Best Life Insider

Ask a Manager's Alison Green on what to do if your company is being too lax about the coronavirus

office workers desk

I am getting a lot of mail about the coronavirus, and one common theme is employers who aren't acting with any urgency at all — not having people work from home where they can, not canceling travel or events, etc. Here's some advice if you're in that situation.

 

SEE ALSO: Read the letter one of Belgium's top virologists sent his children with exact steps on how to keep their families safe during a pandemic

DON'T MISS: Google spent a decade studying what makes a 'perfect' manager and found there's a striking way that the best ones delegate their tasks

1. One of the most effective things you can do is to band together with other coworkers and push back as a group

It is much harder to ignore a group of employees than one person.



2. Try peer pressure

Cite the many large companies — Facebook, Google, Microsoft, IBM, and more — that have instructed employees to work from home. Point out that it's not only socially responsible but also smart for business, and companies are making it work. Share the CDC guide for employers.



3. Talk about your company's obligations to its workers, many of whom will be in higher-risk groups or live with people who are, but also, appeal to their own self-interest

If they let the virus spread in their workforce, far more employees are going to be sick and unable to work than if they take precautions now. Point out that it's better to figure out arrangements now than to be in a mad scramble when things change in your area overnight.



4. If your company has said it encourages people to work from home but your own manager isn't backing that up, talk to HR

While approving remote work might normally be up to individual managers, there's a good chance that in this situation your company doesn't want individual managers undermining its virus prevention efforts.



5. If your company hasn't approved remote work for people whose jobs can be done from home and you are in a higher-risk group, say you need an exception

Talk to your manager or HR and say, "I am in a higher-risk group for coronavirus and will need to work from home until the government is no longer advising that higher-risk people distance themselves from groups." Note that language — "will need." You're telling them, not asking. (In reality, they can still say no — but framing it as of course they'll agree to let you follow public health recommendations will help.)

Use the same approach if you live with someone in a higher risk group.



6. If you can work from home and you're choosing not to, please reconsider

There are many people who can't work from home, and you're putting them at higher risk by adding to the number of people they're forced to come in contact with.



7. "Stay home if you feel sick" is not a good enough policy

The symptoms of coronavirus take four to five days to show up. Someone who comes to work looking and feeling well can transmit the virus. By the time someone feels sick, it's too late; they will have already been infecting people.



8. If you're job searching and are invited to interview in-person, it's completely reasonable right now to ask to do it by phone or video chat

If a company isn't open to that in these circumstances, that's a serious red flag about them in general.



9. Be an ally to others

Insist your company take action even if you personally don't feel at risk. If a coworker's not getting something they need, add your voice to theirs. Advocate for paid sick time for anyone in your company who doesn't get it. Push your employer to lift limits on sick leave, provide extra PTO, and generally make it as easy as possible for people to stay home. Ask about what your vendors are doing for their people. Tell your members of Congress you want more aid to affected workers, including people who can't work from home, and people who won't be able to pay their rent and mortgages because of income loss. And don't make people feel they're overreacting when they take precautions.

This column originally appeared on the Ask A Manager blog by Alison Green. It has been reprinted here with permission. 

Alison Green was once the chief of staff for a successful nonprofit, where she was responsible for the hiring, firing, promoting, and managing of employees. She is the author of Ask a Manager: How to Navigate Clueless Colleagues, Lunch-Stealing Bosses, and the Rest of Your Life at Work.

 

 

 



Visit dearJulius.com to get free premium content for all of your lifestyle needs.

COMMENTS



Name

Advice,97,Balance Work & Life,50,Be a Better Manager,33,Break Room,12,Business Skills,102,Career,1547,Career Advice,298,Career Choice,125,Career Growth,180,Career Paths,24,Career Problem,8,Education,84,Entrepreneurship,39,Featured,39,Features,152,Finance,4,Internship,8,Interview Skills,37,Job Search,47,Leadership,44,Marketing,10,Money & Career,21,Resume,11,Tools & Skills,16,Training,1,Work Environment,77,
ltr
item
Career - Best Life Insider: Ask a Manager's Alison Green on what to do if your company is being too lax about the coronavirus
Ask a Manager's Alison Green on what to do if your company is being too lax about the coronavirus
https://static4.businessinsider.com/image/5e6fedd7c485400888593e98-1106/office-workers-desk.jpg
Career - Best Life Insider
https://career-bestlifeinsider.blogspot.com/2020/03/ask-managers-alison-green-on-what-to-do_17.html
https://career-bestlifeinsider.blogspot.com/
https://career-bestlifeinsider.blogspot.com/
https://career-bestlifeinsider.blogspot.com/2020/03/ask-managers-alison-green-on-what-to-do_17.html
true
4349954968455113299
UTF-8
Loaded All Posts Not found any posts VIEW ALL Read More Reply Cancel reply Delete By Home PAGES POSTS View All RECOMMENDED FOR YOU LABEL ARCHIVE SEARCH ALL POSTS Not found any post match with your request Back Home Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat January February March April May June July August September October November December Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec just now 1 minute ago $$1$$ minutes ago 1 hour ago $$1$$ hours ago Yesterday $$1$$ days ago $$1$$ weeks ago more than 5 weeks ago Followers Follow THIS PREMIUM CONTENT IS LOCKED STEP 1: Share to a social network STEP 2: Click the link on your social network Copy All Code Select All Code All codes were copied to your clipboard Can not copy the codes / texts, please press [CTRL]+[C] (or CMD+C with Mac) to copy Table of Content