This oft-repeated phrase
is both the premise and the challenge of Why Work
Isn’t Working Anymore, a unique gloves-off observation
on and critique of the American workplace – that
place where the number of employees who profess
to be “reasonably satisfied” with their work has
fallen 13% in the last five years and now numbers
fewer than half.
“Why are we so unhappy
in our work and our jobs?”
That is the question
to which Karger and Aldrine offer answers, to include
the early-inculcated western fascination with money,
making our work not an end, but a means to an end
– more money and the stuff it can buy. “In America,”
Karger observes, “we talk of ‘growing up to be what
you want to be,’ but what we really mean is ‘growing
up to have what you want to have.’ Having, not being,
is the American Dream, and work is the cost of our
ticket.”
Because money, not happiness,
is the goal of work for most employees in the American
workplace, it is hardly surprising that most jobs
have not been designed to bring meaning and joy
but are designed with efficiency as the sole goal.
Via the scientific method, division of labor, the
time clock and the computer, work has been sliced
into smaller functions, each performed in less time,
each seemingly having little relationship to the
whole.
Our “mistaken belief
that more money will make us happier and that more
will one day become enough has kept most workers
in harness in meaningless, repetitive jobs,” say
Karger and Aldrine, even in the face of “overwhelming
evidence shows that beyond the basic needs of food,
shelter, clothing, and education -- money and happiness
are disconnected.”
Based on analyses of
dozens of studies and their substantial anecdotal
perspective, the authors suggest that the individual
relationships between managers and the employees
they supervise is most important to positive workplace
morale. What kind of relationships? Meaningful,
empathetic relationships – relationships that require
greater knowledge on the part of managers about
the lives, beliefs, and goals of their employees.
“The post-modern manager
must be the mother, father, brother, sister, pastor,
and psychiatrist for all of her employees,” Karger
argues, and in the second half of Why Work Isn’t
Working Anymore, he describes a simple 3-tool system
used successfully by thousands of managers today
to create healthy, happy relationships in their
workplaces, and thereby make their workplaces better
places.
Unlike many business
tomes, the authors do not attempt to “convince managers
that they are right, but rather introduce a simple
system that requires modification of management
behavior, which when successful, modifies managers’
beliefs.” Each tool requires the user to engage
in empathy-producing behavior and document it, to
include, learning important facts about employees,
palpable use of that knowledge in their service,
and introspection. Powerful to be sure, yet the
entire system requires an expenditure of no more
than 15 minutes a day.
In the final chapter
of Why Work Isn’t Working Anymore, the authors challenge
corporate America to open itself to fundamental
structural change via establishment of employee
happiness as a primary goal, and the embracement
of meaningful, healthy relationships between managers
and the employees for whom they are responsible
as the way to achieve that goal. These are relationships
based on a foundation of more than mutual economic
dependency, but in genuine care, compassion, and
concern.
“Endemic change in the ethos
of what work is, what work can become, and how our jobs
should fit into our lives is essential if half of the
American workforce, currently dissatisfied and discouraged
with work, is to salvage any joy and satisfaction from
their waking hours. Only by understanding why we are
not happy at work can we grasp the futility of continuing
to do the same old things in the same old ways, and
understand that by relegating the entire work experience
to economics we will continue to view work as being
something we give up in order to have the very things
that, in the end, will not make us happy or satisfied.”
The
three tools introduced in Why Work Isn’t Working Anymore
are the functional beginning of this effort and have
proven highly effective in a myriad of workplaces to
modify managerial behaviors, work environments, and
subsequently, beliefs about what work should provide
each of us.
This book is a significant
step toward the creation of the post-modern workplace,
a workplace in which managing and caring not only coexist
but are dependent upon one another.
Why Work Isn't Working Anymore
- Tools To Transform Your Workplace As If People Mattered
For fastest service, order from www.jimkarger.com.
Also available at www.amazon.com
and www.bn.com.