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IT Technology

More Than Ever, Employees Want a Say in How Their Companies Are Run (qz.com) 231

Two readers share a report: While workers have traditionally looked to unions to address their grievances, a new generation is trusting in the power of petitions to force changes. At the Wall Street Journal, 160 reporters and editors, delivered a letter to their managers protesting the lack of women and minorities running the organization, Business Insider reported yesterday. "Nearly all the people at high levels at the paper deciding what we cover and how are white men," the letter read. IBM employees are circulating an online petition objecting to the tone of CEO Ginni Rometty's letter to US president Donald Trump, and calling on her affirm what they call the company's progressive values. [...] Other employee petitions call for Oracle to oppose US president Donald Trump's second travel ban, and to let men who work at US regional supermarket Publix grow beards. Employee petitions are now so popular there's a website, coworker.org, devoted to hosting them. In some cases, the campaigns work: Starbuck's relaxed its rules about visible tattoos and unnatural hair color for baristas after thousands signed petitions asking for a change. Sometimes, they fail disastrously. Interns at one (unnamed) company described in a blog about being fired en masse after signing a petition asking for a more relaxed dress code.
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More Than Ever, Employees Want a Say in How Their Companies Are Run

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  • by ganjadude ( 952775 ) on Wednesday March 29, 2017 @03:49PM (#54137925) Homepage
    there are zero barriers for entry in the workforce today. this push for diversity for nothing other than the sake of diversity is pointless.

    the best person for the job regardless of race or gender is how it should be, nothing else.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      But making false numbers games are how SJW's survive.

      As a business owner I would have a huge pushback on the force change bit if stuff this simple requires a petition your management is probably already dysfunctional.

      • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

        I was a suit at Mobil Oil during its Dilbert years, and it was called, "empowerment."

        It died along with "Quality, Vision and Mission" statements.

    • there are zero barriers for entry in the workforce today

      Just try to apply to my job without a masters or PhD in a relevant field. At best you will never hear from anyone again. At worst they'll bring you in for sport, and some of these people are just enough assholes to do it, if HR didn't get in the way.

      There are lots of barriers. The mistake is thinking management cares about what people think. Instead they should buy a share, group up, then start forcing votes at the shareholder level.

      • ok...so get a masters or PHD? that isnt a barrier in the sense i was speaking here. that actually goes along with my "best person for the job" point
        • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

          How about managements spawn. That will get you more places than anything else will. Hell, they will hire two at a time to fill those jobs, one the spawn gets paid to do nothing much what so ever and their 'assistant' that does the actual job and gets paid bugger all, only to be fired when they are blamed for the spawns fuck up.

          Petitions are as stupid as fuck, seriously, sign those and you screw over your career. To do that stuff you absolutely require the protection of Unions. Unhappy with company policie

      • Just try to apply to my job without a masters or PhD in a relevant field.

        Err....being qualified for a job is not considered part of overcoming a barrier to a job. Being qualified for a job is a GIVEN to even be considered for a job, geez.....please have some common sense.

        Barriers as discussed above are artificial things keeping folks out that are all qualified for the same job or activity.

        • Barriers to entry are almost always used in the same breath as "requires high investment factor". Masters and PhD (or even B.S.) degrees all require a very significant investment. These degrees represent dubious qualifications. They are academic certifications, which may or may not have applicability in the corporate world. I'm not sure how many of my professors could hack it outside of academia, but not so many.

          And I disagree, very often those things are requirements that are not actual qualifications, jus

          • Re: (Score:2, Troll)

            However often people of other races have a hard time acquiring the money to make it over the barrier, it is as impossible for them as for me to become a black lesbian woman.

            Bullshit. You can just declare yourself as identifying as a black lesbian. In truth, minorities have an easier time acquiring funding than white candidates do.

          • I'm not sure how many of my professors could hack it outside of academia, but not so many

            The life of young academics is completely brutal. I used to be one. I left, bought a house and started a startup. Both of those are considered rather stressful. I did both at the same time and frankly it was a holiday compared to my academic staff job (assistant prof equivalent).

