Thanks to Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer, America is having a grand
national discussion about telecommuting. I’ve been following it on this blog
and I am happy to see that, after an initial spasm of feminist outrage, more
sober and thoughtful minds are prevailing. Better yet, people have not been dividing on party lines.
Yesterday on the Atlantic
site Ann-Marie Slaughter offered her own assessment. It is good to read her
opinion. You will recall that Princeton Professor Slaughter resigned from an
important job at the State Department because her frequent, extended absences
were hurting her children.
Her job required physical presence and she couldn’t be in
two places at the same time.
Since Slaughter was heading the office of policy planning at
the State Department, her analysis of Mayer’s new policy has a special
credibility.
Slaughter begins with a point I have also emphasized:
Marissa
Mayer is a CEO first and a woman second. Indeed, she is a role model for many
precisely because she made it to the top job. And as a CEO, her first job is to
save her company. If she fails in that, the employees she is insisting come in
to the office will have no jobs to come in to.
Because it is impossible to form even a preliminary judgment
about a new policy without knowing what incited it, Slaughter explains the
situation at Yahoo:
Let's
look at this decision a different way. According to one ex-"Yahoo"
(the way Yahoo employees describe themselves, which may be one thing that needs
to change) who was quoted in Business
Insider,"For what it's worth, I support the no working from home
rule. There's a ton of abuse of that at Yahoo. Something specific to the
company."
The
source also said Yahoo's large remote workforce led to "people slacking
off like crazy, not being available, and spending a lot of time on non-Yahoo!
projects."
It happens that Mayer had tried other softer approaches to
changing the Yahoo culture. When the failed she was forced to try a new policy.
Slaughter renders it with an excellent analogy: when your ship is going down, all
hands should be on deck.
In Slaughter’s words:
Another
source who
spoke to Kara Swisher at All
Things D reported that Mayer had tried the carrot approach by offering
free food and iPhones (!) at work, but was getting nowhere, as she saw Yahoo
employees coming in later and leaving earlier than employees at other Silicon
Valley competitors.
Any
leader who has had to transform a company or an institution understands that
culture change is essential. People have to think differently about their jobs
and their employers before they will do their jobs differently. Moreover, when
a ship is going down, it is not unreasonable to demand all hands on deck. Mayer
tried to go with the existing telecommuting policy, which apparently works
elsewhere in Silicon Valley, but concluded that it was contributing to the
culture that she needed to change. That does not mean she will not return to
that policy if and when Yahoo! recovers.
In the last analysis, as I have been stating, the market will
decide whether or not her now policy works:
So
let's withhold judgment for a while and let Marissa Mayer do her job. Let's
evaluate her on whether she can turn Yahoo around. If her instincts are right,
and she has to bring everyone back together on site to get the company going in
a profitable and sustainable direction, then we will have to adjust our
perceptions of when telecommuting makes sense and when it may not. If results
really improve, then we have a much harder time convincing the many employers
who are afraid of deeply flexible policies to change. If Mayer is wrong, then
we will have time enough to dissect the reasons why, and Mayer herself will
join the numerous ranks of former Yahoo CEOs.
So far, so good.
Also advancing the discussion is Todd Essig at Forbes. Yes,
warm bodies around the water cooler matter, but people who are present also participate in workplace rituals. These rituals matters because they produce group identity and
group cohesion.
In Essig’s terms, physical presence creates “experiential
capital.” He means that each individual needs to experience the fact that his
work belongs to a larger group. His job becomes meaningful when he feels that it contributes to
the good of an enterprise.
In his words:
However
much people use their screen-relations as a transition to direct
experience, time together is still the shared experiential capital from
which we grow our capacity for screen-relations. Being bodies together is still
bedrock. And while Yahoo’s new policy has been a lightening-rod for
criticism, what Mayer’s critics seem to forget (including here at Forbeswhere the decision has been
called an “epic fail” that goes “back to the stone age”) is that sometimes an organization
needs to invest in the additional experiential capital only acquired from being
bodies together.
