horribly work ethic. late, texting and in general not giving a shit about the job!! Originally Posted by soxfanLMAO, now I know what's wrong with me. . . I'm too damned young!
. I've noticed the opposite with some of the young management types I work with. Originally Posted by IaintlieinMost of the ones that I work with also seem to be the "high achievers" & at least within that set there seems to be a high work ethic and a "get the job done" mentality.
For example they all seem to believe that extensive texting and/or internet chatting at work is not only acceptable but expected. . Originally Posted by EJunkieThere does seem to be an increasing integration between work time and personal time to include personal texting, surfing the net and running errands (like picking up drycleaning or even a hair appointment)
They have no patience, nor "feel" for taking the human factor into account, preferring programs and spreadsheets to dictate every move.That's why you get paid the big bucks and office....to have the feel for the human factor. I don't think that has ever changed, just the analytical tools & access to data these days are just so much stronger than they were.
As an aside I think this (lack of work ethic) has been said about every new generation* to enter the workforce since longer than I can remember, I bet if some of the old fellas stretched their memories, they'd remember the same being said about their generation.
*really this gets said every couple of years anytime some new fad (like texting) emerges Originally Posted by atlcomedy
In europe people usually get started in their career path at about 15 years old. 20 seems a bit old :-)....Some of them are then already finished with their path :-) and have own companies :-) Originally Posted by ninasastriMy European counterparts are lazy and arrogant. In at 9, out by 5. They simply will not work past 5. Conference call? It will be during European working hours - Asia and US be damned. They hate the Americans but any progress is made by the US. The EU is simply the gatekeepers of the process. BTW, we have to work 10 years at my company before you get 4 weeks vacation, in EU they get 4 weeks right off the bat.
My kids are in their 20's and they bust their ass.That is the same people i know. My stepbrother went to evening school to be able to study next to a very demanding job and after he finisehd school he studied next to the same very demanding job. Now he is in the middle management of some of the best computer companies of austria doing business with foreigners. He started that with 18 and is at his peek now with 34 (he is my stepbrother so its possible we are the same age).
My daughter is a single mom and she got up at 4:30 AM to take the little one to day care then she went to clinicals. Was the top in her class etc.
My boys are the same way.
I'd say most of their friends are like that too. So not all of that generation is lost. Originally Posted by Marcus Aurelius
My European counterparts are lazy and arrogant. In at 9, out by 5. They simply will not work past 5. Conference call? It will be during European working hours - Asia and US be damned. They hate the Americans but any progress is made by the US. The EU is simply the gatekeepers of the process. BTW, we have to work 10 years at my company before you get 4 weeks vacation, in EU they get 4 weeks right off the bat.Seems to be a gross generalization. But yes if we compare american work ethics and european work ethics generally speaking, you might be right. Americans live for their jobs (again generalizing) and europeans work for their living. I - for one - prefer american work ethics, but that is because i love it here and i love my job. Also, you have to see that people in europe generally get paid less for the same jobs like americans, but we have more social benefits. So the motivation to stay past 5 is something not supported because you simply don`t get paid. The amount of taxes yo have to pay for a little more hours don`t justify it. We have very stupid and restrictive contracts here (at least in austria and germany). Swiss are probably exceptions, but then again , you earn by far more in switzerland then anywhere else. But you are right: Americans have to work harder than people in europe to have the same living standard. Good example is one of my exes: He is an attorney in Austria and said he would never ever move to the NYC because to have the same living standard he has in Vienna he would have to work more than twice as much and he is plain and simply not interested in that. (And i have dated two attorneys - one in Manhattan and one in Vienna - who coincidentally work in similar legal fields, so i have good comparative measurements)
. Originally Posted by gnadfly