            In my field, there's a lot of cross overbetween academia and industry, and the academic jobs are much more work, much more stress and

      • That's a prerequisite not a barrier. You're conflating the meaning in use.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by grasshoppa ( 657393 )

      The problem is folks get outcomes confused with opportunity. Just because a certain gender or color isn't present in representative numbers in upper management and certain jobs doesn't mean they didn't have the opportunity to pursue that job. Equal Opportunity does not equate to Equal Outcomes, essentially.

      Amusingly, what these folks are advocating for is a lowering of the bar which only applies to certain genders or skin colors...which makes them, you guessed it, bigots.

      • Because who gets promoted to management is entirely based on merit, right? If you actually believe that then your naivete is staggering.

        • Because who gets promoted to management is entirely based on merit, right?

          Sadly no. In my experience, who gets promoted to management has more to do with who you're friends with than actual ability.

          Please note that gender and race were not mentioned *once* in the above.

          • Because who gets promoted to management is entirely based on merit, right?

            Sadly no. In my experience, who gets promoted to management has more to do with who you're friends with than actual ability.

            Please note that gender and race were not mentioned *once* in the above.

            But they're still there. What you've described constitutes deep and systematic racism and sexism that place serious obstacles in front of anyone who isn't the right race and gender. Just because no one is doing it "on purpose", that everyone has good intentions and thinks they're doing their best to be fair doesn't mean it isn't happening. It's the result of pervasive unconscious biases.

            So, how do you overcome those unconscious biases, break the stranglehold of the good old boys' network on management po

            • You start your own company. Nothin' stopping you.

              Just sayin'.

              • You start your own company. Nothin' stopping you.

                Then [s]he could make sure to hire and promote the right genders and colors to ensure diversity.

              • You start your own company. Nothin' stopping you.

                Just sayin'.

                So, your answer is to ignore it. I see.

    • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

      the best person for the job regardless of race or gender is how it should be, nothing else.

      I've been in the workforce long enough, including in interview panels, to know that raw merit is only half the game. Hiring and promotion decisions are largely social, especially when multiple candidates have similar merit credentials. Humans are social animals, and thus naturally biased.

  • by tsqr ( 808554 ) on Wednesday March 29, 2017 @03:50PM (#54137935)

    I'm convinced that these petitions will be at least as effective as the ones posted on whitehouse.gov. [whitehouse.gov]

  • by Snufu ( 1049644 ) on Wednesday March 29, 2017 @03:53PM (#54137959)

    Just ask your union... Oh.

    • Even better - go work for a (relatively more) sane company. Let the dysfunctional companies get stuck with dysfunctional employees. Eventually they (the companies) die.

  • How cute (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday March 29, 2017 @03:53PM (#54137963)

    The workers think they have an opinion that matters.

    The current American culture gives absolutely no shits what workers think, only that they show up and do what it says on the tin.

    You want to have an opinion? Fight for it. Walk out. Organize. Use the tools that are available to you, not spineless open letters that only provide the status quo with targets to aim at.

    And, btw, when you have that opinion, don't give it up. Remind everybody that you fought hard for the right to have a voice, as opposed to workers in the 70s, 80s, and 90s that happily gave up their ability to affect change.

  • by Rob Riggs ( 6418 ) on Wednesday March 29, 2017 @03:55PM (#54137989) Homepage Journal
    That intern was taught an invaluable business lesson.
    • That intern was taught an invaluable business lesson.

      Something something nail, hammer!

      If you don't like the culture where you work, and your suggestion box entries seem to disappear into the ether, then get a different job, explaining why you chose to leave. If that doesn't change the culture, then chances are you weren't valuable enough for them to care about your petition anyway.

      You could also try to work your way into management, such that you're entrusted with decisions that affect the area you want to change. But let's be honest--by that point you've p

  • by future assassin ( 639396 ) on Wednesday March 29, 2017 @03:58PM (#54138011)

    say we used the word Union. It would be an organization of people from the same industry banded for the benefit of all workers. Maybe the workers could donate a little of their monthly income so the Union could hire lawyers and lobbying power. Its just an idea...

