When we recognize the wrong things

Have you ever been thanked for working countless hours through the night, over the weekend and during your days off?  Have you ever gotten prizes, certificates or a bonus because you “did the right thing and worked tirelessly without counting the hours”?  If so, you are in good company, but maybe working for a bad one.  Rewarding people for working themselves to death is antithetical to the current push for a healthy work environment and it needs to stop.  Now.

Every day, I hear people pontificating about work life balance and how we all need to take time off to recharge.  We hear about how great it is to take time and just think.  We are given the spiel about emotional intelligence and focus being great productivity boosters.  Then, I see at least half the recognition coming to several teams saying how awesome people are because they went against those values.  There is something very wrong with this picture.

In my workplace, you will never hear an executive tell people they should be working more than the standard policy work week.  We know there will be peak periods where we will have to put in more hours, but that should be followed by commensurate time off, which is not only a legal requirement, but is the right thing to do for your staff’s physical and mental health.  But, what happens when it is all peaks and no valleys?  How many weekends and nights do we have to work before we have legitimate burn out cases?  What is “normal” workload?

In a discussion with a leader I know and respect, she accurately said that part of the problem is driven from the bottom up.  Individual workers feel and perpetuate a culture of having to work the extra hours to be successful.  Projects need to deliver on time and everything needs to run perfectly out of the gate.  If you work in software development, you know that nothing is ever perfect and the unknowns pop up pretty consistently.  We always talk about how the best laid plans go awry, but we never learn our lesson that the stuff we don’t know about is what will trip us up.  We adopt new ways of doing things, like Agile and Scrum, and then we ignore some of the fundamentals in favor of delivering every requirement without deviating from a schedule planned with inordinate amounts of uncertainty.  All of this contributing to a culture where failure is not tolerated and is feared instead of embraced.  We like to say “fail fast, fail often, fail forward”, but we ignore it all when the rubber hits the road.  Often, we are even our own worst enemies.

So, all this begs the question “what should I do about it”?

First, you should talk to your leader and their leader, and even their leader.  Repeat as necessary to get to the top if you have to.  If you are not comfortable doing this, I question how open your environment really is (This is not a judgement.  Mine has it’s issues too…).  It is worth it to talk about perception and reality.  We need to talk about expectations together and make them clear.  We need to ask the difficult questions about what to do when we think the product is not really ready.  We need to embrace the culture of failure as a good thing to learn and improve. We need to feel comfortable saying I don’t know, I don’t agree, I don’t think that is a good idea, I don’t have the time to do that and I don’t want to work that many hours.

As employees, we are trading our time and expertise for compensation.  If we work more hours than the agreed upon number without related compensation, we are diluting the economic value of our labor.  In a time where wage increases are harder and harder to come by and the lion’s share of the value WE are creating is being sucked up by runaway executive compensation and dividend increases, we, the workers, the creators of value, need to stand firm and demand what is rightfully ours.  We need to ask the questions and get the answers.  We need to help each other feel respected and valued.

Lastly, and most importantly, we need to get leaders to STOP RECOGNIZING OVERWORK.  They need to give the prizes to those work their regular hours and have a life outside of work.  Those who take the time be happy and balanced.  They need to give people the ability to get the job done in a reasonable time frame with the right support.  They need to give prizes to projects that deliver without working the team more than the standard work week.  They need to accept that there will be failures and support frameworks that reduce risk and manage time appropriately.  They need to encourage people to speak out against anyone or any project that goes against these principles.  And, we, as the teams doing the work, need to muster the courage to act as a team and support each other in leading balanced lives that make us happy.

22/6/22

Numbers to remember.  Any plan should have an expiry date.  Mine has one and it is a little less than 5 years from now.  There are milestones for me to achieve, some that will be easier than others.  Through all that, I have to remember the goal that will lead to greater independence, choice and new horizons.  I expect to be able to do more of what I want when I want.  I can do this now and have much happiness in my life, but I have this vision in my head of change that I think will bring me and my loved ones new adventures and experiences for us together.

The next 5 years will be filled with challenges the will make our lives amazing.  Afterwards, new challenges will come to be and I know that we will face them together.  I am looking forward to them.  🙂

So, I will remember 22/6/22 and will strive to check off the different milestones of challenges I want to conquer with the ultimate goal to be a better person for me and my family.  More to come on progress as it happens.

 

Balance

I am sure that you have heard that variety is the spice of life. Well, balance is a synonym and rightfully so. I hear “work – life” quite a bit these days and do not disagree in principle, but I think that we are looking at it the wrong way. Instead of pushing for change in how we, as employees, are managed, we should be managing ourselves. There is great freedom in the choice of how you live your life, and that includes work.

I am not saying you should go in to work tomorrow and tell off your boss. I am just saying that YOU can take more control of how you perform your duties, especially if you are a salary worker. I, one among many, get a yearly salary and have a bonus structure in place that pays out against certain performance indicators. In theory, I could work ten hours a week and still get full salary if my objectives are met. In practice, it is a little more difficult and if you have a good manager, they will know that you are not working to your capacity, which may be very different than others.

However, you DO have control. Work is part of your life, whether you want to admit it or not. In our beloved capitalist society, we have the freedom to chose our path and have many opportunities to better ourselves. Unfortunately, many of us do not fully understand how to get to where we want to go and how to start, me included. I can not tell you how to succeed, because I am still working on it myself!  🙂

What you can control is the level of pleasure you get from your job. You should have fun at work every day. You should enjoy the people you work with and feel a sense of accomplishment at the end of the day, or at least at the end of the month! If you are not having fun, do not like the people and have no idea why you are there, LEAVE. There is plenty of work out there and if you can not find anything to your liking, you have many avenues to explore in creating your own. This last option is VERY interesting to me. The sense of ownership gives you more desire to succeed and the intimate knowledge you will develop will certainly drive new passion in to your life. Lastly, it will become your LIFE, and you will want it to be.

Be brave souls and try something new. Make your own path and be happy. Nobody else will do it for you. You have to want it for yourself and success will follow in one form or another.

Stay interested and interesting!

John

PS: This post was written while listening to Ratatat. It is instrumental, but very upbeat. I think you will either love it or hate it. Try it though, because you will never know otherwise. 😉