|
In Your
Role As An Organizer, Be Sure To MEET THE NEW HIRE ON THE FIRST DAY
What do you
think the new hire wants and needs to know the first day on the job?
Do you remember your "FIRST DAY" on the job?
Put yourself in the new hire's shoes! That plant or office, department,
job, and everything about it is going to be NEW---STRANGE----and just a
little bit UNREAL. Remember? The new hire is going to want to know, and
will be thinking about, many things. If you were the new hire, would you
be thinking.
1. Should I really be here?
2. What's expected of me on the job?
3. How much "break-in" will I have before I'm on my own?
4. Can I do the job?
5. How will the other workers accept me?
6. Where did they say the rest rooms and vending areas are?
7. What should I remember about what the Boss told me? The Union rep?
8 .By the way, I wonder what a union rep really looks like? After all,
I don't know much about leaders.
That first day is so rough that most people remember it for the rest of
their lives! The first day is when the new hire needs a friendly
"welcome" . Remember?
Tips For Face-To-Face Contacts
- Introduce
yourself.
- Make eye
contact.
- Contact at
the right time. Do not contact an employee during normal work hours
- catch them during break, lunch, or before or after work.
- Be yourself.
Smile, relax, use the kind of language you use every day.
- Have some
piece of information to give or leave with the worker to break the
ice.
- Be polite. If
a worker refuses to talk to you, don't get into an argument, tell
the person you'll catch them another time (do follow up).
- Be frank. If
you get a question that you can't answer, don't try to bluff. Tell
the person you will try to get the answer.
- Don't preach.
You should talk about the issue to help lead the person to his or
her own conclusion. This is a much more effective approach than a
hard sell.
- Listen.
Listen to what the worker says - it will give you insight into their
particular concerns and objections. Sometimes the best way to
convince a person is just by listening and letting them know that
the union cares what they think.
Return to Stewards
Toolbox... |