Category Archives: Workforce News

The Value of a ‘Portable’ Career

chargerslt01sunny

Stellar teamwork and star talent will be on display February 1 at the National Football League’s annual Super Bowl, in Tampa Bay, Florida. For football fans, the much-awaited Super Bowl is the highlight of the year.

Minus the dramatic interceptions and exciting touchdowns, however, football teams are not so different from organizational teams in other fields of life, including business. And watching the career moves of football stars may shed light on how you, too, can plan your next step.

That’s the message of new research by HBS professor Boris Groysberg, Lex Sant, and Robin Abrahams. Their case study “When Stars Migrate, Do They Still Perform Like Stars?” looks at the “portability” of performance and the likelihood that some positions may improve or diminish one’s prospects for career advancement. In autumn 2008, Groysberg and coauthors described their work on the National Football League in the MIT Sloan Management Review.

“As research on the National Football League reveals, sometimes the specific nature of a job determines whether a great performer at one company can replicate that performance at another,” they wrote.

The lessons are directly relevant for hiring managers, too, says Groysberg. “Managers might want to think strategically about what positions they can hire a top-notch outsider for, and which ones they’re better off developing talent for inside the organization.”

To continue reading click here.

50 Best Companies to Work For (2009)

Glassdoor.com released today their listing of the 50 best companies to work for (2009). Having worked with some of these companies I think their inclusion is a little suspect, but can you really expect perfection with these kind of things? Although if your job hunting, this list may not be a bad place to start.

50-best-companies

Does Working for a Bigger Company Mean you are Happier?

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Employees working at large companies tend to be happier than counterparts at smaller firms, according to a survey by a human resources consulting firm. The Beacon Group of Toronto measured satisfaction in four areas: management support, career development opportunities, compensation and work environment/co-workers. “Large companies scored equal or higher in every category,” but received particularly high marks for their compensation and commitment to career advancement, Beacon Group says. However, researchers point out that employees at smaller companies sense greater control over their role in the organization and its work environment, whereas workers at larger companies may have grown complacent about their ability to influence the workplace environment.

Agriprocessors Has One Option – Step-Up

postville

After the infamous Postville raids, the Iowa meatpacking company has attempted to keep production up by hiring the most marginalized populations: ex-offenders, Somali refugees, homeless people, and workers from Palau (and when not able to employ on their own using unscrupulous staffing companies to act as a proxy for worker mistreatment).  But since the raids, the company has been unable to reach previous staffing levels.

The company has filed for bankruptcy and reopened with a skeleton crew but haven’t come close to pre-raid production levels.  To continue production, Agriprocessors may have to (*gasp*) start paying its workers a living wage.

A Chicago Tribune article details the history of low wages in the meatpacking industry:

“There was a time when meatpacking plant jobs paid well, when there was no difficulty at all in obtaining native born workers ” said Stull, the Kansas professor. “Beginning in the 1960s, that changed. The wages were driven down and plants were moved to states where being a union member wasn’t required.”

When adjusted for inflation, meatpacking wages have plummeted since the 1960s, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Slaughterhouse jobs paid an average of $2.60 an hour in 1960, which when adjusted for inflation would be about $19 in current dollars.

Slaughterhouses paid an average of $11.81 an hour in 2007, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.

The decline in wages has been especially steep since around 1980, when the $8.49 average hourly wage would now be worth $22.31 when adjusted for inflation.

As the economy worsens and the anti-immigrant folks continue protesting any comprehensive plan for immigration reform, it seems hard choices are emerging.  Will companies that have been raided raise wages to provide jobs for native born workers?  And if so, how will the consumer react to higher food prices?

To read the entire article from the Chicago Tribune, click here.

Is it Legal to Work for a Buck?

one-dollar

The CEOs of the Big Three auto companies have just agreed to accept salaries of $1 per year.

Which other big-time bosses earn $1 salaries?

Eric Schmidt… CEO of Google
Steve Jobs… CEO of Apple
John Mackey… CEO of Whole Foods
Michael Bloomberg… Mayor of New York City

Click here to learn why such salaries don’t violate minimum-wage laws.

