Thursday, December 9, 2021

Don’t Try To Solve Every Problem

Don’t try to answer every question or solve every problem. I learned this lesson while working for difficult bosses. It’s one of the few positive take-aways that I gained from those experiences.


It’s admirable to want to step up and handle a challenge. No customer wants to hear, “That’s not my job,” when they need something. Responding quickly is a hallmark of good customer service, but it can come with risks.


If a team or process has been set up to handle a particular issue, but someone else jumps in, it can create confusion. The customer won’t know who to talk to when follow-up is required.


Further, not everyone has the expertise to handle all types of problems. Without a knowledge of the procedures that have been set up to handle a particular issue, a well-meaning employee could unwittingly create expectations that can’t be met. The client may be pleased when offered a solution, but if that solution turns out to be costly or infeasible, the relationship will be strained.


Another consideration is that clients don’t always act in good faith. They may just want to vent some frustration. If someone without adequate knowledge tries to help, it may compound the client’s frustration.


Finally, if you happen to work for a difficult boss, they’re probably risk averse. They won’t reward your initiative for trying to help. Instead, they’ll perceive your well-meaning efforts as misguided and problematic. If anything goes wrong, they’ll blame you for supposedly making them look bad.


Know your boss. If he or she is a jerk, don’t volunteer, and don’t be a hero.



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Monday, December 21, 2020

Job Satisfaction

The best places to work have a collegial culture. Everyone helps each other. Every team member’s skills and strengths are utilized and appreciated. The mission is clear, and everyone understands its importance and commits their efforts to achieving it.


In second-tier workplaces, employees are valued and appreciated, but there is less interaction between team members. The work is done in silos, whether out of necessarily or custom. Individual contributions are recognized and respected, but there is less of a sense of camaraderie or teamwork in the organization.


The next level down is a workplace with a territorial or combative culture. Team members don’t share information openly, either because management discourages doing so, or because  they view secrecy as a competitive advantage. Team members routinely criticize each other’s performance in bids to outdo their colleagues in the eyes of management or important customers. Job satisfaction is tied to perceptions of who is winning and getting ahead.


The worst places to work, where job satisfaction is abysmal, are organizations led by domineering and unreasonable supervisors. This situation can occur locally with in a larger, well-respected organization where most employees may feel that the company treats them well. Concurrently, those who work for tyrannical managers feel isolated, helpless, and demoralized.


This can be an inescapable nightmare for employees. Most companies give tremendous power to supervisors for evaluation of employee performance. Employees have few if any options to evaluate the performance of their managers. The manager’s account of events will precedence in the eyes of upper management. (Bad managers are often good at fooling their superiors into believing that they are thoughtful and productive.) The manager will be informed of the complaint, which will only create more tension. If the supervisor can convince HR and upper management that the employee is a “troublemaker,” dismissal will be likely. Even if the employee is retained, their performance history will be compromised, all but negating any hope for advancement. 



Copyright 2020 Corporate Absurdity

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Wednesday, April 12, 2017

Public Relations Scandals

Poor Pepsi! They can't even be Number One in public relations scandals. Someone else is always better. Congratulations to United Airlines for stepping up and showing everyone who's boss!


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Tuesday, January 31, 2017

The Emotional Experience of the Workplace

After a long day of work, employees can expect to come home feeling tired, worn out, stressed out, and even exhausted. Work is often demanding, and the amount of work that an employee must complete in a day is not always under the control of management. 

Deadlines can converge. Supply chains can be interrupted. Crises can happen.

Clients can be demanding. Orders can surge unexpectedly. Colleagues may need to take a day off without warning.

So, if you're tired at the end of the day, welcome to the club. You have plenty of hard-working company.

The more important questions are: 

Do employees feel valued, respected, and appreciated? Do they believe that their contributions are important? Do their efforts provide them with a sense of satisfaction?

Or do they feel disposable, overly criticized, or under-appreciated? Do they believe that their contributions are futile? Does the work leave them feeling frustrated and miserable?

The emotional experience of the workplace is an area where management has considerable influence. If employees routinely feel demeaned, undervalued, micro-managed, brow beaten, or otherwise miserable, management isn't doing its job.

I'm going to repeat that statement in capital letters: MANAGEMENT IS NOT DOING ITS JOB.

Do your employees have to deal with difficult customers? Support them and put policies in place that help to protect them from abuse.

Do your employees feel uncertain about their future at your firm? Reassure them to the degree that you can.

Do your employees feel stressed out from an unrealistic workload? There are many solutions. Streamline the workflow. Set reasonable expectations with clients. Provide better training. Or hire more people.

Do your employees feel unappreciated, hopeless, and downtrodden? That doesn't happen when management encourages them actively.

Is there friction between employees? Talk to them separately, address what each one feels is unfair, and take action to make everyone feel listened to and respected.

Management's job is to deliver results in a timely, efficient, and ethical manner.

Miserable employees are not efficient. They're not focused on the work; they're focused on how bad they're feeling about the work. They're not focusing on the important customers; they're agonizing over the jerk that berated them (and the boss who didn't support them adequately). They don't have the company's best interest at heart; they're trying to figure out how to get through the week without having a heart attack.

When the workplace is miserable, the more talented employees will leave. The less talented will stay on but while being consumed by the hopelessness of their plight.

Management is in charge. If morale is low, some level of management bears the lion's share of the responsibility for that. Not every manager is necessarily at fault. It's not uncommon for the line manager to be constrained by financial pressure from above. But SOMEONE in the management chain is responsible for bad morale, and it's up to those people to do something about it before the entire operation falls apart.




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Thursday, December 22, 2016

Obnoxious Office Behavior

Of all of the obnoxious, unneighborly, and downright stomach-turning behavior that I have encountered in offices over the years - the loud talkers, the unrelenting political debaters, the soup slurpers, the ear and nose pickers, the too much information on the telephone guy, the people who clip their fingernals and toenails at the desk, and those who stink up the entire floor by microwaving fish at lunchtime - the current record-holder is a guy who clears his throat throughout the day with a loud, deep-throated, "hocker" sound whilst sitting as his desk during business hours.


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Thursday, October 20, 2016

Angels

In an environment that thrives on negative reinforcement, treasure those kind and thoughtful souls who take the time to help you when you desperately need support.



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Tuesday, August 2, 2016

An Ounce of Common Courtesy

It's not that difficult to chew with your mouth closed. Really, it isn't! Perhaps you might try practicing the technique at home before bringing your meals into the office.  








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