The Work Talk Show: Humor at Work and Being Unqualified
As with most worthwhile projects I stumble into, when DJ Waldow and Nick Westergaard invited me to be on The Work Talk Show, I felt unqualified. But I said yes anyway. To avoid sounding unqualified, I scrambled to come up with anything that sounded like a step or a process or an iPad app that I use to get work done, but we never really got around to those bullet points. Like a good improv show, we started out with a little structure, and found ourselves on a much more fascinating path.
I confessed to the hosts that I have no idea how I get work done, and it seems like most of the time I am not getting work done. My projects usually start with a request like, “Hey, can you produce a funny YouTube video to amplify our marketing message for the upcoming product launch?” I’ll say yes, then block off the next 4 -5 hours to feel unqualified. Day 2 in the project schedule is usually dedicated to self-loathing, and by EOD, I’ve concluded I shouldn’t even be in corporate comedy and should apply for a lateral move into Accounts Payable or Procurement. The following morning I’ll stop at a coffee shop and write the script in seven minutes on a napkin and ATM receipts. And the video comes out okay.
But instead of discussing work process on this show, we discussed how more comedy and humor in the workplace can improve creativity, productivity, and make us all taller. And, as with all business podcasts, we covered Del Close and The Harold.
I’m only just not coming to peace with this way of working. And I was comforted after listening to the first Work Talk Show episode of this year. Seth Godin proclaimed that the industrial economy has been replaced by the Connection Economy, which rewards surprise, grit, delight and ridiculousness. What we get paid for now is by standing for something, and by overcoming the fear of being remarkable and ridiculous.
Being ridiculous? Now that is something I’m qualified for.