Lexus just introduced it's newly-updated SUV, the RX for 2010.
While I am not what you would call a car hound, I certainly have an appreciation for fun and sexy cars (my personal all-time favorites would definitely be the '85 BMW 635csi and a vintage '55 VW Kharman Ghia coupe), Lexus' have never captured my attention.
So while the Lexus RX has always seemed a little staid to me, what really made me stop was, the marketing approach for the RX: 2009 is a write-off, let's skip it and look ahead to 2010. Wow, it's going to be a long year.
This approach makes me wonder - is 2009 going to be like a TiVo show that you end up fast-forwarding to the end (or maybe wish we could)?
I was speaking to a friend who just returned from a leadership conference his employer held this month. The friend's employer is tightening its belt and settling in for a bumpy ride. But even more frightening was an off-hand comment from an official of the organization that employee's are 'frankly just lucky to have a job.'
Having spent the better part of the last month interviewing candidates (about 75% of them unemployed from the auto or allied industries), the pragmatist in me agrees.
The HR strategist in me is worried - employers that embrace this 'be thankful or else' attitude are going to have a rude awakening at the end of our recession/depression/whatever-you-call-it.
Employees 'left standing' at the end of 2009 will likely have been surrounded by layoffs in their organization. According to a recent (Dec 2008) scientific study (4000+ employees from 3100+ companies) conducted by Leadership IQ, these 'survivors' are 87% less likely to recommend their organization as a good place to work and believe (61%) that the companies prospects are worse.
So, fast forward to 2010 (or for the real pessimists in the crowd, 2011). If the survivors remaining in organizations mirror the finding above - will they stay when new opportunities come up? Or, will they 'be thankful' to leave?
My bet is that employees told they should be thankful, will be thankful - to leave.
And, after all is settled from this economic tsunami, we are still left facing an inevitable reality: the bulk of our workforce is aging and still anticipating retirement (perhaps pushed off a few years), we haven't produced the scientists, engineers, nurses, doctors, technicians, etc that our economy and organizations need to be optimized.
Showing posts with label depression. Show all posts
Showing posts with label depression. Show all posts
February 23, 2009
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