Wednesday, July 22, 2020

The Funny Guy Gets the Job - Workology

The Funny Guy Gets the Job - Workology Having a Great Sense of Humor in the Workplace For job seekers or those looking to make their way up the corporate ladder, being qualified or having a degree is no longer enough. A sense of humor is a must.  Maybe job seekers and aspiring professionals should spend more time on their standup than that Powerpoint. Accountemps  just released a survey  with nearly 8 out of 10 executives stating that having a great sense of humor is an important part of fitting into a companys culture.  Job seekers, add the bulleted words funny man or woman directly to your list of skills and qualifications stat. Having a Great Sense of Humor in the Workplace I find the survey results hilarious (hence the humor) and peculiar at the same time.  Accountemps which provides staffing for the accounting and finance industry surveys executives finding that employees should have a sense of humor in their career bag of tricks and in accounting no less, an industry where workers are not known for their brilliant and humor-filled personalities. But those employees who are funny at work and casual are fun, well-liked, and more engaged in the workplace,  making them likely candidates for management and career progression. Unless, of course, you follow the  Dilbert Principle  where  leadership is natures way of removing morons from the productive flow.  According to this principle, employees who cant do the job are promoted into corporate leadership positions because they are incompetent, not funny. Ive written about this topic before.  These  corporate slackers  woo the boss, make the right corporate connections, and show up at just the right time shaking hands, kissing babies, and tell a well-placed joke to seal the deal.  Theyre perfect corporate management material making the art of corporate politics look easy. Humor at Work: Finding the Perfect Mix As cynical as I sound, I believe there is a mix.  Employees that receive promotions or are considered for career progression within an organization must be competent, funny, qualified, and be able to lead and motivate a team beyond the standard quirky email or manager imposed deadline.  For managers and those leaders who are on their way moving up the corporate ladder, the employees, the disengaged workforce are not the typical Generation Y that you would expect.  They are workers who range in age from 30 to 65 who cut across Generation Y, Generation X, and the Boomer Generation.  That equates to nearly  all  of your workforce. Gallupss data from their  2011 October Employee Engagement Survey  goes beyond just generational topics and your engaged workforce.  The least engaged worker is not that BachelorĂ¢€™s degree college grad but the highly educated workforce or high school grads that leaders and aspiring managers should be worrying about. Millennials Being Funny at Work Except that they arent.  Most managers and organizational leaders dont follow Gallup or even give a damn about your  employee survey. Theyre busy passing the buck and blaming their teams staffing and turnover problems on one culprit, the lazy Millennial.  Granted, those Millennials are a challenge.  I know because I am one, and working with someone like me who questions authority, chooses flexibility over boatloads of cash, and uses Facebook at work is a problem.  Im disengaged, bored, and probably applying for jobs via the company internet. The secret sauce to being an effective manager and landing that big promotion is working with not against employees including millenials and employees from all ages, backgrounds, and experience levels.  Working with them and developing a employee retention strategy on an individual level instead of across the board.

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