WHY WORK HAS GOTTEN A BAD NAME
MANAGEMENT LOST IN THE SHUFFLE
James R. Fisher, Jr., Ph.D.
© April 18, 2014
REFERENCE:
The response across
the globe to these little vignettes from my proofreading and editing of “Six
Silent Killers” finds me supplying another.
You may be in the
United States, United Kingdom, France, Spain, Germany, Russia, the Ukraine,
South Korea, China, or Taiwan for you are part of this vast audience and constant
viewers of this blog.
Each workplace has
its own unique culture, which either works for workers and managers, or it
doesn’t. This vignette may give some
insight into the problem as discussed in this book. For within each of these nations, the
workplace has an indigenous culture that reflects its history, industry and its
workers and managers. Chances are it is experiencing
contretemps especially in these difficult times. We may speak many different languages, live
in various national cultures, but the culture, wherever we are on the globe, is
most likely to be unique to that particular workplace.
EFFECTIVENESS IS A MATTER OF CULTURE
Culture, as defined
here, is the workplace climate and the shared values, beliefs, and expectations
of workers and managers.
Culture is a recent managerial
obsession, triggered by its emphasis by the human resources department (HRD).
Over the past several years, HRD has attempted, unsuccessfully, to untangle the
sins of organization with cultural manipulation.
Senior management can
now mouth the words, such as climate and culture, without understanding their
meaning. What is not communicated is that cultural bias dictates behavior.
Unless the focus is on cultural bias, all cultural modification will be
essentially cosmetic and ineffective.
Established rites,
rituals, and rhetoric dominate the will of the organization, with the informal
group controlling the ebb and flow of how these established practices are working.
Inherent in this informal structure is the current mindset, not only toward
these cultural biases but toward the organization as well.
The combination of
this mindset and these biases dictates behavior—what is tolerated, expected,
believed, valued, and experienced. There can be no discernible change without
first understanding and then dealing with this reality. It is natural for the
organization to resist change no matter how good the change might be—logic does
not operate at this level—because it prefers to sustain its known value and
belief system. To ignore this fact and to go plunging ahead without first
dealing with it is to spell inevitable doom for the change process.
The formal
organization is essential to generate an appropriate operating philosophy,
consistent policy with a mission focus, and a fair-minded value system for
growth and development. It creates the rites of passage, the rituals of
operation, and the message of the mission. Once this is done, the informal
group reacts to these directives and interprets them in its own best interest.
The interpretation
and reaction to this set of interventions determine the workplace culture. It
is this relationship between senior management and operating personnel that
spells success or failure in any organization. Culture is always created from
above and interpreted from below. If both are on the same page, everything runs
as smooth as silk; if not, operations bound out of control.
Management exerts
little real influence on informal behavior once the cultural variables are
defined and assimilated. Should they be changed, workers must be involved in
the process for verification, acceptance, and support.
What we have seen in
recent times is that circumstances have forced organizations to change quickly
to stay afloat. Expediency became policy. Panic was reflected in a series of
faddish activities—from “T” (sensitivity) groups to Quality Control Circles (QCCs),
from team building to sensitivity training, from Muzak to ergonomic work
centers, from worker-wellness programs to company-sponsored beer blasts on Friday
night, from Managing by Objectives (MBOs) to Total Quality Management (TQM),
from 40-hour work weeks to flex time, from company daycare centers to employee
assistance programs (EAPs), from shared management to symbolic management… and
on it goes!
There is nothing
wrong with any of these interventions except for one thing—they were done to
the workers and for the workers with little or no input from the workers before
the fact. They were gratuitous interventions—like giving candy to a baby not to
cry—which made workers feel even less in charge than ever before. Workers
didn’t show their resentment up front. They went underground and surfaced with
the “six silent killers”: passive
aggression, passive defensive, passive responsive, approach avoidance,
obsessive compulsive and malicious obedience behaviors.
These interventions
were tactics, not grand strategies. They demonstrated the panic of buying time.
Work has changed.
Workers have changed. Real work has gotten a bad name or gotten lost in the shuffle.
Value change, which is essential to behavioral change, is served poorly by
cosmetic changes. Fad merchants know their clients and their impatience. The
quickest way for them to lose a sale is to tell senior management that it has
to change first, which means the structure and function of work, before anything else changes. Management,
consequently, has gotten what it expected and wanted—quick fixes and
non-involvement.
Management remains
obsessed with the idea of culture while becoming compulsive in its actions
toward it. There is no point in assessing blame. No one could have predicted
the incredible changes or the demands of these changes in the workplace in so short
a time. Management, in its naiveté, thought that whatever it did would get it
to where it wanted to go. That has proven false. Preoccupation with fads has found the workplace
going from the Culture of Comfort (management dependent) to the Culture of Complacency
(counter dependent on the company or organization), at the expense of the
Culture of Contribution (interdependence between workers and managers).
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