阿丽莎·班达里和拉克萨尔工业公司

B. Parmar, Jenny Mead
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引用次数: 0

摘要

阿丽莎·班达里是一家成功的、备受尊敬的全球油漆、涂料、特种材料和光学产品供应商的运营副总裁。在公司工作的10年里,她看到了工作场所文化的微妙解体。她自己的观察,再加上最近的一项员工调查,显示出公司整体的心态是自满、缺乏动力、缺乏灵活性,以及普遍的不安和不愿意灵活地接受公司的新想法。一些管理者承认,他们害怕提出改变的建议,不喜欢偏离常规,甚至不愿意考虑接受任何创新。班达里还注意到,各个部门的压力和紧张程度都在增加,他认为这已经影响到了公司的业绩。她担心,更积极的员工可能会被竞争对手挖走,而整体的不安情绪会变得更大、更成问题。为了工作效率、员工心理健康和公司未来的成功,班达里知道事情需要改变,但她不确定该采取什么步骤和策略。尽管5月下旬的下午阳光明媚,阿丽莎·班达里还是带着挥之不去的头痛离开了办公室。拉克萨尔工业公司(Laxar Industries)是一家油漆、涂料、特种材料和光学产品的全球供应商。作为该公司的运营副总裁,她第二天与高级管理层开了一整天的会议,讨论公司日益低落的士气和态度。为了控制工作场所的温度,该公司在2018年的去年秋天对其1000多名经理进行了匿名调查,最近报告的结果并不尽如人意。调查结果显示,人们的总体心态是自满、缺乏动力、缺乏灵活性、普遍不安,不愿灵活地接受新想法。一些管理者承认,他们害怕提出改变的建议,不喜欢偏离常规,甚至不愿意考虑接受任何创新。班达里对此并不感到惊讶。她在拉克萨尔工作了10年,一路晋升,目睹了当时文化的微妙瓦解。许多部门关系紧张,对缺乏晋升和机会感到不满,员工普遍无精打采,她认为这最终会损害公司。几位有才华的高管已经离开,理由是工作场所和职业道德越来越不景气,他们去了拉克萨尔的竞争对手那里。公司首席执行官让班达里领导一组高级管理人员,想办法解决拉克萨尔管理层普遍存在的消极心态和日益缺乏动力的问题。班达里记得,当她第一次加入公司时,有几个缺乏积极性的经理,但情况与现在明显不同。她注意到各个部门的压力和紧张程度都在增加,她坚信这已经影响到了公司的业绩。在过去的几个月里,她参加了各个部门的运营会议,她所看到的,以及她与许多员工的谈话,证实了调查所揭示的结果。拉克萨尔工业公司……
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Alisha Bhandari and Laxar Industries
Alisha Bhandari, vice president of operations at a successful and well-respected global supplier of paints, coatings, specialty materials, and optical products, had watched during her ten years at the company a subtle disintegration of workplace culture. Her own observations, coupled with a recent employee survey, had revealed an overall mindset of complacency, lack of motivation, inflexibility, and a general malaise and unwillingness to be flexible to new ideas in the company. Some managers admitted to being fearful of suggesting changes and a distaste for deviating from the normal routine or even considering embracing anything innovative. Bhandari had also noticed greater stress and tension in various departments, and believed that this was already affecting company performance. She worried that the more motivated employees might be lured away by competitors and general malaise would grow larger and more problematic. For the sake of workplace efficiency, employee mental health, and the future success of the company, Bhandari knew that things needed to change, but she was uncertain what steps to take and strategies to put into place. Excerpt UVA-E-0466 Sept. 29, 2020 Alisha Bhandari and Laxar Industries Despite the sunny late-May afternoon, Alisha Bhandari left her office with a nagging headache. Vice president of operations at Laxar Industries (Laxar)—a global supplier of paints, coatings, specialty materials, and optical products—she had an all-day meeting the next day with senior management to discuss declining morale and attitudes at the company. In an effort to take the workplace temperature, the company had conducted an anonymous survey of its 1,000-plus managers the past fall, in 2018, and the recently reported results had been less than stellar. The overall mindset revealed in the survey results was one of complacency, lack of motivation, inflexibility, and a general malaise and unwillingness to be flexible to new ideas. Some managers admitted to being fearful of suggesting changes and a distaste for deviating from the normal routine or even considering embracing anything innovative. Bhandari was not surprised. She had been with Laxar for 10 years, rising through the ranks, and had watched a subtle disintegration of the culture in that time. There was tension in many of the departments, resentments over lack of promotion or opportunity, and a general listlessness that she thought would ultimately harm the company. Several talented executives had left, citing an increasingly moribund workplace and work ethic, and had gone to Laxar's competitors. The company CEO had tasked Bhandari with leading a group of senior management members to come up with ways to address the negative mindset and growing lack of motivation that seemed to pervade management at Laxar. While Bhandari remembered, when she first joined the company, that there were a few unmotivated managers, it was nothing like it apparently was now. She had noticed greater stress and tension in various departments, and she firmly believed that this was already affecting company performance. She had also spent the last several months attending operational meetings of the various departments, and what she saw—along with conversations she'd had with many employees—had just confirmed what the survey had revealed. Laxar Industries . . .
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