没有人喜欢听到自己的奖金被取消的消息。但在家具设计公司MillerKnoll的员工大会上,其首席执行官安迪·欧文却非常清楚地告诉员工“不要自怨自艾”,别再问薪酬问题,今年4月下旬,泄露的会议视频片段在社交媒体上疯传。
现在,据美国密歇根州媒体MLive的报道,欧文为自己没有以正确的方式传达信息向员工道歉。她在给员工的电子邮件中写道:“我希望展现透明和同理心,我会继续反思这件事情,但让我感到糟糕的是,人们对我的呼声似乎反应迟钝。我希望激励团队,应对我们以前多次遭遇过的挑战,但结果与我的出发点相去甚远,对此我感到很抱歉。”
她还表示:“任何事情都不会削弱我们的集体团队的能力和力量。我非常感谢每一位同事,我会继续竭尽所能帮助团队实现共同的目标。”
MillerKnoll并未立即回复《财富》杂志的置评请求。
鼓舞士气的讲话却适得其反
4月下旬,一条欧文评论奖金问题的短视频在社交媒体上走红,令她遭到批评。这条视频节选自长达75分钟的视频会议。
据美国全国公共广播电台(NPR)爆料,位于密歇根州齐兰的MillerKnoll召开此次员工大会的议程,以客户服务和绩效目标重点。欧文表示,曾经有员工向她询问,如果失去奖金,他们应该如何保持积极性。
首先,她告诫员工要友善,要以身作则,但接下来她反驳了员工的担忧,要求员工专注于实现内部绩效目标。
在视频中,她说:“别再问‘如果没有奖金,我应该怎么办’这样的问题。去找到2,600万美元资金。花时间和精力想想如何找到我们需要的2,600万美元资金,而不是只想着如果领不到奖金应该怎么办,好吗?大家能否给我做出承诺?”
然后,欧文提到她的前老板曾经告诉她:“你可以有负面情绪,但不能陷入其中。”
她说:“所以,诸位,不要自怨自艾。让我们行动起来。”
4月下旬,一名推特(Twitter)用户发布的欧文讲话的视频,播放量超过1,000万。许多人指出,这位首席执行官去年的收入接近500万美元,其中基本工资只有110万美元。
一位推特用户写道:“这就是安迪·欧文,MillerKnoll的首席执行官,她取消了员工的奖金,自己却领取了巨额奖金,她还要求所有员工保持好心态,喊话员工‘不要自怨自艾’,还告诉员工去为她再开发2,600万美元的业务。她一定是疯了。
另外一名用户在推文中也表示:“安迪·欧文,MillerKnoll的首席执行官,一方面在心理上控制员工,自己却领走巨额奖金。就是这些人助长了反对工作运动。”
在欧文遭到批评之后,MillerKnoll的股价于4月下旬下跌5%。
这并非第一次有首席执行官因为视频会议内容而遭到非议。2021年,Better.com的首席执行官维沙尔·加戈通过视频会议解雇员工的视频被泄露给《财富》杂志,并在TikTok上广泛传播。他对员工说他们“不被容许失败两次”,不能按时完成任务“是不可接受的”。在遭到批评后,加戈公开道歉并从公司请假。
近几年,首席执行官们不顾公司业绩和宏观经济状况领取高额薪酬,或者首席执行官的薪酬远高于基层员工的工资水平,引起了广泛批评。2022年10月的一项研究发现,自1978年以来,首席执行官的薪酬涨幅高达1,460%,现在首席执行官们的收入是普通员工收入的399倍。(财富中文网)
译者:刘进龙
审校:汪皓
没有人喜欢听到自己的奖金被取消的消息。但在家具设计公司MillerKnoll的员工大会上,其首席执行官安迪·欧文却非常清楚地告诉员工“不要自怨自艾”,别再问薪酬问题,今年4月下旬,泄露的会议视频片段在社交媒体上疯传。
现在,据美国密歇根州媒体MLive的报道,欧文为自己没有以正确的方式传达信息向员工道歉。她在给员工的电子邮件中写道:“我希望展现透明和同理心,我会继续反思这件事情,但让我感到糟糕的是,人们对我的呼声似乎反应迟钝。我希望激励团队,应对我们以前多次遭遇过的挑战,但结果与我的出发点相去甚远,对此我感到很抱歉。”
她还表示:“任何事情都不会削弱我们的集体团队的能力和力量。我非常感谢每一位同事,我会继续竭尽所能帮助团队实现共同的目标。”
MillerKnoll并未立即回复《财富》杂志的置评请求。
鼓舞士气的讲话却适得其反
4月下旬,一条欧文评论奖金问题的短视频在社交媒体上走红,令她遭到批评。这条视频节选自长达75分钟的视频会议。
据美国全国公共广播电台(NPR)爆料,位于密歇根州齐兰的MillerKnoll召开此次员工大会的议程,以客户服务和绩效目标重点。欧文表示,曾经有员工向她询问,如果失去奖金,他们应该如何保持积极性。
首先,她告诫员工要友善,要以身作则,但接下来她反驳了员工的担忧,要求员工专注于实现内部绩效目标。
在视频中,她说:“别再问‘如果没有奖金,我应该怎么办’这样的问题。去找到2,600万美元资金。花时间和精力想想如何找到我们需要的2,600万美元资金,而不是只想着如果领不到奖金应该怎么办,好吗?大家能否给我做出承诺?”
