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POSTAL FUN
FACTS
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NATIONAL PRESIDENT'S MESSAGE |
POSTAL FUN FACTS
Did You Know that the Postal
Service...
* Contrary to popular belief, the
United States Post Office has no official motto. However, a number of
postal buildings contain inscriptions, the most familiar of which appear
on postal buildings in New York City and Washington D.C. General Post
Office, New York City, 8th Avenue and 33rd. Street. "Neither snow nor
rain nor gloom of night stays these couriers from the swift completion
of their appointed rounds." This inscription was supplied by William
Mitchell Kendall of the firm of McKim, Mead & White, The Architects who
designed the New York General Post Office. Kendall said the sentence
appears in the works of Herodotus and describes the expeditions of the
Greeks against the Persians under Cyrus, about 500 B.C. The Persians
operated a system of mounted postal couriers, and the sentence describes
the fidelity with which their work was done.
* Handles more than 43% of the world's mail. It's nearest competitor is
Japan with only 6%.
* Depends exclusively on postage and fees rather than tax payer revenue
for it's operations.
* Serves more than 8 million small business customers.
* Operates the nations largest alternate fuel delivery fleet with more
than 7,000 vehicles powered by natural gas, electricity, and ethanol in
1996.
* The postal service is listed by Fortune Magazine as 29th on a list of
the world's largest companies. Working with an annual budget of nearly
1% of the United States economy.
* Recycles more than one million tons of materials annually.
* Handles more than 41 million change-of-address cards each year as a
free service to the 17% of the nation's population that moves each year.
* Serves as the largest credit/debit card acceptor in the nation with
nearly 50,000 terminals at 33,000 postal locations throughout the
country.
* Experiences an increase of one million dollars in costs when the price
of gasoline increases by one cent nationwide.
* Delivers more in one day than FedEx does in a year, and more in three
days than UPS does in a year.
Micro Careers
The common view has
been that we have one career. Typically, it was defined by both our
occupational field-we are an attorney, a salesperson or a logistics
professional-and our employer-we work at IBM or at Coca- Cola. Although
we were often told otherwise, many of us believed that we would spend
our entire career working for that one or, at most, two or three
different organizations. In other words, we were convinced our careers
would be relatively stable and long lasting.
While that was
probably not true in the past, it is definitely not true today. This
Great Recession has changed the nature of our careers forever. I know
you don’t want to hear that. It’s hard enough to find a job in the
current economic environment without some putz telling you that the
rules of the game have now changed. But they have. And sticking our
heads in the sand won’t undo what has been done.
On the other hand, if
we can learn the new rules quickly-if we can get our arms around them
and figure out how to play by and win with them-we can turn today’s
difficult situation into a much better one. We can capture the upside in
a down economy. We can put these new rules to work for us so we can find
the work we want and hang onto it.
So, what are these
new rules? They are a response to the traumatic and wrenching
devastation of business now underway in this country and around the
world. From GM to Citigroup, from Hertz to Microsoft, employers are
shedding jobs and the workers who held them. These are not, however,
your father’s or mother’s layoffs. They are not reductions in force that
will eventually be replaced by rehiring in force. They are, instead,
reductions in structure. The American employer is becoming leaner and
determined to stay that way.
This shift in
organizational philosophy holds several implications for those of us in
the workforce.
- First, there
will be far fewer permanent jobs available to us. Companies will
shrink down to a relatively small number of core roles and hire very
selectively to fill them. Gone are the days of offering a position
to a qualified applicant. Today and for many tomorrows to come, only
the best qualified candidate for each opening will get the nod.
- Second,
employers will increase their hiring for “defined outcome
positions.” Unlike traditional contract or project work, these
situations will have the look and feel of permanent jobs, but have a
fixed duration determined by the accomplishment of a specific
objective established by the employer. Defined outcome positions
will have the same organizational prestige and seniority as core
jobs, but without the commitment to long term employment.
- Third,
employers will attempt to be much more nimble and quick acting. The
competitive dynamics of a highly integrated, global marketplace have
shortened the life cycle of products and services, sales and
marketing strategies, and the organizational staffing requirements
that flow from them. The kinds of talent required to execute an
organization’s business plan last year or the year before may
be-indeed, often will be-entirely different than those it needs
today or tomorrow. If those are the new rules, how do we play them?
The answer is as
simple as it is challenging. We will have to shift our own employment
philosophy. We must change the way we think about our careers. We have
to accept that they are no longer relatively stable or long lasting.
From now on, our careers will be episodic and short. They will be “micro
careers.”
Micro careers are
defined by two kinds of impermanence:
- Instead of
working for one or two employers over the course of a thirty year
career, we will now be employed by 10-15 organizations over the
course of a fifty year career. We are living longer even as the
staffing needs of employers grow shorter and less enduring.
- Instead of
working in a single occupational field, you will work in 3-5
different professions. They may all draw on a common foundation of
expertise, but each will require a specific and additional set of
knowledge, skills and abilities. This continuous changing means that
we can no longer aspire to be complete and fully formed workers. The
old industrial era paradigm of moving from novice to journeyman to
master is over. In today’s knowledge-based economy, only masters
survive. So, our new strategy must be to act as
“masters-in-progress.” We must never stop moving toward a better,
more capable, more effective version of our best selves.
Now, I acknowledge
that such incessant self renewal is a new and potentially uncomfortable
way of working for some, maybe even many of us. We worked hard to get to
a certain point in our careers, and now, we would like to coast. We
would like to sit back and enjoy the fruits of our labor. And that’s no
longer possible. In the 21st Century workplace, managing a successful
career is like riding a bicycle. We can coast for a short period of
time, but we’re going to have to peddle and sometimes peddle very hard
if we want to keep from crashing.
While that may be
difficult to accept, there are some advantages to this situation. It
enables us to escape from the imprisonment of dull jobs and dead end
employers. No employment situation is forever and as long as we keep
preparing ourselves for what’s ahead, each new job is a chance to move
on and up. We get to start fresh on a regular basis, so mistakes are
less harmful to our progress and risk is less dangerous. We have, in
short, more freedom and opportunity than we have ever had. That’s the
key point we should remember. Because that’s the power and the promise
of micro careers.
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