when I was most promotable by age and experience,
I was also most associated with Dilbert, so it was pretty clear
to everyone that that was not my path. I always assumed that had
that not been there, I would have found some way to succeed, but
given that I didnt, its kind of interesting that people
look to me for insights.
I guess the one thing I can do that other people cant do is
play a court jester role. I can say anything about anybodyor
so it seemsand I dont get in trouble. Theres an
ability to speak clearly. And another skill I have that people seem
to appreciate in that business guru role is that Im good at
simplifying things down to their basic element, and that alone has
some value. But the thing that I dont have is a better idea.
Heintjes: I was going to ask you about that. Its easy
to lampoon and take shotsespecially at such an obvious targetbut
its harder to devise solutions and propose alternatives. Does
that ever occur to you?
Adams: It occurs to me constantly. There are some things
that I think I have some solutions to.
Heintjes: Such as what?
Adams: One good example is about dress codes. One thing that
a lot of companies are doing is having a casual day, and then defining
what casual means to them. And what they usually do is define a
type of clothing that few people own in any quantity, so they defeat
the objective of looking good or feeling good, in the name of looking
good and feeling good.
Heintjes: So the result is that people have to go out and
spend money on clothes they wouldnt otherwise even want.
Adams: Right. The whole purpose is defeated. Contrast that
with United Media. The new president of United Media, Doug Stern.
He had that same decision to makethey were thinking about
going casual on Friday. He said, How does it make sense that
if its OK on Friday, its not OK on the other days?
Thats the first absurditythat it would be OK only one
day of the week. So he did the sensible thing and said, If
were going to do it, lets just do it. So its
casual all the time. Now, I dont know if hes specified
what is sensible or not sensible, or if he left it to peoples
better judgment, which is a more reasonable approach.
Now heres a case where I absolutely have a better ideatheres
no doubt about it. You have to pick oneeither youre
casual or youre not. But being casual one day a week, or being
casual and then specifying what casual is, seems nonsensical.
And thats just a case of clarity of thought. I dont
think that takes any experience in the business world. You could
pick a Tibetan monk out of the monastery and say, Here are
the factswhich one makes sense to you? Im pretty
sure he would come down on my side on this one.
Heintjes: Do you feel that had your career advanced more
traditionally, you might have become co-opted by corporate America
and you would have then suffered creatively? You might have been
less able to perceive the foibles of management.
Adams: Well, certainly my bitterness has worked in my favor.
Being the one who was having it done to him instead of being the
one doing it to others had some benefit in the creative process.
Heintjes: You know, now that youre a management
guru, you can go around and do what all the other management
gurus docharge exorbitant sums to talk to executives.
Adams: Im already doing that.
Heintjes: You are?
Adams: Thats why Ive been traveling so much. Of
course, I dont teach them how to manage; I just entertain
them. The reason I get asked is because they like the strip, and
they know the employees will pay attention. So I have a fairly booming
speaking business now.
Heintjes: Who is your primary audience?
Adams: Big companies, technology companies in particular,
and trade shows.
Heintjes: Do you speak to executives or rank-and-file employees?
Adams: Usually some combination of both. Not so much executives
aloneI try to shy away from those types of groups, but usually
middle managers and the technology people in particular.
Heintjes: If you had an audience composed exclusively of
executives, you might have to erect one of those chicken-wire fences.
Now weve got him.
Adams: Im actually making more money speaking than
I am cartooning at this point.
Heintjes: Is that right? Ill bet you never saw it coming,
did you?
Adams: No, not that. I didnt see that coming at all.
That was a complete surprise.
Heintjes: How did it happen? Obviously, its not something
you deliberately tried to build up.
Adams: I got a phone call from a woman in Canada who said
they had this association of people in the oil industry, and that
they were big fans of Dilbert, and they wondered if I would come
up and give a talk. I had never done such a thing in that context.
Id done a lot of speaking, but it was always for Pacific Bell
business. So I said, Well, Im not crazy about coming
to Canada, and she said they would pay me. So I said, Let
me get back to you with a price. So I asked someone at United
Media what I should charge, and he said, Tell them youll
do it for $5,000 plus travel, which sounded like an amazingly
godawful number that would make her go away. So I called her and
said, Sure Ill come up and talk to your group for an
hour for $5,000 plus travel. She said, OK, when can
you be here? For that, I put together a bunch of material.
Then my phone would ring occasionallymaybe once a monthand
someone would ask me to speak, and since I already had the material
put together, I would say, Surefor $5,000.
Heintjes: And this all started from word of mouth from that
one event in Canada?
Adams: Some word of mouth, but even more from people just
having the same idea independently. Since then, Ive raised
my price because demand was growing. Now I charge $7,500 to talk
to people for an hour. I get probably two or three speaking requests
a day, of which I can only do a few a month. I get to pick the ones
I want. I probably turn down 10 for every one I do.
Heintjes: Most people fear public speaking above all else.
In your early talks, did you have any butterflies before taking
the stage?
Adams: I took the Dale Carnegie course a few years agoits
one of the most valuable things Ive ever done. When I look
at all the things Ive done, probably the Dale Carnegie course
and my hypnosis course are the most important ones.
Heintjes: Hypnosis?
Adams: Im a licensed hypnotist.
