Saturday, May 1, 2021

Loving Work - NOT!

    According to Sigmund Freud, "Love and work are the cornerstones of humanness".

 

But it seems work is becoming well developed as a place where workers do not want to be and the cause seems to be a reversal to pre-Industrial Revolution, Theory X, Authoritarian management style. And worse still, I learn my beloved Human Resource function is complicit!

 

Despite the overwhelming evidence supporting the value of creating an environment at work which causes people to want to be at work and to give of their best, there is a strong sense of general dissatisfaction with ‘work’ which shocked me.

 

It seems the number of disengaged or downright unhappy employees is staggering. A Gallop poll has revealed that out of the world’s one billion fulltime workers, only 15% of the people are engaged at work, meaning an astounding 85% of people are unhappy in their jobs.

 

Scholars suggest that to live a life with meaning, people must fulfil three preconditions. First, they must have a purpose which gives them a sense of direction and which helps the world make sense to them. Second, they must feel they are part of something larger than themselves. Third, they must maintain connections with other people. knowing your sense of purpose is worth up to 7 years of extra life expectancy.

 

Given on average, we spend about 1/3rd of our lives at work, around 90,000 of our waking hours in a lifetime, work exerts a significant influence on ‘meaning’ in our lives and therefore our life expectancy.

 

The focus on workplace culture is relatively new with the Industrial Revolution as the turning point in the history of management. Companies grew far larger than ever before. Massive corporations with hundreds maybe thousands of employees sprouted up in this era. And different concepts of management developed.

 

Frederick Taylor’s ‘Principles of Scientific Management’ was one of the earliest proponents of management theory, arguing that managers and employees must work together. This was heresy for the Owner / Boss classes because until then most companies operated like dictatorships. They issued orders and expected employees to get on with the work.

 

About that time, Henri Foyal published ‘Administration Industrielle et Generale’, focusing on the administrative side of management, arguing managers were not interacting well with their employees and all employees should only have one manager.

 

Max Weber built on Taylor’s theory and whilst he argued similar principles, he also argued that the rise of technology could lead to a toxic workplace culture and too much change could affect morale.

 

These early concepts of management held that money was the main influencer of employee performance. However, a five year study by George Mayo focused on workplace conditions and how they affected productivity, brought new thinking.

 

His work, described as “The Hawthorne Effect”, found that relationships work as the key motivator for employees, and when working as part of a team, people became more productive. In short, job satisfaction increased through employee participation in decisions rather than through short-term incentives. Mayo’s work laid the foundations for the focus on teamwork that today’s management theories have. His work was the first to prove that the right people in the right teams leads to higher productivity.

 

Ludwig von Bertalanffy noted from a biologist’s perspective, an organisation is made up of various parts (departments) and of course people. All of the parts and people need to work together for both a successful business result and a good working environment. Ludwig also noted that personal issues outside of work can also affect an employee’s motivation levels.

 

Another significant contributor to our knowledge was Douglas McGregor who, in 1960 built on the teamwork related ideas from the Hawthorne Studies which he published in ‘The Human Side of Enterprise’. He presents two types of management, Theory X and Theory Y.

 

Theory X is easiest described as Authoritarianism, with managers taking a negative view of their employees and expecting to control everything believing that employees wouldn’t work unless they are pushed and or dragged

 

On the other side of that coin is Theory Y, a more positive approach to managing people – a belief that teamwork, professional development of and responsibility for employees, leads to a more positive and productive work environment, and overall workplace culture. Along with McGregor, there is no shortage of research and opinion that Theory Y is the better choice.

 

When I arrived in management, Peter Drucker was the management guru, being one of the first to portray management as a distinct function. He was a prolific author, with 33 books to his credit. It was in one of those, ‘The Concept of the Corporation’ he argued demotivation was rife, and initiative reduced to the minutiae of checks, rules, and controls. Bureaucracy slowed down decision making, created adversarial labour relations and did nothing for ‘creating the self-governing plant community’ – the phrase Drucker used for an empowered workforce. His thinking and wisdom form the basis of our modern view of effective management.