Layoffs an Excuse to Shed Bad Hires?

stop-sign

Nothing is as tricky for hiring directors as making the right employee selection from a field of applicants. Research released by the Washington-based Recruiting Roundtable underscores this point. It finds that either organizations or their newly hired employees wind up regretting their choice. The result: Employees are less committed to their new organizations, costing organizations millions of dollars in lower performance and higher turnover. The study aims to quantify the negative impact of poor hiring decisions. One key factor is that about 40 percent of new employees say the information they received when applying for the job turned out to be “less than accurate.”

The Roundtable study analyzed data from more than 8,500 hiring managers and 19,000 of their most recently hired employees. Three important reasons emerged to explain why companies consistently fail to hire high-quality candidates: “[Companies] over-rely on candidates describing themselves,” rather than forcing them to demonstrate their abilities; organizations don’t “follow a consistent, evidence-based selection decision process”; and employers “fail to provide the candidate with enough information” regarding the true nature of the job.

Hmmm,companies misrepresenting their job and candidates misrepresenting themselves – sounds like business as usual. That is one of the biggest problems when companies allow their managers to hire from “gut” feelings as opposed to any outside measurement of candidate suitiblity.

‘Made in America’ Must make a Comeback

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One thing the financial crisis shows is that the United States is in trouble because Americans have stopped making stuff.

It used to be that we made a lot of stuff: televisions, clothes, washing machines, radios, typewriters, shoes, telephones, and furniture. And we also used to make the stuff out of which stuff was made: steel, aluminum, plastic, rubber, glass, and electrical components. Today that’s largely made overseas. They send us their stuff and we send them our money.

It also used to be that Americans liked to make stuff. Think of all the things Thomas Edison invented. Or consider Henry Ford, who made the car affordable, perfected the assembly line, and paid workers a decent wage. Countless others, such as my grandfather, worked as toolmakers and machinists because they liked to work with their hands. Today we rely on people around the world to do that innovation for us.

To be sure, outsourcing has some benefits, but the danger in abrogating our desire to make things is that, in doing so, we forget what made America great. It wasn’t manipulating money; it was hard work and persistence. It wasn’t “flipping houses”; it was having a dream and being patient and self-sacrificing to achieve that dream. It wasn’t speculative gambling; it was belief in a line of labor that rewarded honest risk. Forgetting that contributes to America’s deterioration.

To continue reading click here.

Google in Trouble? Contractor Jail Break?

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Reports are surfacing that Google has begun eliminating some of its 10,000 contract workers, trimming expenses in the face of a declining stock price and slow online ad growth. Included in that number, according to several sources, including Daya Baran, president of The Web Guild, are 500 recruiters.

The company signaled in October during its third quarter financial presentation that it intended to reduce expenses. Sergey Brin, co-founder of Google, told The (San Jose) Mercury News, that the company had a plan to reduce its contract workforce by improving its vendor management, converting some contractors to employees and “other approaches.” “It’s really high,” the newspaper quoted Brin as saying of the number of contractors.

Google reported in its most recent filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission that it has 20,123 employees. Among the 10,000 contractors are cafeteria workers, bus drivers, groundskeepers, off- and on-site programmers, and technical workers and others.

In a CNET story this week, Google spokeswoman Jane Penner didn’t provide a specific number of the contractors to be let go, but was quoted saying, “We have 10,000, and we have had a plan in place for awhile to significantly reduce that number.”

While the news may be hitting contractors hard, it’s creating opportunity for recruiters. A few have started posting contact information on sites where stories about the layoffs are appearing.

As for the laid off recruiters, one person posted to the Web Guild blog that they signed non-disclosure agreements prohibiting them from discussing their work with Google and, presumably, the terms of their termination.

Click here: Forbes also has some inside dirt on what is going on in case you are interested.

Visual: Where the Job Cuts are taking Place by Industry

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Click on image to enlarge.

HT: Jeanne C. Meister, New Learning Playbook

How Many U.S. Jobs are Offshorable?

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Some 900 Harvard Business School students were asked to recreate a study assessing the potential “offshorability” of more than 800 occupations in the United States. Their findings: It might be a larger number than we thought.

Key concepts include:

  • Management students are likely tomorrow to face an unprecedented array of options concerning what they can do where.
  • Increasingly, jobs are being viewed as groups of tasks that can be bundled, unbundled, and sent to different places.
  • Offshoring could come to an end just as quickly as it began.

