An employee for a business has held her job for five
years. She's done well on the job, performing her duties to her boss's
satisfaction, and taking on roles of increasing responsibility. She -- let's
call her Tina -- loves her job at a business that is privately owned by a
wealthy gentleman.
Several weeks ago, the owner sent out an email to the
employees that his wife had taken on responsibility for running a series of
nonprofit events in the community. There were many opportunities for employees
to volunteer to help with the cause. They were given a heads up that his wife
might be in touch.
Sure enough, Tina was contacted by the owner's wife, who
asked her if she could run one of the activities. Tina learned more about the
nonprofit and what the owner's wife had in mind for her. She realized that she
liked the work the nonprofit was trying to do. But she also realized that the
boss's wife was asking her to run this event on her day off from work on her
own time.
Many years ago, I wrote about a program that a major bank
chain ran with its employees asking them to adopt-an-ATM in their neighborhood
and then making sure that those ATM areas were kept clean. The adoptive
employees were not paid for their efforts. The program drew the scrutiny of
some labor officials who found the practice to violate wage and hour law. Many
employees who loved their bank would likely have picked up litter in an ATM
area without having a formal program. Those employees a little less enamored of
the company might have felt a bit more coerced into saying yes to the plan.
Tina didn't want to disappoint her owner's wife, but she
also really liked the idea of getting paid for when she worked and she enjoyed
her days off. She didn't want to disappoint the owner who signed her paycheck.
She was fairly certain she would not be punished for saying "no" to
the request, but she wondered if saying no was in her best interest if she
wanted to continue advancing at the company at the rate with which she had been
doing.
If Tina wants to say no, she should say no. She can
graciously tell the owner's wife that she likes the work the nonprofit is
doing, but that she can't participate on the day of the event. If she wants to
help out and volunteer, she should say yes. But she should fight the urge to
feel like she must say yes, as strong as that urge might be.
The right thing would have been for the owner not to have
mixed business and his wife's outside efforts and put his employees in the
position of having to say no to her requests. It's like saying no to the boss
asking employees to buy Girl Scout cookies from his kid -- only a bit tougher
since the request to Tina involved an entire unpaid day, rather than simply
shelling out $5 for a box of Thin Mints.
Company owners and bosses should respect their employees
and their time and not put them in the awkward position of having to decide if
saying no to an outside, unpaid event will affect their job security.
Jeffrey L. Seglin, author of The Simple Art of Business Etiquette: How to Rise to the Top by Playing Nice, is a lecturer in public policy and director of the communications program at Harvard's Kennedy School. He is also the administrator of www.jeffreyseglin.com, a blog focused on ethical issues.
Do you have ethical questions that you need answered? Send them to rightthing@comcast.net.
Follow him on Twitter: @jseglin
(c) 2015 JEFFREY L. SEGLIN. DISTRIBUTED BY TRIBUNE CONTENT AGENCY, LLC.
2 comments:
As a person in my 80's, long away from business situations of any kind, it is quite "delicious" to read about these kinds of situations existing. Thankfully, my business was life insurance administration and in none of my jobs was this example present. Suffice to say, if this subject can avoid cooperating with this kind of forced "free services", more power to her.
Charlie Seng
As a working person I would interpret an email from the boss to pretty much be an order. While legally Tina cannot be compelled to work for this charity she might give it a second thought if she wants to stay employed and/or receive the good treatment that she is used to receiving. I know it's not legal but this is one of the realities of working today.
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