Tag Archives: Ethic

Work Ethic in the Workplace

Work EthicWork Ethic in the Workplace: Doing More Than is Expected Each Day

I’m writing a new book about rethinking the work ethic, and in the course of my research I’ve been speaking to people from all walks of life about what this means to them. Today I spoke with a small business owner who shared his experiences as a college student working in London during the 1980s.

He had been hired by Harrod’s department store to work in the stockroom. Wishing to do his best and to please his supervisor he arrived a few minutes early each day and quickly got to work. After a couple of days one of the other stock clerks took him aside and suggested that he slow down a bit. He explained that once management realizes you can work faster and more efficiently than had been done previously, this becomes the new expectation for everyone.

I had similar experiences as a new teacher, where several other teachers were quite vocal about my willingness to do so much for the children. They told me that I was going to make them look bad if I continued to do so much, both in the classroom and on my own time. I’m sorry to say that I succumbed to their demands and soon settled in to doing only what was necessary and required of me the majority of the time.

Years later I regret that decision and choice. Now I’m more mature and better able to handle bullying and negativity from other adults. I wonder how many other teachers did less than they could have at that school for similar reasons. If only we’d had the courage to stand up to what was probably the minority of teachers who only did what they had to each day. What a different experience teaching would have been and the results could have been life changing for the students who passed through our doors during those years.

It was only years later, at the final school I taught out before resigning from the school district that I found my voice and did what I knew was best for everyone. Even though I left the teaching profession on a high note, I spent many years in mediocrity because of my inaction.

I would love to hear your thoughts and experiences on this topic of work ethic in the workplace. And look for my new book to be published in the spring of 2017.

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Do You Have a Strong Work Ethic?

Work EthicYears ago I met a man on a flight between Los Angeles and Chicago. He asked me if I knew what people from most of the United States thought about people who were from California. I shook my head, but then attempted to guess. Perhaps they thought we had it too easy because the weather was so favorable, or that we were a little crazy or liberal, or that we all wanted to become movie stars. No, none of these was what he was about to share with me.

This man told me that the perception of people from the Golden State was that we didn’t follow through and do what we said we would do, and that we lacked a strong work ethic. This surprised me until I gave it further thought.

While I was in law school in New York during the late 1970s my fellow law students regularly teased me for being too “laid back”, meaning that I was more casual in my attitude, the way I dressed, and how I approached life in general. It was true; my jeans and long shirts were comfortable and I didn’t feel like I needed to impress anyone while I was a student. Also, I was more easygoing than the people I met in New York and took most things in stride. The ability to be unflappable and non-confrontational seemed to be desirable traits in my way of thinking. But I believed I was just as serious and studious as my peers.

But the part this man mentioned about Californians not possessing a strong work ethic? I would have to take issue with that comment. Although I had never thought of myself as a hard worker, I was always willing to do what it took to accomplish the task at hand. Could it be that I did not fully understand what he meant by the term “work ethic”?

It was only a few months ago that the phrase popped up in my life once again. It when I watched a video with actor and motivational speaker Wil Smith, where he brought up how his “ridiculous work ethic” ensured that he could always win a challenge or a contest, and achieve his life goals and dreams. This video is below. What do think about what Wil Smith says?

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