The Business Exchange Bath & Somerset Issue 12: Summer 2019 | Page 19
BUSINESS ADVICE
EVERYONE’S A LAWYER: A SLICE FOR A PRICE
Peter Woodhouse is an employment law expert and heads up the
Business Sector at national law firm Stone King - but he asks; aren’t
we all lawyers? In each issue of TBE Peter reflects on a legal skill that
most of us use every day. This time he reflects on his childhood.
a chore although I suppose some of it
was fun. But looking back at it now, it
is easy to spot the techniques all of us
used that I see now daily in the office and
across courtrooms. It’s probably easiest
to explain this by summarising the
presentation styles of the four siblings
involved:
Oldest sibling (girl)
Adopts the weight of responsibility and
air of gravitas. I am the one in whom you
place responsibility and I am exercising
that now. I am the voice of the one you
trust. Giving me what I want is really an
extension of your own desires. You know
it is the right thing.
Next oldest (boy)
I am the biggest and strongest one
here. I can (and will) cause the most
aggravation if I don’t get what I want. It
will be better for you if you do what I say.
Twin (boy)
There is thesis and antithesis. I am
synthesis. I am the peacemaker.
Everyone values my view. Let me have
what I want and I will make it right with
everyone else.
Me
Sod it! I’m taking my ball and going
home.
Versions of these approaches get played
out at work or in court processes all
the time. If anyone reading this article
ever thinks about presenting a case,
they could do worse than think about
which of these models, or blend of these
models might work for them. Similarly,
if anyone has to adjudicate on a decision,
it is worth assessing what presentation
style is being used, and if you are more
susceptible to that presentation style.
It is an age-old court advocacy
technique to make oneself the ‘friend
of the court’. The one that can be relied
upon to give unbiased, fair and objective
views to the judge - it being entirely
coincidental that those unbiased, fair
and objective views exactly coincide with
the wishes of that advocate’s client.
For those in the workplace who
need to present a case, the more you
can align yourself to the conscious and
unconscious interests of the listener,
the more successful that presentation is
likely to be.
And in case you’re wondering,
my childhood technique rarely got me
very far!
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My parents were high achievers and they
worked hard to ensure that each of their
numerous offspring were high achievers
too. They had only moderate success!
But in the process of attempting to instil
that high achiever instinct, we all had to
participate in various activities that were,
to various levels, cerebral or artistic, or
simply monetarist.
So, on occasion, we were invited to
learn whole poems or foreign language
vocabulary (for monetary reward), or
write and present plays. My personal
favourite was to be given the money to
buy the ingredients for a cake and be
permitted to offer siblings a ‘slice at a
price’.
One activity that got frequent airtime
was presenting a case. On one occasion
we had a prosecutor and defender
appointed to determine ‘The Case of
the Missing Cookie’. A lot of this felt like
Peter Woodhouse, partner and
head of business at Stone King
Company culture – How important is it really?
by Jo Kangurs, Keystone HR
The business environment we are operating in today is evolving
rapidly. Advances in technology and the expectations of the next
generation means businesses are having to change the way they think
about work and consider how they can conduct business for the better.
Company culture is a big part of this.
SME COMPANY CULTURE
SMEs are at an advantage here. With less
large corporate hierarchical systems,
more opportunities for face-to-face
communication and flexible working
conditions, SMEs can respond quickly and
adapt their company culture to gain a happy
work-life balance for its employees from
the start.
On the flip-side, if SME’s ignore the needs
of their employees and adopt what is known
as a ‘toxic company culture’ the negative
impact on overall business performance will
be far more damaging.
WHY IS COMPANY CULTURE IMPORTANT?
In a nutshell, cultivating a great company
culture is important not only for employee
engagement, happiness and retention, but
also for the future success of the business.
You may not see it directly impacting the
bottom line but if you look closely you will
see how your employees’ behaviours or your
company procedures affect your profitability
or the quality of what you do or produce.
You may have never even considered
what your company culture is, but if you feel
like there are some repeated performance
niggles or that your overall output has
plateaued, you might want to take the time
to question whether the way you do things
has changed or if it hasn’t, does it need to
change for the business to move on?
If you have any HR queries or would like
some help developing your company
culture, contact Jo Kangurs by emailing:
[email protected]
WHAT IS COMPANY CULTURE?
All companies whether small or large have
a culture of sorts.
Culture is not just the values, nor it is
the free office fruit, the annual pay rises or
the table tennis table. It is not just about
having excellent leadership or management
styles. Company culture is all of this and
more. It is how a company encourages
business growth and competitive advantage
by fostering healthily day to day attitudes,
behaviours and work ethics.
Great company cultures set the
foundations for real, tangible business
growth. They are always looking to remove
the barriers in the workplace so people feel
empowered, enabled, recognised and have
access to the resources they need to do an
excellent job.
THE BUSINESS EXCHANGE 2019
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