During the last couple of years, I get the feeling that corporations have reverted to workplaces of the Industrial Revolution, where people are seen as just another cog in the machine that can be easily pulled out and replaced if necessary.
This dehumanization is no small matter. In the Financial Times article I reference in my last post, Jonathon Hogg, head of the people and operations practice at PA Consulting, commented:
This reminds me of the prison system in which inmates are assigned numbers. To the prison guards, they are not called by their names or referred to by name in any way. They are their number: Inmate 173658.
Even outside of the performance appraisal process, employees know they are viewed as nothing but cogs in the machine. A recent Wall Street Journal article made this abundantly clear, discussing the “near historic” profits U.S companies are pulling in after “re-tooling their operations.”
Companies know they’re putting the squeeze on employees, as noted in this Market Watch article:
“Some companies acknowledge that workers are feeling squeezed. Among all employers, 61% said their cost cutting has increased employees' workloads, while 53% said cost cutting has made it harder for employees to manage their work-related stress.. …
What’s the likely outcome if this dehumanization continues? Workers looking out for themselves, especially as the economy improves, as this BlessingWhite research notes:
How are employees viewed in your workplace? As inmates who are nothing more than a number, interchangeable at will and not to be troubled about? Or as teammates with value and worth that should be honored, noticed and recognized?