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What Makes a Company a Fun Place to Work?

July 23rd, 2010 Scott Griffis No comments

Does your company shun fun?
no fun chinese sign
A fun company draws in the top work talent. Employees are inspired, love their company, love their job, and by extension the fans love it as well. A great example of a fun company is Google. We’ve all seen the quirky and creative offices Google places around the world. People love to see it and everyone wishes they could work there.

How do we promote companies that are fun and make people want to go to work? One way is by our rating system that allows you to rate different aspects of your workplace and the work environment. Promote those companies that do a great job inspiring employees and speak out against those that make work a terrible place and a bad word.

With more company ratings we can get a better picture of the best places to work and drive better work places worldwide.
Thanks for your help in improving all of our work lives.

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3 things that create a bad work life

July 9th, 2010 Scott Griffis No comments

If you are an employee it helps to identify a bad work experience early on before you are stuck there for years.  If you are a manager it is good to review these three areas so you can spot these signs in your own groups and improve your teams.   For both employees and employers it is good to know the major causes of dissatisfaction at work.


Keep in mind no company is 100% perfect and almost everyone will be able to connect with one or two of these workplace ailments, however if you see more than a few of these problems in your job then it may be time to consider that your company is not a happy place to work and could use some improvement.


3 Causes:




1. Your company – Is the entire company dysfunctional and a bad place to work?

Many companies create a work environment that makes being there eight hours a day (or more in many cases) an undignified experience.  This could be the actual physical environment or this could mean the people in the company from the executive management team all the way down seem to be filled with jerks and shady characters.

  1. Employees fight against each other – The atmosphere and company culture of some companies feel like a dystopian wasteland where the motto is everyone for themselves.  It is difficult to get help from other employees and departments, or even worse they actively try to sabotage your projects to make you look bad. This makes for a very stressful environment.    Employees who get along with each other, help each other, and act like a supportive team generally function like one as well.

  2. No one gets promoted – Are you waiting for your manager to die so that you have a chance at promotion?  Some companies are just not built to allow regular promotions.  Maybe there is little growth or the bridge between job titles is too great.  In these cases management needs to make up for the lack of real promotions with increased salary and additional numbers behind your job title.  Even if there is no direct path from flight attendant to pilot, there should be a clear path to flight attendant level II and senior flight attendant.  The company must provide a chance for growth, increased skills, learning programs, and regular salary increases above inflation adjustments.

  3. Responsibilities are increased without the corresponding increase in authority – If your company is expecting you to perform ever increasing tasks and lead projects and programs there needs to be a publicly known increase in authority that gives you the ability to accomplish these tasks.  This should be done in the form of a new job title or a public announcement stating you are in charge of certain aspects of a program.  This allows people to know that you are not just being nosey and bossy, but are doing your job.

  4. The skilled are not promoted – Often managers and entire companies reward friends or those who are most visible in the company over the most skilled and reasonable person for the job.  This could be due to nepotism or it could be due to the skilled person being the only one who can perform a certain job and promoting them would move them away from the current job.

  5. High turnover rate– Constant reorganization is tough on employees rather it is caused by layoffs, firings, or a lack of loyalty toward the company or employees.  It constantly changes work requirements, causes a loss of friends and security, and removes experts who are most knowledgeable about their roles.   High turnover rate is both a sign and a cause of a bad workplace.

  6. No respect for employees – Employees are treated like property with no interest in their needs.  They are never asked for their opinion, and never kept up to date on company direction.  They are given no privacy, no independence, and are without the tools they need to perform at their best.  Finally they are used up and spit out once they are no longer of value.

  7. Appearance more important than results – Companies often choose to measure work hours, meeting attendance, or the appearance that work is being done even if creating that appearance takes away from actual productivity.  These things often correspond with results, but it is the actual progress that matters in the end and results are what need to be counted.  Sometimes a unique and unstructured workplace can birth the greatest creativity.  Companies need to be mindful that one size does not fit all.

