Two Views of Employment
Management of a Corporate Entity
Any organization is a corporate legal entity, not a human being. So its obligations and expectations must be taken over by people. This incarnation of the corporate entity is referred to as: «». From the perspective of executive work, the CEO and managers constitute «». Even then the Governing Board or Council sometimes needs to be included.
Executive members of «» have an inherent conflict of interest in that they are needing to be managed. Hence the importance of: a strong Board, and separating the Chairman and CEO roles.
The Protagonists
In any employment situation, there are two protagonists, each with a distinctly different perspective: one personal and the other impersonal.
● The employee (staff member or person) asks:
what obligations and expectations do I take on myself ?
and
what obligations and expectations do I place on the organization via its management?
● The employer (the organization via «the management») asks:
what obligations and expectations do «I» have as a legal corporate individual?
and
what obligations and expectations do «I» place on this particular employee?
● Because only persons can ask and answer such questions, many employees are expected and obliged to ask:
what obligations and expectations are placed on my particular role as part of «»?
► Continue to the contract of employment that starts the ball rolling.
Originally posted: 20-Oct-2011