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The workplace is changing, as many of us have found out the hard way. Marcus Letcher,
Australian author and consultant, has a message: exploit the new jobs for your own
purposes before they exploit you. He’s coined the term “modular work” for a new
pattern of working where there’s room for making heart choices and following your
dreams, as well as paying the bills. Modular worker Lindy Stirling takes a look at
the ideas in his book, Making Your Future Work.
Concerned about your job security in the future? Finding your current work
satisfaction less than it used to be? Looking for ways to manage your time, your work,
your family, your creativity, your life? Marcus Letcher
could give you some very practical and realistic ways of tackling these and other
issues of personal employment.
Thanks to Marcus Letcher, 40 SEEK readers have won copies of Making Your Future Work.
This very readable book is full of real examples of people who have broken the mould
of a permanent lifelong job using this alternative work model, and discovered the joys
of modular work. Marcus Letcher says that this new type of work has brought him both
personal and professional satisfaction while giving him back control of his life and
real flexibility. And I can say much the same, having opted out of life as a burnt out
teacher some five years ago for modular work but more of that later.
Modular work is all about customising work to suit individual needs. Letcher aims (and
largely succeeds) in showing that the quality of life needs not be lost to the dictates
of the labour market that a balance between earning a living and living a sane,
satisfying and sustaining life is possible.
His main message is that through an intelligent selection of part-time modules of work,
employment and personal enterprise activities can be meaningfully combined. He says,
"Modular work is more than a job mix it is a job composition, in which each distinct
module of work has a rightful place and function which enhances the unity, form and
purpose of the whole". Ideally each job should have the potential to reinforce the
others so that all are mutually supportive. If the modules of work are strong and
interrelated, they can be bolted together for a tight and reliable fit, then
dismantled and regrouped to match new situations.
Instead of "a job", you need to think in terms of "work" that you can supply in a
number of ways. Instead of a "job title" that limits your scope, harness your
capabilities to "provide services". Think not of what you are, but what you do. It's
all about raising your employability factor through adding value. Instead of being at
the whim of an employer, you can create the flexibility to choose when and what you
want to do
Marcus Letcher has written elsewhere for SEEK about the future of work. He describes
three groups of people hit hard by the changing nature of the workplace. He calls these
the "overs", ""unders" and "outs". In the past seven years, full-time jobs have risen 1
per cent and part time by 27 per cent. This has added to the plight of involuntary part
time workers.
Under employment is marginalising more and more people. Those with "commonly held...and
non-specific skills are falling behind...the highly sought after 'knowledge' or 'gold
collar' workers," says Marcus Letcher. Such people simply don't earn enough to meet their needs.
The "over-employed" suffer from the perception that "if you are not working a 12 hour day you're perceived to be not serious about your job". Their lot is the "fabulous job, no life" syndrome.
Thirdly, the unemployed are "out" of the loop of employment, where their skills, self
confidence, networks and employment savvy all diminish over time.
The modular work message is this: "Exploit the new jobs for your own purposes before
they exploit you." You may find the modular work mode attractive if you:
- have retired early;
- have been or are threatened with retrenchment;
- want a vehicle of career transition;
- are young and unable to find opportunities which offer worthwhile development
opportunities;
- want to cut back a demanding work style but stay connected to the workforce;
- live in a rural area with disappearing full-time work opportunities;
- are a sole parent;
- want to start a small business enterprise;
- want to give voice to your special talents;
- feel stale after many years in the same job;
- mature and unemployed.
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