Tag Archives: Employment Agencies in China

RMG Video – 5 Minutes with RMG – Qualified Candidate for RMG

5 Minutes with RMG – Qualified Candidate for RMG

Do you want to work in a relaxed and joyful working environment? Do you prefer to work far away from intrigue? Would you like to work with awesome boys and girls? If yes, RMG will be your first choice. This video is from Mr. Robert Parkinson, CEO & Founder of RMG Selection, he will tell you what kind of candidates we need at RMG. Are you the person we are eager to hire?

Watch the video on Youku: http://v.youku.com/v_show/id_XNDY1MTc5MzA4.html

Watch the video on Youtube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KB9GbeRNl3c&feature=youtu.be

 

Executives Reach Breaking Point – RMG CEO on China Daily

Stress among managers in China is mounting, even causing deaths at work. What is pushing them to the brink?

These days, Brian Dong is crying out for a vacation. The stress of running a startup company in China’s finance industry is threatening to overwhelm him. Too bad he does not have the time.

As the CEO of an Australian foreign exchange trading company, he has a laundry list of tasks and roles, from dealing with hundreds of emails every day, reporting to the board and investors to giving directions to his employees.

“From the moment I get into the office till the time my head hits the pillow, I’ve worked almost 15 hours a day,” the 30-year-old executive says. “I should take some time off before I burn out.”

Like Dong, many business leaders in China are saddled with enormous pressures. But stress among senior executives is often not discussed in the corporate world, where working 80 to 100 hours a week is the norm.

China Daily found out, however, that stress and problems related to high stress are more common and serious than many employers are willing to admit. Sixty percent of business executives in China say they have seen their stress increase in 2011, according to Grant Thornton, an international business research accounting firm.

The number is 28 percent higher than the average stress level around the world and the second-highest after Greece, which is currently under a deep depression with 67 percent of senior executives admitting a spike in stress levels.

Jonathan Geldart, the global head of marketing and communications at Grant Thornton International Ltd, says the problem is getting serious and sometimes dangerous because stress can force business leaders to make decisions too quickly or worst of all, take the wrong direction.

“Eventually it can affect the profitability of a company or even bankrupt it if the stress is not managed because you are stressed and you don’t look thoughtfully at all of the issues,” he says. Geldart says there is more pressure on the Chinese government to fix the nation’s ills.

“The Chinese government is clamping down on many aspects of business corruption in particular, in taxation, in improving the accounting standards and in encouraging people to go overseas, so the pressure is rising. And the economy is not doing as well as it used to. So there is a higher pressure in China than other places.”

The American Institute of Stress estimates that American companies lose over $300 billion every year due to stress and stress-related diseases such as absences, exhaustion and mental health problems.

According to RMG International, a recruitment consultancy in Beijing, work pressure costs Chinese businesses more than $100 million each year.

A recent example of what stress can do in China happened earlier this month. A 25-year-old employee of Kingsoft, a software company in Beijing, died at his desk after spending the night in the office. The company denied that too much work contributed to the tragedy.

In recent months, unexplainable deaths have been more common in financial sector.

In May, a 34-year-old senior manager in the legal department of CITIC Securities, China’s largest listed securities company by total market value, died of cerebral hemorrhage. The death triggered a heated public discussion with many saying that the death resulted from the manager being overworked.

Peer pressure

Experts say several of the deaths are closely related to being overworked as well as intense pressure from peers, the fear of “losing face” and unrealistic business expectations in the workplace.

Mike Thompson, a professor of management practice at the China Europe International Business School in Shanghai, says that in China there is a great amount of pressure on an individual to be seen as successful among peers.

Robert Parkinson, CEO and founder of RMG, says that money leads to pressures to live a prestigious life, to have a nice apartment, to join a nice club and to marry a pretty girl.

“People are fearful of losing their position in society or lose their money when they become rich,” he says. “In China 40 or 50 years ago, people were concerned about whether they had have enough to eat or if they had enough basic things.

But as China has rapidly expanded its economy with the huge level of disposable income available to the people, things have changed. This competition to have more things in life will never end if your only value is money.”

The increasing desire for luxury goods is an apt explanation of why people seemed more stressed in China than in other countries.

Here, people are trying to live up to a social status they’ve created for themselves.

All about face

One of the results from the Grant Thornton survey is that business people in the United Kingdom and France have the lowest stress levels in the world.

Thompson, who was born in the UK and has been working in China for more than three years, says one of the causes of lower stress levels in the workplace in the UK is directly connected with humor or wit that works as a relief to stress. He says it’s a very common factor across all UK workplaces.

