To modern workers everywhere, |
Many of us have thoughts about Zoom meetings (cue the memes). But what are your Zoom meetings telling you about your company culture? 🔮 |
Matt Tucker, CEO of organizational software startup Koan, posed this question in a piece last week for Quartz at Work and offered some concrete advice: "Reflect on the meetings you took part in this past year. Think about what you observed, how everyone treated each other, and the general team dynamic… Though one action alone may seem inconsequential, these moments add up and they affect your outcomes." |
Here are some questions Tucker recommends asking yourself about the state of your company's meeting habits 📝: |
- Is your meeting agenda intentional or ad-hoc?
- Are your meetings inclusive or clique-ish?
- Are meeting participants truly present or clearly distracted?
- Is the meeting discussion honest or inauthentic?
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If your answers don't reflect your culture, or the one you hope to create, check out Tucker's advice. Even small changes can help address the gap (and ensure better meetings). |
Remember, a productive meeting is about more than just the meeting. "It's about cultivating the right habits to help facilitate the right conversations, and ultimately nurture a culture of purpose and achievement," Tucker writes. "That's why these are hard questions."—Michelle Cheng |
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Five things we learned this week |
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Krispy Kreme is encouraging customers to get vaccinated. Behold the power of a free donut. |
Boston mayor Marty Walsh will oversee the US Department of Labor. He will be the first former union member to lead the department in half a century. |
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30-second case study |
This past week, junior bankers at Goldman Sachs requested that their average workweek get capped at 80 hours, down from a more typical 95 hours. In a pitch deck, they asked management to abide by the bank's official policy that junior bankers have time off on Fridays after 9pm and all day Saturday, and make other changes to alleviate stress and burnout among their ranks. |
It isn't the first time young analysts at the firm have drawn attention to the issue of overwork. Back in 2014, Goldman and other investment banks were responding to a raft of similar concerns about the demands placed on young talent, spurred in part by the death of an intern at Bank of America Merrill Lynch who collapsed after working three nights in a row. That's when Goldman instated its Saturdays-off policy, and said it would set the expectation that junior bankers work 70 to 75 hours a week. Clearly the efforts did not stick. |
The takeaway: If you want a high-paying job at an elite firm, why would you expect the path to be easy? That's one way of looking at the situation. But even workers with less money or prestige may see themselves reflected in this issue, particularly entry-level employees who often feel they need to prove themselves. Burnout is real, and it can have a serious impact on mental and physical wellbeing. A Microsoft survey released Monday found that 54% of workers are burned out, and 38% are exhausted. |
When grappling with the problem of junior-banker burnout back in 2014, Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon—then co-head of the firm's investment banking division—said the firm would carefully monitor young staffers' working hours to make sure they didn't creep back up. But as the breakdown in the effort suggests, and as Quartz at Work's Sarah Todd reports, it isn't easy to change course on overworking if it's an established part of a company's culture. |
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Quartz field guide interlude: Tesla takes on the world |
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Simone Noronha for Quartz |
Today in the US, electric vehicles account for only 1.8% of new car sales. Even in an optimistic scenario, only a quarter of the new cars sold in the US in 2030 will run on electricity. |
Tesla's cheapest model currently starts at $38,190, just under the average US price for a new car. To push EVs even cheaper, the company is betting on innovative manufacturing practices, better software, and longer-lasting batteries. |
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Workshop recap |
While we each have a certain threshold for workplace stress, the pressures of the pandemic have likely lowered it, putting all of us at higher risk for burnout. But how do you know when you've crossed over from high stress to more dangerous burnout territory? And once you've gotten there, how do you regain your energy and build up resilience? |
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Words of wisdom |
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