Heintjes: What do you do with that?
Adams: I havent done anything with it lately, but at
one point I was thinking about it as a career. I used it for past-life
regression and getting peoples arms to float.
Heintjes: Why would you want to get peoples arms to
float?
Adams: It validates that theyre in a deep sleep.
Heintjes: Did hypnosis tell you anything interesting about
people?
Adams: Oh, lots. You learn how fragile the human mind is,
and how overrated it is, in a sense. Its overwhelmingly influenced
by outside sounds and sensations, almost to the exclusion of the
logical stuff thats going on. Your whole impression of why
people act the way they do is changed.
Heintjes: Whats the benefit of the Dale Carnegie public-speaking
course?
Adams: It makes you so confident in front of an audience
that its an adrenaline rush. The most enjoyable part is the
public speaking. The parts I dont like are the traveling and
the preparation.
Heintjes: What is at the core of one of your talks? Is it
just to lampoon management, or is there actual advice?
Adams:
I guarantee people that they will learn nothing useful in my talks.
Thats actually part of my contract. What I talk about is purely
for entertainment. Most people use it to break up a technical conference
or as an incentive for people to stay through to get to some other
event, or just as a reward because theyve done a good job.
The three things I talk about are how I became a cartoonist, I show
them some of the cartoons that have never been published and the
ones that would have gotten me in trouble if they had been published,
and then I teach them my secrets for writing humor. I show them
my formula for taking a situation and adding the humorous element.
Heintjes: Would you be willing to share with us the cartoons
you use during your talks?
Adams: No. Publishing them would diminish my income seriously.
Heintjes: Ill just have to attend one of your talks,
I guess. It sounds as if everyone comes away learning nothing but
happy as hell.
Adams: Thats the point!
Heintjes: Are your talks fairly low-tech affairs?
Adams: Its me with overhead transparencies. Ive
put it on computer and Ive put it on slides, and it turns
out that the perfect technical solution is overhead transparencies.
It just works better.
Heintjes: The high-tech solution isnt always the best
one, I
suppose. In addition to the strip, youre also working on a
prose book about management, arent you?
Adams: Im well on my way to completing that. We have
a publisher and we have deadlines. Itll probably contain some
earlier cartoons that illustrate the points Im writing about.
Heintjes: Is there a working title?
Adams: Itll probably be called The Dilbert Principle.
The single biggest point I make in the book is that people are idiots.
And Im careful to say that Im not excluding myself from
this category. Were all idiots, but about different things
at different times. If you put three of us in a room, chances are
youve got yourself an idiot. [laughter] And its not
related to IQ or education or anything elsetheres just
something about humans that makes us behave in really preposterous,
absurdways. Theres something about the business environment
thats supposed to be analytical and based on data, but when
you put the two together, its really what makes Dilbert workits
the most absurd two things you can find in one space.
Heintjes: When you were at Pacific Bell, did you inhabit
a cubicle?
Adams: I was a cubicle person the entire nine years I was
there.
Heintjes: Youve spoken earlier about companies
policies concerning what is and isnt permissible in personalizing
a cubicle. Were you able to personalize yours?
Adams: There were rules concerning putting things above the
line of the wall. We couldnt do that. And I think there were
guidelines about what you could put outside the cubicles. And you
couldnt have plants.
Heintjes: So much for trying to purify the recycled air.
Adams: I think they were worried about bugs or something.
I never found out. You couldnt have a coffee maker or an electric
device like that. It was considered a fire hazard. You couldnt
have a phone number on your cubicle wall. If you had a phone list,
you couldnt put it on the wall because that was considered
confidential information, even though were the phone company,
and all you have to do is ask for that information and we give it
to you. And they had a clean-desk policy, meaning that anything
that was an important document had to be put away at night, and
the best way to ensure that nothing important was left out was to
put everything away at night.
Heintjes: And these were formal, codified rules?
Adams: Yeah, they were formal rules.
Heintjes: Did you have any cartoons up in your cubicleyour
own or those of others?
Adams: Yeah, I had some up. I had a real messy cubicle, actually.
I was never really into the cleanliness thing. I think it was because
I had such low regard for the department. Im real neat at
homeeverythings in its place. But at the office, I didnt
mind coming in and throwing something on the ground.
Heintjes: Theres that rebel Adams again, flouting
the rules.
Adams: I dont think it was that so much as the fact
that I just didnt care.
Heintjes: Did your co-workers have Dilbert strips up in their
cubicles?
Adams: Oh, surehundreds of them.
Heintjes: How did it feel to see that?
Adams: Pretty cool. It was strange at first, but you get
used to
it. I actually used it as market research. Id walk around
the buildingand we had around 8,000 employeesand see
which ones were working.
Heintjes: From your point of view, what is the role of a
manager?
Adams: Well, in the simplest sense, its to make sure
things work better than they would if there wasnt a manager.
But thats got to be different in every situation. In many
situations, that means that employees have the resources and training
necessary for them to do what theyre supposed to be doing,
and that youre removing obstacles for them. So often you end
up as a buffer between the employees and the onerous rules of the
corporation, protecting the company from itself. In the worst case,
youre micromanaging them or making them unhappy all the time
as part of the job.
