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Gartner Says That by 2017, 25 Percent of Enterprises Will Have an Enterprise App Store - 0 views

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    "Gartner Says That by 2017, 25 Percent of Enterprises Will Have an Enterprise App Store Growing Number of Enterprise Mobile Devices and Enterprise Adoption of MDM Will Drive Demand and Adoption of Enterprise App Stores Analysts Examine the State of the Industry at Gartner Application Architecture, Development By 2017, 25 percent of enterprises will have an enterprise app store for managing corporate-sanctioned apps on PCs and mobile devices, according to Gartner, Inc. Enterprise app stores promise greater control over the apps used by employees, greater control over software expenditures and greater negotiating leverage with app vendors, but this greater control is only possible if the enterprise app store is widely adopted.  "Apps downloaded from public app stores for mobile devices disrupt IT security, application and procurement strategies," said Ian Finley, research vice president at Gartner. "Bring your own application (BYOA) has become as important as bring your own device (BYOD) in the development of a comprehensive mobile strategy, and the trend toward BYOA has begun to affect desktop and Web applications as well. Enterprise app stores promise at least a partial solution but only if IT security, application, procurement and sourcing professionals can work together to successfully apply the app store concept to their enterprises. When successful, they can increase the value delivered by the application portfolio and reduce the associated risks, license fees and administration expenses."  Gartner has identified three key enterprise app store trends and recommendations of how organizations can benefit from them:  The increasing number of enterprise mobile devices and the adoption of mobile device management (MDM) by enterprises will drive demand and adoption of enterprise app stores. Enterprises already have numerous choices for downloading software onto PCs, but most of them don't include support for smartphones and tablets. Enterprises are beginning to f
Aurialie Jublin

Uber's Augmented Workers - Uber Screeds - Medium - 0 views

  • Uber has long claimed it’s a technology company, not a transportation company. Uber’s drivers are promoted as entrepreneurs and classified as independent contractors. The company claims to provide only a platform/app that enables drivers to be connected with passengers; as an intermediary, the company relies on the politics of platforms to elude responsibility as a traditional employer, as well as regulatory regimes designed to govern traditional taxi businesses.
  • Drivers must submit to a system that molds their interactions, controls their behavior, sets and changes rates unilaterally, and is generally structured to minimize the power of driver (“partner”) voices. Drivers make inquiries to outsourced community support representatives that work on Uber’s behalf, but their responses are based on templates or FAQs.
  • Uber uses surge pricing to lure drivers to work at a particular place at a particular time, without guaranteeing the validity of the surge incentive if they do follow it. Surge is produced through an algorithmic assessment of supply and demand and is subject to constant dynamism. The rate that drivers are paid is based on the passenger’s location, not their own. Even when they travel to an active surge zone, they risk receiving passengers at lower or higher surge than is initially advertised, or getting fares from outside the surge zone. Drivers will be locked out of the system for varying periods of time, like 10 minutes, 30 minutes, etc. for declining too many rides. They also get warnings for “manipulating” surge.
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  • Uber drivers are “free” to login or log-out to work at will, but their ability to make choices that benefit their own interests, such as accepting higher-fare passengers, is severely limited.
  • To a significant degree, Uber has successfully automated many of the processes involved in managing a large workforce, comprised of at at least 400 000 active drivers in the U.S. alone, according to Uber’s last public estimate. However, automation is not to be confused with independence. Uber has built a system that leverages significant control over how workers do their jobs, even as that control is structured to be indirect and semi-automated, such as through nudges, algorithmic labor logistics, the rating system, etc.
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    "Summary Uber has done a lot of things to language to communicate a strong message of distance between itself and its relationship to Uber drivers. Uber insists drivers should be classified as independent contractors, labelled driver-partners, and promoted as entrepreneurs, although the company faces legal challenges over issues of worker misclassification. Beyond its attempts to label work as a type of "sharing" in the so-called "sharing economy," Uber's protracted efforts to celebrate the independence and freedom of drivers have evolved into a sophisticated policy push to design a new classification of worker that would accommodate Uber's business model. The emergent classification, "independent worker," does not acknowledge the significant control Uber leverages over how drivers do their job."
Aurialie Jublin

How Freelancers Are Redefining Success To Be About Value, Not Wealth | Co.Exist - 0 views

