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MEANINGFUL PARTNERSHIP AT WORK by Seth R. Silver

MEANINGFUL PARTNERSHIP AT WORK

by Seth R. Silver & Timothy M. Franz

Pub Date: Aug. 27th, 2021
ISBN: 978-1-03-202011-2
Publisher: Routledge

A hands-on approach to finding dignity, meaning, and success in the workplace.

Silver is an independent business and leadership consultant who holds a doctorate in education, and Franz, a former human resources consultant, is an industrial and organizational psychologist at St. John Fisher College. In this collaboration, the authors propose a methodical system to enable transparent, collaborative, and mutually beneficial partnerships between managers and their teams. Dysfunctional workplaces, they write, are plagued by the “Dreaded 4 Ds (dissatisfaction, disengagement, despair, departure),” and the authors present a three-part approach to combat these problems. The first part involves cultivating the correct mindset, one that strives for coordination, coequal responsibility, and mutual accountability. The second part is a model referred to as ERTAP—empathy, respect, trust, alignment, and partnership—which serves to create and maintain the system’s positive effects and workplace satisfaction. Finally, the authors discuss the “Workplace Covenant,” a signed document that delineates obligations and expectations, including personal integrity and regular dialogue; importantly, the document is subject to periodic review. The authors draw on years of research, both their own and that of others, to create a program that can improve “the manager’s leadership, the maturity and self-management of the team, and even the culture of the organization.” Though the book is not designed for a general readership, Silver and Franz write with common sense and empathy, prizing decency over power in order to break down barriers to communication in a hierarchical context. Both managers and employees should experience common support, a sense of appreciation, and viable avenues for success. Some readers may quail at the suggestion to sign their names to a written covenant, but the authors make it feel like putting one’s name to a petition or declaration one believes in—just as they understand it will take time and observation for the process to gain traction with some participants.

A savvy psycho-communicative guide to finding authentic partnerships at work.