Saturday, 24. May 2008, 20:07:36
opera asa
There is a new recruitment video posted both
on the desktopteam blog and on
YouTube. I notice the comments and feedback are rather mixed. Some commenters think the video is trying too hard to be cool.
I think the main point of the video is easy to miss. The main point is that those people on the screen are genuine employees, not some PR agency cast. They probably came up with those words to describe Opera all by themselves too (knowing some of them I don't think it was scripted.)
Why is that point easy to miss? Because
all of them except Håkon are anonymous. The video does not actually tell a casual watcher that these people work for Opera Software!
So the problem with the video is not that it fails to communicate "cool". The problem is that it fails to communicate "genuine". Simply due to the omission of people's names and titles. Someone please tell HR that "employees anonymous" isn't a group the target audience wants to join...
BTW, funny that one of YouTube's "related links" was
Royal Opera House recruitment video - which does pretty much the same thing but pulls it off..

You should consider joining Opera of course
Wednesday, 21. November 2007, 13:45:24
opera asa
It's easy to take things for granted. Only sometimes when I talk to new employees and externals I realise that some of the tings I'm used to at work might not be common.
As my profile says I work part-time. By choice. So while over at Google people enjoy their 20% work-on-your-own-pet-project time I have a generous 40% timeshare to spend on dancing, family, children, and various idealistic causes.
I work 1/3 from home. In other words, I come to the office about two days a week. And I generally come and leave when I want.
Also, most of the time nobody is telling me what to do (we have a manager but his attitude is that everyone in our team by definition is an expert who knows exactly what needs to be done at what point in time).
Usually, this flexibility is a nice thing to have (unless it's the sort of flexibility that is a eufemism for "job insecurity", that is). But sometimes it's more than that - sometimes it's essential.
Tomorrow my father will go through an operation for Parkinson's disease. It's becoming harder and harder to do the everyday things we take for granted with his shaking hands.
Though nothing in the known medical universe can reverse the illness we hope that the operation will reduce the symptoms...
I had a cold last week and only came to the office once, but I've asked if I can be away for the rest of this week and start of next - I'll work a bit remotely from my parents' home but mostly focus on being there. So I'm off to support my family if I can. It's a gift of time - sometimes the most precious substance in the universe - which reminds me again why I'm blessed to work here.
Any good wishes for my father's brain surgery are appreciated. We hope for the best.