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Are You a Free Agent? It May Depend on Your Age

August 24th, 2011 by admin in Careers, corporate culture, employment, Uncategorized

Are you a free agent? Kelly Services  recently asked that question of adults in the United Staes. Over 40% of employed adults now consider themselves free agents a larger percentage than before the financial meltdown of 2008. Read the rest of this entry »


What’s Important to New Graduates?

August 3rd, 2011 by admin in colleagues, compensation, jobs skills, Uncategorized

Are graduates of the class 2011 throwbacks? In a recent survey  released by the National Association of Colleges and Employers recent graduates sought personal development and job security as the most important factors in choosing a job. The top five factors in order are 

1. Opportunity for personal development

2. Job security

3. Good insurance benefits

4. Friendly co-workers

5. High starting salary 

Opportunities for advancement aren’t a consideration.

All of which asks the question will the aftermath of the recession may have a lasting effect on how young adults view their careers?


Does Your Boss Have Your Back?

October 13th, 2010 by admin in Careers, management

 

As the world was transfixed by the rescue of the Chilean miners today, one person was still conspicuously out of sight. The shift foreman, 54 year old Luis Urzua whose leadership was credited with helping the men endure the isolation for 17 days after the collapse when the world didn’t know if they were alive or not, is expected to the be last miner to reach the surface.
Read the rest of this entry »


The Price of Job Security

March 22nd, 2010 by admin in Careers

Coonskin caps covered hearts in respect for Fess Parker, better known to all as Davy Crockett who died last week at the age of 85. The three part series in which he starred for Disney in late 1954 and early 1955 was dwarfed the merchandising bonanza that followed. It was perhaps, the first, inkling marketers had of the buying power of the baby boomers, as the hula hoops, Barbie dolls and trends that followed.

But, if Fess Parker had designs on being something other than a stalwart player at the Disney studios, he was destined to be disappointed. As Richard Severo pointed out in Mr. Parker’s obituary in The New York Times, “He began to chafe at the roles the Disney organization was offering him, and when he refused to appear in “Tonka,” the studio suspended him. He was unhappy, too, that Walt Disney had discouraged his being cast in “The Searchers,” the John Ford classic starring John Wayne, and “Bus Stop,” with Marilyn Monroe.”

Of course, no one will know what Mr. Parker’s acting future might have held, if he had appeared in those films. After he hung up his buckskin, he went on to a business career, including that of vintner. Was he typecast by Disney? Or were they just unwilling to tinker with success?

As Towers Watson reported last week, in the aftermath of the great recession, employees are seeking security.  To what extent is it okay to give up some of your dreams for security?


The Organization Man, “The Sequel”

March 16th, 2010 by admin in Books, Careers

William H. Whyte Jr.’s The Organization Man was a seminal work of the 1950’s .The book detailed what Mr. Whyte believed was the sacrifice of a generation in exchange for finding and keeping jobs that promised security.  That generation came of age in the “Great Depression.”

Are we on track for The Organization Man, “The Sequel?” In their Global Workforce Study released today Towers Watson, a human capital firm, showed a workforce weary of the fallout from the recession. And, perhaps not surprisingly, there is a renewed interest in job security. When respondents were asked about the factors most important in a preferred work situation, 86% chose a secure and stable position. Fewer, 74%, chose substantially higher levels of compensation.

Has the pendulum swung away from the idea Daniel H. Pink, author of the recently released Drive,  first popularized in Free Agent Nation? Said Laura Sejen, a leader of the company’s Talent and Rewards business, “Where once employers fretted over a ‘war for talent,’ now they must plan for a workforce that appears ready to settle in for years—perhaps even decades.”,

What will this mean for those joining the workforce in coming years, and folks who are delaying retirement? Share your thoughts!