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I am curious to know if you mean like constant moves within an organization at appropriate times (more lateral, less vertical) to keep the employees skill set varied and yet make them more ingrained into the culture of the company? I LOVE this idea, as it seems to solve (for larger companies) the idea that most employees leave because of their manager. Also, if you attached it to any generational issues, it would appear on the surface that a shift like that (at least in a larger company) could "extend the shelf life" of a millennial candidate. The only pushback I see is that corporations are already frustrated at the amount they spend training and might feel like this was more of an investment on their part with no guaranteed rate of return. I guess it's safer than the markets huh?
OR
Are you saying that from the start, these people should wear "more than on hat" within more than one department? I think with the current state of management, that would be very hard, as most departments rarely want to share resources or accountability, much less humans. Beyond that, Oftentimes a skill is easy enough to learn, it's the repetitive nature of it that is time consuming. So people might assume that they could handle more "on paper" than they could actually handle in a given work week or day. Obviously, this happens every day in small businesses. I think it's more possible with positions that require less of an exact steady hand and utmost consistency. I don't think the accounting procedures should be shared and juggled, but perhaps graphic design and copywriting could get mixed around.
I am curious to know if you mean like constant moves within an organization at appropriate times (more lateral, less vertical) to keep the employees skill set varied and yet make them more ingrained into the culture of the company? I LOVE this idea, as it seems to solve (for larger companies) the idea that most employees leave because of their manager. Also, if you attached it to any generational issues, it would appear on the surface that a shift like that (at least in a larger company) could "extend the shelf life" of a millennial candidate. The only pushback I see is that corporations are already frustrated at the amount they spend training and might feel like this was more of an investment on their part with no guaranteed rate of return. I guess it's safer than the markets huh?
OR
Are you saying that from the start, these people should wear "more than on hat" within more than one department? I think with the current state of management, that would be very hard, as most departments rarely want to share resources or accountability, much less humans. Beyond that, Oftentimes a skill is easy enough to learn, it's the repetitive nature of it that is time consuming. So people might assume that they could handle more "on paper" than they could actually handle in a given work week or day. Obviously, this happens every day in small businesses. I think it's more possible with positions that require less of an exact steady hand and utmost consistency. I don't think the accounting procedures should be shared and juggled, but perhaps graphic design and copywriting could get mixed around.
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