Thursday 1 November 2012

Ballet Dancers Moonlight as Wrestlers


BaldOpinion 12(a)


Managing before the crisis:

Clarie arrived as a pup.  Her temperament is one of friendship – too much, but I learn that to have a good friend I have to be a good friend first. Clarie follows in a line of other dogs, Lampo, Boris, Bess, Foxil the 1st, Capone, Rocky and the more recently expired, Fancy Nancy.

Seven years ago Clarie’s nose was dry. Her tail would not wag. Her look was of sadness.  

Where’s your ball Clarie?’ 

There was no exuberance.

Garbage Disease’ - that is what the Vet said. The puppy had Garbage Disease.


If you put rubbish in then you’ll get rubbish out’, so said Mr Williams – alas, I here sanitise the language he usedJ.

Mr Williams wore short sleeved check shirts and a tie that ended with a broad flair, like a bib. He had big forearms, many stories about rugby and; and his four front teeth were missing!  No matter what this teacher said the posture in his tone made one forget to disagree.  This Williams taught English, but did so using another very different language. When I complained to my mother her response was: ‘Concentrate and learn to speak English.’  

When she walked back into the consulting room I overheard her grumble:

‘You children should be grateful; after all you get two for the price of one.’ 

How do you take precaution against assimilating rubbish or; are you partial to the way Peter Block responds when he says “The Answer to How is Yes?”


Part One – of Three 

Here I broadly discuss employment, but much detail is omitted because the intention is to create a foundation for later discussions.  I am to tread on a number of proverbial toes, but my intentions are not malicious.

This is a rewrite for those who may have read my earlier writing, “Change is Permanent”.  The consternation then was almost comparable to “We Demand a Living Wage”!  Maybe this time I’ve caught up and am on the same page, singing off the same sheet as others:

When I was a boy my football friends went to church on a Sunday. I would accompany them. It was difficult to play football alone and to dribble against a dog served only to puncture my foot. No matter whether my football friends were Catholic, Anglican, or members of other Protestant faiths, the constant at the church was always a shrill voiced woman leading the singing – from the front I’ll have you know.  She would sing way ahead of the others. So far that a fellow footballer, after noticing my perplexed look, he leaned over and whispered, ‘That woman is in a hurry. She has a Sunday roast is in the oven and a match to referee this afternoon!’  

These up-tempo descant singing church women with roasts in the oven would bother me for a number of years.  The same bother was about the man in the front whom people referred to as Pastor and Father. He wore different garments in most every church I visited.  In my boy mind I knew that if I attend often enough then someday I shall understand what the front man was saying.

On a certain Sunday the man spoke about children. He spoke about parents who were previously married to other partners and; also about children who were born to parents who were not married to each other. I understood that, but he made it seem that we children were lesser than the others…

Sometimes we apply to be appointed against a job that we feel more than suited for. Receiving the regret letter, a standard letter, is a devastating feeling.  ‘It prepares you for life’ says that mother. If it is preparing me then why is it that I feel lesser when this happens?

Let’s examine the selection and recruitment processes applied in the world of work.  I draw against criteria that do not add to growth within business.

The purpose of recruitment is the identification of people who have ability, potential, passion and an inherent interest to become better at whatever it is they do.

All too frequently people are recruited because they are liked and less because they sport ability, growth potential, passion, talent and insight.  We choose people for appointment against certain positions because they suit our paradigm. We frequently disregard results drawn from achievement tests and; we forget that the position we seek to fill was created by the business, often a very long time ago.

When the Company is compliant with what is described as the minimum requirements in Equity Legislation then seemingly all is in order. Where fines are imposed for non-compliance Companies increasingly opt to pay instead of comply. No different to the ‘wild cat strike’ (where employees withdraw their labour without following the set procedure. In most countries this is a criminal act, and participants are frequently dismissed, but not in South Africa.)

Prior to and during the interview we observe and test for aptitude, gender, creed and many more. Do we test for whether the candidate is the best at doing the job and; whether such person is able to contribute to growth of the business? Surely, we want to build successful businesses and provide sustainable employment? Instead people are employed because they suit our paradigm and allow us to comply with the minimum requirement stipulated in the relevant Equity Act.

Is academic qualification an accurate measuring instrument; more so than experience?    

The concern about personal weakness is over-rated.  Most people only possess between 75% and 85% of the skill mix stipulated in the Company job description.

Jobs that are structured to suit the incumbents’ ability, passion and talents make weakness irrelevant. Jobs created by the Company should be fluid and selection processes should gear toward the appointment of people who can best contribute to building the business.

What if job descriptions are changed to contain only those tasks that the incumbent is good at; what if tasks are reallocated to those who have greater ability where there is deficiency and; what if jobs are more regularly scored in order to determine parity reward?

