andrew ross on Fri, 27 Dec 2002 20:30:24 +0100 (CET) |
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<nettime> Re: No-Collar |
My book, No-Collar: The Humane Workplace and Its Hidden Costs has just been published by Basic Books. It is based on eighteen months of ethnographic study of two Internet workplaces (Razorfish and 360hiphop) from 2000 to 2002. I've included a Q&A which the publisher customarily requires of authors (a genre unto itself) to give Nettimers a sense, albeit a publicist's sense, of the book. Needless to say, the nettime list was an important backdrop while I was doing research for, and writing the book. 1. How did you first become interested in the theories and practice of the New Economy workplace? I had been a Silicon Alley watcher for several years, and had written a few articles on the development of the new media industries. Increasingly, it occurred to me that the most important story about these companies–the nature of labor in the workplaces--was being sidelined by the Internet gold rush. The press had shown some early interest in the maverick ethos of work organization and employee conditions, but follow-the-money stories about young entrepreneurs very quickly came to dominate all media attention. No one had done a close analysis of the workplaces from the point of view of employees themselves, and my hunch was that this angle would be lost to history in the event of an economic downturn. I think I was right, and indeed, the window of opportunity to do my study proved to be even tighter than I expected. 2. What did you expect to find through your research? Did you think employees would overall be positive or negative about their workplaces? At the time I made the decision to approach my companies, there were two schools of thought. One accepted the uncommonly flattering claims about these workplaces–they were a workers paradise, where employees enjoyed freedoms and rewards that were virtually unheard of in the corporate world. And it's certainly true that the stories I was hearing from employees suggested that they had found the workplace equivalent of the Big Rock Candy Mountains. The other, more skeptical, school of thought saw nothing but a con job. The permissive workplace and the autonomy given to employees was just one more management ploy-- to extract long working hours and maximum enthusiasm from an impressionable and vulnerable workforce. Several decades of corporate history suggested that the latter view would prevail. My task was to put these preconceptions aside and find out how employees themselves judged their workplaces. To be accountable to the task, I had to be as agnostic as possible from the outset. Above all, I wanted to get a feel for what a good job was, at the turn of the millennium, and so, in addition to my two companies, I interviewed widely throughout the Internet industries. 3. What were the most surprising things you found talking to New Economy employees? Probably the overall consistency of the responses. Though most of the employees were in their twenties or early thirties, they were still remarkably diverse in their life and work experiences–from newly minted college graduates to seasoned ex-bohemians, from MBA straightshooters to arty eccentrics. Even so, I found a lot of agreement in the stories that I collected. What they prized most was not the prospect of fast money, or the memory of stock options that had withered on the vine. Much more common was nostalgia for an irresistible work environment which they feared they may never enjoy again in their lives as employees. Almost universally, this had been experienced as a Saturnalian kind of circumstance, where management ceded a goodly amount of power to rank and file employees to develop their own initiatives. "Workers behaving as if they are truly free and truly human" one employee observed, "are a big threat to corporations, and you don't need an MBA to figure that out." On the other hand, there was also a good deal of awareness that this balance of power was likely to be short-lived, and that the reforms were too utopian to be lasting. 4. Did any part of the idyllic new economy job description turn out to be true? Yes, at least in the companies I focused on, which were among the best. The work tasks were stimulating, creative, and challenging--"work you just couldn't help doing,"as one employee described it. Employees were treated like adults, released from the indignity of steady supervision, and given near-maximum control over their time. Compensation was ample, and the permissive workplace was designed, both physically and philosophically, to chase off the blues. These firms offered the personal independence of the self-employed, plus all the benefits and monthly paychecks that come with a regular job, and so their employees often spoke of having the best of both worlds. But for each of these benefits, there were also hidden costs. Features that appeared to be healthy advances in corporate democracy could turn into trapdoors that opened on to a bottomless 70-hour-plus work week. Employee self-management could result in the abdication of accountability on the part of real managers, and an unfair shouldering of risk and responsibilities on the part of individuals. Flattened organizations could mean that the opportunities for promotion dried up, along with layers of protection to shield employees from raw exposure to market forces. A strong company culture was an emotional salve in good times, but could turn into a trauma zone in times of crisis and layoffs. Partial ownership, or stakeholding, in the form of stock options, could give employees an illusory sense of power sharing, rudely shattered when they encountered the unilateralism of executive decision-making in lay-offs and office closures. 