Heintjes: It seems that many managers are faced with diverse
missions: on the one hand, theyre supposed to be leading everyone
toward a common goal, yet theyre not supposed to stifle everyones
individuality. Thats a tough balance to strike.
Adams: I think most managers have largely given up on that
whole get them to think independently concept.
Heintjes: You think theyd just prefer the workers to
come in lobotomized and get the job done?
Adams: Yeah, frankly, because if you let everybody be creative
you couldnt run a company. Its not like theres
an alternative. I wouldnt fault companies for not allowing
people to be creative, because thats just simply not an option.
If you let everyone run around being creative, you find that they
do what I did: start a business on the side. Theres a huge
underground economy at most companies: people selling Amway out
of their cubicles, stuff like that. Its hard to walk down
the hallway of Pacific Bell and find somebody who doesnt have
a second job. Its usually the kind of job you can run out
of your cubicle.
Heintjes: Do you think most managers feel threatened by their
employees moonlighting? Isnt working for me good
enough for you?
Adams: Some are threatened, but most of them are doing it
themselves too. Its not like its only rank-and-file
who are doing it.
Heintjes: Everyone stays busy, just not with PacBell work.
Adams: Yeah. It only gets bad when they start answering the
phone with HelloBobs Auto Repair. [laughter]
Heintjes: Lets talk a bit about your early interest
in comicsdid you read them as a child?
Adams: I was a voracious comic-book reader, especially Spider-Man,
the Fantastic Four and Superman.
Heintjes: A guy who read both Marvel and DC, eh?
Adams: Yeah, I went both ways. [laughter] And Mad magazine
was the major publication of the age.
Heintjes: When would this have been?
Adams: I was born in 57, and I dont remember
ever not reading comic books. And Peanuts books were how I learned
to read, literally. They were the first reason I found to want to
learn how to read. Those were the big influences. I cant say
Ive ever considered myself a comics historian. It was just
something I liked.
Heintjes: Ive noticed in your Dilbert newsletters that
you feel fairly comfortable taking some good-natured shots at The
Family Circus. Are you actually fond of the strip?
Adams: [laughter] Well, first of all, you have to say that
for someone to write a strip thats been that popular for that
long, hes obviously doing something very right. I wish I could
do something that would be that well-loved. But for me, its
more of a matter of product differentiation. Its a rallying
cry, and its just fun. Ive met Bil Keane, and hes
a real nice guy.
Heintjes: And his own sense of humor is very different from
the strips.
Adams: Oh, very. And everyone knows its all in fun.
Heintjes: Lets move on to one of your other influences:
when did you get your first computer?
Adams: I started work right out of school at Crocker Bank
in San Francisco. I found myself in a management training program.
One day, the senior vice president called me in and said that he
needed a computer system to track progress in the various branches,
and could I do that? Now, up to that point, my only experience with
computers had been that it was the only class I ever dropped in
college. It was a programming class. But there was a huge raise
associated with accepting this assignment, so of course I said,
Well, how hard could it be? So suddenly, I became the
computer expert, literally without having ever used one. But this
was in 1980, when no one was acomputer expert, really.
Heintjes: But you must have had some sort of innate aptitude
that allowed you to wing it.
Adams: Well, theres a reason it was the only class
I ever dropped in college, and that is because I had a D in it.
But those were the days when you had to write the programs right
the first time. But once computers became more like modeling clay,
where you could try it and test it, try it and test it, and gradually
shape it until you got it where you wanted it, it became very much
wedded with my talents. Theres a very creative aspect to computers,
particularly with the programming. Programming is like leaving your
body, because you have to imagine yourself inside the commands.
Its like youre building this big playground, and youre
deciding where the swings go and where the basketball court is and
the people running around after the bouncing basketball. You have
to imagine it all as almost physical objects, with yourself in the
middle of it, in order to write these little command lines that
create programs. So the imagination part of programming was just
tremendously exciting for methe fact that you could write
a few lines of code and have the program do a different thing. Thats
what really got me turned on, and after I got my own computer I
used to write a lot of programs late at night, just for fun.
Heintjes: What was your first computer?
Adams: It was an IBM clone, put out by some company that
existed for about six months. It was a dual-floppy system with 640K
of RAM.
Heintjes: As a boy, did you show a creative impulse?
Adams: I was pretty much a constant doodler. I mentioned
modeling clay because I messed around with that a lot. My mother
was a big doodler, so I got it from her.
Heintjes: Your family probably thought you had a boys
normal interest in comic books. Little did they know what youd
grow up to be.
Adams: Well, I did sign up for the Famous Artists course.
A couple of years ago, my mother found my old application for the
course and sent it to me. Id forgotten all about it, frankly.
At least at 11 years old I was thinking about being a cartoonist.
And I remember looking at Charles Schulzs Peanuts books and
thinking that I wanted to grow up to be a rich cartoonist, too.
Unfortunately, I was a little too smart about the ways of the world,
and when I looked into it, I realized that there was only one Charles
Schulz. [laughter] Im not sure how many people there were
on earth at that timemaybe 2 billion or 3 billionand
yet, there was only one Charles Schulz.
Heintjes: The odds are against duplicating that success.
Adams: Yeah. You could find other examples, like Al Capp,
but you run out of examples real fast.
Heintjes: Its a short list indeed.
