I went to employee orientation today, and I must say, it was pretty boring. It was the first orientation I’ve been to since I worked at Wal-Mart, and I am astounded by the striking similarities and differences.
Setting:
Wal-Mart: A dingy back office with folding chairs and dirty folding tables.
Sentinel Technologies: A conference room with plush high-backed chairs and a humongous wooden table.
Administrator:
WM: An older woman who runs through a routine she’s done a thousand times before.
ST: An oder woman who runs through a routine she’s done a thousand times before.
Content:
WM: Corporate presentation about the company history and policies, break with a tour, then return to discuss benefits. We’re handed giant packets of information we’ll probably never use, and we’re given the standard legal forms.
ST: Corporate presentation about the company history and policies, break with a tour, then return to discuss benefits. We’re handed giant packets of information we’ll probably never use, and we’re given the standard legal forms.
Presentation:
WM: We watch an old VHS movie about the company.
ST: One word: Powerpoint. *shudder*
Conclusion:
WM: We’re sent on our way and told to direct further questions to someone else who isn’t in the building at the time.
ST: The HR person answers any questions and helps fill out the proper forms.
So there it is, from Wally World to the Corporate world, its mainly the same. A bit more polished, but the exact same thing. Now, just because its more polished, doesn’t mean its any less stupid. Au contraire!
During the Powerpoint presentation, one slide stated the year they opened up an Arizona office. To the side of this statement was a picture of a state. Which state? Missouri.
I’ll give you a moment to let that sink in.
I call the presentor on it, “Excuse me, I can’t help but notice, but is that Missouri?” She is silent for a few seconds, then says, “I’ve been giving this presentation for seven years, and you’re the first person to notice that.”
I’m not sure whether I’m pleased at myself, or mournful of the hundreds of people who either didn’t realize or ignored the mistake.
So then, we watch a tape, two tapes. The first is, “The Diversity Diner.”
I’ll let you dwell on that a moment.
Picture the corniest after school special imaginable. Complete with all-too-happy people who enunciate way too clearly. Now, set it in a diner. A bunch of people talking about diversity. And, get this, actually justifying HR surveys with questions like “If you were a tree, what tree would you be?” Yes, this is an actual quote.
The second was a stock film about sexual harrasment. Shot in this bizarre talk show format. Which, in very nice words, declared, “You may not mean it, but there’s a lot of stupid people out there, so be careful. Because a jury will believe them, not you.”
Here’s the actual quote: “Remember, its not the intent of the accused that is evaluated in court, but rather the perception of the accusor.”
Wow.
There was actually a section on how if you hug a co-worker who likes to be hugged, a third-party may feel uncomfortable and file a harrassment charge. Am I being overly insensitive when I think that’s going just a tad too far?
Ahh, corporate films, good stuff. Well, that’s all for me.
Zel-kun out.
shinimitsukai | 13-Feb-06 at 6:23 pm | Permalink
…and this, ladies and gents, is why I fear for the future of humanity. Seven years and nobody’s noticed, least of all the presenter?
Ditto on the videos. Odd how when a man talks dirty to a woman, it’s sexual harrassment. When a woman talks dirty to a man, it’s like, $3.99 a minute. Everybody keep your hands to yourselves and we’ll all be cool.
Sabrejack | 13-Feb-06 at 8:08 pm | Permalink
My workplace is an equality disaster.
One of my coworkers routinely walks into the office with the phrase, “What’s up, bitches?” as the first thing out of his mouth for the day. The only black guy in the office calls us all “brother.” There are two women and 15 guys. Porn regularly shows up on our screens as a normal course of assisting our customers. At least once a day, someone calls someone else “gay” or otherwise suggests they “love the cock.” We have to lock our workstations whenever we step away because pranks get played.
That said, I freaking love the place, and we all know none of us mean any harm by it. I stand by the statement: You cannot run a society based on its most sensitive members.
I must admit, though, the support callback requests from the porn starlets do tend to get done first… hmmmm.
Zel-kun | 13-Feb-06 at 8:20 pm | Permalink
Haha. You put my thoughts to words most perfectly, good sir. You have just described a work environment I would say is ideal.
David N. Scott | 15-Feb-06 at 12:50 pm | Permalink
Hah, until some sensitive person gets hired, and YOU ALL GET SHUT DOWN! Eh, don’t mind me. I’ve had classes on HR law. Shuuuuuuudder.
MIssiouri, eh? Well, allz I can say is…
you watched your company’s introductory powerpoint?