Regular readers of Flying Lessons may have discerned a theme: what aviation knows about how to improve human performance can and should be applied to a host of other endeavors. My trip to the Fairway supermarket in Stamford, Connecticut yesterday made me realize that this remarkable grocery store can teach something to the airline industry.What does a typical produce manager, butcher, customer service clerk, check-out cashier earn? Beats me. I'm guessing though that it is an hourly wage and very often probably does not seem to be adequate compensation for dealing with the dangers inherent in the meat slicer, or the discomfort of the industrial freezer or the wrath of customers, hungry, harried and often distracted and disgruntled. In short, grocery store workers
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| Photo by Bill Hilson and courtesy of Fairway |
It's so remarkable, that I've started asking them, "What gives? Were you trained to be helpful and friendly to the customers?" Nope, they've said, they just like their jobs and like each other.
As far as I'm concerned this is a ringing endorsement of the hiring practices at the Stamford store. Making sure happy employees stay that way is attributable to management, so far so good. Kudos to that person, too.American, Delta, USAirways, United, and the rest of you, may I suggest a field trip? Bundle up your HR folks and put them on a plane to New York where, after squeezing the produce and eyeballing the fish, they can lunch in Stamford's Fairway cafe and consider how to bottle up, bring back home and sell to the bosses whatever it is that's working so gosh-darn well at Fairway. Food for thought anyway.