Later in his column he states his point more incisively:
When managers
also show up it helps breed group cohesion. And there’s more. We know
that attitudes often change so as to be made consistent with what one has
already done (the traditional concept of “cognitive dissonance” as pioneered by
Leon Festinger). If it takes more work to get to work then for those able to
avoid rebellious resentment—either from their own reslience or the presence of emotionally attuned good-enough management—it is likely
their attitude will shift towards a greater commitment to the company. That’s
right: commitment follows effort.
Essig compares it the family dinner. If meals are merely a way
to nourish your body, it seems to make little difference whether you eat
alone or as part of a specified ritual including other family members.
Regular family dinners promote family stability and
security.
In Essig’s words:
Lets
look at an example of the power of time together that would hit especially
close to home for working mothers. Consider families that take a break
from their screen-relations to have dinner together, the “Family Meal” Laurie David has
been championing. We know from a 2010 study
in theJournal of Family Psychology that
”families with teenagers may enhance parent–child communication and ultimately
promote healthy adolescent development by making family dinner a priority.”
Another 2010 study this time from theJournal of Adolescence shows the converse: fewer family
dinners is correlated with a bunch of problematic adolescent behaviors
(“substance-use and running away for females; drinking, physical violence,
property-destruction, stealing and running away for males”).
6 comments:
No manager worth the title is going to go into an organization and start to change things right away unless there is something wrong, really wrong. As I stated before, good for her.
I am a little surprised that so many people, who I would think know better, attacked her without knowing the environment of Yahoo and the reasons, but that does seem to be how we do things.
You're right, of course. Too many people, especially zealots, attack before they think. I am heartened to see that, as the debate develops, more sensible voice are making themselves heard and moving things in a more positive direction.
"Mayer had tried the carrot approach by offering free food and iPhones (!) at work, but was getting nowhere, as she saw Yahoo employees coming in later and leaving earlier than employees at other Silicon Valley competitors."
No, no, no, no, no! benefits such as free food & iPhones may have some marginal effect on employee commitment, but this is not the major factor, any more than fancy new buildings are. What matters most is the belief that the company is intelligently led, that it has a future, that performance is rewarded, that there is reasonable autonomy to do one's job in one's own way, that top management genuinely cares rather than just playing a short-term game for their own benefit, that top management is interested in seeing the actual realities of the business rather than blindly applying some paradigm from a prior job.
Overemphasizing the importance of the perks is similar to the thinking of the people Glenn Reynolds has talked about who confuse the benefits of middle-classness (houses, college degrees) with being causes of middle-classness.
Oooooohhhhh. People have opinions, and sometimes preconceived notions, spring-loaded to be fired by hair triggers. (I give you...trolls. Happily, not often found in these parts.) Anonymity encourages those dogs to bark when the opportunity arises.
Indeed, the firestorm of criticism aimed at Mayer and Yahoo seems politically motivated, coming from redistributionists who want society to confer ever more benefits on everyone. In some cases the agenda is specific. Feminists, for instance, have identified "family-friendly" initiatives as a strategic key to women reaching and retaining more positions of power -- with the rest of us paying for it.
I too welcome the more rational input from people who understand how business works, and admire their courage in speaking out. They know there's a good chance they're going to be attacked by the thug-Left. The progressives don't care much about what happens at Yahoo!... they care much more about having one of their platforms called into question in such a public way, and they're pulling out all the stops to shut this problem down.
In regard to David's point, surely it matters mightily that the company is intelligently led.
Mayer's problem was turning around a dysfunctional culture. I can understand why perks would not do it, but if they can't then it seems to me that a more radical intervention seems to have been required. We are dealing with the question of how to break a bad habit, especially a bad habit that has become ingrained in a culture. I cannot imagine anyone's doing it by hiring a better leadership team.
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