Minding Your Own Brand Presented by IMAGEidentity

April 2006

 

Why does work have to suck?

By Dave Lubelczyk

Earlier this month, I took the commuter rail into Boston to go to a conference. This is a trip which was very familiar to me as I used to take this train when I worked in the city, but this time it was different. Unlike my past trips, I was excited and looking forward to my day. I was going to the Great Places to Work Conference which was full of business leaders who loved where they worked and did all they could to create organizations where going to work is an extremely positive experience.

This was a stark contrast to what I saw around me. Most of my fellow commuters had drained looks on their faces and they trudged along as if they were on a death march to an internment camp. As I walked along with this crowd, I realized that not many of these people had jumped out of bed and said, “Hooray, I’m going to work today and boy will it be fun!”; at least not without a sarcastic tone in their voice.

Why are so many work places draining the life out of their people and what is the dysfunction of these organizations doing to the strength of these companies’ brands?

I once knew someone who was deciding between two jobs: one that paid extremely well but would be a job he hated, and one job that paid barely enough for him to live on but he knew he would love. He told me of some advice a friend gave him. “Face it, all work sucks. I hate my job, everyone else hates their jobs, so why do you feel you should be able to like what you do? Therefore, you might as well take the job that pays the most because at least the money eases the pain.”

With that kind of attitude do you think that person provides great customer service to his company’s clients? Do you think he is constantly looking for innovative ways to improve the company’s product or save the company money? Probably not. He punches his card, does what he “has to do” and gets the heck out of there as fast as he can at the end of the day. The sad thing is that a great number of workers feel the same way as him, yet most companies can’t understand why their brands are losing dominance in the marketplace.

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Issue 120

This Month's Recommended Reading

 

When Fish Fly

Lessons for Creating a Vital and Energized Workplace - From the World Famous Pike Place Fish Market

by John Yokoyama, Joseph Michell

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