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Lab Rats

Tech Gurus, Junk Science, and Management Fads—My Quest to Make Work Less Miserable

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New York Times bestselling author Dan Lyons exposes how the "new oligarchs" of Silicon Valley have turned technology into a tool for oppressing workers in this "passionate" (Kirkus) and "darkly funny" (Publishers Weekly) examination of workplace culture.
At a time of soaring corporate profits and plenty of HR lip service about "wellness," millions of workers—in virtually every industry — are deeply unhappy. Why did work become so miserable? Who is responsible? And does any company have a model for doing it right?
For two years, Lyons ventured in search of answers. From the innovation-crazed headquarters of the Ford Motor Company in Detroit, to a cult-like "Holocracy" workshop in San Francisco, and to corporate trainers who specialize in . . . Legos, Lyons immersed himself in the often half-baked and frequently lucrative world of what passes for management science today. He shows how new tools, workplace practices, and business models championed by tech's empathy-impaired power brokers have shattered the social contract that once existed between companies and their employees. These dystopian beliefs—often masked by pithy slogans like "We're a Team, Not a Family" — have dire consequences: millions of workers who are subject to constant change, dehumanizing technologies — even health risks.
A few companies, however, get it right. With Lab Rats, Lyons makes a passionate plea for business leaders to understand this dangerous transformation, showing how profit and happy employees can indeed coexist.
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    • Kirkus

      September 1, 2018
      How the tech industry, fueled by greed, is shaping workers' experiences across the business world.Lyons (Disrupted: My Misadventures in the Start-Up Bubble, 2016, etc.), a former staff writer for HBO's Silicon Valley and technology editor at Newsweek, mounts a caustic critique of mercenary tech culture, which, he argues persuasively, is infiltrating many other businesses. "We have a new work culture," he writes, "that celebrates overwork, exhaustion, and stress," led by people who care about nothing but making money. "Instead of geeky engineers," he writes, "the industry draws hustlers, young guys who hope to get rich quick," financed by voracious venture capitalists. Most new startups "are terribly managed, half-assed outfits run by buffoons and bozos and frat boys, and funded by amoral investors who are only hoping to flip the company into the public markets and make a quick buck." After the VC's have taken their bounty, most startups never make a profit. But the author's focus is less on the viability of startups than the fates of workers, who are mercilessly exploited and so desperate that some kill themselves. Among the many tech oligarchs he condemns is Jeff Bezos, "a modern-day Ebenezer Scrooge," running sweatshops where workers do physically demanding jobs in unsafe environments, earn low wages, and are forced to be "permatemps" not entitled to benefits. Lyons cites four factors contributing to worker unhappiness: money (besides low wages, many big companies have raided their employees' pension funds); job insecurity (rapid turnover is encouraged, and workers are fired for capricious reasons); constant, random changes, including instituting cultlike philosophies and demeaning workshops, classes, and role-playing games; and dehumanization, such as open office plans where employees have no privacy and endure constant surveillance of their emails, chats, website visits, and even bathroom breaks. The author ends with a note of optimism: his discovery of a "quiet movement" of responsible business leaders building worker-friendly, inclusive, and diverse companies; business courses that emphasize social responsibility; and socially conscious funding by "well-intentioned rich people."A passionate indictment of brutal workplace culture.

      COPYRIGHT(2018) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      June 1, 2018

      After publishing the New York Times best-selling Disrupted, Lyons heard from hundreds of readers distraught by their toxic work environments. Here he investigates why American workers are increasingly unhappy and what Silicon Valley has to do with it. With a 100,000-copy first printing.

      Copyright 2018 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Library Journal

      October 15, 2018

      After publishing the New York Times best-selling Disrupted, Lyons heard from hundreds of readers distraught by their toxic work environments. Here he investigates why American workers are increasingly unhappy and what Silicon Valley has to do with it. With a 100,000-copy first printing.

      Copyright 2018 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Library Journal

      October 15, 2018

      In the tradition of works such as Marshall McLuhan's The Gutenberg Galaxy, Lyons (Disrupted: My Misadventure in the Start-Up Bubble) offers a first-person account of contemporary workplace disruption, citing how new technologies supersede older ones, and that the workplace is slow to make the transition. Companies such as IBM, General Electric, and Sears have faced this challenge with varying success. As Lyons notes, employees can become trapped in a situation beyond reason or control. He argues that management consultants fuel the problem; in a fast-moving world, management learned by apprenticeship is no longer practiced or practicable. His hopefulness comes from fields relating to hospitality as customer-facing organizations often have a better handle on valuing both customers and those who support them. VERDICT A must-read for tech entrepreneurs and anyone interested in the shifting dynamics of workplace culture.--Steven Silkunas, Fernandina Beach, FL

      Copyright 2018 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from September 3, 2018
      In this darkly funny journalistic look at the contemporary workplace, Lyons (Disrupted), a former journalist at Newsweek and writer for HBO’s Silicon Valley, reveals how the culture fostered by tech firms has created toxic environments in which workers are dehumanized, wages are low, stressors are constant, and job security is nonexistent. Behind the typical tech start-up trappings, such as ping-pong tables and free snacks, lies a drastically reengineered social contract between employers and employees, one in which notions of contributing to social good have been replaced with profiting at any cost. Lyons traces the emergence of this new corporate style to valley titans such as Amazon founder Jeff Bezos and Netflix CEO and chairman Reed Hastings, whose companies reap billions while their workers get an ever-dwindling share of the pie, and further back, to the erosion of the social safety net in the 1980s. Writing scathingly about management fads such as Agile and Lego Serious Play, Lyons shows that much of the hype around the “lean” start-up model is an illusion, premised on inflated stock values and angel investors. He finds hope in companies such as Basecamp, Patagonia, and Kapor Capital, “zebras” that are playing by more human-friendly rules and still turning profits. By turns sardonic and impassioned, this is an insightful and frequently entertaining guide to the increasingly bizarre world of Silicon Valley and the trends it spawns.

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