Heartily Working™ invites everybody at work – from the head honcho to the worker bee – to ask questions and get suggestions about dealing with those workplace challenges – and to read the answers in their local newspaper.
Newspaper readers invest the single greatest slice of their productive time on the job. For most people, there are more relationships, more changes, and more problems at work than in any other aspect of their daily lives.
Publication Information
Heartily Working™ may be available for publication in your area.
For publication information about this popular and relevant column on workplace issues, contact Gregory Lay.
Sample Columns
Here are a few samples of Heartily Working™ weekly columns — is your problem here?
- Boss has tried all the usual solutions, and wants to know what to do about a really lazy employee…
Lazy label could hide actual problem
- She’d like to put the moves on a manager, but is wondering if the modern workplace is more tolerant…
Are rules for office romance getting easier?
- She wants to share a positive attitude, but that can be difficult when there’s too much to do…
You can’t be serious… ‘RELAX’ in this crisis?
- All she wants is a germ-free place to eat lunch. Is it asking too much to expect a little help…
Cleaner-upper wants co-worker to do his part
- Some get to the point, others never shut up – and you’ve got to listen to all of them…
Learn to communicate with different styles
- If you want your team to see the problem and fix it, you’ve got to give them the tools…
A-B-C’s to build a self-correcting work team
- You know what you said, but your boss knows what he wanted you to say, so…
How do you deal with a boss who misquotes you?
- In the competition between a computer keyboard and a human voice box…
Jump off E-mail-go-round and learn to talk
- Job mastery isn’t about what we think we know, it’s about what we choose to do…
Bored employee ‘above’ some assignments
- Yikes! Here comes Old Faithful – what can we do about an unsanitary situation…
Colleague spitting out his words — literally