Originally Posted by
MattyNoNeck
I’m 29 now and I am starting to realize what it can be like for a boss or an owner who has dead weight to deal with. But I’ve worked with great younger people and lazy older people. I really don’t think age matters that much, I think it is the quality of the person’s character that makes a good employee…or boss!
I hear what you're saying. A person's character has a lot to do with it. It's something i touched on in another thread. I was saying that everyone has their own temperament. Some are bold and yet others are timid by nature. Those with a bold temperament are better suited to leadership positions while those with a timid nature are better suited to being followers.
Neither one is any better than the other ... it's simply who you are. Be excellent at what you're meant to be.
So much of all of this comes down to the unspoken agreement :
You know the old saying " That you'll never get rich working for somebody else" ? It's true !
The people who are followers (employees) have made a choice to tradeoff any real chance of success for the security of a steady job.
As a leader (boss) it's your responsibility to provide a safe, stable, and structured work environment along with a steady paycheck. Further, it's not enough to be really good at what you do. You have to be able to work with, and effectively manage, people. That's an entirely different skill set. And ... you will probably end up working TWICE as hard as your employees. It's no easy task.
==============
There's something else in the works these days though:
It reminds me of an interview that was done with a steel worker shortly after the fall of the former U.S.S.R. The iron curtain dropped and the news media from the west came in to investigate what had been going on behind the scenes for all of those years. Their steel industry was badly outdated and in a shambles. When the steel worker was asked his opinion he grew thoughtful and summed it all up in one short phrase. He said:
For thirty years i pretended to work and for thirty years they pretended to pay me.
Bookmarks