-
The Colorado/Canyon That Tracks Down a Taco! - December 17, 2024
-
Who, What, When, and Where of Layoff Information - December 15, 2024
-
Online Newsline #9: Holiday Party Is Today, UAW Members On Strike - December 15, 2024
-
Why You Should Wear A White Shirt on National White Shirt Day - December 12, 2024
-
You Voted In November, You Receive Better Vacation Benefits in 2029! - December 10, 2024
-
Online Newsline: Are You Eligible For The $500 Bonus? - December 10, 2024
-
St. Louis University Graduate Students Join UAW! - December 9, 2024
-
Please Help a Missouri UAW Member This Season! - December 6, 2024
-
So You Want To Be A Labor Leader? - December 5, 2024
-
What Is Social Security To You? - December 4, 2024
How Bird-Dogging Hurts Everyone
Did you know?
People began using bird-dog as a verb meaning “to closely watch someone or something” or “to doggedly seek out someone or something” in the early 20th century. Of course, this phrase is used in this plant as a way describe a boss or management sneaking around while watching someone do their job. Does bird-dogging really make things better?
Yahoo Finance has the answer in Monitoring your employees may actually make them slack-off…
“Our studies showed that monitoring employees causes them to subconsciously feel that they are less responsible for their own conduct, thus making them more likely to act immorally,” the authors of the study said.
Harvard Business Review similarly found in another 100-employee study that monitored workers “were substantially more likely to take unapproved breaks, disregard instructions, damage workplace property, steal office equipment, and purposefully work at a slow pace.”
Maybe, just maybe, it would be better for management to talk and work with employees to improve the work environment. Take the bird dog hunting but don’t let him in the factory!
(free graphic via clipart.com)