  • Time is a new currency, and successful freelancers manage, save, and spend it wisely.
  • Independent workers value community, because collaboration and camaraderie are more than warm and fuzzy feelings--they’re the foundation of success in the emerging independent economy.
  • Freelancers value eating healthy, going to the gym or practicing yoga, meditating to reduce stress, and working in spaces with plenty of light and fresh air. For a freelancer, success in work means being healthy enough--physically and mentally--to enjoy life.
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  • Freelancers are shaping the new economy. As flexible schedules and ubiquitous communication become the norm, the work-life balance that we’ve always struggled for is becoming achievable. As community and teamwork become more necessary than ever to thrive, the lonely, closed-off cubicle will make way for meaningful collaboration. And as the demand for healthy food and workspaces increases, industry will increasingly connect corporate profits and social good.
  • The American workforce is changing, and the definition of success is changing with it. For freelancers, freedom in work, health in life, and community in both are the ticking hands on the new gold watch.
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    "The old model of slaving for 40 hours a week in exchange for a paycheck is eroding. When you can control your own time, you can control your own well-being--and that might be worth more than money."
Christophe Gauthier

Everyday Sociology Blog: The Rationality of Irrationality - 0 views

  • The Rationality of Irrationality
  • One of the most well-known sociological theories is George Ritzer’s idea of McDonaldization. Ritzer based his idea on Max Weber’s theories of bureaucracy and rationality. Weber was concerned that capitalism and industrialization were fueling a world where our individual freedoms were being eroded. He warned that we were increasingly living in an iron cage, as we become trapped in an impersonal world that values efficiency, rationality, and control over individuality and autonomy. Ritzer picked up on Weber’s concerns and adapted them to contemporary life
  • Ritzer’s theory of McDonaldization has four dimensions:
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  • Efficiency: Completing tasks in the most productive and proficient manner. Calculability: Being able to quantify the output; emphasizing quantity over quality. Predictability: Ensuring that tasks, results, and products are the always the same. Control: Replacing human efforts with non-human technology.
  • Ritzer makes the point that when our lives become McDonaldized, the resulting effect is often one of irrationality. In other words, as we try to become efficient, calculable, predictable, and controlling, we often end up with illogical, counterintuitive, and problematic results
  • just like our consumption of fast food, basing our educational system on standardized tests and using social media for our interpersonal communication have many irrational drawbacks. In the world of education, we have teachers “teaching to the test,” and students feeling like empty vessels that are being filled with irrelevant information (see my recent blog about this). In terms of communication, when technology replaces face-to-face interaction we end up, to use the title of Sheryl Turkle’s book, Alone Together
  • The rationality of irrationality. If the result of trying to be extremely efficient, calculable, and predictable is irrational, then might it be true that we can be more rational if we try to be inefficient, un-calculable and unpredictable?
  • Every Thursday during the summer and fall I pick up vegetables and fruits at the Huguenot Street Farm—my local CSA (Community Supported Agriculture).
  • In the framework of McDonaldization, the CSA model seems quite irrational. And yet, the results are undeniably rational. The food I am eating is healthy, fresh, natural, and free of chemicals, and it is not genetically modified. I usually get so many vegetables and fruits each week that it forces me to eat in a healthier way than I might normally eat. The money I am spending is staying in, and contributing to, the local economy instead of adding to the profits of some faraway multinational corporation. The people I see each week allow me to build a greater sense of community and social capital. As my colleagues Brian Obach and Kathleen Tobin found in their study of CSAs, this un-McDonaldized form of food production has significant benefits for individuals and their communities
marinealbarede