To read the report click here.

Insane Job? Could you ride for the Pony Express?

pony-express

To see if you think you could be a Pony Express rider I must introduce you to Lil’ Charlie Miller, a.k.a., Bronco Charlie, he became the youngest rider of the Pony Express at just 11 years old. So, what’d it take to be a rider? The typical “help wanted” ad called for,”Young, skinny, wiry fellows. Not over 18. Must be expert riders. Willing to risk death daily. Orphans preferred.”

Now is that a dream job or what? and you think you have it bad.

How to Boost Your Job Satisfaction

You dreamed about an ideal job in which you’d be motivated, inspired, respected and well paid. And for a while, your job may have been all that.

But now it seems the honeymoon is over. You’ve lost your job satisfaction, and you find it harder and harder to get through the workday. And that means your stress is mounting. Learn what you can do to reignite your job satisfaction and reduce your stress.

Why you can lose job satisfaction

Lack of job satisfaction can be a significant source of daily stress. To help get your stress back under control, figure out what exactly has caused you to sour on your job.

Reasons why you may have lost job satisfaction can include:

  • Bickering co-workers
  • Conflict with your supervisor
  • Not being appropriately paid for what you do
  • Not having the necessary equipment or resources to succeed
  • Lack of opportunities for promotion
  • Having little or no say in decisions that affect you
  • Fear of losing your job
  • Work that you find boring or overly routine
  • Work that doesn’t tap into your education, skills or interests

Take some time to think about what motivates and inspires you. You may even want to work with a career counselor to complete a formal assessment of your interests, skills and passions. Then explore some strategies to increase your job satisfaction.

The link between work approach and job satisfaction

Work is often approached from three perspectives. Usually all three perspectives are important for job satisfaction, but one is often the priority:

  • It’s a job. If you approach work as a job, you focus primarily on the financial rewards. In fact, the nature of the work may hold little interest for you. What’s important is the money. If a job with more pay comes your way, you’ll likely move on.
  • It’s a career. If you approach work as a career, you’re interested in advancement. You want to climb the career ladder as far as possible or be among the most highly regarded professionals in your field. You’re motivated by the status, prestige and power that come with the job.
  • It’s a calling. If you approach your job as a calling, you focus on the work itself. You work less for the financial gain or career advancement than for the fulfillment the work brings.

Do you recognize your approach to work? One approach isn’t necessarily better than the others. But it’s helpful to reflect on why you work if you’re unsatisfied with your job and are ready to move on. Think about what originally drew you to your current job, and whether it may be a factor in your lack of job satisfaction.

Strategies to improve your job satisfaction

Depending on the underlying cause of your lack of job satisfaction, there may be several ways to increase your job satisfaction.

Set new challenges
If you’re stuck in a job because of lack of education or a downturn in the economy, it doesn’t mean your work has to become drudgery. With a little imagination, you can create new challenges and make the best of the job you have. Here are some ideas that may help.

  • Improve your job skills. Imagining yourself in your dream job, you might envision yourself as an excellent project manager — a confident communicator and a highly organized person. Why not work on these skills in your present job?
  • Develop your own project. Take on a project that can motivate you and give you a sense of control. Start small, such as organizing a work-related celebration, before moving on to larger goals. Working on something you care about can boost your confidence.
  • Mentor a co-worker. Once you’ve mastered a job, you may find it becoming routine. Helping a new co-worker or an intern advance his or her skills can restore the challenge and the satisfaction you desire.

Beat the boredom
Does your job seem boring sometimes? Do you run out of things to do? If so, your abilities may not match your responsibilities. Here are some suggestions:

  • Break up the monotony. Take advantage of your work breaks. Read. Listen to music. Go for a walk. Write a letter.
  • Cross-training. Does your work consist of repetitive tasks, such as entering data or working on an assembly line? Talk with your boss about training for a different task to combat boredom. Once you’ve completed the training, you can switch back and forth.
  • Volunteer for something different. If you hear that your company is launching a new project, volunteer for the work team.

Keep in mind that boredom can literally be deadly if your job involves working with machinery or caring for people. If your mind wanders to the point that you put your life or the lives of others in jeopardy, take action now. Talk to your supervisor about new challenges you can take on or seek a new position.