然后,欧文提到她的前老板曾经告诉她:“你可以有负面情绪,但不能陷入其中。”
她说:“所以,诸位,不要自怨自艾。让我们行动起来。”
4月下旬,一名推特(Twitter)用户发布的欧文讲话的视频,播放量超过1,000万。许多人指出,这位首席执行官去年的收入接近500万美元,其中基本工资只有110万美元。
一位推特用户写道:“这就是安迪·欧文,MillerKnoll的首席执行官,她取消了员工的奖金,自己却领取了巨额奖金,她还要求所有员工保持好心态,喊话员工‘不要自怨自艾’,还告诉员工去为她再开发2,600万美元的业务。她一定是疯了。
另外一名用户在推文中也表示:“安迪·欧文,MillerKnoll的首席执行官,一方面在心理上控制员工,自己却领走巨额奖金。就是这些人助长了反对工作运动。”
在欧文遭到批评之后,MillerKnoll的股价于4月下旬下跌5%。
这并非第一次有首席执行官因为视频会议内容而遭到非议。2021年,Better.com的首席执行官维沙尔·加戈通过视频会议解雇员工的视频被泄露给《财富》杂志,并在TikTok上广泛传播。他对员工说他们“不被容许失败两次”,不能按时完成任务“是不可接受的”。在遭到批评后,加戈公开道歉并从公司请假。
近几年,首席执行官们不顾公司业绩和宏观经济状况领取高额薪酬,或者首席执行官的薪酬远高于基层员工的工资水平,引起了广泛批评。2022年10月的一项研究发现,自1978年以来,首席执行官的薪酬涨幅高达1,460%,现在首席执行官们的收入是普通员工收入的399倍。(财富中文网)
译者:刘进龙
审校:汪皓
No one likes hearing that they’re not getting bonuses. But employees at furniture design company MillerKnoll, were told by CEO Andi Owen in no uncertain terms to “leave pity city” and stop asking about compensation in a leaked video of a company town hall that went viral on social media in late April.
Now, Owen is apologizing to her employees for not conveying the message in the right way, MLive, a Michigan-based news outlet, reported. “I want to be transparent and empathetic, and as I continue to reflect on this instance, I feel terrible that my rallying cry seemed insensitive,” Owen said in an email to employees. “What I’d hoped would energize the team to meet a challenge we’ve met many times before landed in a way that I did not intend, and for that I am sorry.”
She also added: “Nothing will lessen the power and strength of our collective team. My appreciation for each of you is huge, and I will continue to do everything I can to help us meet our shared goals.”
MillerKnoll did not immediately return Fortune’s request for comment.
Pep talk gone wrong
Owen came under fire in late April when a short video clip of her bonus comments from a 75-minute videoconference started doing rounds on social media.
The agenda of the town hall for the Zeeland, Mich.–based company was focused on customer service and performance goals, according to NPR. Owen said she had received questions from employees about how they can stay motivated if they lose their bonuses.
She started by telling employees to be kind and lead by example, but then dismissed their concerns and asked them to focus instead on achieving the internal performance target.
“Don’t ask about ‘what are we going to do if we don’t get a bonus?’ Get the damn $26 million,’” Owen said in the video clip. “Spend your time and your effort thinking about the $26 million we need and not thinking about what you’re going to do if you don’t get a bonus, all right? Can I get some commitment for that?”
Owen then alluded to her former boss who told her: “You can visit pity city, but you can’t live there.”
“So, people, leave pity city. Let’s get it done,” she said.
A video published in late April by a Twitter user capturing Owen’s remarks has crossed 10 million views. Many pointed out that the CEO took home nearly $5 million last year, with only $1.1 million of that coming from her base salary.
One Twitter user wrote: “This is Andi Owen, CEO of @millerknoll who cancelled workers bonuses, took a massive bonus herself, asks everyone to stay nice, tells her workers to ‘get out of pity city,’ then tells them to get out there and get her another $26 million in business. She gets unhinged at the end.”
Another user tweeted chimed in: “Andi Owen, CEO of MillerKnoll, gaslighting her employees while she collects a FAT bonus check. These people are the ones fueling an anti-work movement.”
MillerKnoll’s shares have fallen 5% in late April in the wake of the criticism against Owen.
This is not the first time a CEO’s video call has gotten them in hot water. In 2021, a clip of Better.com CEO Vishal Garg firing employees via video call was leaked to Fortune and went viral on TikTok. He told employees that they “will not be allowed to fail twice” and failing to meet deadlines would “not be acceptable.” Following the backlash, Garg apologized and later took a leave of absence.
In recent years, CEOs have provoked criticism for taking home paychecks that defy company performance and macroeconomic conditions, or are significantly higher than what rank-and-file workers make. A study published last October found that CEO pay has increased 1,460% since 1978, and now, CEOs make 399 times what an average worker makes.