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The Three Signs of a Miserable Job: A Fable for Managers (And Their Employees) (J-B Lencioni Series)
ISBN:9780787995317 read summary

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Binding:
Hardcover
Release Date:
August 2007
Edition:
1
ISBN-13:
9780787995317
ISBN-10:
0787995312
Author:
Patrick Lencioni
Publisher:
Jossey-Bass
 
 
 
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Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com

Summary:

Patrick Lencioni, renowned business consultant and bestselling author of The Five Dysfunctions of a Team, is on a critical mission: create widespread job satisfaction in a world full of workplace misery. His latest book, The Three Signs of a Miserable Job: A Fable for Managers (And Their Employees), tells the inspiring tale a high-flying, but deeply dissatisfied Chief Executive Officer who ditches the power and perks for career bliss as the manager of a pizzeria! In this unusual and inspiring story, Lencioni convincingly demonstrates how career happiness (or misery) is the direct result of the manager--employee relationship. Patrick Lencioni took the time to tell us about his life-long "obsession" with job misery, shatter some myths about workplace satisfaction and offer some real advice on how to turn that daily grind into daily fulfillment. --Lauren Nemroff


Some Questions for Patrick Lencioni

Q: Why did you decide to write this book?

A: As a kid, I watched my dad trudge off to work each day and became somewhat obsessed with the notion of job misery. Somewhere along the line, I came to the frightening realization that people spend so much time at work yet so many of them were unfulfilled and frustrated in their jobs. As I got older, I came to another realization--that job misery was having a devastating impact on individuals, and on society at large. It seemed to me that understanding the cause of the problem, and finding a solution for it, was a worthy focus for my career.

Q: What exactly is a miserable job?

A:A miserable job is not the same as a bad one. A bad job lies in the eye of the beholder. One person’s dream job might be another person’s nightmare. But a miserable job is universal. It is one that makes a person cynical and frustrated and demoralized when they go home at night. It drains them of their energy, their enthusiasm and their self-esteem. Miserable jobs can be found in every industry and at every level. Professional athletes, CEOs and actors can be--and often are-- as miserable as ditch diggers, janitors and fast food workers.

Q: How prevalent is job misery?

A: Attend any kind of social gathering, anywhere in the country, and talk about work. The stories and anecdotal evidence confirming job misery are overwhelming. Misery spans all income levels, ages and geography. A recent Gallup poll found that 77% of people hate their jobs. Gallup also contends that this ailing workforce is costing employers more than $350 billion dollars in lost productivity.

Q: What is the root cause of job misery?

A: The primary source of job misery and the potential cure for that misery resides in the hands of one individual--the direct manager. There are countless studies confirming this statement, including both Gallup and The Blanchard Companies. Both organizations have found that an employee’s relationship with their direct manager is the most important determinant to employee satisfaction (over pay, benefits, perks, work-life balance etc).

Even employees who are well paid, do interesting work and have great autonomy, cannot feel fulfilled in a job if their managers are not providing them with what they need on a daily or weekly basis.

Q: What are the three signs?

The first is anonymity, which is the feeling that employees get when they realize that their manager has little interest in them a human being and that they know little about their lives, their aspirations and their interests.

The second sign is irrelevance, which takes root when employees cannot see how their job makes a difference in the lives of others. Every employee needs to know that the work they do impacts someone’s life--a customer, a co-worker, even a supervisor--in one way or another.

The third sign is something I call "immeasurement," which is the inability of employees to assess for themselves their contribution or success. Employees who have no means of measuring how well they are doing on a given day or in a given week, must rely on the subjective opinions of others, usually their managers’, to gauge their progress or contribution.

Q: Why don’t managers do these things?

A: As simple as the three signs are, the fact remains that few managers take a genuine interest in their people, remind them of the impact that their work has on others, and help them establish creative ways to measure and assess their performance.

There are a number of reasons. First, many managers think they are too busy. Of course, the real problem is that most of those managers see themselves primarily as individual contributors who happen to have direct reports. They fail to realize that the most important part of their jobs is providing their people with what they need to be productive and fulfilled (a.k.a. not miserable) in their jobs.

The second reason that managers don’t provide their employees with the three things they need is that they simply forget what is was like when they were a little lower on the food chain. They somehow forget how important it was to them when a supervisor took an interest in them, talked to them about why their work really mattered and gave them a means for evaluating their progress.

Finally, many managers don’t do this because they are embarrassed or afraid to try. They fear that their employees will see them as being disingenuous or manipulative, or that by taking an interest in their personal lives they will be stepping into inappropriate territory. It’s almost as though they fail to understand the difference between the interview process (no personal questions allowed!) and the actual work experience (treat people like a full human being).

Q: What can a miserable employee do to improve his or her situation?

A: The first thing they can do is assess whether their manager is interested in and capable of addressing the three things that are required. And they have to realize that most managers really do want to improve, in spite of the fact that they may seem disinterested.

The second thing miserable employees need to do is help their managers understand what it is they need. If they have a strong relationship with their manager, they can come right out and say it ("You know, it would mean a lot to me if you knew more about who I am and what makes me tick." or, "Can you sit down and help me understand why this work I’m doing makes a difference to someone?").

Finally, employees would do well for themselves if they turned the tables and started doing for their managers what they want for themselves. For instance, employees who take a greater interest in the life of their managers are bound to infect them with the same kind of human interest. Similarly, employees who take the time to tell their managers (in a non suck-up kind of way) about the impact they have on their job satisfaction, will likely inspire them to respond in kind.