“It is more acceptable and more usual to use and express humor at the expense of someone else in the UK than in other places, particularly in China,” he says. “Humor can lower stress because the use of humor actually allows a person to more fully disclose who they really are.”

But Parkinson says in China, people care most about losing face. “What does losing face mean? It means looking stupid,” he says.

“In my interpretation, people in China care very much about what people think of them and that causes lots of stress. In fast-moving competitive working environments, you can have conflicts and misunderstandings very easily.”

Oliver Barron, the head of the Beijing division of NSBO China, a UK-based Chinese government policy investment research firm, says the Chinese concept of losing face makes managing workers very difficult. Losing face is another source of pressure for many foreign managers in China.

Heavy workload

Experts say that a heavy workload and high expectations are two major sources of stress for senior managers.

According to the report by Grant Thornton, 24 percent of respondents from China believe their stress stems from the pursuit of business goals, while 20 percent of the respondents reported difficulties in finding a work-life balance.

“I think the expansion of personal performance targets is one of the chief causes in the rise of stress internationally and particularly in China, where I think the competitive nature of the market is stronger than in the West,” says CEIBS’ Thompson.

In the face of stress, many senior managers are trying to manage the pressure by delegating work to others, while some are finding other ways to help ease their stress, such as meditation, exercising and traveling.

Barron also recommends meditation on a regular basis.

“Ten minutes everyday is more important than an hour every week, and the simplest technique is to focus on breathing,” he says.

Thompson says that exercise or vacations are only a temporary relief from stress.

“The more permanent way to get rid of stress is by living from within and from discovering who you really are and taking a step back and looking at yourself,” he says. “Perhaps enjoying humor because it is energizing and can also reveal a lot about you.”

Read the whole article: http://usa.chinadaily.com.cn/weekly/2012-09/21/content_15772409.htm

Read the newspaper: https://www.rmgselection.com/images/rmg%20news_cd_sep_rpeurope%20weekly.png

From Pressure to Impetus by Scientific Management – RMG CEO on Economic Daily

依靠科学管理 化“压力”为“动力”

浙江音乐调频动听968官方微博8月1日凌晨在新浪微博上发出一条信息:我们的主持人郭梦秋于7月31日晚突发心梗,经医院抢救无效辞世,年仅25岁。网上迅速转载了这条消息,网友们发出呼吁,现在的年轻人很多都处于亚健康状态,经常熬夜无疑会增加心梗的风险。许多人将死因归罪于压力大。

作为一名长期从事专业职业咨询的专家、罗迈国际商务咨询有限公司首席执行官潘瑞宝对记者谈到:“事实上,压力对人和工作是有好处的,一个人的成功在很大程度上得益于科学的压力管理,但是,对抗不是好的方法,应该学会如何利用好压力。”他认为,在中国经济快速发展的阶段,每个人只要愿意工作,就能找到很多好的工作机会,因此,这种压力不算是真正的压力。在欧美国家,经济上升的时代已经过去,人们害怕失业,找不到工作才是最大的压力。

潘瑞宝说,压力是一种旅行,是身体的一种反应。他说,压力不是一种想象出来的疾病,而是身体“战备状态”的反应,这是当意识到某种情形,或者某个人,或者某件事情具有潜在的威胁性和紧张状态的时候做出的反应。压力也可以视为一种由挫折、失败所造成的反应,这种反应需要一定的时间去缓解,需要他人抚慰与适当休息。

“事实上,在这个竞争激烈的社会中,每个人都会面临着各种压力。因此,懂得减压的人才懂得工作。那么怎样处理压力?”潘瑞宝说,最有益的方式就是心态,每天每时都要给自己的身心放个假。另外,减少工作中的压力,最基本的一条是选择一个适合自己性格特点并能发挥自身长处和有共同价值观的单位。当你做一份喜欢的工作时,就不会感到有很大的压力。即使工作很辛苦,也会把压力变为动力。

潘瑞宝认为,要实现有效减压目标,仅靠个人自我调节是远远不够的,企业单位以及国家政府相关部门都应该共同参与,探讨切实可行的方案。用人单位要减轻员工的工作负担,注重压力管理工作。不仅要依照相关法律法规制定管理制度,保证员工切身合法权益,还要关注员工的心理健康,利用空余时间开展文化娱乐活动,活跃工作氛围,促进人际关系的和谐发展。这样一方面可以提高员工的工作积极性,另一方面可以减轻工作压力。

Read the whole article: http://paper.ce.cn/jjrb/html/2012-08/24/content_127677.htm

Read the magazine: https://www.rmgselection.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=167&Itemid=104&lang=en

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