Jess Kutch: What productive conflict can offer a workplace
Jess Kutch: Lo que el conflicto productivo puede ofrecer al lugar de trabajo
TED Fellow Jess Kutch is the cofounder of Coworker.org, a nonprofit that helps people join together to improve their jobs and workplaces. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
la organización coworker.org
an organization called coworker.org
a la gente a unirse a colegas
to help people join with coworkers
in the workplace.
of reactions to what I do.
dos tipos de reacciones.
about what organizing is.
sobre lo que se trata.
what I do and I told him,
like, Marie Kondo-style.
me vendría bien eso aquí.
I could use some of that around here.
los archivos de los pacientes".
our patient files."
it's not that kind of organizing,
que no era ese tipo de organización,
to work tomorrow
had gotten together
se reunen en la oficina
the second kind of reaction:
from the conversation
de la conversación
"¡Oh por Dios, sí, lo necesitamos!"
to tell me a story.
or a coworker or a friend
a neutral response to what I do.
que no hay respuesta neutral.
a lightning bolt of excitement.
such strong reactions?
estas fuertes reacciones?
or a senior leader of some kind,
o parte de la alta dirección,
with that power being challenged.
si les desafían ese poder.
who lacks it and needs it,
o conocen a alguien que lo necesita,
and shake me, you're so pumped.
y me agitarían con fuerza.
from understanding
nos beneficiaríamos al comprender
en nuestro trabajo.
in our workplace is real,
en el trabajo es real
depending on our roles and status.
según nuestro papel o estatus.
like office politics, right?
como políticas de oficina, ¿no?
for power thoughtfully
por poder reflexivamente
to you all about today,
some of us uncomfortable.
with policies and decisions,
con las políticas y decisiones,
our commitment to each other.
sobre nuestro compromiso mutuo.
"productive conflict"?
con "conflicto productivo"?
for an outdoor retailer --
de una tienda minorista,
and asked for a raise.
was fairly standard for her position
el estándar para esa posición
the authority to give such a raise.
autoridad para aumentarlo.
the end of the conversation.
el fin de la conversación.
to create a campaign on coworker.org,
una campaña en coworker.com,
to give raises to store employees.
el sueldo de los empleados de tienda.
from around the country
and sharing their own stories
con sus historias
was impacting their lives.
that they had quit recently
that they didn't want to quit,
que no querían renunciar,
in the company's mission,
creían en la misión de la empresa,
was a growing problem in their work lives.
en su vida laboral.
of employee activism,
de empleados activistas,
in cities across the country.
by productive conflict:
that aren't working for us
que no funciona bien para nosotros
in doing this work
en conflicto productivo
in productive conflict
and their coworkers.
the worst workplaces,
o ambientes laborales
employee activism on our site,
de activismo en nuestro sitio
we can accomplish great things.
logramos grandes cosas.
by employees there
to legitimate safety concerns.
a problemas de seguridad.
the lowest voluntary turnover rate
las tasas de renuncias más bajas
productivity rates as well.
de productividad más alta.
you shouldn't fear conflict,
no le teman al conflicto
in your workforce.
that can be difficult to manage,
de difícil gestión,
to tell you something
that needs your attention.
que requiere atención.
especially important right now,
transforms nearly everyone's job
el trabajo de la mayoría
that contain our work
since the Industrial Revolution.
desde la Revolución Industrial.
and participating in the future of work.
en el futuro del trabajo.
and changing the parts of our work lives
las partes de nuestra vida laboral
a coworker invites you
que un colega los invite
letter to your boss,
about the new health care plan,
sobre el nuevo plan de salud,
como una oportunidad
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Jess Kutch - Labor entrepreneurTED Fellow Jess Kutch is the cofounder of Coworker.org, a nonprofit that helps people join together to improve their jobs and workplaces.
Why you should listen
Jess Kutch and her team at Coworker.org are figuring out the technology, organizing models, financing and policies that can help workers improve their companies and industries in today’s economy. At Coworker.org, they believe anyone can be a workplace organizer and that seeking positive change at work is a form of civic and community leadership that requires infrastructure. Since 2013, hundreds of thousands of people in the United States and worldwide have used Coworker.org tools and services to win wage increases, scheduling improvements and parental leave benefits; end biased dress codes; fix harassment policies; demand corporate ethics and much more. Coworker.org also helps channel workers' information about the real-time effects of digital economy trends -- like automation, data profiting, surveillance and app-based gig work -- to influence decisions that will shape the future of work and inequality.
Kutch has 15 years of experience innovating at the intersection of technology and social change. Previously, she led a team at Change.org that inspired hundreds of thousands of people to launch and lead their own efforts on the platform. She also spent five years at the Service Employees International Union (SEIU), where she pioneered digital strategies for the labor movement. Kutch is a TED Fellow, an Echoing Green Global Fellow, a J.M.K. Innovation Prize winner and an Aspen Institute Job Quality Fellow. She is a frequently requested speaker at business, labor, futurist, democracy and economic conferences around the world. She has been invited to provide expert testimony to the EEOC Task Force on Harassment in the Workplace and the National Labor Relations Board. In 2015, Coworker.org cohosted the first-ever White House Town Hall on Worker Voice.
Jess Kutch | Speaker | TED.com