Le Figaro - L'entreprise : Voici votre bureau en 2030 - 1 views

  • Le salarié sera sans doute présent moins de temps sur le site de l'entreprise mais il travaillera de chez lui, bénéficiant d'horaires adaptés à sa situation. « L'idée est aussi d'éviter les heures de pointe pour ceux qui dépendent de leur voiture », précise Marie Puybaraud. Ainsi, la frontière entre l'espace privé et professionnel s'estompera. Selon les différents scénarii, cette évolution sera une souplesse bienvenue ou, au contraire, une dérive vers le travailleur corvéable à merci.
  • Le scénario de l'éco bureau est le plus épanouissant, car il offre le meilleur mode de vie. Le salarié partage sa journée de travail entre son domicile, son bureau et des espaces collectifs loués pour l'occasion. Le projet a germé dans « le Hospital Club » situé à Londres qui propose aux entreprises spécialisées dans la publicité, le multimédia et le marketing des bureaux satellites.
  • Le monde du travail régi par le réseau. Scénario noir. Nous sommes en 2030, le monde subit des attaques terroristes informatiques et les pandémies se multiplient. De ce fait, le travail à domicile s'impose comme réponse à ces menaces. Les travailleurs, souvent sous un statut de micro entrepreneurs, échangent avec leurs clients et leurs collaborateurs via des réseaux. Ils perdent donc le sentiment d'appartenance à leur entreprise.
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  • Le bureau-forteresse. Le monde entre dans un déclin, martyrisé par des attaques terroristes, des troubles sociaux et une forte insécurité. Le scénario du "bureau Gattaca" projette par exemple une succession de grèves planétaires en 2015 et un monde gouverné plus que jamais par les entreprises.
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    Le groupe Johnson Controls a fait réaliser une étude sur l'évolution du cadre de travail d'ici à une vingtaine d'années. Trois scénarios sont imaginés : l'éco-bureau (travail en communauté), la Ruche (le monde du travail régi par le réseau) et "Bienvenue à Gattaca" (le bureau-forteresse). En 2030, nous aurons toujours un bureau. Même concurrencé par le travail à domicile, il restera indispensable pour se retrouver et échanger. Si le lieu demeure, sa forme change cependant. Il perd sa dimension privative pour devenir plus que jamais un espace collaboratif. 
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    Le groupe Johnson Controls a fait réaliser une étude sur l'évolution du cadre de travail d'ici à une vingtaine d'années. Trois scénarios sont imaginés.
Aurialie Jublin

Miroir Social - Peut-on utiliser la biométrie pour contrôler les horaires de ... - 0 views

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    L'utilisation de la biométrie dans le milieu du travail est strictement encadrée par la CNIL.
Aurialie Jublin

The Future of Work - livre blanc de Esselte - 0 views

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    "As a result of the internet, new technologies, the huge increase in mobile or home working, part-time jobs and today's 'always on', 24/7 culture, we found that most people now spend more time working than sleeping. In fact by 2015 around 40% of the total workforce will be mobile. The reason for this is that work is no longer where the office is but for mobile workers it is wherever they are - be that their car, home, coffee shop, the airport, customer site or even on holiday. This is just one area our report identifies as having a massive impact on the way we work;" explains Richard Watson. Other factors covered in the paper include: Ageing workforces: By 2050 over 65's will represent around 50% of the working population in Europe Millennials and Gen Y: More tech-savvy than any other generation The generation gap: Millennials think senior management do not relate to them and use autocratic command and control structures Gender: The huge economic impact of getting more women in the workforce especially at senior levels. Eliminating the gap between male and female employment would boost GDP by 9% in US, 13% in Eurozone and 16% in Japan (Goldman Sachs). Mobile working: By 2015 new technologies mean 1.3 billion (or 40%) of the total working population will be mobile Security of Information: Workers will have their own devices (BYOD) and potentially work remotely creating huge security and data storage/retrieval challenges. Where will new talent for workforce come from? Talent scarcities worldwide mean that by 2030 the USA will need to add over 25 million workers to its talent base to sustain economic growth and Western Europe more than 45 million.
Aurialie Jublin

The Two Emotions That Can Save Your Brain From Burnout | Fast Company | Business + Inno... - 0 views

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    There are two emotions that you can control to prevent burnout and increase the likelihood of success: excitement and empathy. Empathy is for your customer and for the problem you are trying to solve. Intimately knowing the problem or the customer you are trying to serve helps remove some of the startup risk, minimizes the time to market and cost before you even begin. Be your first customer. Excitement is for the psychology of you and your team and to create an environment that obsesses over detail. Genuine excitement from the team fosters this type of detail. It comes from the labor of love.
Aurialie Jublin

11 Things To Know About Abstract Labor - 0 views

  • Living labor can be understood as identity-making effort (in the absence of traditional prescriptions); it is the productivity of open-ended potentiality. You can be whatever you want (and you will have to work to become it!) Abstract labor is the quantification of that effort, conforming it to pre-existing measuring tools that allow for its commodification. It’s a matter of having oneself fitted to the yardstick. All the work of being someone can be converted to dollars.
  • A fundamental problem for capitalism: how to maintain a supply of workers who are (a) flexible, creative, and motivated to be social (work cooperatively with others to produce value) at the same time they are (b) manageable, controllable, and predictable. It must be able to extract “living labor” — the work of belonging socially — as “abstract labor” amenable to rationalization, measurement, and control and freely deployable on whatever opportunity will yield the most profit.
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    "To recap: Social media are ways to contain and recapture the productive and potentially disruptive energy of the cooperation engendered by the capitalist production process, which depends on bringing workers together, dividing labor among them, and generating/capturing the surplus that emerges from their effort to work together. Cooperative efforts - sociality - are captured by social media and made into data: that is, they are made fungible, abstract, countable. This data then sets cooperative workers back into competition with one another, now competing over and in terms of measurable influence, attention, contribution, network links and so on. The struggle comes to seem like the very struggle for personal identity, but it's just the opposite; it's the struggle to render what is personal about oneself into something that is generally exploitable to whatever company wants it."
Aurialie Jublin