5. What about now when the dot-com's all seem to have gone bust? Does this bear out the idea that they were flawed workplaces, or is that a separate issue altogether? The main company in my study–-Razorfish-–was only recently acquired, after turning in a profit for the last three quarters. The other company–360hiphop–was acquired, twice, and its employees are still part of the larger Viacom organization. Nonetheless, the financialization of the economy (and of the workplace) has taken a heavy toll on jobs, and the Internet industry sector has shrunk considerably. This has led, inevitably, to the widespread perception that the workplace idyll of the New Economy was only possible in boom times, that it was a pricey indulgence rather than a reasonable expectation of all employees. On this line of thinking, let me quote from an employee: "It's like saying we can only have good things, like womens' rights or human rights, if you are affluent, and then you put a price on these things, or you see them as toys that get handed out only when there's enough to go around." This employee believed that a gratifying job should be a matter of justice , and not a fringe benefit of the right kind of education, or a reward for a lucky throw of the Nasdaq dice. Yet in no way did she perceive the speculative economy to be "just," and recognized that it rewarded individual risk-taking with feelgood benefits and not with protection for all, or democratic control over the enterprise. So, while it may be tempting to imagine how these work reforms might have proceeded apart from the indulgent climate of binge capitalism, this is not how it happened. But that is not say that this cannot or should not happen under some alternative economic arrangement more sympathetic to creating even better workplaces. 6. How did you end up choosing to do your research at 360hiphop and Razorfish? Were the leadership of both companies happy to have you there or afraid of what you might find? Quite simply, they had the best reputation in their respective sectors as places to work. Among the big Internet consultancies, Razorfish was famous for its company culture. It was supposed to be the most employee-friendly, and it recruited the best and the brightest. Among the content companies, 360hiphop had a similar renown–topnotch writers, recruited at the top of their game from the music and media industries to work together to try to fulfil the political promise of hip hop. In both cases, managers welcomed my presence in the workplace, and I was given a desk and a lot of access to employees, projects, and meetings. I think it was assumed that the companies would learn something from my ethnography, which could be applied in some way to the work organization. It was also expected that, since I was there for a long spell, I would be more accountable than a snapshot journalist working on a three-day deadline. 7. Some practices of the new economy workplace spread to other industries during the 1990s-for example, many companies adopted casual Fridays or flexible work hours. But now those same companies are becoming much more conservative, going back to "the old way" of doing business. What does this mean for the future of work? Are we moving further away from ideal jobs for everyone? In any recession, corporate managers are going to be actively looking for concessions and sacrifices on the part of their employees, so there is a vested interest in believing that the clock can be turned back. Rather than a backlash, however, I think what have seen is a normalization of many of the features of the New Economy workplace. They are no longer celebrity items, just part and parcel of the continuing march of informality into all aspects of our lives. From a technological point of view, the increasing adoption of Web-based networking to carry out all kinds of work within firms necessarily means that decision-making is being decentralized and pushed out to edge of organizations. Plus you have a whole generation of employees out there who are looking to duplicate what they were weaned on. It will be difficult to "keep them down on the farm." 8. Please explain why you feel the dot-com workplace was a step backward toward days of yore when artisans and craftsmen were highly valued members of society. In most workplaces, information technology is used for the surveillance of employees, and to speed up their work tempo. In these new workplaces, the machine was not seen as an impersonal taskmaster, but as a personal tool to be used in versatile ways. As a result of the potential for Web-based work, many saw these conditions as ripe for some kind