Maybe Scrooge Was Right
Article Overview: According to Right Management, a subsidiary of Manpower Inc, only thirteen percent of employees surveyed said they "planned to stay in their current positions." Two-thirds reported they're looking to change jobs in 2010, and another twenty-one percent indicated they're networking now, just in case.
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Free Download - Deliberate Black Hole Tactics By Nan Russell
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Maybe Scrooge Was Right
Thirteen percent. That number should make you pause if you manage staff, lead a group, or own a business. It's a number recently released from an on-line survey reported by Reuters.
According to Right Management, a subsidiary of Manpower Inc, only thirteen percent of employees surveyed said they "planned to stay in their current positions." Two-thirds reported they're looking to change jobs in 2010, and another twenty-one percent indicated they're networking now, just in case.
Pent-up frustrations and workplace treatment during the economic downturn were the primary reasons given in the survey. But don't just blame the recession. Disengaged employees are not new news. Gallup was reporting nearly seventy percent of the U.S. workforce disengaged well before recent economic troubles. Why? Why this level of disengagement?
A massive job shifting or the workplace equivalent of musical chairs won't solve the inherent underlying problems that plague many workplaces, businesses, organizations, and communities. It won't fix what's broken.
At least Bob Cratchit didn't expect his boss, Ebenezer Scrooge, to hire someone to help him with his mounting workload, didn't anticipate going home to his family before bedtime, or hope for a workplace where his ideas were encouraged or his talents engaged. He didn't expect a raise or benefits or days off.
No, as self-serving and stone-hearted as Dickens' character was, Bob Cratchit understood Scrooge was who he said he was. He didn't profess that Bob was his most important asset, or suggest if Bob worked harder he'd get rewarded. Scrooge didn't claim that they were in it together, or that they both were suffering in economy downtimes.
Scrooge made no such proclamations. He rendered no unkept promises. He set no expectations that if deadlines were met, quarterly goals achieved or problems solved, that Bob would be rewarded, help would arrive, or the workplace improved.
In this respect, Scrooge got it right. What he said and what he did were in alignment. What plagues many workplaces a hundred and fifty years later is that our alignment is way off. What we say and what we do as leaders and managers in most organizations fuels the spiral of discontent and distrust. And too often, we don't even know it.
The transformation of Ebenezer Scrooge from self-serving boss to enlightened man is more harrowing than most workplace ah-has. But for those of us who lead organizations, manage teams, or run businesses we may soon face our own nightmare if this projected upheaval of employees emerges in our organizations.
Of course, I'm not suggesting that just because Scrooge matched his actions and words, his despicable management style is to be emulated. But I am suggesting that we need to look in our respective organizational mirrors. How can we expect a sustainable economic recovery with a workforce of disengaged employees?
Like Scrooge, we've been given the gift of sight of what a future could be. And like him, we can use that vision to transform ourselves and our organizations. There's still time to ignite the talents of those we lead, rebuild the trust, open a dialogue, and build a winning future together.
(c) 2009 Nan S. Russell. All rights reserved.
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Related Forum Posts
Re: Favorite Christmas movies
- [quote="OmnivoreInk":1rxsgr0t]I do have to say I've never liked[i:1rxsgr0t] It's A Wonderful Life[/i:1rxsgr0t]. He spends all his life having his hopes and dreams shattered, feeling miserable, and its only at the end of his life that he can look back and realize how many friends he has, etc. But that doesn't change the fact that up until that point he was miserable![/quote:1rxsgr0t]
I love the sentimentality around watching that movie with your Mom! Chtistmas is made up of all those sentimental things.
"It's A Wonderful Life" is all about perspective, much in the same way that Scrooge is 'realigned' in Charles Dickens' "A Christmas Carol" - which I listen to on CD every year (sometimes twice!)
Happy Christmas Everyone!
Regards
Martin
Favorite Christmas movies
- Back when us kids were young (my parents had 3), my mom, sister and I would watch White Christmas every Christmas. (My dad and brother were never interested.)
