Quiet Quitting, Quiet Firing, and the Victim Mentality

Beginning Balance - A podcast by Jesse Mecham - Fridays

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Mark and Jesse discuss a new term that is making the rounds on social media, and recently got the Wall Street Journal treatment as well. "Quiet quitting" is the so-called trend of dissatisfied and disillusioned workers exerting bare minimum effort and working as little as possible to keep their jobs, without actually quitting. The employer side to this has been dubbed "quiet firing," that is, keeping an employee but giving him less work, fewer hours, and generally making the work experience worse in hopes that he will quit of his own volition.   Mark and Jesse discuss whether this is a "thing" or just a spin on the victim mentality, which is unforunately all too common among employees and employers alike. Jesse references Jocko's Extreme Ownership, and why it's equally important for team members to "lead upward" as it is for managers to "lead downward."   Wall Street Journal article: https://www.wsj.com/articles/quiet-quitting-firing-productivity-paranoia-11664390490   Mark Butler, Virtual CFO https://markbutler.com https://letsdothebooks.com   You Need a Budget https://www.youneedabudget.com