parallel carrier
A concept proposed by Peter Drucker. in his book "What will govern tomorrow".
- Chapter 6 Managing Ourselves Section 5: Second Life
Humans have outlived their organizations.
- One cannot rely on a single organization.
- get tired of one's work
A second life is needed there.
There are three ways.
- Changing organizations, changing jobs
- parallel carrier
- Keep the work that is going well and have another world.
- social entrepreneur
- Reduce the amount of time you devote to your job and start a new one
The boundary between parallel careers and social entrepreneurship is not clear. Drucker describes the former as "often working for a non-profit organization" and the latter as "starting a new job, especially a non-profit job," and it is assumed that the distinction is between joining an existing job and creating a new one. The choice of the name "entrepreneur" also suggests this.
- It is not a ratio of hours. There is a reference to the fact that there is an option of part-time or consultant-like contract work as well as continuing to work 40 hours a week in one's main job with respect to a parallel career.
- Being a non-profit organization does not seem to be a requirement. At the time he wrote this book, there may not have been many examples of working practices with multiple payroll entities.
terms
- It has to be aided and abetted even before we take the plunge in earnest.
Opportunities for Success
- For each person, "to contribute to something" is important.
- One main business alone can lose it due to uncertainty.
- By having multiple lives, you have an opportunity to contribute even if one doesn't work out.
Drucker describes this as an "opportunity for success," but I think this term is misleading, like "let's give it a shot. He does not mean "big financial success," but the feeling of having made a contribution is what he means by "success.
About Japan
- Assumptions implicitly assumed by previous societies:.
- Organizations are longer-lived than those who work for them.
- What works is fixed in the organization.
- Japan has succeeded by ensuring that "workers do not move to other organizations" through its lifetime employment system.
- The challenge for the future is to realize freedom of movement for knowledge workers while maintaining social stability through lifetime employment.
- Kizuna is essential for a society to function, and Japan's challenge will serve as a model for other countries.
For example, Cybozu's childcare leave system guarantees reemployment after leaving the company to take on other challenges, and can be said to be a system that balances "maintaining ties through lifetime employment" with "working but taking on the challenge of a second life.
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