Tag Archives: the great resignations

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mechanized jobs

Mechanized Jobs, Are They In Your Workplace?

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Have you been striving for mechanized jobs? Is that the game plan for the future of your work?

People often mention the self-checkouts at the grocery or superstore. People might joke about the absence of the grocery bagger, once popular in suburban supermarkets in the 1970s or 1980s.

Some jobs may be nearly extinct. Is it because of automation, or is it more about margins and saving establishments?

On one hand every business is striving for exceptional service, on the other, every business is striving to reduce costs. Is there a happy medium, or really no medium at all?

For the manufacturer or the fast-food enterprise, it seems to be about automation. Robotize every job you can. Investments in technology reduces or minimizes headcount which ultimately is more reliable and reduces operational costs.

True, and largely a good thing.

Should you robotize more jobs? Is that better?

Mechanized Jobs

Better for what?

Is it better for the bottom line, or is does it propel you to the top of the curve, creating that moment right before starting a downhill slide?

Unemployment is stranger than ever. On top of that, everyone is operating during a time being label as The Great Resignation.

Are you struggling? Is your business or organization struggling with workforce problems?

In the 1960s and 1970s there was a lot of great work performed to analyze job performance, the psychology of work, and efficiency. Countless efforts were studied, analyzed, and published. Much of this work is still relevant today. It may be tweaked a little, but still relevant.

The quest for businesses to operate more efficiently with less headcount per operational dollar is nothing new.

Are mechanized jobs the answer for you?

Apple Pie Opportunity

Your grandmother may have made a great apple pie.

The apple pie can be mass produced, thousands and thousands of them, with very little human intervention.

I’ll bet there is a difference between those pies, and the one grandma once made.

And there lies the opportunity.

The opportunity to do work that matters. Work that people can get behind because they understand and support the purpose, the product, and service outcomes.

You won’t stop automation. You shouldn’t even try.

There is always an intersection of price, quality, and value.

Mechanized shouldn’t lack purpose.

-DEG

Dennis E. Gilbert is a business consultant, speaker (CSPTM), and culture expert. He is a five-time author and the founder of Appreciative Strategies, LLC. His business focuses on positive human performance improvement solutions through Appreciative Strategies®. Reach him through his website at Dennis-Gilbert.com or by calling +1 646.546.5553.


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changing landscape

Changing Landscape And How Your Workforce Adapts

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Are you facing a changing landscape? Has your workforce changed or is there a need for change?

Change can be tough.

There are many people who are eager to change. They’ve grown tired of the old ways, the boredom, the monotony. They might also see opportunity in change and believe change works.

At the same time there are many people who are unsure of change. They are comfortable in the old ways. Knowing what works and how to do it feels safe.

Change resistors are quick to shout out potential problems, obstacles, and roadblocks. Things are happening too fast for them, the unknown means confusion, delays, and more emotional labor.

What are the real objections? What is happening, at the root?

Is it fear stopping progress?

Changing Landscape

Newsflash, things are changing.

The rate of change seems to be accelerating. What has transpired in the last 18 months (2020 pandemic) has sparked a lot of change. Even greater is the transformation across the most recent 50 or 60 years.

Technology is changing everything. Adapting and growing with it comes with a price.

The price of avoiding it and staying the same is much greater.

In a tight labor marketing people are going to work with what they consider the best companies. Many workforce experts have suggested we are heading into a time they’re calling The Great Resignation.

Are you listening for the objections?

Change resistors are often masquerading fear with objections.

Will your workforce adapt, hold the organization back, or will they move on to what they perceive as greener pastures?

Working towards a greater understanding of risk, reducing fear, and improving confidence may be the best way to navigate change.

People are counting on you.

-DEG

Dennis E. Gilbert is a business consultant, speaker (CSPTM), and culture expert. He is a five-time author and the founder of Appreciative Strategies, LLC. His business focuses on positive human performance improvement solutions through Appreciative Strategies®. Reach him through his website at Dennis-Gilbert.com or by calling +1 646.546.5553.


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workplace

Workplace, Is This The Era of The Great Resignations

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What is your workplace, or perhaps a better question might be, where is your workplace? You could also substitute the word workplace with, workspace.

Facing difficult or bad news is not easy. Many people find a way to deal with it, cope, and move on. It seems that the pandemic isn’t letting go of the behavioral reactions in people and the decisions they make.

There is a reported surge in the COVID virus which is being labeled the Delta variant.

What will this mean for your workplace or workspace?

Work From Home

It seemed like it happened in an instant in 2020. Everything shut down. Business operations that were labeled as essential kept going, but many businesses were forced to close their doors.

Some businesses had a fairly smooth transition while others suffered from shock about the way they work. In smaller more rural communities, the infrastructure wasn’t (and still isn’t) there to support work from home (WFH).

June 2021 was looking favorable. Many things opening, schools out for the summer, and finally some things were returning to normal.

Now, the Delta variant is threatening a retreat.

What will this do to your workplace? What will be the plan for your workforce?

Return To Office

The return to office (RTO) may not be coming as expected. Even if your business or the organization you work for has had this as part of the plan.

Is some of your team still working remote?

Has your return to the office been delayed?

What does the workforce want?

Trending Workplace

Some research indicates that what employees want has changed. They’ve had a taste of something different and now they want more.

Some are calling this new era the time of, “The Great Resignations.”

Many arguments exist as to why the workforce is facing so much struggle. Certainly, some of it appears to be connected with financial benefit invoked by the Government to help those in need during the pandemic.

Polls and surveys during the past 12 to 18 months have indicated that perhaps now more than ever before, employee satisfaction is way off. Employees want more, and they’re often finding it with businesses and organizations that they believe are the best places to work.

Some of this is the remote workforce, some of it may be blended or hybrid. In either case, it is largely different from the traditional workspace of 2019.

Is there a shift for you?

What is your workplace looking like these days?

-DEG

Dennis E. Gilbert is a business consultant, speaker (CSPTM), and culture expert. He is a five-time author and the founder of Appreciative Strategies, LLC. His business focuses on positive human performance improvement solutions through Appreciative Strategies®. Reach him through his website at Dennis-Gilbert.com or by calling +1 646.546.5553.


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