 'All the ballet dancers in the National Ballet Corps moonlight as wrestlers', so says Suleiman Hendricks, a theatrical lighting operator who is known for using hyperbole.   

Much truth is spoken in jest (Geoffrey Chaucer – 1390).  When the accountant is not a good salesman and; when the salesman is not a good accountant – why are we surprised?

Employees are not assets in the business. Only good employees are assets. Bad employees are a catastrophic liability. Williams would have been more descriptive!

The selection mechanism determines whether persons are attracted and subsequently employed. The selection process prioritises criteria in order to identify the best candidate. Selection panels are dictated to by law to interview and appoint from a pool of people who were, for political and customary reasons, excluded from certain employment bands. 

Why not search for the better talent and grow the business so that it can incubate for the future in a manner that is discriminatory only about ability and effort? The education system in South Africa is failing the people.  People are not being sufficiently prepared for the world of work – all the more reason why development at work is essential.

Experience has to be earned.

Create opportunity to harvest from a yield of proven/identified ability; create attainable aspiration within the business and; encourage the demise of entitlement.

Is it right to prevent ability and potential from having access to opportunity; particularly if opportunity is reserved for those who were wronged in the past and; is often at the expense of the better candidate.    

What can be done to fix the past and; what can be done to grow better future businesses, so that more people can have jobs with which to earn dignity?

To legislate who should be employed is defeatist. The selection mechanism should be defensible against and defined in legislation. Legislation should not be punitive to the appointment of talent and the best candidate. Skin-tone and the past are not going to build future businesses and create jobs - ability, talent, passion and opportunity for the better candidate will. 

It is important to reflect the demographics throughout the tiers of employment bands, but it should not be at the expense of ability and talent.  Selecting employees because they are/were recipients of negative discrimination will further stunt personal growth – ‘Those punch above their weight!’ says Williams

The role of the business includes supporting employees. People need affirmation as a form of and support.

Imagine, Abbe Zimmerman became fed-up with the noise; dropped his newspaper, removed his spectacles and in frustration shouted:

… For heaven’s sake, Robert! Put that there guitar away and stop singing that Knock, Knock, Heaven Door, thing, over and bloody over!

When is it enough!

Your voice, it, is monotone and, and irritating! ...’   Williams would have said it better.

However, had Mr Zimmerman consistently said this to Bob then the world would have been denied the incalculable musical influence Bob Dylan continues to exert on popular music?

There are times when judgement is rubbished by reality; … but how can we avoid garbage disease?

Businesses and organisations are the custodians of jobs for all who work.  

We have no choice, but to constantly seek a marriage between judgement and reality. Leadership is the ability to balance circumstance.

Conflict on the other hand, need not be negative.  The employer-employee relationship will always be one of conflict.  Leftover feelings following a bloody / bruising strike are more important than the act of flexing industrial muscle.  Is industrial action necessary; is it the only solution; has its time passed and; what are the alternatives?  My reference here is not limited to employees.

We want leadership to engender positive conflict. People who work want to celebrate their workplaces.  We want to be happy and enjoy the journey of growth without exploitation and disrespect.  

To hanker after, or fain blindness when we fail to facilitate the convergence of judgement with reality is a travesty. No employer or employee can dance alone.

In this context the guarding against paternalism is a puerile argument. We have to do whatever it takes so that people who have the best ability are attracted, identified, appointed and nurtured. Anything lesser shall serve to tamper with the custodial obligation employers have toward the jobs against which those who work are appointed.  Sustainable businesses and perpetual growth shall only occur upon solid defensible foundations and where nurturing for excellence is the left over feeling.  

Business has a responsibility to provide sustainable jobs – hold business leaders accountable. To strive for equity as determined by skin-tone and an unjust past whilst unemployment soars and sustainability of employment decreases is not constructive. Each one has to teach one, but such teaching must vest on a solid, sound and growing platform, failing which teaching shall continue to be a vacuum exercise.

When all is said and done go on, have a listen, enjoy –

13 comments:

  1. I disagree that the employment relationship is one of conflict. The employment relationship is one of co-operation.

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    1. Where do you come from? Where have you been these past months? The world around us is colapsing mainly because the employees and their employers are at war - so much at war are they that the rules of the war are being ignored. Yet, you state that the employer-employee relationship is one of co-operation!

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  2. Johan, the employment relationship is one of conflict because each of the two wants different things from the other. The point Bald makes is that there is no need for there to be negativity when the conflict occurs. Instead of Industrial Relations maturing in South Africa it is doing the opposite, hence I begin to think that Bald makes a number of points that I shall think through and implement in my own sphere of influence.

