Michael Hyatt, the current President/CEO of Thomas Nelson Publishing and once upon a time potential manager of my band Guardian, writes one of my favorite blogs on the net.
Allow me to share his blog that shows what happens when common sense meets compassion at the intersection of finance in the workplace. When people are valued over tradition- in this case: "The Dress Code"
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Often, decision-making in corporations crawls along at a snail’s pace. Or so it seems. But occasionally, when the right idea surfaces at the right time, things can move quickly.
On Thursday, October 16, at 4:30 p.m. Gabe Wicks, the VP in charge of our Design and Multimedia Group, sent me an email. He challenged our dress code policy, saying
I replied seven minutes later to Gabe and Jim Thomason, our VP of Human Resources. I told them both that I loved the idea. Jim replied a few minutes later and suggested that we poll the executive leadership team. We gave them a “negative option,” telling them that we were going to announce the change on Friday afternoon unless they objected. I wanted for our employees to go into the weekend with some positive news.
By noon on Friday, we had heard from everyone on the executive team. Jim sent out a “Dress Code Change” announcement at 1:30 p..m., less than 24 hours from the time Gabe first presented the idea.
An hour later Jim reported back that his email was “lit up with thank-you notes.” More than one employee said to him, “This is the best news I have heard in weeks?” Wow.
Last week, in honor of our new dress code, I wore jeans every single day. I loved how much more productive I felt. I don’t know if it was the jeans per se or just the change of pace. Regardless, I like it.
Why do you think most people responded so positively to such a seemingly small change in our dress code? What other small changes could we make that would have a big impact?
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
I think work attire (and even church attire) is pretty much a costume. I wonder what would happen if we put away the pretentious wardrobes and encouraged people to be more authentic. aka: "Real".
Mike's experience showed more productivity and a more positive atmosphere.
-jamie
Subscribe to
Posts [Atom]