Adams: So from a purely practical perspective, after the
Famous Artists school rejected meI was only 11, and you have
to be at least 12I pretty much gave up on it and didnt
think about it until much later in life.
Heintjes: You gave up on it because of the odds against commercial
success?
Adams: Well, I never stopped doodling for myself. But as
a career goal, it seemed even at that young age so wildly impractical.
As a teenager, I dont recall ever thinking seriously that
could ever be a job.
Heintjes: What an intriguing mix of creativity and pragmatism.

Adams: I actually score identical scores on my math and verbal.
I have a classic Gemini personality.
Heintjes: What reignited your interest in cartooning as a
profession, after having ceased to consider it for many years?
Adams: I had finished my MBA, and I didnt have to go
to school at night anymore. It seemed like I had so much free time!
[laughter] It seemed like I need to be doing something, and I wanted
to try one more time to be a cartoonist. But again, I was practical
about it, and I really wanted to see if I could get just one cartoon
published, in a magazine or something. On the high end, I thought
I could make $100 now and then, and that would be a nice supplement
to my income without having to work very hard. And mostly for ego,
frankly. But I didnt know how to do it. But as these things
work, when you start setting a goal, sometimes your filters change,
and you start noticing things you wouldnt have noticed otherwise.
Some things that seem like coincidences start happening.
Heintjes: Such as what, in your case?
Adams: In particular, coming home one night and catching
the end of a TV show on how to be a cartoonist. Now, to the best
of my knowledge, I hadnt seen one before, and I havent
seen one since. But at this very exact point in my life when I decided
I need to learn how to be a cartoonist, there it was! I missed almost
the entire show, and I caught only enough of it to know what it
was about, and I just wrote down the information about the host.
I got enough from the closing credits that I could track him down.
I wrote a letter to the host, Jack Cassady, and asked him a few
questions like what materials do you use and how
do you submit things and who do you send them to.
He was nice enough to write back a fairly lengthy letter answering
all my questions and was nice enough to point me in the direction
of books I needed, like the Artists Market. He told me to
make sure I didnt get discouraged if I got a lot of rejections,
because that would be common in this business when youre starting
out. So I got all excited from his advice and put together about
a half-dozen cartoons and sent them off to Playboy and The New Yorker.
Heintjes: Did the single-panel gag cartoon hold a special
appeal to you, or did you feel that type of cartoon was something
you could handle better?
Adams: It seemed more accessible. I dont remember ever
ruling out multipanel strips except for the obvious fact that they
seemed more like work. Beyond that, I dont think I ever thought
about it too much. So I sent them off, and they came back with form-letter
rejections fairly quickly, and I decided to give it up. It seemed
I didnt have enough talent even to get a personal reply. It
just didnt seem like it was going anywhere. So I put away
materials and didnt think about cartooning for about a year.
Heintjes: During that time, did you still read the comics?
Adams: Yeah, I read them in the daily papers as I always
had.
Heintjes: So you werent so devastated that you couldnt
even bring yourself to look at other comics.
Adams: No, I didnt feel crushed. Acceptance just didnt
seem likely enough at the time. Then one day I got a follow-up letter
from Jack Cassady. I had not even thanked him for the original letter
hed sent me. So it was kind of surprising that hed write
to a stranger a second time. He wrote just to say that he was going
through some files and hed found a letter from me and some
samples Id sent to him. The only reason he wrote was to make
sure I hadnt given up and to encourage me to keep submitting
stuff.
Heintjes: He gave you a kick in the seat of your pants.
Adams: A major one. The key thing here is that he had nothing
to gain, not even thanking him for the help. He had no reason to
believe that I would even thank him for the advice, since I hadnt
responded to his first advice. He didnt even have the hope
of seeing the look on my face. [laughter] This was as close as you
can get to a purely selfless act, of being a part of the human experience,
and it touched me deeply. I got very excited, and feeling rather
heady from all this, and having never been published, I decided
I would raise my sights to major cartoon syndication. At that point,
Dilbert had sort of grown up in doodles at work.
Heintjes: So you already had a vehicle.
Adams: Well, I knew the bare bones of it. I knew he was a
technical guy. Id invented Dogbert at that point, and they
were the only characters. I had drawn them enough that they looked
the same from drawing to drawing, which is a big deal. So I put
together about 50 sample strips. I drew one a day, just like I was
a cartoonist. My intent was that I would throw away the ones that
were bad and just submit that good ones. So I got my 50 strips together
Heintjes: Let me guessyou loved them all.
Adams: No, I loved some and hated others. But when my friends
were visiting, I would have them sort them into piles of which ones
they thought were good and which ones they thought were bad, so
I would know which ones to submit. Now, this was a huge learning
experience for me. There was absolutely no correlation between one
persons pile and another. Somebody would say, These
are pretty good, but this one just stinks. Whatever you do, dont
submit this one. Just as often, that would be the one that
somebody else would pick out of a pile and say, Man, this
ones a keeperthis is your best work.
Heintjes: So much for Plan A. What did you do to weed them
out?
Adams: I sent all 50. That was the learning. You dont
know whos on the other end, and if you try to guess, youre
doing yourself a disservice.
Heintjes: You sent them out to all the syndicates?
