| |
New
Living Diary
Index
New participatory democracy
Taming
the Corporations
My Welsh socialism
My New Socialist
Settlement
Globalise the left!
Bevan re-visited
|
|
|
item0020
501
4 November
2002
E-Message from Chris Rowe
Morning, Roger
Thanks for your prompt response -
my apologies for not giving a fuller picture! I am Mum to five children,
and I'm studying for a BA Honours Degree in Public Relations (2nd Year).
My current assignment is to assess the value of internal communications within
a large corporate structure.
On your Website, I've noticed an
article - "The Great Western Railway Paddington Band" which commented on "long-term
employment relationships" - this is something I regard as internal communication.
So that's where the seed was sown
- to contact you to see if you could name me a corporation or two that you know
practise effective internal commmunication, that I could cite in my text.
I'm trying to research electronically - as I'm working from home (kids on
half term), and although I've looked at a couple of web sites, companies
don't seem to publish details about their "Human Resources" Departments!
I hope this provides a little more clarity - and that you can offer some
direction - Cheers
Chris Rowe
..this was my reply...
Dear Chris
That's a difficult question - because
I am no longer in the big-company mainstream myself, and I know little about
the current management styles of specific corporations.
But there is definitely a
basic distinction to be drawn between
(a) corporations (whether public or private) which
seek to cultivate personal/social "communities" within their
workforce, supplementing the employment relationship, and
(b)
those that do not, consciously preferring to retain the
employment-relationship as a "bare, contractual" link, avoiding any intrusive
extension of the relationship into employees' private lives.
There is in my view important research work to be done -
(a) exploring the management practice of cultivating such wider networks of
social/communal relationships and
(b) asking whether such a management strategy is effective or ineffective
(e.g. in reducing staff turnover, strengthening staff loyalties, reducing severe
staff conflicts, weakening or strengthening trade union networks)
One possible approach would be to
collect (say) a dozen big-company in-house staff magazines/newspapers and analyse
their content - John Lewis is obviously outstanding as a community (with
its weekly magazine) - I suggest you take the FT list of quoted companies,
use a pin and select 25 - then write to each of them (Directory Inquiries would
be your best bet) getting the Chief Executive - NOT the HR animal, who will
be too defensive) and base a project on the publications you get back - my impression
(for example) is that Sainsburys and Waitrose (John Lewis) are
"communal companies" but that Tesco is not.
These are certainly all matters (in your sense) of "Internal Communications"
.
Roger Warren Evans
Drop me a line
<
Back to Home Page
502
4 November 2002
Blair wrong-footed
Blair's spat
with Chirac was significant.
French diplomacy
had been running rings around Britain, for weeks. Blair had been wrong-footed
by France over Iraq, trapped into a position widely rejected throughout Europe.
The French UN double-motion tactic was brilliant, and won many friends for France
throughout the Islamic world, while the UK had been pinned-down by
its subservience to the US. France had found of way facilitating EU
enlargement, by removing CAP obstacles - in a separate deal with Germany, cutting
out Britain. France had wrong-footed Britain by launching an unannounced public
challenge to the "Thatcher Rebate", a budgetary device which is deeply resented
by other EU countries. These moves have all won back, for the French, the political
initiative.
This is not the work of the rogue
Chirac, still less his self-effacing Prime Minister Raffarin. This is the legendary
brilliance of professional French diplomacy at work - imaginative, subtle, courageous.
The French diplomats are softening everybody up for the "Constitutional" negotiations
which lie ahead - so that they can get their way.
For my part, I remain
apprehensive about those negotiations, not because I disagree
with the le projet constitutionnel, but because I fear that the French
diplomats will run rings around us. I expressed my worries earlier in the year,
in March. The French lawyers and diplomats have much more experience of
formal "constitutional reasoning" than we have, and our chaps will be at a real
disadvantage.
Having said that, the real loser
from recent events is Tony Blair -
personally. It is now difficult to imagine his ever being taken seriously as
a contender for the EU Presidency - a position which will be the subject of
secondary election by other politicians. He has suffered a crippling loss of
personal credibility over Iraq and his personal subservience to Bush. He has
lost face by failing to secure British entry to the Euro, for being insufficiently
communautaire. And now he has shown himself to be a petulant, bad loser.
Sadly for Blair, these are defects
which he cannot rectify because -
There can be
no Euro-Referendum without threatening the very future of his Government
(Denis MacShane's elevation to FO Europe Minister is not a prelude to a Referendum:
it is instead of a Referendum);
He has no distinctive
leverage on the Common Agricultural Policy, now that France and
Germany have reached a bilateral settlement; and
Even if
there is no attack on Iraq, he will find it impossible to live down the memories
of his seeming weakness and lack of independent judgment.
Blair
is kebabbed - by his own particular cocktail of action and inaction.
Small wonder, then, that he is very annoyed indeed...
Drop me a line
<
Back to Home Page
|
|