  8. No time off – Vacation is made available and advertised on job descriptions but cannot be used since everyone is too busy or taking vacation is frowned and seen as being lazy.  Vacation accumulates and is lost. Employees lose their personal life and become burnt out.

  9. Payment is late or skipped – company is not fiscally solvent enough or responsible enough to pay employees what was promised.  Checks are late or missing. If this happens once due to some mistake it may be forgivable.  If it happens often then the company is stealing from you and not worth your time.

  10. No one ever gets fired – A bad coworker can bring everyone down.  Maybe others are forced to do their job, or they cause hostility or lack of fluidity in the group.  Whatever the case the management team needs to have the backbone to stand up to these people and not let them harm the rest of the group.

  11. Employees can’t tie what they do to the success of the company – Employees need to feel they are part of a bigger project and how their roles are important to the success of the company.  The management team needs to keep them informed on company projects and how they are helping and share celebrations with them when goals are met.






2.  Your manager – As a leader and a person

officespace_lumbergh


Managers set the tone and call the shots for the group and can make your work-life pleasant or crush your spirit.  Managers are usually a key component to rather or not a person is happy at work.   Good bosses are positive leaders for a department, insightful sources of experience, ambassadors to other departments, and they fight for their team during meetings with upper management.  Bad bosses create a pocket of terror in an otherwise good company and tend to block progress more than help it along.

Here are a few common characteristics of a bad boss:

  1. Everything is top priority– Some managers are very good at creating artificial stress in their department by inflating the urgency of every project.  A good manager knows that their employees need a break and save the red alert situations for real emergencies.

  2. Promising the world to upper management – Weak bosses cannot say no to upper management and pass on every request to their employees even if it is impossible.   These bosses rarely provide good leadership.  Other departments and even employees in their group take advantage of them.   We also see this with managers who are more interested in promoted their own career over the needs of the group they lead.  If their employees work long hours to complete every project that is asked it looks good for the manager and cost them little time to say yes.

  3. Boss is overemotional and egotistic – Many bosses seem to confuse yelling and being a strong leader.  Often loss of emotional control is used to hide a manager’s lack of real skill.  Some schools of management seem to promote harsh words and threats as a way to motivate employees.

  4. Manipulates situations to take advantage of you – During slow job markets many bosses take advantage of the situation by cutting pay raises to their employees, increasing work hours and generally rolling back promises made to employees.  They know there are not a lot of other jobs available due to economic situations or realities of your type of industry.  Bad managers use this to their advantage and forget you are a real person and not a commodity.

  5. Doesn’t give positive feedback or guidance for improvement – Good managers give timely and regular feedback.  They frequently and publicly praise employees’ work when it is good and give private feedback on how to improve when it needs improvement.  Managers should not wait for yearly reviews to state progress or blow up at employees when things have been going downhill for months.   Employees should know their role and have expected, required tasks that are achievable.  Goals should not be constantly changing.   Feedback should be given as goals progress.  Finally, if employees work long hours for extended periods of time there needs to be reciprocal signs of appreciation from the management team to make sure the team feels appreciated and rewarded.

  6. Your boss hates you – A bad boss may not be able to get over perceived differences with you.  Maybe they think you have different political beliefs or a different work style than they have.  They may allow this to cloud your work relationship and cause them to constantly be negative toward you. Good bosses don’t get stuck on these differences and instead can work with a wide array of personality types They work well with the entire team and take an interest in each person individually.  This allows the boss to know the strengths and weaknesses of each person in the team and know how to motivate them and get the best results from each individual.  One person may not work well with constant supervision, but with a little room they may end up being the strongest employee in the team.  Building these relationships also creates camaraderie with the team and can avoid situations where employees appear to lose interest in their work or snap unexpectedly.

  7. Micromanaging – Bosses who don’t trust their employees will spend most of their time (and yours) checking your progress and questioning how you choose to attack a problem. This is fine for new employees or employees who work best if they have constant supervision, but if your manager doesn’t recognize your worth and intelligence after 15 years on the job then it can feel demeaning.   This is made even worse if the boss is incompetent and knows less than you do but still insists to look over your shoulder and comment on every action.  Managers need to let skilled employees do their job and give them room.  They should value their opinions and allow them to bring questions and concerns to the boss when they have them.

