别人家的公司,让你眼花缭乱的福利Tech companies are notorious for offering job "perks" that function like
gilded handcuffs: fancy benefits like free meals and laundry that keep you tied
to the office for long hours.
技术公司在提供“金遥”般束缚员工的工作福利这方面臭名昭著:比如像提供遥的午餐和洗衣服务这种奇特的福利,以此让员工在遥间待在办公室里。
Jason Fried is a tech CEO with a radically different philosophy. At Basecamp,
the 50-person software company he helped found about 15 years ago, the benefits
support a culture that urges employees to work reasonable hours (40 a week is
encouraged), sleep more, stay healthy and expand their horizons.
Employees at Fried's Chicago-based company, which develops project management
software, not only receive paid time-off to take vacations, but the company pays
for their vacations as an annual "gift" to those with at least one year's
tenure. New employees receive a paid-for night on the town.
In a blog post earlier this week, Fried detailed a dizzying array of other
benefits:
Four-day, 30-hour workweeks in the summer.
$100 a month for fitness, which employees can spend on gym memberships, yoga
classes, race fees, etc.
$100 a month for massages.
CSA (community supported agriculture) memberships, so workers get locally
grown fruits and vegetables.
The option to work anywhere. Basecamp employees are located all around the
country.
A one-month sabbatical every three years.
There's more. Recently, Fried formalized a parental leave policy. Mothers and
fathers who are primary caregivers get 16 weeks off fully paid.
The vacation policy exemplifies this rationale. Workers get a total of three
weeks off. They can spend some of that time on an all-expenses-paid trip
courtesy of Basecamp. This year they can get to choose among travel to such
places as Martha's Vineyard, the Grand Canyon, Ethiopia and Verona, Italy.
Workers pick from the options in the annual "book" and take the trips, which run
five to seven days, alone or with their loved ones. Oh, and Basecamp makes all
the travel arrangements because Fried doesn't want anyone to stress over the
planning part.
The message is clear: "We want you to take vacation. Please get out of here! "
Fried said.
The paid vacations replaced cash bonuses a few years ago. "We're spending the
same amount of money and giving people experience they wouldn't have on their
own. It makes them more interesting people," he said.