Now the rest of the family is scattered, and only I live close to my parents. We got away from the tradition, but now my mom and I watch [i:1h8kfk2v]White Christmas[/i:1h8kfk2v] again. (Just as every Halloween we watch Arsenic and Old Lace.)
I also like the 1970 musical [i:1h8kfk2v]Scrooge[/i:1h8kfk2v], starring Albert Finney, much better than any version done since!
I do have to say I've never liked[i:1h8kfk2v] It's A Wonderful Life[/i:1h8kfk2v]. He spends all his life having his hopes and dreams shattered, feeling miserable, and its only at the end of his life that he can look back and realize how many friends he has, etc. But that doesn't change the fact that up until that point he was miserable!
Top 50 Entrepreneurs Ever!
- And the Top 50 Entrepreneurs of all time are…
(In no particular order)
Hugh Hefner – Obvious.
Oprah – Born to a single mother in rural Mississippi, did what she loved and never let up. Popularized and revolutionized the tabloid talk show genre.
Simon Cowell – Guy made millions off Karaoke.
Jenna Jameson – Worth $70 million using only what god gave her.
Henry Ford – Standardized efficiency.
Thomas Edison – Numerous failures on the road to success. Perseverance!
Adrian Block - 1612 establish the first known brewery in the New World on the southern tip of New Amsterdam (Manhattan). I live in a city with more than 30 breweries operating in the city limits…think these guys were onto something.
Hans Christiansen – Partners with Adrian Block.
Adam Osborne – Creator of the 1st personal computer.
Howard Hughes – Say what you want about him the man had a vision and stuck to it.
Madame C.J. Walker – 1st Female African American Millionaire…and she did it in early 1900’s. Safe to say she had a lot of obstacles, but persevered and prospered. If you think you have more working against you than Madame C.J. Walker did, think again.
Mary Kay Ash – The woman behind Mary Kay cosmetics. Redefined affiliate marketing.
Howard Schultz – Who’s gonna’ pay $4.00 for a cup of coffee? With $2.5 billion plus in total revenue the answer at Starbuck’s is a lot!
Alexander Graham Bell – Inventing the telephone in 1876 was about as wacky an idea as teleportation is today…did that stop him?
King Croesus – Minted the world’s first coin in 6th century.
Benjamin Franklin – Author, printer, inventor, businessman.
Ray Croc – Where do you go for dinner when you spent all your money on $4.00 Starbuck’s coffee? McDonald’s! Franchising and national expansion (both stores and waistlines) would never be the same.
Sam Walton – Speaking of saving money and expanding like crazy. Sam Walton found a niche and filled it, regardless of what you think of the extra traffic Wal-Mart brings to your neighborhood.
Ernest Gallo – Took what was once an exclusive product and repackaged it for the masses. I was 20 years old before I knew wine came in anything but a “jug”.
William Middlebrook – Giving William the nod for inventing the paper clip, although some debate remains. However, you have to include the inventor of the paper clip in this list since we’ve all said, at one time or another, “and whoever invented the paperclip is rich, and I’m still working in this crappy office!”
Bill Gates – Took a risk and was a first mover in a market that exploded.
Steve Jobs – Make your products easy and people will love to use them…making a dead sexy laptop doesn’t hurt either.
Mayer Amschel Rothschild – Started the world’s first international bank in the mid 1700’s. What did you do today?
Scrooge McDuck - Scrooge has emerged from being a mere supporting character to a major figure of the Duck universe. Parlayed early success into his own comic book series, television appearances, films, and video games. As big as David Hasselhoff in Europe, he seized opportunity when it arose.
Russell Simmons – Worth $325 million, and started as a teen street hustler. A hip hop pioneer and visionary who has shaped the hip-hop scene of the early 80’s, has branched off into fashion, television and film. And I don’t care if you grew up in Brooklyn or Beverly Hills you remember “Russell Simmons Def Comedy Jam”.
Ron Popeil – Net worth in excess of $100 million dollars. A consummate salesman, he had us believing we NEEDED a food dehydrator and spray paint to cover our bald spot!