Stay positive
Use positive thinking to reframe your thoughts about your job. Changing your attitude about work won’t necessarily happen overnight or increase your job satisfaction overnight. But if you’re alert to ways your view of work brings you down, you can improve your job satisfaction. Try these techniques:

  • Stop negative thoughts. Pay attention to the messages you give yourself. When you catch yourself thinking your job is terrible, stop the thought in its tracks.
  • Put things in perspective. Remember, everyone encounters good days and bad days on the job.
  • Look for the silver lining. “Reframing” can help you find the good in a bad situation. For example, you receive a less than perfect performance appraisal and your boss warns you to improve or move to another job. Instead of taking it personally or looking for another job right away, look for the silver lining. Depending on where you work, the silver lining may be attending continuing education classes or working closely with a performance coach and having the satisfaction of showing your boss that you’re capable of change.
  • Learn from your mistakes. Failure is one of the greatest learning tools, but many people let failure defeat them. When you make a mistake at work, learn from it and try again. It doesn’t mean that you’re a failure.
  • Be grateful. Gratitude can help you focus on what’s positive about your job. Ask yourself, “What am I grateful for at work today?” If it’s only that you’re having lunch with a friendly co-worker, that’s OK. But find at least one thing you’re grateful for and savor it.

More job satisfaction can mean less stress

Whether your work is a job, a career or a calling, you can take steps to restore meaning to your job. Make the best of difficult work situations by being positive. Doing so will help you manage your stress and experience the rewards of your profession.

Starbucks Helps Ike Recovery Effort

Starbucks stores are playing a unique role in Hurricane Ike recovery efforts.

According to CNN, residents who have lost their homes or had their homes damaged are gathering at local Starbucks stores to take advantage of the AC, wireless internet and the sense of community.

“It’s a gathering place… they want to come in and talk to their neighbors and the barista behind the counter,” said Amy Christensen, a Houston-based director of business operations for Starbucks.

Customers and employees are also sharing information about where to locate necessities like eggs and milk.

The sales idea: What if your company (or store or organization) could create a similar sense of community and mutual support every day? What would the effect be on morale… and your bottom line?

Click to read the entire story.

Saving the World at Work

For those of you that know me you know I read a lot of books, and while I do get asked about a lot of different business books there is really only one author that I recommend all of the time. His name is Tim Sanders, and I believe he has the best grasp on business and culture and how they should integrate. His new book Saving the World at Work launches today and I really encourage you to order a copy. I would also encourage you to order his other books as well. His writing is very compelling and straight to the point – I promise if you read one of his books you will be hooked and your workplace will be better for it.

Along with his new book he has launched a site for people to come together and share best practices in a social networking environment.

If you have read Tim before I would love to hear your opinion of his other books.

E-Verify Fails to Cover Company From Immigration Raid

Feds arrest 595 suspected illegal workers of a Mississippi company in a raid that likely will add fuel to business opposition to the government verification system.

Howard Industries, a Mississippi manufacturer of electrical products, is the latest example of a company being targeted for immigration enforcement despite using a government-run employment verification system.

The incident, however, is unlikely to derail legislation to extend the program’s authorization or to affect a proposed federal regulation to make the government system, called E-Verify, mandatory for federal contractors, some say.

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement arrested 595 Howard workers suspected of being illegal in an August 25 raid that likely will add fuel to smoldering opposition to the government verification system by business groups.

“Howard Industries runs every check allowed to ascertain the immigration status of all applicants for jobs,” the company said in a statement. “It is company policy that it hires only U.S. citizens and legal immigrants.”

The 595 workers were charged with identity theft and fraudulent use of Social Security numbers.

To continue reading click here.

Sign Language for Cell Phones

For the hearing-impaired, communicating via cell phone has largely been limited to text messaging. Now, a team of researchers at the University of Washington has developed software that incorporates video so that American Sign Language can be used on mobile phones.

Because video requires much faster transmission speeds than text, the low transmission rates and limited processing power of devices available in the United States have prevented the development of real-time video transmission. The MobileASL project will work on improving video compression, which could facilitate communication on slower services.

“The faster networks are not available everywhere,” says doctoral student Anna Cavender. “They also cost more. We don’t think it’s fair for someone who’s deaf to have to pay more for his or her cell phone than someone who’s hearing.”