of revival of the pre-corporate age of craft. There was much talk about "digital artisans," whose trade was highly skilled and self-governed, and for whom there was a steep market demand. Those with the knowhow would belong to a new labor aristocracy, blessed with a strong hand in bargaining over the supply and price of their services. Many employees, especially the technologists, were aware of the historical analogy, though they distrusted it. In the digital age, their knowledge could be transferred, siphoned off, or else outsourced much more easily than in the nineteenth century heyday of the craft artisan. In fact, there was an acute awareness of a race against technology. Almost overnight, software upgrades could severely cut into the value of an employee's knowledge or skill base. So too, there was a "silicon ceiling" which drastically affects the employability of older technologists who have not made their move into management positions. 9. What lessons about work and people can be learned from the new economy workplace? Is it still relevant today in our somewhat post-dot-com world? There is a laundry list, in the book, of principles and ideas that appeared to be steps forward. In many cases, I also detail the hidden costs. The bigger picture, however, is that my book is describing the growth of a new kind of work mentality that I call No-Collar. It did not spring forth, fully-formed, from the forehead of the digital economy. I show how it drew on several lines of genealogical descent in the postwar period (and even earlier) to form a distinct industrial personality before it was absorbed, only half-digested, into the mainstream. My book documents the adolescent growth of that personality, and its maturity will take different forms, yet to be witnessed. One feature, for example, that I dwell on at length is "the industrialization of bohemia." My study showed how companies tried to make a semi-industrial process out of the work habits and noncomformist routines of the bohemian artist or intellectual. These habits and attitudes were once marginal to the mainstream economy, but they moved much closer to the center during the New Economy. No-Collar is the emerging profile of work in the knowledge industries, and my book was really an attempt to document what I call the Early Urban Prototype of this profile. 10. Is the experience of the new economy workplace unique to America? Is there anywhere else in the world that went through this radical change in the concept of work? How might other countries apply these lessons to their job creation efforts? Some of my research was done in London, where similar patterns were evident. Most large cities on the global financial map had New Economy pockets with a cognate mix of features and employees. More exportable, however, is the idea of a corporate organization that was assembled with minimal starch, and maximum flex, to turn on a dime, and thereby reinvent itself from quarter to quarter. In many New Economy firms , constant alterations of business strategy, company identity, and work orientation undermined any sense of operating in a stable industrial environment. This fluidity was quite unlike employment in a traditional organization, governed by formal work rules and rituals, and by a common understanding of products, markets, and performance criteria. Firms like Razorfish morphed from one form of business organization to another in response to market opportunities that opened and closed with starling rapidity. This is likely to become much more common in the global economy. 11. If people were to take just one thing away from reading your book, what should that be? Be careful what you wish for. When work becomes sufficiently humane, we are likely to do far too much of it, and it usurps an unacceptable portion of our lives. For decades, labor advocates have been asking for less alienation on the job, and for a humane work environment that offers personal gratification. Corporate America has been more willing to grant this, while taking away much of the job security and benefit blanket that came along with a corporate job in the Cold War period. We shouldn't have to choose between a humane and just workplace. 12. What makes NO-COLLAR different from all the other books about the new economy out there? My book is a "residential study" of work conditions inside New Economy companies in their prime. It tries to draw some lessons about the future of modern work from empirical observation of employees in New Economy companies. Most books about the New Economy have focused on the boom-and-bust speculation, or on the technologies themselves. No-Collar presumes that the bona fide influence of the New Economy will be on employees' expectations of work conditions, not on the nature of investment or business opportunities. Even during the boom, most Internet business models were targets of scorn. The more telling story, in my opinion, will be about the legacy of the kind of work environment which No-Collar documents in detail. -- Andrew Ross Professor and Director Program in American Studies New York University 285 Mercer Street, 8th Floor New York, NY 10003 # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net