The Phoenicians – Inventors of the sail boat, and could be credited then with giving our early explorers the means to take over the western hemisphere.
H. Ross Perot – Used a $1,000 loan from his wife in 1962 to start Electronic Data Systems. Became a billionaire as computer systems drove the need for electronic data storage.
JP Morgan – How many people get credited with having saved or rescued the U.S. national economy in general—and the federal government in particular—on two separate occasions? Not many, and JP was a merger monger legend in his time.
Charles Schwab – Founder and CEO of the Schwab Corporation, made having a broker cool and accessible. Worth $5.5 billion for his efforts.
Larry Page – Google, need we say more?
Sergey Brin - Google, need we say more?
Philip Knight – In partnership with Bill Bowerman created Nike. What’s the reward for taking a product everyone uses and making it functional and fashionable? Try a net worth in excess of $9 billion dollars.
George Lucas – Start with a vision, add some talent, and never waiver. Stars Wars is as well known on this planet as Coca-Cola, and Lucas is worth a cool $3.6 billion.
Doctor John Pemberton – Pharmacist who in 1886 invented Coca Cola. Forced to change his formula from including wine due to prohibition his elixir with “tonic and nerve stimulant properties of the coca plant and cola nuts sweetened with sugar” became a sensation.
Eberhand Anheuser- Founder of Anheuser Busch Brewing and Budweiser beer…thank you sir for the many mornings where I regretted the night before.
Adolphus Busch - Founder of Anheuser Busch Brewing and Budweiser beer…bless you for allowing me to think I am funny, great looking, and a fabulous dancer for a few hours every Saturday night.
Jeff Bezos – Founded Amazon.com in 1994, and wrote up the business plan for his company on a cross country drive from New York to Seattle. Was a .com entrepreneur before there was even a term for it.
Thomas Kinkade - Americas most collected living artist. Marketing works people.
Erno Rubik - Invented a puzzle only .000001% of the world population could solve without cheating, and sold millions! Marketing works people.
Alex Tew - 21 year old entrepreneur made $1,000,000 off the “Million Dollar Homepage”. Adding him to the list to illustrate that great ideas are sometimes in plain sight. Didn’t we all think, “I wish I had thought of that”?
Henry Hassenfeld - Owner of a textile plant in 1923 his company struck gold when they developed a way for kids to play doctor. The first toy the plant ever produced led the way for the likes of Mr Potato Head, GI Joe, Life, Yatzee, Candyland, and just about any other game we played as kids. Partners with his brother Helal Hassenfeld.
Helal Hassenfeld - Thanks for the memories man, I still get misty eyed thinking about Cobra Comander and the words “YO Joe” will live with me forever.
Rollin King - In 1965 started a regional airline serving 3 Texas cities. 40 years later Southwest Airlines has 3500 flights a day and is the number one airline in the United States and the World by number of passengers carried.
Herb Kelleher - Partnered with Rollin King to start Southwest Airlines. The guy started an AIRLINE COMPANY for crying out loud, that’s ballsy.
Guy Laliberte - Made the circus cool again. Founder and CEO of Canda’s Cirque du Soleil, Laliberte founded Cirque in 1984, and revolutionized the idea of what a circus could be. Cirque du Soleil has toured more than 100 cities around the world.
Admiral Zheng He - Built the vaunted Treasure Fleets, comprising dozens of ships and tens of thousands of sailors, and led them in trade missions across south Asia and as far west as Africa and the Strait of Hormuz in the Persian Gulf. In seven voyages from 1405 to 1433, Zheng He spread China’s goods across the world and returned with treasures for the Ming Dynasty.
Andrew Carnegie - The Scottish immigrant and weaver’s son built a steel empire whose mills churned out the railroads, ships, and structures of post-Civil War America.
Milton Hershey - In 1905 built the worlds largest chocolate factory. His name has become synonymous with chocolate, which Americans consume more than 11 pounds of each year.
Gary Dahl - A millionaire for selling rocks, pet rocks, enough said.
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