 


The expression Human Resource Management had been around for a while however, it
began to gain wider recognition at the beginning of the 1980s in the USA and late 1980s and early 1990s in the UK, which is when I became involved. Whilst the term Human Resource Management as we know it is attributed to Peter Drucker, Dave Ulrich has been referred to as the ‘Father of modern HR”.

 

It is about that time we began talking about ‘culture’ in business. The workplace culture is the environment created for employees. It is the mix of the organisation’s leadership, values, traditions, beliefs, interactions, behaviours, and attitudes that contribute to the emotional and relational environment of a workplace.

 

It is what makes a business unique, and the upside of a great culture is that it attracts talent, drives management, impacts happiness and satisfaction, and affects performance. It is the personality of the business. A good work culture is one which encourages employees to behave like a family and watch each other’s back.

 

Of course, a key influencer in creating a culture, good or bad, is the boss who has a huge impact on how employees feel. A telling brain-imaging study (*2) found that when employees recalled a boss that had been unkind or un-empathetic, they showed increased activation in the areas of the brain associated with avoidance and negative emotion while the opposite was true when they recalled an empathetic boss.

 

A recent example of current thinking is from Hamel & Zanini’s ‘Humanocracy’ (*1)

…organization infantilizes employees, enforces dull conformity, and discourages entrepreneurship, it wedges people into narrow roles, stymies personal growth and treats human beings as mere resources.”

 

Sadly, what I am hearing from diverse examples of ‘work’ is Un-kind, Theory X, Authoritarian management... and worse, that Human Resource staff, the ones whose job it was to facilitate the positive cultures, are becoming the most hated department in an organisation. WHAT! I was an HR pioneer, one of the first in the country, and I loved working with some amazing leaders who embodied all of that positive thinking about work in everything they said and did. I find myself stumbling to try and understand what the hell is going on at work these days.

 

Line managers have the final responsibility for a achieving the organisation’s goals. They also have the authority to direct the work of their teams. HR managers are staff experts, assisting line managers in areas like recruiting, training, compensating, and creating a positive working environment / culture. But be clear, the business line manager is there because they know the business. However, it seems HR has usurped line management and are dictating what will and will not happen. Line managers are becoming babysitters.

 

Why is that? There was a time when HR worked with and for the employees, but their role seems to be shifting to that of protecting the company from the employee, not to help the employee. As such HR is seen as the enemy, like the spouse’s lawyer in a bitter divorce settlement. They are generally too involved with policy and creating more roadblocks instead of removing them; are too focused on ‘administrivia’ instead of focusing on important things like culture, and the all-important  trust.

 

HR people, who should be the Ministers of Culture in their organisations, are often seen as culture killers instead. In a TimesJobs Study they note, “…Most HR functions are still structured for an industrial economy rather than a people economy…HR leaders need to make concerted efforts to improve their employee engagements, HRM practices, policies, and procedures…” (*3)

 

In The Arts Mechanical, ‘The HR Secret Police’, J.C. Carlton writes, “The problem is that HR is bureaucratic by nature. … any bureaucracy will work for its own purposes rather than those of the organisation that the bureaucracy is supposed to be supporting.”

 

Ironically, an unemployed job seeker might say “If I had a job, I wouldn’t complain! I’d be grateful just to have a pay cheque.” The reason many people hang on to their unhappy job, is simply to just pay the bills. And hating their job becomes ‘normal’. They see jobs as modern-day slavery. It seems many employees worldwide wake up every day and rather than looking forward to a day of work, they drag themselves to the workplace, looking forward to ‘hump’ day and counting days to the weekend. 

 

(*1) Humanocracy – Creating Organizations As Amazing As The People Inside Them. Gary Hamel & Michele Zanini. Harvard Business Review Press. 2020

 

(*2) Examination of the neutral substrates activated in memories of experiences with resonant and dissonant leaders. Richard E. Boyatzis in The Leadership Quarterly – Volume 23 Issue 2 April 2012 pages 259-272

 

(*3) Nilanjan Roy, Head of Strategy, Times Business Solutions

 

#loveworknot    #goodleaders    #hrgonebad    #empoweredworkforce    #ingeoffsopinion