Adams: All the big ones. The usual suspects. I got a call
from the editor of the Los Angeles Times Syndicate, which was a
big deal. Unfortunately, he called to suggest that I take art classes
or perhaps work with an artist. He suggested some artists and sent
me some samples of their work. But I really was kind of more interested
in the drawing than the writing at the time. In recent years, thats
reversed, but at the time, I thought, You know, youre
not really a cartoonist unless youre drawing the damned thing.
It seemed to be missing the point. And yet, hearing from a syndicate
was very exciting for me. I probably would not have said no
if I had liked the samples he had sent me, but I didnt. They
were professional-looking, but completely lacking soul.
Another week or so went by, and I got a call froma woman from United
Media who said she was an editor, and she said she wanted to offer
me a contract to be a syndicated cartoonist. Right over the phone.
But I had never heard of United Media. I had sent my samples to
United Feature Syndicate. Not knowing that United Media is the parent
company of United Feature, I was very suspicious of this phone call,
for two reasons. One, I had no way of knowing how they had gotten
my samples, so I didnt know if they were reputable. Second,
they were offering me a contract to be a syndicated cartoonist over
the phone, so clearly, their credibility was very low with me. These
were two highly suspicious things coming together. For Gods
sake, they looked at the same samples the guy at the L.A. Times
Syndicate looked at. So I said, Well, the drawings kind
of crude, dont you think? And she said, No, its
fine.
So she had no credibility whatsoever at this point. I said I needed
some references, so I asked if she had ever worked with any cartoonists
I might have heard of, at which point she informed me that she handled
Peanuts and Garfield and went down the list. I suddenly realized
that my negotiating position had been somewhat weakened. But I did
go ahead and get a reference.
Heintjes: Who would that have been?
Adams: Pat Brady. I called him and asked him about working
with these folks. He gave them a glowing endorsement, and I started
negotiating with United. I got my lawyer involved.
Heintjes: Had you had a lawyer already?
Adams: Not until that point. I went through the Cartoon Art
Museum in San Francisco and got a recommendation of someone who
was familiar with the industry.
Heintjes: What was the negotiating phase like?
Adams: I knew enough about business that I needed to take
myself out of the process, so I wanted a hired gun. Someone who
would not say, Oh my God, if I say this, theyll yank
the contract and my entire life will be over. I wanted it
to be dispassionate. I got luckymy lawyer wasan expert with
contracts, and I outlined with him what I thought were the minimums
and what were the maximums. The syndicates have their own contracts
that they would obviously like you to sign, but I dont know
if they realistically expect anyone to sign it the way its
written.
Heintjes: I suspect they start from their ideal and realize
they have to work down from that.
Adams: I wonder if anybody ever signs it without negotiating.
It seems like somebody must. You get the feeling that they have
all the negotiating position and you have none, because you think,
clearly, you want them far more than they want you. Their lives
wont be different if youre gone tomorrow. But thats
not entirely true. You actually do have . . . I wouldnt call
it clout, but you do have some positioning right off the bat, because
of the several thousand submissions that they see, they dont
offer many people a contract. You have to keep that in mindtheres
a reason they called you.
Heintjes: They think you can make them money, and thats
clearly of importance to them.
Adams: Right. So I took the position that absolutely a deal
would be made. Essentially, I agreed to agree. All this stuff like
copyright ownership, percentages, minimums, things like that, the
lawyer hammered out over the course of a few months. That was a
real nail-biting time, because the longer it goes, the more something
could go wrong. Somebody could be hit by a meteor or change their
mind.
Heintjes: What ultimately was arranged regarding ownership
of the Dilbert property?
Adams: United Media owns the copyright. To be honest, I have
never figured out the advantage of owning the copyright. Ive
figured out lots of disadvantages, but I havent found an advantage.
I think the presumed advantage is that you have more control over
your destiny. You can say no to more things, but the
reality is that, as the artist, you still have that control. If
United Media were ever to say, We know you wont like
this, but were going to license your work to the Ku Klux Klan,
they would be out of business. So all these things you presume a
company is going to do abuse this trust are wholly unrealistic.
If you think about it, what do they own? They own the hope that
you wont be hit by a car, that youll continue to be
funny, and that they can continue to share in this revenue stream
after theyve put hundreds of thousands of dollars into your
development. They own very little, and theyre not going to
mess it up by doing something thats entirely avoidable.
Heintjes: Did you have a development phase with United?
Adams: Yeah, we did the usual six-month period. I guess thats
usual.
Heintjes: What was its benefit?
Adams: If you have a good editor, its a way to figure
out what works and what doesnt. At no point did Sarah [Gillespie,
United Features comics editor] say, How about changing
this word? or anything like that. She never said, Change
this creative element. She did offerand this was very
helpfulto tell me which ones she thought were funny and which
ones she didnt think were funny. Sometimes a little bit about
why, but most of the time it was me figuring out on my own what
worked, with a professional feedback mechanism. She had the breadth
of experience to know not only what she liked but what others would
like.
Heintjes: In the early Dilbert strips, he was more of an inventor,
and over the years the emphasis has shifted to his office life.
Was this a conscious shift on your part?
Adams: That change was a direct result of e-mail. People
wanted to see him in the office more. At first, it was probably
80 percent inventor, 20 percent office. Thats flip-flopped
now.
