hy do some employees consistently put in 60-hour workweeks and ignore employer-sponsored programs to enhance work/life balance? "Some
people simply don’t want balance," says FutureWork Institute consultant
Joseph Gibbons. "We have to stop saying that everyone should have work/life
balance."
At Cap Gemini Ernst & Young, Michael Scheidemann, assistant director of
recruiting, says that "some employees charge forward as fast and furious as
they can, and others have decided that they don’t need to be a partner in the
practice." Ambitious fast-trackers set their own pace and "know what they
are getting into," he notes.
At the New York Times, where daily deadlines create enormous pressures for
many of the newspaper’s 4,500 employees, "people complain, especially in the
news department, but they love their jobs," says Dennis L. Stern, vice
president for human resources. "They came here knowing what the hours would
be. There is self-selection."
Still, there is some indication that employees view long hours as a
prerequisite for advancement on the job. In a recent FutureWork Institute survey
of almost 6,000 people, "only 9 percent identified
themselves as fast-trackers," Gibbons says, "but 29
percent of senior managers identified themselves as fast-trackers, and that
tells the whole story. These people are setting the cultural standard."
Catalyst studies have identified professionals and managers who would like to
take the fast track for a while and then plateau for a period. "Once you
plateau, however, you are no longer seen as being on the advancement track,"
says Marcia Brumit Kropf, vice president for research and information services.
"In many companies, re-entering the fast track is very hard and not acceptable
because you are written off in certain ways."
Workforce, December 2002, p.