Sunday, November 27, 2016

Personal Reputation

I believe personal reputations play a major role in an individual’s decision-making and behavior. If we think about personal reputation by its dictionary definition, one’s reputation revolves around what other people think about the individual—both positively and negatively. Some may place greater value on how they are perceived while others are relatively indifferent. In the workplace, having a positive outside perception of yourself may be helpful in moving up in the company or organization. To clarify, having a reputation as a trustworthy, punctual and efficient employee may indicate to superiors in the hierarchy of the company that you are worthwhile to the firm.

First, I will discuss how this topic applies in my life and then I want to tie how personal reputations play a role in HBO’s show, Westworld. For the past two summers, I worked at a chemical plant on the south side of Chicago. I worked in the general office, but I was in and out of the plant every day. In terms of intensity, the plant was relatively clean and not as loud or dangerous as a steel mill for example. The work was not that demanding and relatively easy to accomplish. One of my friend’s Dad works at the plant and helped connect me with the right people to get the internship. So I felt an obligation to work well and efficiently so my friend’s Dad looked credible by bringing in a productive worker. Similarly, I wanted to build a good reputation with the individuals at the plant to make my day-to-day experience more enjoyable as well as gaining the trust of my supervisors. In order to build this reputation, I would complete the work given to me in a timely and efficient manner. I wanted to come across as productive and easy to work with so my superiors would trust me to get my work done and not have to check up on how I was progressing. In addition, I normally worked in a group with two other interns on a task. Our director would give us an objective for the day and once we finished, we were free to carry out the rest of the day with relative ease. In short, it was relatively straightforward for the other interns and myself to sell ourselves as productive workers. The full-time employees at the plant also noticed that our group of three worked diligently and were easy to talk to. Subsequently, they were more willing to interact with us and I began to develop positive relationships with several people there. In having the full-time employees trust us to do our work however, some conflict of interest can arise. If our supervisor was not checking on us, we would slack off and not get our work done. Since we were doing mostly busy work, we were not doing the company much harm by not finishing it. The motivation behind this was mostly laziness as we were paid by the hour.

As I mentioned previously, Westworld is based around the concept of creating an entirely new reputation in a syndicate world. The show is a sci-fi drama where modern-day human beings travel to a theme-park set in the 1800s wild west inhabited by artificial robots that look and act exactly as a human being would. I left a link to HBO’s summary of the show here to give a better sense of the plot.



           Humans experience no physical harm in the park but can inflict as much damage to the hosts (artificial humans) as they wish. Essentially, there are no rules and a decreased sense of consequences for one’s actions. Knowing that they are essentially gods to these robot humans, humans give little regard to their personal reputation. Further, the truest self of the visitors come out. They can be ruthless and cruel but only act in their own self-interest. In fact, this deviant behavior is encouraged as humans can build a reputation for how poor of a human they can really be. With little to no consequences, humans can stray from any reputation they have in the real world and participate in actions that would otherwise result in imprisonment.

4 comments:

  1. I wonder why you felt it necessary to give two stories, with one real and the other from a TV show. Did you not have anything more to say about your work experience? For example, just on the background part, you said a friend of your Dad's got you that intern job. I would have wanted to know whether you asked your dad for the help or if he said that was what you were going to do. That difference would condition much else that you did say.

    Then I'd want to know whether there was just a thing for that summer or possibly a longer term thing. In the event that it was over after that one summer, even though you didn't want to embarrass your dad's friend, near the end of the internship, there is the same sort of incentive that graduating seniors have in taking a class like mine. So you could have played that angle some. I wonder why you didn't.

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    1. Professor, I added the Westworld component because I felt it added to the conversation about general upkeep of one's personal reputation. With little to nobody watching, it is relatively easy to change one's actions which subsequently can change one's reputation entirely. When characters display drastic changes in their behavior with no regard for consequences, I find the show to be incredibly engrossing in that manner. However, I agree that the post sounds a little disjointed and I did not connect the two ideas very well.

      In terms of my internship, I spoke with my friend's Dad at a family party about his job and he mentioned that they were offering summer internships so I applied. He was very helpful to me so I felt obligated to make him look like he made the right choice bringing me in. I held the internship two summers in a row and I would say I definitely worked harder the first summer to gain a good reputation with the full-time employees. The second summer I slacked off a bit but still put in the necessary work.

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  2. I think it is interesting you brought the element of being lazy in a work environment when wanting to build your reputation. Did you think you could have gained a more favorable reputation had you not slacked off and completed even more work than expected of you? I believe a large part of reputation is doing things that not everybody sees, staying an extra hour to finish your work, not taking unnecessary breaks, and overall never failing yourself or your company.

    It almost seems as though you wanted to have a good reputation on the surface and that kept you content.

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  3. i want to bring up the fact that your friend's dad got you this job. when it came to working with him i can only assume that you did a good job because you have done this job multiple times, but were there times where you didn't want to necessarily let him down. i know that getting an internship isn't the easiest thing in the world, but did you feel that since he was helping you out you had to help him out with doing a good job, more than his personal reputation at the job?

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