They reduce burnout and increase satisfaction.
Job titles don't usually generate much excitement. They’re printed on business cards, emblazoned on LinkedIn pages, and used in formal introductions. Some organisations, however, see them as a chance to get creative. Consider Disney, which calls its theme park workers “cast members” and its engineers and multimedia experts “imagineers”. Subway’s line workers are “sandwich artists”. At some companies, receptionists are “directors of first impressions” and PR people are “brand evangelists”.
It would be easy to dismiss retitling as a silly exercise in euphemisms. But over the past decade, London Business School Professor Dan Cable has come to view it as a legitimate tool for improving workers’ attitudes and boosting recruitment. “The traditional view of job titles is that they’re about standardisation and benchmarking,” he says. “But titles often send the wrong signals and fail to attract the best applicants. Companies should recognise that they are powerful symbols of who we are, what we can do, and what others can expect from us.”
This story is from the March 10, 2019 edition of Business Today.
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This story is from the March 10, 2019 edition of Business Today.
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