Heintjes: You mentioned that Sarah Gillespie had no problems
with your art. Im interested to know how youd rate yourself
purely as a draftsman.
Adams: On a scale of one to 10, 10 being Pat Brady, and I
wont name a one. But even the one is currently in newspapers.
On that scale, Id say Im a 4.8.
Heintjes: Do you enjoy drawing?
Adams: There is a certain delight in the creative process.
Now that its a job and I do a lot of it, I cant say
that I get delight out of it each and every time I draw, but once
in a while you really nail something, and you sit back and say,
Man, that was fun!
Heintjes: You mentioned that Dilbert sprang to life over
time on your office notepads.
Adams: Hes what I drew when I was bored to death in meetings.
I would look around at my co-workers. They were all a bit of Dilbert.
Heintjes: His persona was derived from them?
Adams: Hes a little bit of me, a little bit of my coworkers.
Heintjes: What part of him is you?
Adams: His love of technology for the sake of technology.
His being a powerless victim in a cubicle was all me, and I think
his experience with Dogbert is a little bit of me too, because I
grew up with a floppy-eared beagle who, for the 14 years of her
life, never once came when called.
Heintjes: Thats not very doglike.
Adams: Nohave you ever heard of a family dog that wouldnt
come when you called its name?
Heintjes: Thats not very beagle-like either, because
theyre so obedient and eager to please.
Adams: I think it scarred me for life. [laughter]
Heintjes: How much of you speaks through Dogbert?
Adams: He says all the things I wish I could say if I could
get away with it. If you were a small dog, no one would kick you,
because that would be cruel. What if you could say anything you
wanted to? Hes kind of the tape recorder thats playing
in my head when other people are talking. Oh my God, whens
he going to stop? Ive heard this a million times.
Heintjes: So the megalomaniac inside Scott Adamsis revealed
through Dogbert.
Adams: Yeah, we share a desire to conquer the earth and make
everyone our slaves.
Heintjes: The new ruling class. To your mind, what is Dogberts
role in the strip?
Adams: Im not sure if its fair to analyze it
after the fact. He was initially developed simply because Dilbert
needed someone to talk to. And I like drawing dogs. Ive been
drawing dogs since I was little. As for his character, it didnt
make sense for me to have a character less powerful than Dilbert.
Its the basic, standard comedy convention to have a character
be the opposite of what youd expect. So making the little
dog all-powerful just kind of came naturally. But people have read
into it and seen some sort of brilliance on my part. [laughter]
I think what people like is that Dogbert always wins. He can get
away with anything. Theres a reasonable chance that hell
conquer the world, and he does it all through attitude. Theres
nothing innate about him that is powerful. He doesnt have
control of a lot of money, and he doesnt have size or physical
strength. Theres just something about his attitude that allows
him to win. People dont identify with himits just
the opposite. Its almost a fantasy experience.
Heintjes: You spend part of every day devising new ways to
humiliate and degrade Dilbert. But do you like him?
Adams: Oh, yeah. Hed be a great guy to know. Hes
kind and smart and wouldnt hurt a fly. Hed be interesting
if you could get past all the technical stuff. I cant tell
you how many Dilberts I know. I like them all.
Heintjes: Do you perceive parallels between Dilbert and Dogbert
and an adult Charlie Brown and Snoopy? The cynical, worldly dog
whose master is a good-hearted naïf?
Adams: I can look at my strip and identify a whole bunch
of things that Ive liked in the past. So there are two things
that I can be certain of: the first thing is that I did not consciously
ever sit down and make any similarities between Charlie Brown and
Snoopy. The second thing is absolutely its true. Theres
no question about it. You cant look at it and see it, but
its there. After all, I learned to read from Charlie Brown
books. What are the chances of a complete coincidence? Pretty damned
low.
Dilbert is also influenced by the characters Don Martin and Sergio
Aragones created in Mad magazine. Some people ask me if I based
Dilberts hair on Bart Simpsons, and I tell them that
Dilbert was created before Bart Simpson.
Heintjes: I guess well have to ask Matt Groening if
hes a Dilbert reader. I wanted to ask you to talk in rough
terms about the number of situations you lampoon in Dilbert that
are based on reality versus the number you simply make up out of
whole cloth.
Adams: Id say roughly 80 percent of it is based on
incidents people have suggested to me.
Heintjes: Thats pretty frightening, actually. Would
a person typically be able to recognize his suggestion in the strip
once you got done playing with it?
Adams: Its funny. I wont use a situation in a
strip unless Ive had the same sort of incident suggested to
me at least twice. I look for patterns. But when I take one of these
patterns and form it into a strip, I always get follow-ups from
people saying, Thank you for using my idea in your strip.
Ive told all my friends that you used my idea. I never
discourage them from thinking that. And sometimes, Ill do
a strip about something that did just happen to me, and then Ill
get e-mail from people thanking me for using their idea. [laughter]
Its probably a sign that Im doing something right.
Heintjes: How do you structure your day? For the nearly a
decade you spent at Pacific Bell, you must have had a highly structured
routine.
Adams: The cartooning part of that decade was only six years
or so, but for that time I did it pretty much the same way. I would
do all of the creative part from five to six in the morning, and
that would include thinking up the joke and penciling the strip.
