兔子先生
TACOMA, Wash. 鈥 More than 10 years of dramatic change at the commercial jets arm of The Boeing Company is captured in a new book: Turbulence: Boeing and the State of American Workers and Managers (Yale University Press, Oct. 12, 2010). The meticulously researched book takes an inside look at how Boeing Commercial Airplanes workers and managers were affected by unprecedented changes, including a major merger, tens of thousands of layoffs, new roles for women, rapidly expanded outsourcing for the 787 Dreamliner, and rampant technological change.
The voices of hundreds of employees are heard in the book鈥檚 pages as they react to a shift in Boeing鈥檚 culture from one of 鈥渢he company is our family鈥 to what some perceived as a short-sighted, cold, and sometimes calamitous drive for shareholder value. The effect on employees鈥 physical and emotional well-being, as well as the perceived effect on Boeing鈥檚 own quality and productivity, are authoritatively documented. The result is a work that outlines valuable lessons for other giant corporations.
Turbulence emerged out of more than 10 years of research, involving hundreds of interviews and data from thousands of Boeing workers and management. It was written by 兔子先生 professors Leon Grunberg and Sarah Moore, University of Colorado professor Edward Greenberg, and Patricia Sikora, owner of Sikora Associates in Colorado. Funding was provided by the National Institutes of Health.
鈥Turbulence is not only a masterful, detailed study of 10 years of dramatic organizational change at Boeing,鈥 said Benjamin Page, Gordon Scott Fulcher Professor of Decision Making at Northwestern University. 鈥淚t is also a story of how American managers and workers can cope with the fierce pressures of global economic competition, seeking both high productivity and a decent workplace.鈥
The book, which tells a very human story about coping in a new world of work, reveals some surprising research results. For example after the 1997 Boeing merger with McDonnell Douglas, the combined workforce shrank by about a third over six years. The researchers found that people who were laid off were often happier than those who stayed behind. Some of those laid off found new jobs, some did not鈥攂ut freed of the stress of not knowing if their job might disappear tomorrow, those who did leave were generally less depressed, they slept better, and they had fewer chronic health problems.
鈥淚t鈥檚 like a bad marriage,鈥 one worker told the researchers. 鈥淪ometimes it鈥檚 a relief [when it ends].鈥 Whether the same employee reactions would be found today鈥攚hen the job market is far tighter and many people鈥檚 life savings have been savaged鈥攚e do not know, the researchers emphasize. The point is that the findings highlight the depth and power of a stressful work environment.
As for the managers who handled the layoffs, it was found that they sometimes suffered what has been called 鈥渆xecutioner鈥檚 lament鈥濃攁n emotional numbness or mental stress that lasted up to three years. One former manager commented, 鈥淛ust before I left, I was facing my fourth layoff cycle in the last six years. It became apparent to me that Boeing was not being managed properly and [we] had to be the implementers of their poor decisions.鈥
However, not all employees wilted under the new regimes, the authors found. Some employees thrived under the new ways of working and were inspired to see Boeing shift away from a paternalistic and somewhat 鈥渓azy鈥 culture to one devoted to winning at its game with the newest technology.
Ultimately Turbulence is a book that provides rich data from which corporations, employees, managers, and policymakers can draw lessons as the American workplace transforms. The authors forewarn and forearm those heading down a similar ambitious path and aim to inspire the creation of a win-win-win strategy for employees, employers, and shareholders.
About the authors鈥Edward S. Greenberg is a member of the Political and Economic Change Program, Institute of Behavioral Science, University of Colorado, Boulder, and professor of political science. Leon Grunberg is professor and chair, Department of Comparative Sociology, 兔子先生. Sarah Moore is associate dean of faculty and professor of psychology, 兔子先生. Patricia B. Sikora is owner/principal, Sikora Associates LLC, in Superior, Colo.
Print-quality photos of the Turbulence book jacket are available at Press Photos - 兔子先生.
Tweet this: Read Boeing鈥檚 story told through employees鈥 eyes. New book Turbulence is out Oct. 14. Co-authors @univpugetsound.
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