Seven-Day Weekend: Difference between revisions

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'''The Seven-Day Weekend: Changing the Way Work Works. Ricardo Semler. Portfolio, 2004'''
'''The Seven-Day Weekend: Changing the Way Work Works. Ricardo Semler. Portfolio, 2004'''


'''A successful corporate adoption of the participatory model?''' the SEMCO case
'''A successful corporate adoption of the participatory model?''' the SEMCO case


In the book,'''The Seven-Day Weekend: Changing the Way Work Works''', CEO Ricardo Semler explains the counter-intuitive m measures he took to make his company succesfull, by relying on the self-organisation skills of his workers. A paradoxical top-down implementation of the hacker culture:
In the book,'''The Seven-Day Weekend: Changing the Way Work Works''', CEO Ricardo Semler explains the counter-intuitive m measures he took to make his company succesful, by relying on the self-organisation skills of his workers. A paradoxical top-down implementation of the [[hacker culture]]:


" * Give up control (e.g., no organization charts, dress code, fixed offices or policies; complete flex-time for all workers, including those on assembly lines).
* Give up control (e.g., no organization charts, dress code, fixed offices or policies; complete flex-time for all workers, including those on assembly lines).


* Share information (e.g., make all salaries public and invite everyone to attend board meetings; Semler even shares profit calculations with customers).
* Share information (e.g., make all salaries public and invite everyone to attend board meetings; Semler even shares profit calculations with customers).
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* Encourage self-management (i.e., force people to think independently, question everything, and solve their own problems; manage by doing nothing yourself when problems arise).
* Encourage self-management (i.e., force people to think independently, question everything, and solve their own problems; manage by doing nothing yourself when problems arise).


* Discourage uniformity (e.g., rotate jobs, allow extreme flexibility in work and pay)."
* Discourage uniformity (e.g., rotate jobs, allow extreme flexibility in work and pay).
(source: from the review:  
(source: from the review: [http://www.opensourcetutorials.com/tutorials/Server-Side-Coding/Book-Reviews/the-seven-day-weekend/page1.html the seven day weekend])
 
http://www.opensourcetutorials.com/tutorials/Server-Side-Coding/Book-Reviews/the-seven-day-weekend/page1.html)


[[Category:Books]]
[[Category:Books]]

Revision as of 17:20, 11 July 2008

The Seven-Day Weekend: Changing the Way Work Works. Ricardo Semler. Portfolio, 2004

A successful corporate adoption of the participatory model? the SEMCO case

In the book,The Seven-Day Weekend: Changing the Way Work Works, CEO Ricardo Semler explains the counter-intuitive m measures he took to make his company succesful, by relying on the self-organisation skills of his workers. A paradoxical top-down implementation of the hacker culture:

  • Give up control (e.g., no organization charts, dress code, fixed offices or policies; complete flex-time for all workers, including those on assembly lines).
  • Share information (e.g., make all salaries public and invite everyone to attend board meetings; Semler even shares profit calculations with customers).
  • Encourage self-management (i.e., force people to think independently, question everything, and solve their own problems; manage by doing nothing yourself when problems arise).
  • Discourage uniformity (e.g., rotate jobs, allow extreme flexibility in work and pay).

(source: from the review: the seven day weekend)