  8. Not around enough – If you boss is never available to be a leader then we have the opposite extreme of micromanagement.  Managers are put in place for a purpose and if they do not guide the team, then someone else will.  This can cause the members of the team to have to perform the role of the manager without any of the authority.  They will not have the connections with upper management and will miss out on the guidance, direction, and experience a good manager would provide.  This can cause bickering between group members and force employees to go around the usual chain of command to get things done.






3. Your role – What do you want to get out your job versus what you are actually getting

the thinker statue


Maybe there is nothing inherently wrong with the company, but it is just not the best place for you.

  1. Not what you expected – If you went into your current position with a salary expectation and you ended up getting paid significantly less, that salary gap is going to eat at you.  You may be happy performing a job for free if that is what you set out to do, but if you are not getting paid what you believe you are worth then your salary goals will keep you from being happy at that job.

  2. You have no interest in what your company does – There is something to be said of being proud of what you do and where you work.  If you believe chewing gum is destroying the lives of children then you are not going to be inspired to work harder at a chewing gum factory.  If you hate what your company does or are even apathetic to its goals then your only motivation for working there is the money.  You will have no enthusiasm and will not care about anything but your paycheck.  If the money itself is not so good, then your motivation for the job will be minimal at best.  Alternatively if you believe the products or services your company produces are really great or are helping benefit the world, then you will have extra incentive to go to work every day. 

  3. You work hard, but have no rewards or successes – In a school setting this is called busy work.  You work hard each day but nothing of value is ever produced.  You never get to celebrate the launch of a new product or start to work on new exciting projects.  Every day is the same meaningless assembly line style tasks.  No matter how hard you work there is no difference in your level of success and you never get to see the fruits of your labor.

  4. You are not doing what you love – You spend a lot of time at work every day.  Are you doing what you love or even what you are good at?  Is this a creative outlet for your talents and passions or does it just pay the bills.




Flip these attributes for a good company that is healthy, productive, focused and driven.


Symptoms of these causes:

Do you and everyone else at your company hate your job?  Are you stressed out, bored, or worked sick?  Does your job leave you frustrated and sapped of energy every day?  These are the top three things that are likely to cause these issues at work.


The ratings and reviews of the companies on Cubecheck.com reflect these issues that create bad work environments.  Common problems and concerns are reviewed for each company and the information displayed for potential employees or management teams looking to improve their company.

Please add a review of your company so that it will be less like the movie Office Space and more like a place where you can enjoy your work.

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You asked, we listened – Changes coming to CubeCheck

June 24th, 2010 Scott Griffis No comments

We’ve listened to our user input and are working on several updates to Cubecheck.  The first change will make it easier for everyone to view company reviews and ratings.  This should make information easier to find for anyone browsing for their business or employer.

Second we have identified additional ways to increase privacy for employees writing reviews on their company.  Privacy and anonymity are constantly on our mind here at Cubecheck.   We regularly survey the site looking for ways to make sure our users feel safe when they review their company.   Our next update to the site will contain several changes that will further enhance your privacy as an employee and give additional shielding options for workers in small departments or companies.

We will have more information on these updates as they happen.

Thanks and keep the suggestions coming.

-Scott

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Work-Life Balance is Important

May 26th, 2010 Scott Griffis No comments

Having a life is important.  When you work long hours and live to serve your job, it is difficult to have a life.  You become stressed, your focus narrows, you don’t sleep well, you lose your sharpness, and you become grouchy.  When this happens it is bad for you, those around you, AND your company.  That is why we are highlighting companies who know how to keep their employees happy and renewed with a fresh mind.  Several of our survey questions ask about work/life balance issues and how well your employer keeps employees from becoming burned out.  Each company also has a profile showing why employees are leaving the company so you know if it is a demoralizing place to work.  We want you to find a job that will treat you right, where you can succeed, and where you can be happy to work.

