I remember well the late 1970's and the 1980's. The landscape was full of experiments ... Quality of Work Life (QWL), quality circles, autonomous groups, self-directed groups, you name it, organizations tried to outdo one another with these workplace experiments.
The search for the ideal organization and job design was fueled by the ever increasing success of the Japanese model which included higher worker participation. From Scandinavia, experiments in socio-technical job design, captured the imagination of HR practitioners. Management gurus all over the Western world promoted the notion that increased worker participation in the traditional functions of management such as selection, pay program design, and work organization would improve employee satisfaction and, as a consequence, productivity. Some Northern European countries went much further by imbedding the notion of worker participation in their labor laws, and they mandated the worker council -- including representatives of the employees in all strategic and operational decision making of the organization.
We have not heard much about this subject in the past ten years or so. Although the worker councils still exist, they are more or less relics of well intended social experiments. I have seen no empirical studies that show a significant benefit to the bottom line or to the job satisfaction level of employees.
THE MONDRAGON MODEL
There is one experiment that is worth noting here. The Mondragon Model. It is an experiment dating back to 1954. I first read about it in the book "The Organization of the Future" published by the Drucker Foundation, editors Frances Hesselbein, Marshal Goldsmith and Richard Beckhard. In chapter 11, Joel Barker summarizes the history, driving force, and success of this model. The setting is a poor region of Spain beset by high unemployment, poor education, and no positive outlook for the future. A young Jesuit priest by the name of Don Jose Maria Arizmendiarreta set out to change all of this. First by starting a vocational school and later embarking on an entrepreneurial experiment that created a mushrooming number cooperatives. The group by the early 1990's had a revenue volume of $ 2.6 billion and employed more than 21,000 people.
The principles of Mondragon included democracy, worker ownership, innovative financial management, pay equity, and self-funded retirement schemes.
I have not followed the success of this model in the latter days. However, I remain impressed to this day with the notion that worker democracy and ownership can be a powerful alternative to the stockholder model. I also admire the community building benefits the model created for the affected region.
I invite the reader to comment on this subject. At a time when jobs are scarce, communities are suffering from high unemployment and overall decline, the Mondragon Model can be a source of inspiration for job creation by stimulating communities in joint, collaborative initiatives.
Enjoy the ride on the learning curve!
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