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  3. Lovely story again. That Williams must have been a character to behold. I wish that you would tell more.
    The workplace should become the educator of the people in South Africa because the education system is no longer failing, it has failed.
    I come from a community where people cared for each other and I live in a community where we do not know each other.
    When we drive on the roads then it feels like dodge-ball because people rage with selfishness. The misgiving I feel each morning is depressing. There is no fibre in society. At work is better, but now the work is also becoming like the neighbours and like the impatience of those I dodge when I come to work.
    - All so depressing. Thank you for the good laughs and for the low light music. You sound like a real man, one who thinks and then cares. Thank you my brother.

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    1. i so agree with you. i to came from such a community.

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  4. Different argument, but valid I guess. We cannot work in isolation when doing life. You cannot say that because society is losing itself through a lack of caring, respect and self-consideration that we should go to the workplace and do there what society no longer can. Much as your proposal in this regard has value, in my opinion, we need also put measures in place to fix education, to fix the way people behave in the streets and to create a caring people again. How, even though the answer is yes, how do we do this, any views?

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  5. I am not very religious, but after reading and re-reading your very different writing style – story telling, humour, music and the way you manipulate logic in a manner that makes me pause, put down, walk around the block, return and read some more, I remember the many instances in history where people were persecuted because they thought differently and dared to disagree.
    I am a South African and I want to be nothing else. I am irritated by your constant talk about how crazy it is to affirm people on the basis of what happened in the past and because of the blackness in our skins. Many times I have started to write a reply to your articles that I found irritating, but I stop myself because I cannot justify, or reconcile my criticism with reality.
    After reading this one I feel the same, but this time I am thinking that you and those who agree with you are right – like you said in another piece, that it is not who, but what that is right. Sorry if I do not quote you correctly. Affirmative Action and Black Economic Empowerment is an embarrassment. Tomorrow I shall ask my employer to be honest with me and tell me if I am employed like I am because I am black. He must be honest, I shall beg him to be honest and if it is true then I am resigning on the spot. I want to be good at what I do, not black first.

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    1. yeah for you Patrick. if we had more of you what progress.

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  6. I wish to understand what exactly you mean that selection panels recruit people that make them feel comfortable and by implication that may not be good for the business?
    I’m a person from Indian origins. My parents and two of my brothers are in arranged marriages. The others (3) had secular unions. The operative term here is had. I want to identify the principle that is relevant here and if I can then can the same principle not be applied to form part of how we recruit for the world of work.
    South Africa was a wonderful country to live in. We no longer respect the rule of law. Imagine, COSATU says that President Zuma is a bad President, but that he should be President again. We are destructing ourselves and the people we employ are chosen because they pass skeptical psychology based tests, comply with the BBBEE Act and then, if we are lucky enough only, will it be checked if they can do the job. It is like having a swim before changing into a swimming suit.
    If people have to compete for ability only then we will find the most suitable candidates, I agree.

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  7. In South Africa it is okay to ignore the rule of law. The NPA was instructed by the High Court and it ignores the order – nothing tangible is done. Workers go on strike without following the procedures needed before such action can be embarked upon and they are rewarded with their demands being granted. Further arguments about legal issues that seem to make the worker action right is currently being touted.
    Back in the 1960s there was a defiance campaign. The campaign was widely supported. The state referred to this action as Civil Disobedience and acted against the African men and women who burnt their resident permits. It would take many decades before this abomination was scrapped.
    Affirmative Action is a similar abomination and I too have read this over and over as contained within these Blog Articles. The BaldOpinion appears to make light of the situation from time to time and I find it offensive that such a sad situation and such an injustice is the bane of jest.
    Why can logical business that see reason also not embark on a defiance campaign and say to hell with discrimination based on skin colour and embrace discrimination, as proposed in this article, in favour of ability irrespective of how much suffering was experienced?

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  8. Nice stories Baldy, but what about the people who do not fit into the mould that you describe?
    In my circumstance my sisters are all graduates and having been the eldest I would lead and assist to the point where I knew more about their subject than they do.
    Today, when I apply for the same job, I do not get as far as an interview. This is for two reasons. The first reason is that I am a white male (35 years old) in South Africa and we are supposedly, even though less than 4% of all South Africans are white males, we are in over supply in the workplace and are not hired. I get chopped prior to being interviewed because of the colour my born with skin is. Secondly I do not meet the requirement because even though I have the ability and the skill, I do not have a paper qualification. I am a professional salesman and I do not have a degree, but I have sold businesses and other more complex entities to of the most senior people in the world, yet I cannot be appointed against a suitable job because I am the wrong colour and I do not have a degree.
    This is not fare.

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    1. Cliff i can relate with you. but this is not only in SA. I have been headhunted over and over again and when i do submit my cv i get sorry you dont qualify since i do not have a bachelor of commerce. what rot. field experience is worth more than paper.

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  9. hell sake - The employer-employee relationship will always be one of conflict. - if that is true then conflict is progress

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