A working prototype of the MobileASL phone can be viewed on YouTube:

Should You Only Hire Amish Workers?

The WSJ published a story Friday about consumers hiring Amish contractors and subcontractors to build homes for folks who are not part of the strict conservative Christian sect. The lure being the Amish community’s tradition of craftsmanship and their renowned work ethic. Of course there is another bonus in employing a community that has long shunned modern living. Because of their restrictive set of beliefs, most Amish builders use family members and don’t pay unemployment benefits, worker’s compensation or insurance. That means that overhead costs are staggeringly low, an irresistible factor that clients uniformly found resulted in their houses being built not only faster but much cheaper than if they had hired non-Amish contractors. It was a fact that seemed to outweigh the downsides of using a workforce that is forbidden to own a phone, computer, or drive and who will most likely not have insurance or sign a comprehensive contract.

But for every set of restrictions whether imposed by the law or a higher authority there is a loophole. While Amish aren’t allowed to own power tools, they can use somebody elses; although they themselves are forbidden to drive, they can be driven, ditto when it comes to the use of somebody else’s telephone.

To continue reading click here.

What are the Most Prestigious Jobs?

Results of the annual Harris Poll measuring public perceptions of 23 professions and occupations, conducted by telephone between July 8 and 13, 2008, by Harris Interactive® among a nationwide sample of 1,010 U.S. adults, indicate that firefighters, scientists, doctors, nurses and teachers are seen as the most prestigious of a list of 23 occupations. Real estate agents, stockbrokers, bankers, accountants and entertainers come at the bottom of the list.

Most Prestigious Occupations
 

 

The occupations at the top of the list are:

  • Firefighter (57% say “very great prestige”);
  • Scientist (56%);
  • Doctor (53%);
  • Nurse (52%);
  • Teacher (52%)

When the numbers for “very great” and “considerable prestige” are added, all of these occupations are very favorably regarded by 74 percent or more of all adults.

Least Prestigious Occupations
 

 

Only 15 percent or fewer adults regard the following occupations as having very great prestige:

  • Real estate agent/broker (6%);
  • Stock broker (10%);
  • Banker (15%);
  • Accountant (15%);
  • Entertainer (15%)

Substantial majorities of adults (from 61% to 83%) believe that these occupations have “hardly any” or only “some” prestige.

Additionally, several occupations are regarded as “very prestigious” by more people this year than they were last year:

  • Engineer, up ten points to 40 percent from last year
  • Actor, up seven points to 16 percent
  • Architect, up five points to 28 percent
  • Journalist, up five points to 18 percent
  • Union leaders, also up five points to 18 percent
  • Banker, up five points to 15 percent.

However, even with these improvements, bankers, actors, union leaders and journalists land near the bottom of the list with “very prestigious” ratings below 20 percent.

Two occupations, which still have relatively high prestige scores, lost more than five points since last year:

  • Military officer, down six points to 46 percent
  • Doctor, down six points to 53 percent.

So what do you think did the people in the survey get it right or are some missing? Do the ones at the bottom of the list deserve to be there?

Which Class Are You Recruiting? America’s Four Middle Classes

The Top of the Class, the Satisfied Middle, the Anxious Middle and the Struggling Middle: A new study from the Pew Social and Demographic Trends Project documents the attitudes and experiences that unite and divide the majority of Americans who call themselves “middle class.” Read more

Diploma Mill BUSTED! and Buyers Publicly Named

It is sad to say that people are willing to cross ethical boundaries in order to obtain a fake degree, especially with all the opportunities for higher education in today’s digital age. Apparently there over 10,000 fake doctors, high school graduates, computer software engineers with great looking degrees claiming they are Ph.D’s, MBA’s, and everything else you can imagine. Well, at least for now some have been busted and named. The sad thing is that the positions these people obtained with their fake degrees are pretty amazing. We’re talking military, government agencies, educational institutions, police work and even a NASA employee. You may inadvertently have even hired some of these people and not even know it – because you must not be doing education verifications. So check the list and let the chips fall where they may.

Moral of the story: Education verification is a very good thing.

To see the list of names of those that have bought these phony degrees and to check out your employee roster click here.