Johonebesus wrote:Elheru Aran wrote:...
It can be safely argued that the CEO's job is far more than what the average team member does; running a corporation is a very different job from putting together a burger.
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More what? That is a matter that very much annoys me. There is this assumption that working in an office is obviously harder than working in service, but how many CEO's would be able to stand on their feet eight or ten hours a day running back and forth dealing with customers and managers constantly saying hurry, faster, get it out now. Service work is
hard. Even back at the library I would have been willing to take a pay cut to be able to sit in an office and deal with papers and computers and other professionals instead of the public. Maybe a white collar job requires more contemplation and complex decision making than running at McDonald's, but the latter is much more demanding physically, and probably has more constant stress.
Not saying they're the same type of job, which was my point. Running a company and making executive decisions with short and long term projections and all that jazz is still work. It's not as physical a form of work as the line employee's, but it's still labor-- the CEO (or middle management or whatever) still has to drive around, talk to people, do paperwork, and assume responsibility for decisions which will affect hundreds or thousands of employees' lives. They're two different types of work.
And bear in mind that the team member just has to clock in, do his job, and go home. From a level not much above the team member on upward, the amount of actual responsibilities increases to where people are working 50, 60+ hour weeks on salaried wages rather than the expected 40. Believe it or not, they aren't just sitting around in air-conditioned offices, putting their feet up and pushing paper around their desks. If the company is publicly traded and doesn't do well, even the higher-ups can lose their jobs if the stockholders or whatever decide they're not helping make the company profit.
Don't get me wrong; I would LOVE it if executives and such would spend a few days every week on the floor with us peons. However, their jobs are in a different category from ours, and you can't necessarily make the blanket statement that they aren't working as hard as the average service employee. Certainly some don't-- once you get into the upper management that probably increases-- but middle and lower management definitely keep busy and earn their pay.
Though I should have made the distinction a little more clear in my post, I suppose...
It's a strange world. Let's keep it that way.