Entreprise et "quantified work" : au secours, Taylor revient (plus fort) ? - 0 views

  • L’enjeu est de taille car, au-delà de la question du “fliquage” (“l’employeur a le droit de contrôler et de surveiller ses salariés, mais seulement dans le cadre d’un contrôle de leur activité et à la condition de les avoir informés préalablement”, peut-on résumer à ce sujet), c’est la nature même du travail, de l’évaluation de la productivité à, en fait, toute la gestion d’un ensemble de données des salariés dans l’entreprise, qui est amenée à se réinventer. Et avec elle, de nouvelles politiques RH, “data-centrées”.
  • Initialement, le taylorisme a en effet été salué comme une force qui “libèrerait les salariés des penchants autocratiques de leurs supérieurs”, rappelle Peter Cappelli, qui insiste pour que le quantified work, ce travail où les salariés mesurent eux-mêmes diverses facettes de leur activité, ne reste pas aux mains des économistes, ingénieurs IT et autres data miners. À la manière des outils d’évaluation dont les conséquences éthiques sont un sujet pris en compte à l’heure de leur élaboration, notamment en y associant la psychologie du travail, la workforce science ne peut se prémunir d’un équilibre entre “l’intérêt des employeurs à prendre des décisions [plus efficaces] et des préoccupations plus vastes sur l’équité et les conséquences inattendues [en matière de motivation, notamment]“.
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    La workforce science, discipline mettant les données des employés au coeur du management, promet une vie en entreprise conjuguant bien-être et productivité. Au prix de la surveillance généralisée ?
Aurialie Jublin

Case Study: Fairmondo - Commons Transition Primer - 0 views

  • Originally founded in Germany in 2012, Fairmondo aims to federate and expand to create a global online marketplace, but with ownership firmly in hands of their local users. The German coop currently gathers over 2000 members who have invested over 600,000 euros in shares. It is open both to professional and private sellers and the products on offer have no general restrictions unless they are illegal or run counter to Farmondo’s values. The core values are fairness and the promotion of responsible consumption. Rather than having to find fairly sourced products from a variety of places, Fairmondo practically gathers them in federated, democratic platforms. The fairness of the products in question is assessed by a shared criteria which remains open to discussion and improvement by the members and the Fairmondo user base. The platform also includes certain products which are not necessarily fair trade, for example books, with more than two million on offer.
  • The economic democracy ethos surrounding ownership and control of the platform goes beyond the practices of most cooperatives. Fairmondo calls this “Cooperativism 2.0” and asks all new Fairmondo chapters to adapt the following seven Core Principles:
  • Consent and majority consensus:  90% of Fairmondo constituents must agree prior any modification to the general principles.
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  • Democratic ownership and accountability to all stakeholders
  • Independence of individual vested interests: Disproportionate financial investments or investments by non-cooperative associations is prohibited.
  • Uncompromising transparency: Fairmondo’s commitment to full transparency may only be limited by jurisdiction-specific legal requirements of wherever the chapter is located.
  • nvolving the crowd: A Cooperative 2.0 structure promotes authentic crowd involvement while fostering confidence. Fairmondo has successfully used crowdfunding and crowdsourcing to strengthen the platform.
  • Open source: Fairmondo coops are committed to open source and innovation.
  • Fair, multi-constituent distribution of profit and wages: Dividends are distributed as broadly as possible, preventing individuals from accumulating more than their fair share. 25% is distributed to coop members through shares. 25% is distributed through “Fair Funding Points” (voluntary work is rewarded by points which legally stake a claim on future surpluses). 25% is donated to a number of non-profits chosen by Fairmondo members. The last 25% is pooled into a common fund used for the development of the wider Fairmondo project. Internal stakeholders (partners, staff, etc.) operate under a defined salary range ration of 1 to 7 from lowest to highest paid.
  • Since the creation of the German marketplace, Fairmondo has also federated to the UK. The objective of its internationalization process is that, once there are five Fairmondo nodes, these will be supported by a global framework organization which will be sustainably controlled and co-owned by the local cooperatives.
  • Fairmondo is an excellent example of an Open Cooperative, as it meets the four criteria: oriented towards the common good; multi constituent in nature; actively creates Commons; transnationally oriented. The  global organization’s vision is analogous to the role of the non-profit foundations outlined in the ecosystem of commons-based peer production.
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    "Fairmondo is a digital online marketplace managed by a multi-constituent cooperative focusing on fair commerce."
Aurialie Jublin

