Hello. This is Six Minute English
Have you ever had a horrible boss, not been paid enough
or simply got tired of doing the same old boring jobs?
some of my previous jobs have been pretty awful, Neil.
I was on my feet ten hours a day.
Most people have had bad work experiences
at one time or another. Maybe a job
that was boring, badly paid or just working too much
and getting burned out – lacking energy or enthusiasm
But does it have to be like this?
Since most of our waking day is spent at work,
how can we make sure our job doesn't make us unhappy?
That's what we'll be discussing in this programme
and, as usual, we'll be learning
some useful new vocabulary as well.
I have a question for you. The worst job
I spent working as a portable toilet cleaner at music festivals.
But, according to a recent survey by Forbes Magazine,
what was voted the worst job in the UK? Was it:
B. a bartender? or C. a traffic warden?
I think the answer might be a call centre worker.
OK, Beth. I'll reveal the answer later in the programme.
Now, it's interesting that survey was carried out in the UK
because being unhappy at work could be related
to the British working culture which emphasises working at a fast pace.
Here's Damian Grimshaw, a professor of Employment
Studies at King's College London speaking with BBC
Really it's all about pace, cost efficiencies, meeting targets
and deadlines. So, this is why, when people do surveys of
what we call 'work intensity', so how hard you work
are you driven on pace?, is there a supervisor breathing down your neck?,
we score really badly compared to European countries.
Compared to some European countries
British workers have to meet more targets and deadlines – a time or date
by which a particular job must be finished. The pressure to
work quickly means you might have your boss breathing down your neck –
an idiom meaning that someone is watching you very closely
and checking everything you do – not a nice feeling to have at work.
That's right. A good job is about more than pay and conditions.
It's one that uses your talents and gives you some choice
over how and when you work. In 2022, Britain's biggest employer,
the National Health Service, or NHS, lost more than 15,000 nurses,
many quitting because of the long and inflexible working hours.
Another sector with long working hours is
the construction industry. Low paid, dirty and physically demanding
construction workers also risk high levels of work-related injury.
Here, Emma Stewart, co-founder of social business,
Time Wise, tells BBC's Radio 4 programme, Analysis,
about her trial project to help builders enjoy their jobs more.
In the work that we've done within the
construction industry, we have trialled
what we would call an output-based way of working,
which means we shift away from the sense of presenteeism,
this sense of: you are paid by the day,
you are on site from seven in the morning
until the last person leaves, maybe seven in the evening...
to a task-based way of working, which means you're going to do five tasks
over the course of this day, when you've done those tasks,
and you've done them well, you can go home,
but we will still pay you the same amount for the day.
They were able to deliver the projects that we worked on with them
but, critically, the feedback from workers was
that work-life balance scores doubled and they were able to reduce the amount
of overtime that they did. It's a win-win.
Emma describes the current working
patterns using the word presenteeism – staying at work longer than usual
or going to work when you're ill to show that you work hard,
but this isn't an effective way to work.
Emma thinks a task-based approach is better both at getting the job done
and for improving work-life balance – the amount of time you spend at work,
compared with the amount of time you spend relaxing with your family
and doing things you enjoy. In other words,
flexible working is a win-win – a situation
that's good for everyone involved.
Maybe more flexible working would help some of the jobs
I mentioned earlier in my question, Beth.
According to a recent Forbes magazine survey,
what was voted the worst job in the UK?
I guessed it was a job I've done myself –
working in a call centre. That was... the correct answer!
Although I think my summer job cleaning toilets was even worse.
Right, let's recap the vocabulary
we've learned from this programme,
starting with burnout – lack of energy or enthusiasm
because of working too hard. A deadline is the time
by which a particular job must be done.
If someone is breathing down your neck, they're watching you very closely
and checking everything you do. Presenteeism means staying
at work longer than usual to show your employer that you work hard
and are important to them. Work-life balance
is the amount of time you spend doing your job
compared with the amount of time you spend doing things you enjoy.
And finally, a win-win is a situation or result
Once again, our six minutes are up.