While working for a landscaping company at his first summer job, Dave Haynes learned the definition of peon when he was informed that he was not allowed to touch the lawnmowers, and was instead relegated to “weed-pickin’” duty. Lawn- mowers were reserved for senior landscaping professionals.
Since then, he has noticed that the view from the bottom seems to be the same, no matter what the job. He has spent time as a lifeguard, a telemarketer (the real obnoxious kind), a school bus driver, a marketing professional, a pool guy, and a salesperson. One time he thought he had finally broken through when he was appointed Marketing Director for a small manufacturer. He soon found, however, that nothing had changed. He was still doing all the work, with no extra pay and no subordinates—just a title and some nice-looking business cards.
He now works in international sales for a Fortune 500 company. He’s not going to tell you which one, because he wants to keep his job. Unless this book sells a million copies. Then he’ll tell you.
The Peon Book: How to Manage Us
by David Haynes
Paperback
- ISBN-13: 9781576752852
- Publisher: Berrett-Koehler Publishers, Inc.
- Publication date: 04/09/2004
- Pages: 150
- Product dimensions: 5.54(w) x 8.58(h) x 0.43(d)
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Management books are traditionally written by industry "experts": scholars, consultants, senior managers. They're writing about how to manage workers, but none of these experts really understands the viewpoint of the average worker, the regular grunt in the trenches-the peon. Peons are the ones affected when a manager decides to manage-in-one-minute, to move somebody's cheese, to try that fifth discipline. Rather than consult some expert, why not go to the source, and ask the peons? Who better to teach you how to train a dog than the dog himself? And who better to tell you how to manage than one of those who are being managed? The Peon Book gives managers the perspective they've been lacking. Author and self-proclaimed Chief Executive Peon Dave Haynes' sole, powerful source of expertise is that he has been managed in different companies and in different industries, and he knows what worked-and what failed catastrophically. In irreverent, straight-talking terms, Haynes tells managers what they really need to do to make their employees motivated, committed, and productive-and it's not memorizing yet another "technique" or "strategy" or "discipline." Haynes writes in a common sense, easy-to-read style that is both witty and wise. Every boss can benefit, and every employee can empathize with the words in The Peon Book. "The inability to empathize can be a real speed bump on the road to a trusting, personal relationship with your employees. So how are you supposed to show more empathy? I take issue with management books that give you a phrase to say to show empathy like 'I understand,' or 'I know what you mean,' or that say that by rephrasing a statement you can show empathy. Don't use some coined phrase to show empathy, just mentally put yourself in our shoes. Sometimes it's just a matter of remembering what it's like to have to get all those reports turned in on a Friday. Or remembering what it's like to have to ask for time off. Or remembering what it's like to be the new guy on the job, and have a hard time remembering everything. Do you see the key concept I'm getting at? Empathy = remembering. Who said you'd never use math in the real world?"
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