Fin du télétravail chez Yahoo, Marissa Meyer s'explique - 0 views

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    "Les abus réguliers des employés de Yahoo auraient conduit Marissa Meyer à réduire certains privilèges et notamment interdire le télétravail. La vérification a été très simple, il a suffi de consulter les logs de connexions VPN..."
Aurialie Jublin

Une entreprise impose le port du bracelet électronique à ses employés - 0 views

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    pour leur protection dit la direction
Aurialie Jublin

The Kinetic Organisation by Andrew Mawson of Advanced Workplace Associates - 1 views

  • In order to maintain order, you need to attain an alternative structure. In the Kinetic Organisation, a natural ‘molecular’ structure replaces command, control and hierarchy. A series of cells are linked together and effectively ‘loaded’ in free space to deliver the organisation’s outcomes.
  • The Kinetic Organisation must: Allow the enterprise to ‘turn on a dime/sixpence’ changing without pain to adapt to new threats, opportunities and economic conditions. Be well placed to meet its promises to clients, shareholders and people. Maintain a flexible cost base and infrastructure so that it can ‘inflate’ and ‘deflate’ its operations without incurring penalty costs. Create a ‘safe’ environment in which people feel able to contribute and share their knowledge and innovation.  This includes constructively challenging the way things are done so as to achieve a better end. Constantly keep its products, services, people skills, capabilities, processes, infrastructure and costs under review to make sure every element of the business always remains fresh and competitive. Allow elements within each structure to be treated and structured in different ways depending on their risks, activities and the markets in which they operate.
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    The 21st Century alternative to hierarchical organisations
Aurialie Jublin

The Avatar Economy | MIT Technology Review - 0 views

  • Progress toward the “avatarization” of the economy has been limited by two technical factors that don’t involve robotics at all. They are the speed of Internet connections and the latency involved in long-distance communication. Connecting a Thai worker to a robotic avatar in Japan with enough signal fidelity to carry out nonroutine work may be more difficult than engineering a cheap robotic chassis and related control systems.
  • How much bandwidth is enough? A “perfect” (just like being there) connection to a robotic telepresence system must accommodate a signal of 160 megabits per second. Theoretically, too, the distance between robot and worker shouldn’t exceed 1,800 miles
  • Telepresence means that in theory, 10, 100, or 1,000 times as many workers could compete (virtually) for the same work. No matter how bad things get in Madrid or Houston, an avatar worker somewhere else could sell his or her labor for less. The same outsourcing logic applies to many high-wage jobs that rely on physical presence and motor skills, including the work done by cardiologists and machinists.
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    Article datant d'1 an, imaginant une économie de type Avatar (le héros est allongé et va sauvé la planète via une connexion sans fil à un corps à distance; il interagit avec les autres, apprend de nouvelles compétences, et même se marie-alors que son corps "réel" est couché sur une dalle à plusieurs km de là). I believe outsourcing of nonroutine labor via robotic telepresence could begin to occur on a mass scale within a decade. Let's take the time to manage the avatar economy thoughtfully while it is still young.
Aurialie Jublin

Stop watching your workers - WashingtonPost - 0 views

  • Bernstein found that when managers were looking, employees in the factory, a global contract manufacturer that produced mobile devices, did everything by the book so as not to call attention to themselves. But when managers weren’t watching, employees used a variety of easier and even safer tricks of their own to keep production humming at an even faster pace. In one study, simply hanging a curtain so that managers couldn’t see workers increased productivity by 10 to 15 percent.
  • When workers have enough autonomy to experiment, fail and share ideas outside the watchful eye of their managers, they could very well develop and perfect tools that make them more productive, not less.
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    "The paper, which Bernstein titled "The Transparency Paradox," found that productivity actually increased when a group of Chinese manufacturing employees were not being closely watched by their managers."
Aurialie Jublin

