Luciana
Skeptical Carioca
I met a friend yesterday who's been working for a large oil company for 2 years. She was telling me how relationships in the office were encouraged.
I was puzzled, and she explained that not only most relationships were quite in the open, having no restrictions whatsoever, but that once a couple get married they would publish proudly, if authorized "they met at the company!".The only relationships not in the open are those of married couples, but not married to each other. "Married after meeting inside the company" is a common phrase in exec speech, with pride! Oh, and they offer generous benefits for parents of small children.
I have heard of companies who strongly oppose romantic relationships in the office, offense potentially punishable by dismissals. Fortunately I've never worked one, as I'd find it totalitarian, but that's personal taste and I can understand some reasons behind it, just don't agree with them.
Other companies are quite neutral, don't really worry about such issues unless they involve concrete ethical cases. It might be frowned upon by the management, but it is tolerated if it's discreet and is perceived as fairly harmless.
But encouraging, that's the first time I hear of it. The only advantage I see thus far is that relationships in the open are obvious, whereas "underground" relationships might generate ethical issues - such as unwarranted promotions - that are harder to detect or impede. If it's out in the open, for employers there's the upside of not having to hide an aspect of your life, and for employees it has the advantage of more honest relations and fewer worries about unknown connections and hidden personal interests in matters.
Has anyone heard of such practice? What are the other upsides and downsides I'm failing to see?
I was puzzled, and she explained that not only most relationships were quite in the open, having no restrictions whatsoever, but that once a couple get married they would publish proudly, if authorized "they met at the company!".The only relationships not in the open are those of married couples, but not married to each other. "Married after meeting inside the company" is a common phrase in exec speech, with pride! Oh, and they offer generous benefits for parents of small children.
I have heard of companies who strongly oppose romantic relationships in the office, offense potentially punishable by dismissals. Fortunately I've never worked one, as I'd find it totalitarian, but that's personal taste and I can understand some reasons behind it, just don't agree with them.
Other companies are quite neutral, don't really worry about such issues unless they involve concrete ethical cases. It might be frowned upon by the management, but it is tolerated if it's discreet and is perceived as fairly harmless.
But encouraging, that's the first time I hear of it. The only advantage I see thus far is that relationships in the open are obvious, whereas "underground" relationships might generate ethical issues - such as unwarranted promotions - that are harder to detect or impede. If it's out in the open, for employers there's the upside of not having to hide an aspect of your life, and for employees it has the advantage of more honest relations and fewer worries about unknown connections and hidden personal interests in matters.
Has anyone heard of such practice? What are the other upsides and downsides I'm failing to see?
