Seth Godin uses Labor Day to write about the "future of labor," which he says "belongs to enlightened, passionate people on both sides of the plant, people who want to do work that matters."
In a world where labor does exactly what it's told to do, it will be
devalued. Obedience is easily replaced, and thus one worker is as good
as another. And devalued labor will be replaced by machines or cheaper
alternatives. We say we want insightful and brilliant teachers, but
then we insist they do their labor precisely according to a manual
invented by a committee...
Companies that race to the bottom in terms of the skill or cost of
their labor end up with nothing but low margins. The few companies that
are able to race to the top, that can challenge workers to bring their
whole selves--their human selves--to work, on the other hand, can earn
stability and growth and margins. Improvisation still matters if you
set out to solve interesting problems.
Read Whatever happened to Labor, here.
Posted
09-06-2010 8:31 AM
by
Graham Griffith