- Whether to mention a pregnancy in a job interview
- A possible meeting protocol
- What are an end-user's responsibilities?
- Another take on opening PCs, or not
- Getting some process going
- Selling a more open environment to management
- Running an effective meeting
- Licensing rules for virtual machines
- The ROI of metrics
- Legal challenges to virtual machines
January 31, 2008 | Comments: (0)
Zell and the art of employee management
It always irritates me when this happens: Frank Hayes beat me to the punch (a sadly common occurrence; for my money Frank is the best columnist in IT). Take the time to read his excellent column about the Tribune company and its new owner/CEO, Sam Zell: "Frankly Speaking: Sam Zell's 'crazy' idea plugs content filters," Computerworld, 1/28/2008.
Zell plans to lead the Tribune based on the radical notion that he has talented employees who are also, coincidentally, grown-ups. He's going to run the company based on that assumption. That means no more use of web filtering and monitoring, e-mail tracking and so on as ways to make sure employees aren't wasting time on the job.
It isn't that I haven't written about this subject ... for example, see "Employee privacy - buck the trend," Keep the Joint Running, 11/13/2000, not to mention a very old IS Survival Guide, "Sam Kinison on management," (4/15/1996).
Still, it's one thing for a columnist and self-appointed pundit to talk about this. It's quite another for the billionaire owner of a media conglomerate to build the future of his business around it.
As further evidence, here is how the Tribune's new Employee Handbook begins:
Rule #1: Use your best judgment.You have to like a guy like that.
Rule #2: See Rule 1.
That's it. That is the one hard and fast rule. Unless a serious mistake was made when you were hired, you have pretty good judgment.
- Bob
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Posted by Bob Lewis on January 31, 2008 06:19 AM
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Three books. Three ways to change the world, your life, or at least Bob Lewis' bank account. Leading IT: The Toughest Job in the World distills the world of IT leadership into eight learnable skills and gives you concrete, practical techniques for each one of them. Bare Bones Project Management: What you can't not do makes project management manageable, even for first-time project managers with no formal training in the discipline. ManagementSpeak: What managers say/What they mean … well, it won't help your career, and won't make you a better manager. Mostly, it will make you chuckle, guffaw, and maybe even chortle. Make friends - it's the perfect gift for anyone who has ever suffered through one of those meetings. Order your copies today! |
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