Tom Rath is a bestselling author and researcher who has spent the past two decades studying how work can improve human health and well-being. He has written several books, his newest one comes out in February and it is titled, Life’s Great Question: Discover How You Contribute to the World.
Tom set out to write this book as a result of his personal reflections over the last several years. He says, “I’ve really been personally reflecting on, given my own health challenges and threats and my mortality, what are the most important things for people to get focused on? In particular, most of my writing and research is focused on that nexus of people and organizations, and how can we help people to lead better lives through the organizations that they’re a part of? And one thing I’ve observed after 20 years of, kind of following this area is that we’re often so quick to look inward and think about self-development and our own brand and how we can improve personally, and the more I have studied these topics, my big takeaway is that we can get more done and life is less stressful and more liberating when we find real concrete ways to focus almost all of our energies on the contribution we’re making to other people”
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The book addresses topics such as how to separate our identity from our job title, why following our dreams is not always the best approach, and the things teams need to address in order to be effective.
One thing Tom has observed over the years is that the relationship between organizations and employees is broken. Why? Mostly because the basic structure of organizations today is outdated and ineffective for the modern age. It no longer suffices to bribe employees to work with monetary rewards, people today want more than that. They want purpose and meaning in the work that they do. They want to feel that they are contributing something to the organization and the world.
As Tom shares, “I think the question is how quickly can we get to a place where each of us as individuals and organizations start to say, “Are we producing people who are better off when they go home at night?” They’re healthier and they’re more financially secured, that does matter. They have better relationships with their family members because they chose to be a part of this organization.”
But this isn’t just up to the organizations to fix, individuals have a role as well. “Each of us has the responsibility to make sure that we’re not tolerating a job or a work that’s making our lives worse at the end of the day than we were when we showed up in the morning. And we need to start to ask some of those critical questions, ask the people around us, ask your best friend or your spouse, “Do you think I’m a better person because I’m doing this job right now versus where I was a year ago?” And sometimes they can help hold up a mirror where we need it as well.”
What you will learn:
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Why Tom first started writing, even though it is not what he originally planned on doing
How he approaches his day to day work and life
What’s wrong with the employee-organization relationship and how do we fix it?
Advice for leaders who want to be role models
How to discover what you contribute to the world
Why following your passions and dreams is not the best approach
This episode is made extra special by my friends over at Poppulo, a global leader in employee communications technology. Make sure to grab their awesome guide on The Role of Employee Communication in the Digital Workplace here: http://bit.ly/poppulo
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