What have those pesky managers at our largest companies have been up to?
In “Is Your
Driving Being Secretly Scored?” (The New York Times, June 9th),
author Kashmir Hill asked “You know you have a credit score. Did you know that you might also have a
driving score?” That, also called
“telematics,” which “reflects the safety of your driving habits – how often you
slam on the brakes, speed, look at your phone or drive late at night,” is
supplied to insurance companies from car manufacturers, or “from apps that
drivers already have on their phones,” which can include Life360, MyRadar, and
GasBuddy. These tools often have their
extra capabilities explained in legal-looking fine print, often unspecifically,
such as “we may collect third party data and reports.” Yet auto insurers have long used personal
data, so this is nothing totally new. In
most cases, it can be shut down, or you can choose to do as I did – leave it
alone knowing that relaying boring driving habits can only reduce your premiums. Those more privacy-concerned can dig out this
article for much more – it printed to 11 pages.
Another thing
I hadn’t seen before, with its absence glaringly obvious, was from Erica
Lamberg in Fox Business on July 16th: “Hot career trend
‘hushed hybrid’ has managers choosing the employees who have flex work
arrangements.” Back in the day, and
since then as far as I can see, employers did not seem to care about
productivity or responsible behavior when deciding whether to allow workers to
stay at home, but, despite official policies banning that, here we have,
secretly, better employees being given some privileges. “Hushed hybrid” can be defined as “managers
overruling, dismissing or choosing not to enforce a company’s return-to-office
policies.” Although it is high time that
firms used individual assessments, formal or not, to decide who can work
remotely, the problem is that those not chosen may feel deceived about the true
policy. It would be better if management
could do this openly – if there are no unions involved, it seems like they
should be able to.
A few years
ago we got publicity about different customers being charged different prices,
even when all aspects of the transactions involved were identical or nearly
so. It may be expanding with new
developments, as “FTC probes AI-powered ‘surveillance pricing’ at Mastercard,
JPMorgan Chase, McKinsey and others” (Eric Revell, Fox Business, July 23rd). The new method uses “AI and other technology”
combined with “personal information… such as their location, demographics,
credit history, and browsing or shopping history” “to analyze consumer data to
help set price targets for products and services.” The Federal Trade Commission, along with
masses of people buying things, did not like that, and it may be banned.
Workers’ long-time
frenemy found the spotlight in “So, Human Resources Is Making You Miserable?”
(David Segal, The New York Times, August 3rd). HR, which “bugs a lot of employees and
managers… seems to have more detractors than ever since the pandemic began,” when
it “began to administer rules about remote work and pay transparency, programs
to improve diversity, equity and inclusion and everything else that has rattled
and changed the workplace in the last four years.” Those in that department are themselves
“aggravated or bummed out,” often because “office behavior post-Covid has
become notably less civil,” resulting in them “being called in far more often
to referee disputes.” Employment site
LinkedIn found three years ago that “H.R. had the highest turnover rate of any
job it tracked.” With more and more
areas causing problems for them, its staff members often call it a “thankless
job.”
Perhaps
fuller and consistently honest disclosure of practices, my largest wish for HR
during my corporate career, would help their reputation – but that would be
neither quick nor easy. And so it goes
with the other three situations. People
are more willing to accept a fair shake when they know the rules, even if they
are not as favorable as they would like.
That is the moral of these stories.