Innovation: Ce silence qui tue votre entreprise | Le blog de Philippe Silberzahn - 0 views

  • Alors voilà, petit conseil d’ami. Sachez d’abord que je n’ai pas de recette miracle pour vous rendre plus innovant. Personne n’en a. Ou si, peut-être un seul: dégagez le passage. Laissez faire vos employés. Ils en savent plus que vous. Ils sont aujourd’hui sur-éduqués. Sur-connectés. Sur-créatifs. Plus au contact des clients que vous. Je suis chaque fois effaré par le nombre d’idées intelligentes que n’importe quel employé de votre entreprise peut avoir en dix minutes de discussion, et par leur degré de lucidité sur la situation de celle-ci. Alors laissez-les parler. Vous souhaitez vraiment interdire quelque chose? Vous y tenez? Alors interdisez le silence, ce silence qui vous tue comme il a tué la Tchécoslovaquie socialiste*. Et dégagez vos stratèges en culotte courte et cravate, ils sont inutiles; des stratèges, des vrais, vous en avez des milliers et ils travaillent déjà pour vous. Ils sont même plus attachés à votre entreprise que vous, qui souvent n’êtes que de passage. Laissez-les s’organiser. A qui allez-vous faire croire qu’ils ne peuvent pas se contrôler, si vraiment on veut du contrôle, en plus de dix minutes par jour? A-t-on idée du gaspillage que représente ces 30% consacrés au contrôle? Là encore, dégagez. Au revoir!
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    "Donc je résume: vous dépensez des fortunes pour recruter des gens intelligents, puis vous faites en sorte qu'ils consacrent 30% de leur temps à vous rendre des comptes et à surveiller leurs subordonnés. Vous leur interdisez de parler. Et si par malheur l'un d'entre-eux s'avise d'essayer quelque chose et que ça ne réussit pas, cet échec restera comme stigmate pour le restant de ses jours parmi vous. S'il reste. Et avec tout ça, vous me dites vouloir innover? De qui vous moquez-vous?"
Aurialie Jublin

L'entreprise classique serait au bout du rouleau - France Info - 2 views

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    "Son organisation hiérarchique, le contrôle, la récompense individuelle : les jeunes ne voudraient plus de ce vieux modèle. C'est en tout cas la thèse d'un livre qui vient de sortir: "Partager le pouvoir, c'est possible", chez Albin Michel,"
Aurialie Jublin

Etre géolocalisé par son employeur ? « Je m'en fiche, je n'ai rien à cacher »... - 1 views

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    "Comme la géolocalisation permet de connaître les consommations de carburant des véhicules, plusieurs entreprises utilisent ces données pour mettre en place une compétition entre les commerciaux. Selon Claire Alleaume, le salarié qui consomme le moins d'essence obtient une prime. L'économie se met au service de l'écologie. La volonté de contrôler l'absentéisme et les attitudes des commerciaux n'est, elle, pas mise en avant. Ni par les équipementiers de balises de géolocalisation, ni par les chefs d'entreprise. Stéphane, le commercial, n'est pas dupe de ce qu'il y a derrière les arguments marketing : « L'écoconduite ? Oui, on y était sensibilisés. Mais pour moi, ce n'est pas la raison principale. Même s'ils ne s'en vantent pas, et c'est normal, ils ont surtout utilisé la géolocalisation pour diminuer les abus. »"
abrugiere

Exclusif : les propositions de Terra Nova sur les seuils sociaux - 0 views

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    La négociation qui doit s'ouvrir en octobre sur les seuils sociaux peut-elle renouveler le dialogue social ? Nous montrons dans notre rapport que la présence syndicale dans les entreprises est un levier de compétitivité. Si on veut s'inspirer des pays où la réussite économique est couplée avec un dialogue social fort, les pays scandinaves, l'Allemagne et dans une certaine mesure la Grande-Bretagne où le Labour garde un certain poids, nous devons revoir notre modèle Chacun a intérêt à ce que se développe un dialogue social de qualité. Le syndicalisme, on y prend goût en le pratiquant. 30 % des entreprises entre 50 et 100 salariés n'ont pas de comité d'entreprise, 75% des entreprises de 11 à 20 salariés n'ont pas de représentant du personnel et seuls 60% des établissements de 11 salariés ou plus disposent d'au moins une instance représentative du personnel (source : Dares, chiffres 2011, repris dans la note Terra Nova).
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