
My Secret Life on the McJob: Lessons from Behind the Counter Guaranteed to Supersize Any Management Style
Jerry Newman(Author)
McGraw-Hill Inc.,US (Publisher)
Published on 16. December 2006
Book
Hardback
240 pages
978-0-07-147365-1 (ISBN)
Description
Once upon a time, a Ph.D. went to work at Mickey D's...
And what he found was illuminating. Jerry Newman, a college professor who has taught business courses for nearly 30 years, went undercover as a bottom-rung worker for the biggest names in fast food, including McDonald's and Burger King. Newman found that fast-food chains were the perfect petri dishes for covert research: High-pressure, high-volume businesses with high-employee turnover. The pecking order was also crystal clear, from fry cook all the way up to store manager.
Of the seven restaurants where Newman worked, some were high-morale, high-productivity machines. Others were miserable, misplaced circles of hell. Yet one common trait stuck out from them all: Each restaurant's respective manager determined the climate of the work environment.
Go behind the fast food counter with Newman and see what happens on an average day on the "McJob"...
how the restaurants are run (for better or worse)
how managers reward good employees when raises are impossible (believe it or not, bosses give 'em more hours-and it works!)
how morale and motivation spring directly from the manager's office
and how a few simple adjustments to your own management style-the "Supersized Management Principles" in this book-can transform and invigorate your workplace
And what he found was illuminating. Jerry Newman, a college professor who has taught business courses for nearly 30 years, went undercover as a bottom-rung worker for the biggest names in fast food, including McDonald's and Burger King. Newman found that fast-food chains were the perfect petri dishes for covert research: High-pressure, high-volume businesses with high-employee turnover. The pecking order was also crystal clear, from fry cook all the way up to store manager.
Of the seven restaurants where Newman worked, some were high-morale, high-productivity machines. Others were miserable, misplaced circles of hell. Yet one common trait stuck out from them all: Each restaurant's respective manager determined the climate of the work environment.
Go behind the fast food counter with Newman and see what happens on an average day on the "McJob"...
how the restaurants are run (for better or worse)
how managers reward good employees when raises are impossible (believe it or not, bosses give 'em more hours-and it works!)
how morale and motivation spring directly from the manager's office
and how a few simple adjustments to your own management style-the "Supersized Management Principles" in this book-can transform and invigorate your workplace
Reviews / Votes
"Jerry Newman offers entertaining anecdotes and wonderful descriptions of the personalities working at every station of responsibility...Unusual for a business book offering management advice, My Secret Life on the McJob is written from the perspective of a crew member on the receiving end of the boss's expectations rather than from that of a manager who faces the challenges of building a team, running a business and earning a return on investment...It offers many lessons that would be helpful to managers in almost every segment of business--or even government." --Andrew H. Card Jr., President Bush's chief of staff from January 2001 to April 2006; The Wall Street Journal, January 17, 2007 The Wall Street Journal 20070117More details
Language
English
Place of publication
New York
United States
Publishing group
McGraw-Hill Education - Europe
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 236 mm
Width: 160 mm
Thickness: 20 mm
Weight
468 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-07-147365-1 (9780071473651)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Jerry Newman (B.A., U of Michigan; M.A., Ph.D, U of Minnesota) is Distinguished Professor of Organization and Human Resources at the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Content
Chapter 1: Would You Like Fries With That?Chapter 2 Rules of the Fry Spy Game
Chapter 3: McJob isn't McEasy
Chapter 4: Hire Me Please - Will Work for Whoppers
Chapter 5: Wendy's Wages
Chapter 6: Sandwich Assembly 101
Chapter 7: The Great Cheese Wars & Other Tales From Behind the Counter
Chapter 8: Lap Dancing and the Double D's
Chapter 9: I Quit, You're Fired
Chapter 10: Management Lessons From Fast Food
Chapter 11: Life Lessons From Fast Food
Chapter 3: McJob isn't McEasy
Chapter 4: Hire Me Please - Will Work for Whoppers
Chapter 5: Wendy's Wages
Chapter 6: Sandwich Assembly 101
Chapter 7: The Great Cheese Wars & Other Tales From Behind the Counter
Chapter 8: Lap Dancing and the Double D's
Chapter 9: I Quit, You're Fired
Chapter 10: Management Lessons From Fast Food
Chapter 11: Life Lessons From Fast Food