I would do that in an hour, no matter what. If at the end of 50
minutes I had nothing on the page, that days joke would be
a ten-minute joke. The other discovery I made, which supports my
earlier assertion about not trying to guess what other people think
is funny, is that there rarely was a difference in quality between
the 10-minute joke and the full hours joke. I like them equally.
Once I got over that, I wasnt scared of the 10-minute joke.
Then, after I got home from work, I would do the inking and finishing.
Heintjes: You never did any Dilbert work on your lunch hour
or during other times at Pacific Bell?
Adams: No, I never did.
Heintjes:I wonder why, since everyone else apparently was
moonlighting.
Adams: Well, I couldnt do the inking, because I would
need the special equipment. And there was too much distraction for
the creative part. It was just never an option.
Heintjes: What are your drawing tools?
Adams: I use a standard mechanical pencil, and for inking
I use Alvin Penstix.
Heintjes: And you letter with Penstix as well?
Adams: I used to. For the last year and a half or so, Ive
been working with someone to do the lettering.
Heintjes: Is that right? Hes certainly duplicated your
own style effectively.
Adams: Well, hes a professional.
Heintjes: When do you work your Sunday strip into this structure?
Adams: Ive always done my Sunday strip on Sunday mornings,
for reasons Ive never been able to explain except by saying
that any other day would seem wrong. Partly, its the day when
I have the most time to do it. By the end of the week I feel pretty
beat up from all my other work. But I do a cartoon every daySaturdays
on Saturdays, Sundays on Sundays.
Heintjes: So you never have stretches where youll do
all the writing for a week, then all the pencilling and finally
all the inking?
Adams: No. In fact, I dont do the writing before I
do the drawing. Im probably different from other cartoonists
in the sense that I actually start drawing my first panel before
I know how the strips going to end.
Heintjes: Thats a daily high dive.
Adams: Particularly if you have a time constraint. By the
time you get to the end, you have to have confidence that youll
be able to pull something out of your ass, because you dont
have time to go back. What works best for me is to have a theme,
and there are just some themes that once I think about them, I say,
This could be funny. So the first panel is always the
set-up, explaining to the reader what the situation is. That ones
usually pretty straightforward. So I draw the first panel to see
how much space Ive got left over for the words, and I might
change the words based on how much space Ive got for them.
Then I do the brainstormingwhat is it thats going
to be funny about this? Is it going to be some horrible tragedy?
A play on words? Whatever. Then I take advantage of the fact that
I have the shortest attention span on the planet earth and a poor
memory, and I begin to cycle through things. I can do this amazingly
quickly, and I reject the things that dont work. It feels
almost physical, like a chamber of a gun being spun around during
Russian roulette. Whirrr, click. Whirrr, click. Whirrrhey,
this one might work. Pow! [laughter] So I begin writing the rest
when I feel like I have a good idea. And pretty much everything
you see then is a first draft.
Heintjes: Your two Dogbert booksBuild a Better Life
by Stealing Office Supplies and Dogberts Clues for the Cluelesswere
composed of material that had never run in the paper before. So
you simply doubled your workload while putting those books together?
Adams: During that time, I did one comic strip and one book
page before I went to work in the morning. And those would both
be in an hour.
Currently, Im working from about six in the morning until
about midnight each day. Yesterday was the first time that I sent
my cartoon the day it was due. I think when I started Dilbert I
was six months ahead, and Ive been cutting into that a little
bit at a time, like a savings account. And today, if not for the
fact that I sent them by modem, I would have missed my deadline
for the first time. So work and physical hygiene is about all I
can manage these days.
Heintjes: You get most of your raw material sent to you via
e-mail. Does this prevent you from ever coping with writers
block?
Adams: I think writers block is when you say to yourself,I
could write something, but it wouldnt be good enough.
Theres no such thing as a complete inability to write a sentence.
At least I havent had that. But the great breakthrough for
me is that I know that what I think will not necessarily be funny
is going to make someone else fall out of his chair. Ive learned
the patterns, so if Ive got a day when its just not
coming, when I cant see anything that makes me laugh, it doesnt
really stop me. Because I know the form at this point, and someones
going to write me and say, This is the finest joke youve
ever done. A good example of that was a joke done on the theme
of how bosses come and go fairly quickly. So I thought I would do
a cartoon on that, and I proceeded to do what I thought was the
most uninspired cartoon of my life, which is nothing more than having
a boss fly onscreen on a bungee cord, fly back off, and have Dilbert
and Wally saying, I think he made a difference. He was like
a mentor to me. When I drew that cartoon, I said, You
know, I really phoned this one in. [laughter] But that is
probably the most popular cartoon Ive ever done. I knew it
would work, it just wasnt working for me. So you learn to
get that extra sense of what other people are looking for.
One of the great discoveries about cartooning is something I learned
when I first started. I believe theres this thing called the
funny zone, this universal thing that all people would
recognize when they saw it. If you can take any situation and just
move it into the funny zone, people will laugh. Once
I learned that trick, everything changed. I found, for example,
that if I do one cartoon that mentions ham-radio operators . . .