However, if an employee comes to the conclusion that his or her manager is indeed completely disinterested in helping them find fulfillment in their work, it may well be time to start looking for a new job.

Q: Why do so many professional athletes and entertainers seem miserable in their jobs?

A: In spite of the money they make and the attention they receive from fans and the media, many athletes and entertainers experience one or all of the three signs of a miserable job.

Most professional athletes feel anonymous in their jobs because their coaches and managers dedicate little, if any, time or energy getting to know them personally. I’ve had coaches tell me "Hey, these guys are professionals and this is a business. They don’t need anything special from me." Keep in mind that they are referring to young men in their early twenties who are living on their own for the first time and feel surprisingly alone--even with all the fan attention.

Entertainers are in similar situations, but for them, it is often relevance that suffers. Many actors cannot reconcile their celebrity and wealth with the fact that they see their work as being somewhat unimportant, in terms of impacting the lives of others. Perhaps that’s why so many of them get involved in charitable causes or politics--it gives them a sense of purpose.



Customer Reviews:

Average Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 

Happiness in your career AND your life

Customer Rating:  5 out of 5 stars 

The book highlights the simple fact that too many of us are reactive in our work, and feel at the mercy of our situation. This creates dissatisfaction, marginalization, and "misery". Recognizing the control we do have and the impact we make on our surroundings helps us recognize the good things about our work. Managers who recognize the emotional component in the financial bottom line allow the space for workers to recognize and build on the pieces of their work that bring satisfaction, rather than creating a stifled "do-what-I-say-or-else" environment.

This recognition of who and what we impact, and why we are important, not only brings satisfaction into the workplace, but into one's life overall. To feel irrelevant in any setting makes us want to look elsewhere for a sense of importance, but the inability to recognize our relevance to the world will be constant no matter the setting.

"3 Signs of a Miserable Job" could just as easily be called "3 Signs of Misery". And contrary to the expectation one might have from the title, it is inspirational, uplifting, and insightful. I highly recommend everyone read this book, especially those who are looking for a deeper understanding of their role in the world.

Another good leadership resource from Lencioni

Customer Rating:  5 out of 5 stars 

Patrick Lencioni continues his series of excellent leadership/management books with The Three Signs of a Miserable Job: A Fable for Managers (And Their Employees) (J-B Lencioni Series). As usual, he uses a fable to make his point. He tells the story of Brian Bailey, a retired CEO who is trying to determine why people hate their jobs and how it can be fixed. Through the fable and the more direct final section, Lencioni identifies three forces that make a job miserable: anonymity, irrelevance, and immeasurement.

When workers feel anonymous, especially to the boss, they tend not to care about their work. They just want to get through the day and go home. It is up to the manager to take a genuine interest in each person so that this anonymity is dispelled.

When people feel irrelevant to the company, they often decide that their work doesn't matter. While they may be key to the success of the organization, they may not know that. Someone needs to tell then the role they play and how their work helps others.

While immeasurement may be a word that Lencioni has created, it is a simple concept. Workers need to be able to measure success. They need to know that they have fulfilled their goal. We have to be careful to measure things that we can control, but we all need some way of knowing that we have succeeded.

Lencioni is clear that these are simple concepts, but his insights are excellent. As usual, Lencioni takes very simple things and shows that any manager can master them with some effort. This is one more really helpful tool in leading people.

A great read for middle managers

Customer Rating:  4 out of 5 stars 

I think Five Dysfunctions of a Team is still Lencioni's best. But Three Signs of a Miserable Job is almost as good, still a must read for Lencioni fans. He's a master story teller, and reads quick. Perfect for time strapped middle managers like myself. I will do my best to apply what I've learned from this book. I've already loaned my book to the HR Director.

Meaningful measurement and personal fulfillment for any job

Customer Rating:  5 out of 5 stars 

I have read two other of the author's business fables and really enjoyed them, but this is my favorite from him so far. Lencioni takes on many tough questions that are very timely in today's business climate. How do you motivate people in a job that appears to be dead end by most popular standards? How can I or anyone else add meaning to my current job so it becomes more interesting and meaningful, especially to me? How should a manager act if he/she really cares about people? How should he/she act if he really does not care about others? Is management with meaning and purpose fulfillment just soft management that favors weaker employees while holding back the really good ones? Is any of this touchy feely talk about people and meaning in work really good for the bottom line and if so, how exactly?

If you feel like just another cog in the wheel at your job, or manage others who feel that way, this is the best book I know of for re-orienting your mindset to a more positive place. I have started implementing some of the ideas in my personal tasks and the broader projects I manage. I have found it refreshing and motivating. The book shows how any job can become miserable or meaningful and life fulfilling; it all hinges on three pretty simple factors the story illustrates very memorably. Don't expect anything complex here - it's meat and potatoes how to treat people with intelligent concern and simultaneously manage better. And the story is not all flowers and pixie dust - one guy gets fired, investment bankers exploit people for opportunities - but everyone is human.

Nicely written, enjoyable story done in a style readers want today - excellent back-to-basics message for managers - with profound importance.

3 Signs of a Miserable Job

Customer Rating:  5 out of 5 stars 

I found the book to be a fast, easy and interesting read. I don't agree with all of his points, but for the most part, he is right on! It is very important for managers to connect to their employees and find out what is important to them.

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