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Where Should I Work

Where Should I Work
Choosing the Best Place to Work

Simon Moss
ISBN: 9780734611239 / 978-0-7346-1123-9
Price: A$29.95 NZ$35.95 US$24.95
Binding: Softcover
Trim: 150 x 220 mm   140 pp (approx.) 
Published Date: April 2012

Most people have acquired extensive knowledge about many topics. Some individuals, for example, know that actually two moons orbit the Earth, the second of which is only a few miles wide and invisible to the naked eye. Other individuals know that bubbles in Guinness beer seem to sink to the bottom rather than float to the top like every other beer. In addition, some people know that French fries originated in Belgium, Michael J. Fox's middle name is Andrew, the pupils in goats are rectangular, the first US cheerleaders were actually men, and Fidel Castro once worked as a Hollywood extra.

Despite this wealth of information, fewer people are informed about a topic that affects every facet of their lives: how to choose the best workplace.
Where Should I Work? Choosing the Best Place to Work helps the reader do just that. This is important because hundreds of characteristics and features of organizations will affect not only an employee’s job satisfaction, but they will also influence their wellbeing. Thus, in the right organization people cultivate a sense of meaning and purpose in life, and, consequently, they become more likely to fulfill their goals, extend their skills, enhance their reputation, and improve their friendships.

Key objectives

This book fulfills  two key objectives:

•  First, Where Should I Work? Choosing the Best Place to Work challenges many of the misconceptions individuals have formed about the qualities and characteristics of organizations that pro­mote wellbeing and progress in employees. Many people, for example, assume they will flourish in organizations that offer enormous bonuses to reward exemplary performance. Other individuals feel they will thrive in dynamic organizations – organ­izations that respond swiftly to unexpected opportunities in the relevant markets. As many scientific discoveries indicate, these characteristics, and many other coveted attributes, can damage wellbeing rather than enhance progress.

•  Second, this book enables individuals to predict the prevailing qualities and characteristics of organizations. Most organizations do not depict themselves accurately. During interviews, on and in official documents, many companies inflate their qualities. They erroneously portray themselves as supportive and cooperative. They feign concern about the family life of employees, maintaining they value balance. They exaggerate the degree to which they develop the skills, expertise and qualities of employees, and overestimate the degree to which they value the contributions of employees and the creativity of their suggestions.

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Preface

Part A - The rationale

Chapter 1 - Do you really need this book?
Chapter 2 - How to decide?
Chapter 3 - The model company

Part B - The physical surroundings

Chapter 4 - Objects and artifacts
Chapter 5 - Design and layout

Part C - Research before the interview

Chapter 6 - Vision and value
Chapter 7 - Senior managers and directors
Chapter 8 - Executive announcements and communication
Chapter 9 - Budgets and finances

Part D - Observations during interviews with supervisors or managers

Chapter 10 - Physical features of your immediate supervisor or  manager
Chapter 12 - The language of your immediate supervisor or manager

Part E - The final evaluation
 
Chapter 13  - The workgroup
Chapter 14  - Rules and prohibitions
Chapter 15 - Experiments to assess the organization Concluding remarks References



Simon Moss is research fellow at Deakin University, and was a senior lecturer at Monash University for 15 years. His primary expertise revolves around how policies and practices at organizations affect the resilience, capabilities, progress and wellbeing of individuals. He has written several books and over 50 scientific papers on leadership, personality, motivation, integrity and stress. Simon co-founded Zenith Professional Development, a company that has collated every scientific discovery that contradicts prevailing management beliefs and practices.