I dont know how many ham-radio operators there are in the
country, but I think Ive heard from every one of them. And
one of the consistent things they would say is, That was the
funniest cartoon Ive ever seen. But the fact is, it
just wasnt. By any objective measure, it simply wasnt
inspired work. Further, they say, I hadnt read your
strip, but since my friend sent it to me I read it every day, and
your work is the finest since Michelangelo.
Heintjes: So if you create strips that refer to every conceivable
hobby, you eventually will be Charles Schulz.
Adams: You may notice that thats exactly what Im
doing. Im mentioning methodically all kinds of different careers
until I hit most of the white-collar careers. Lets say youre
a quality-assurance person in a software firmhow many popular
references are there to your profession?
Heintjes: Probably zero. 
Adams: But there are many, many people in that job.
Heintjes: So if you take just one day to shine a spotlight
on them, theyre yours forever.
Adams: Theyre mine forever. Then theres a strange
things that happens, sort of an afterglow effect thats maybe
unique to cartoons. If someone will laugh maybe once a week at your
cartoon, they will think the other six days are funny, too. So if
you can say something that will make the quality-assurance guys
laugh once, theyll think everything you do from that point
on is funny. These are things that are not obvious to a beginning
cartoonist. How could you possibly know that? Its so counterintuitive.
Heintjes: Well, youre a man with a plan, Scott.
Adams: Thats the quantitative side of me.
Heintjes: I would guess that the amount of e-mail you get
is an affirmation of the universality of the themes you work with.
Adams: It has a number of benefits. Chief among them is that
it helps me write the strip. When people write to me with their
anecdotes, they often end it by saying, Thank youits
been good therapy. Its often abundantly clear to me
that they dont expect me to use it in the cartoon, but theres
some sense that I alone understand. [laughter]
Heintjes: Do you receive e-mail from all over the world?
Adams: Every day from all over the world.
Heintjes: Are clueless managers identical the world over?
Adams: Absolutely identical. I have not found a single cultural
difference from whats been written to me. I should point out,
though, that I dont get much mail from Asia or Africa, for
example, and they might have a different cultural management style.
But as far as stories from Europe, Canada, Australia . . . they
all have the same bureaucracies.
Heintjes: You were one of the earliest cartoonists to implement
the power of the online services, specifically the Internet and
the World Wide Web. Do you find that this has helped popularize
the strip?
Adams: Yeah, hugely. Im not sure its a technique
that would work for other cartoonists. I obviously have a closer
connection with the online crowd, by the nature of the strip. But
the hardest part about selling into a new market is, you bring it
into the editor, who really only has the ability to look at it and
ask himself, Do I think its funny? But we kind
of changed that equation. Now, the salesperson walks into the office
almost anywhere in the United States, and the editor says, Oh
yeahpeople have been calling and asking for this. [laughter]
And the only reason they can call and ask for it is because theyve
seen it on the Web. So we learned a few things. One is that its
a tremendous marketing tool, far more than we had hoped for. Second,
the Web stuff seems highly complementary to the newspaper, rather
than cannibalizing from it, which we were worried about. We were
careful about that. We make sure to run the strips online a week
after theyve run in the papers.
Heintjes: Do you get any especially strange or humorous e-mail,
apart from the usual anti-manager tirades?
Adams: I get some amazingly humorous stuff. One letter I
got made me fall out of my chair, clutching my stomach for an hour,
I was laughing so hard. Im not sure itll translate when
I tell it, though, but the basic idea was that these people had
moved into a new computer area, taking over a room that had been
used for something elsea furnace room, or something. There
was a big red button on the wall with a sign that said, Do
not press this button. Well, they all naturally assumed that
this button had nothing to do with their operation, that this button
was a relic from the older use of the room. So it became a tradition
for one of the guys on Friday, on the way out for the weekend, to
hit the button. That was his personal way of signifying that the
weekend had started. In fact, he trained one of the summer co-op
employees to do the same thing if he wasnt there. They found
out much later that what they were doing was shutting down the computer
and furnace systems to the building, causing somebody in another
department to go into manual mode, spending hours trying to correct
the problem.
Heintjes: [laughing] This happened once a week?
Adams: Not only once a week, but at five oclock on
Friday! Of course, they couldnt figure out what was wrong,
because there was no logical reason for it to be happening! It says
so much about people, that they had to keep pressing a button that
says Do not press.
Heintjes: Have you even wondered how different your entire
life might be had you not caught the end of that Jack Cassady show?
Adams: I think about that all the time. Its one of
the great unresolved questions of my life. Could I have been successful
in a corporation? I truly think that by now I would have been a
fairly high-level manager and made more money than I do now. But
I started doing cartooning just when I was most promotable, and
the more I cartooned, the less promotable I became. Ill never
know. Its a great mystery to me.
Heintjes: Lets suppose that a couple of centuries from
now, anthropologists unearth a time capsule containing nothing but
Dilbert strips. What would they conclude about life in late twentieth-century
America?
Adams: Theyll look at us in the same way we look at
stories of workers during the Industrial Revolution. My God,
they worked 16-hour days and fought traffic for two hours a dayhow
did they live like that? Theyll talk about people living
like that with no possibility of a raise, no budgets to work with
and no real prospects for improvement, and theyll say, Can
you believe people lived like that before we tightened up the laws?
Im not exaggeratingI am saying what I believe is absolutely
true. Theyll look at us with a great deal of pity.
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