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Feature:

The New Job Sharers

  

Feature Contents
Top of Feature

1. Secrets of a Successful Job Share


2. Bringing Professional Women Back Into the Workforce
Understanding why educated women leave the workforce—and changing the nature of work to get them back—is crucial for meeting companies' leadership needs and showing the next generation of female business school grads that there are ample opportunities for them.

3. Making the Case for Flexibility
One firm is learning new ways to measure productivity beyond just billable hours.

4. Sample Job-Sharing Policy and Request Form
Here's one company's policy, explaining the benefits and costs of job-sharing. Also included: a sample job-sharing request form.


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Secrets of a Successful Job Share


The best job-sharing partners are organized, flexible, have good communication skills, share career goals and trust each other, according to two women who shared a job for more than 14 years.
By Michelle V. Rafter
Recommend 0

ebecca Hinkle and Karen Boda shared a job at Hewlett-Packard for more than 14 years, through multiple responsibilities, managers, promotions and physical locations, as well as five pregnancies and maternity leaves.

     Over time they learned a lot about what makes job sharing successful, information they now use to teach Fortune 500 clients of Twinstar, the Atlanta consulting firm they started after leaving HP two years ago. The partners counsel companies to consider the following when deciding whether two employees would be a good job-sharing match:

     Communication skills: Employees’ written and verbal communication skills need to be excellent "to keep the job share invisible to the outside world," Boda says, but also so one person can update the other about what happened while they were off.

     Organization: Being organized and planning ahead are critical when you’re splitting duties. The same goes for flexibility, Boda says. Partners have to accept that the other person may have a different way of doing something, and buy into the notion that because of it, the whole can be more than the sum of its parts, she says.

     Work ethic: Job-sharing partners need a similar sense of commitment to the job. Are they both willing to take calls on days when they’re technically "off"? Would they both put in extra work? "You do have to match people who have the same styles. That’s as important as the actual qualifications," Hinkle says.

     Trust: Partners have to believe that the other person can do the job as well as they can, so much so that they’re willing to let their career depend on it, Boda says. If the partner on duty makes a mistake, they have to agree never to discuss it with anyone else until they have a chance to talk it over "behind closed doors," Hinkle says.

     Compatibility: Hinkle and Boda lasted in their shared job as long as they did because they had common career goals: to continue advancing but only work part time, and to take jobs that interested both of them. Sometimes managers suggested a promotion and sometimes they sought one out. Whenever anything came up, "We spent a good deal of time talking about it," Boda says. "We weren’t so like-minded that the job was obvious. It was … a lot of negotiation." In fact, it took two years of negotiating between themselves before they decided to quit and start their consulting firm.

Workforce Management Online, May 2008 -- Register Now!


Michelle V. Rafter is a freelance writer based in Portland, Oregon. E-mail editors@workforce.com to comment.



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