    • ...and in 20 years when management decides to offshore *all* of its tech work to India (due to bloated contracts with said unions, bloated wages, and a systme where the incompetent could never get fired, let alone done so in a timely manner), we can all sit back and say we at least tried, right?

    • say we used the word Union. It would be an organization of people from the same industry banded for the benefit of all workers. Maybe the workers could donate a little of their monthly income so the Union could hire lawyers and lobbying power. Its just an idea...

      These are not petitions for things unions care about, like benefits, pay, and work conditions. It is in a union's best interest to keep its members stably employed so that those union dues keep creeping higher. Diversifying the workforce has little to do with this.

  • Stock holding? (Score:3, Interesting)

    by cyocum ( 793488 ) on Wednesday March 29, 2017 @03:58PM (#54138021) Homepage
    Why not club together with your fellow employees to collectively purchase stock in the company that you work for? That way, you can force issues at the board level when management comes up for re-election.
  • You know how these big companies foster "local culture"? Because that's what makes us all "a family". So some people end up believing it and because they and others believe it they become a community, they become a family. isn't it normal for members of the community to have a say? -it can certainly be a win/win for both employee and employer. Some C level execs think "culture" is the BS to feed the peasants so they work harder for free...that's even true to an extent but when those peasants unite; those m
    • by swb ( 14022 )

      I've usually found that *most* companies hedge a lot on their culture propaganda, to the point it which it is usually meaningless drivel. The downside is that since it is content-free, nobody cares and they doesn't do anything for them or the peasants.

      When they put too much meaning into the culture propaganda, people tend to believe it and expect follow-through, which they seldom get because it's propaganda. This results in a poisoning of the well and a further loss of credibility.

    • Actually, a culture forms whether or not management fosters one. Oftentimes, a culture will form that is decidedly counter to what management wants to foster.

      If management is a bunch of cut-throat snakes, the employees adapt and form their own counter-culture of sorts. The result only gets uglier over time, and management usually doesn't find out until the company is rapidly sinking (at which time many of them have either jumped ship or are about to).

  • unions are good, worker co-operatives are better https://medium.com/@PrestoViva... [medium.com]
  • Employees generally have the right to express a non-attack style opinion, on the job. Except for invaluable employees, managers, executives, or part owners, it makes no sense to give all employees a say in how a company is run. That's not not how business works. If I hire a worker, I welcome their opinions, But, unless they're hired to manage a specific area of my business, they can't hold the reins.
  • by Dunbal ( 464142 ) *

    "Nearly all the people at high levels at the paper deciding what we cover and how are white men,"

    Nearly all. So not, in fact, all. So how many non whites is "enough"? Does it matter who we replace, so long as we're just replacing a white guy? And isn't that a little, oh, I dunno - racist? You can't scream racism when you propose a racist solution.

  • It's pretty obvious to me that the worker revolution is going to be happening in the next 20 years if not sooner. The rich keep trying to squeeze whatever they can out of people and the environment and the younger generation is pissed.

  • https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]

    AFAIK this is real.

    (As heard on the No Agenda podcast.)

  • by zifn4b ( 1040588 ) on Thursday March 30, 2017 @06:18AM (#54141557)

    The only reason employees feel compelled to take the wheel is because they realize that their leadership is completely incompetent and delusional. We'd really actually like REAL leaders that actually do their job so we can just do ours but that's apparently like asking for the sun, the moon and the stars anymore.

    I think the best part is how there are plenty of articles about burnt out and overworked managers with self help strategies like delegating work. So, let me get this straight, you, the poor woe is me manager, that's sitting in meetings all day playing on your phone is so stressed out that you should get special privileges to delegate any work arbitrarily that you want to and get paid more money? Where's my special privilege? Why can't I delegate that fly-in on fire shit ball task that you want done yesterday? Double standard.

  • by whitroth ( 9367 ) <whitroth@[ ]ent.us ['5-c' in gap]> on Thursday March 30, 2017 @11:21AM (#54143849) Homepage

    So, first you let big business destroy unions in the US, when folks grandparents fought, in many cases literally, to form, and how you feel helpless.

    And a petition's going to get upper management to change their minds. I'm sure the idea of forming a union again never entered your pretty little libertarian-brainwashed heads....

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