We will be posting stats for the best companies to work for as we get additional information.  In the mean time individual reviews reveal how employees at that company are feeling; stressed or inspired.  I hope you’ve found one that inspires you.

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Making your workplace a better place to work

May 19th, 2010 Scott Griffis No comments

Want to be happier at your job?

One of the goals of CubeCheck is to make YOUR company or employer a better place to work.  Through the company ratings and review system, CubeCheck provides employees a way to give anonymous feedback to their company.  This feedback rewards the best companies by listing them high on the best places to work list.  Companies that have good morale, that have employees and managers who work well together, and companies that understand how to make the workplace work will be set as models for other companies.  If an employer has a consistent track record of treating employees poorly it will reflect on their score and they will not be able to attract employees to their company.   Once a system is in place that is widely used, employees will be able to always check on a future employee before they work there and only those that treat their employees right will succeed.

In order to make this work we need a good collection of company reviews and we need everyone in an office or workplace to know about these career tools.  Here is how you can help.  Right now you can add your review of your company.  If they are doing a great job, let everyone know.  If there are places that need improvement, comment on those as well.  If you identify these issues your company will be a better place and in the future it will transform workplaces worldwide and create an environment where companies appreciate their employees and treat them with respect.

We are creating an employee warning system here.  Anyone can use these resources to make better career choices and avoid dead end jobs that will do nothing but stress you out.  No one wants to find out the hard way that they have started working for a terrible company.  I hope to create a much better way to investigate a company before you apply for a job.

Please invest in this process now and help us create this tool by reviewing one of your employers.

We also like to hear feedback about us and how CubeCheck can improve so if you have any suggestions please feel free to contact us.

Thanks,

-Scott Griffis

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Follow us on Twitter

May 12th, 2010 Scott Griffis No comments

CubeCheck will now be tweeting about company reviews, employee satisfaction, salaries, reasons people leave companies,  ratings and the best places to work here.  You can also find us on the twitterverse by searching the hashtag #CubeCheck

Tweet this!

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Happy Administrative Professionals’ Week

April 20th, 2010 Scott Griffis No comments

This week American companies celebrate Administrative professionals’ week.  Though most companies will probably not give anyone the day off on Wednesday, we hope that they at least give a big thanks to those who work so hard to make sure everyone’s schedules, flights, and daily work go smoothly.  If you’re stuck in a job where you don’t get the credit you deserve, now is a great time to review that company and let your voice be heard.  Alternatively if your company is doing a great job of appreciating your efforts, then return the favor and tell the world that they are the best company to work for.

Companies We’ve Reviewed

April 8th, 2010 Scott Griffis No comments

Hello Everyone,

I wanted to highlight some of the companies we have in the database already.  We have some well known corporations that employ lots of people as well as a few smaller employers and workplaces.  It is a great mix of companies that have been rated.  Here is a sample:

CalTrans

ING

Concordia University

Delta Airlines

Jostens

State of California

Walmart

Wells Fargo Bank

So as you can see we have reviews of retailers, government offices, manufactures and service providers.  Thanks to everyone who added a review for their job.

If your company is not on the list yet, please be the first to add it and watch more reviews come in.

-Scott

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Interesting stats on visitors so far

March 30th, 2010 Scott Griffis No comments

Thanks to everyone who has shared the site with their friends and families and especially to those of you who have added a link to the site somewhere.  With your help we are off to a great start with thousands of visits, forty registered users, and several very helpful company reviews.

We’ve had visitors from 38 countries and 45 states.  Top search terms to find the site are “resume”, “company”, and “reviews”.  Three percent of you are viewing this on either an iPhone or Android phone.   Ten percent of you are using the Safari web browser and 5 percent of you are using the Google Chrome browser.

Thanks again for all your help and please continue to spread the word.  We are adding reviews for more companies each day.

-Scott

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Check us out on Facebook

March 17th, 2010 Scott Griffis No comments

We’re on Facebook!  Become a fan of CubeCheck.com by clicking on the “Become a Fan” button at the right.

Thanks!

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