Slashdot is powered by your submissions, so send in your scoop

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
China Businesses

Tech Exec's Videos Spark Clash Over China's Work Culture 27

Search giant Baidu fires its head of public relations after she outraged Gen Z workers. From a report [non-paywalled link]: The head of public relations at a major Chinese tech firm gained hundreds of thousands of followers seemingly overnight after posting a series of viral videos laying out her unapologetically tyrannical management style. The videos also earned her a pink slip from her employer after they set off an explosion of criticism among Gen Z Chinese fed up with the intense work culture that prevails in their country's tech industry.

"I'm not your mother-in-law. I'm not your mom," Qu Jing, a vice president at Chinese search giant Baidu, said in one widely excoriated clip, referring to a colleague who was struggling with a recent breakup. "I only care about your results." In other videos, she criticized employees who didn't want to work weekends and dismissed complaints from one subordinate that messages she sent to a group chat late at night had kept a crying child awake. "Why should it be my business that your child was crying?" she said.

On Thursday, as public outrage soared, Qu removed the videos from her account on Douyin, TikTok's sister platform in China, and replaced them with an apology. She said she had tried to do a good job but had been too impatient and hadn't adopted "a proper approach." Baidu Chief Executive Robin Li was furious at Qu and fired her on Thursday, according to people familiar with the matter. A top Baidu executive told employees that Qu's comments were "inappropriate and didn't represent and reflect the real culture and values of Baidu," the people said. The management also promised to review the company's corporate culture and working systems, they said.

China's hard-charging tech industry relies heavily on a Darwinian work culture that demands near-total devotion to the workplace. Tech workers coined the term "996" to describe the typical schedule: 9 a.m. to 9 p.m., six days a week. Half a decade ago, videos like Qu's were just as likely to garner a shrug as generate controversy. But younger Chinese, much like their counterparts in the U.S., are increasingly skeptical of the pressure to work themselves ragged in pursuit of financial success. They have coined their own terms -- "lying flat" and "letting it rot" -- to describe their antipathy to the grinding ethos of 996.

Tech Exec's Videos Spark Clash Over China's Work Culture

Comments Filter:
  • Doing hours (Score:5, Interesting)

    by eneville ( 745111 ) on Friday May 10, 2024 @05:31PM (#64463597) Homepage

    Doing hours isn't the same as productive.

    A healthy work ethic will never catch on whilst there's media pumping out job risks here and there, telling us slaves we're easily replaced.

    What actually happens is people end up in a presenteeism system to show off how dedicated they are.

    Look at it from a buyer perspective of the business product though, would you rather buy a product that had people in offices nearly all their waking hours, or a product that was innovative and fit for purpose? I don't care if the product was made from office slaves, or someone who's working four days a week with a good creative mental balance. This matters because it should matter to the shareholders who cascade demands.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      When I read these stories of 120 hours workers, who exactly is it? Is it just salaried white collar? I just don't see a janitor being required to work 7 days a week.

      • Putting your newborn baby on a treadmill of life training (early education), then toddler (sports training, advanced learning, tutoring), and then repeating until they are out of college is not working out.

        The hyper competitive parents starting with the boomers in 1980 turned many things for just enough of the population, keeping up with the Jonses, into Olympic training and careers for Boomer tutors, life coaches, sports coaches, dance coaches, gymnastics, swimming, ....

        It's a guess here that large numbers

    • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

      It's actually started a movement called "laying flat". As in a number of Gen Z have stopped doing.

      They are not applying for those kinds of jobs anymore. Instead, they're applying for jobs that make "enough". As in enough to eat and pay for a roof over their head. Given how economical living is with an oversupply of housing and cheap food, many are getting by delivering food. And they're not working crazy hours.

      Instead, they're using that time to just lie down and enjoy life - they have food, they have shelt

      • by will4 ( 7250692 )

        LDAR - Lie Down and Rot

        Japan has trends of avoiding work, relationships, .... some aligned, some not
        Hikimori
        Herbivore men

        Korea too - Mainly because of the 3 year forced military service for men only, disadvantaging them in the labor market, insane work hours, insane house prices, and the requirement by the future bride's family and bride that the future husband be rich, have a home, be high paid, etc.. All of which are largely impossible for men entering college at 21, graduat

  • Punishing Honesty (Score:4, Interesting)

    by alvinrod ( 889928 ) on Friday May 10, 2024 @05:32PM (#64463599)
    Punishing honesty isn't a good thing. Unless they're changing their practices, what does this really do beyond appeasing s mob that will settle back into the same situation as before? Does anyone really think that her replacement will think differently?
    • No. But....

      As an executive, part of the job is to represent the company. Anything you say or do publicly -especially when actually referencing the job- affects the company's image. If you make the company look bad, you should expect to be fired.

    • This is a PR flack we are talking about. Her entire job is to create a deceptively positive impression of the company. Being honest in an unpopular way, in public, is basically being as bad at that job as it is possible to be.
      • The PR flacks are the ones working under her. The ones she is trying to get to work as hard as she is by showing them it's possible to work this hard. Leading by example. It's their job to do that. Her job is to motivate them to work as hard as they can and get rid of the ones who can't/won't. Which she was successful at

        A former Baidu employee said Qu brought Huawei’s aggressive corporate culture with her to Baidu.

        “(She triggered) a pretty big culture shock. About 60% of the team left within months of her arrival,” the former employee told CNN on the condition of anonymity.

        She'd had the job since 2021, and they only just noticed now? No, it just went viral now. But this was very much intended when they hired her. She did the exact same thing at her previous jo

    • Don't companies intentionally hire and promote this exact sort of person to management roles? Ms. Qu just made the mistake of making it obvious. They'll make her the sacrificial pawn, but they'll just keep doing the exact same thing, with a new person who is, in all meaningful aspects, just like Ms. Qu. Baidu will not make any real changes in the workplace because of this instance. This is just pruning the noticeable thorn.
  • Gen WHAT? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Hodr ( 219920 ) on Friday May 10, 2024 @05:57PM (#64463633) Homepage

    I'm sorry, but the "generations" are meant to indicate groups that have shared life experiences based on age groupings (had similar scholastic experience, watched same TV shows, experienced the same political atmosphere, etc.)

    You cannot just slap this label on people born into wildly different cultures who experience different life events.

    Calling people born 20 to 30 years ago "Gen Z" just confuses people as they will not be anything like what you would typically expect when you hear that term, rendering it meaningless.

    • by Hodr ( 219920 )

      To expand on that, the Chinese literally have a different calendar. That's like having an article about kids in the US and saying "oh those year of the Rat kids, you know how they are".

    • And yet this story illustrates that a cohort does have similar sensibilities on the issue of work, despite living so far apart. The crash in birth rate is another example of simultaneous cultural evolution in the east and west.
  • Uh-huh... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by cmdr_klarg ( 629569 ) on Friday May 10, 2024 @06:01PM (#64463643)

    Baidu Chief Executive Robin Li was furious at Qu and fired her on Thursday, according to people familiar with the matter. A top Baidu executive told employees that Qu's comments were "inappropriate and didn't represent and reflect the real culture and values of Baidu," the people said.

    What he was furious about was that she said them out loud.

  • Not entirely wrong (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Baron_Yam ( 643147 ) on Friday May 10, 2024 @06:12PM (#64463663)

    >"I'm not your mother-in-law. I'm not your mom," Qu Jing, a vice president at Chinese search giant Baidu, said in one widely excoriated clip, referring to a colleague who was struggling with a recent breakup. "I only care about your results."

    I was at a company team building meeting where they were talking about how we just needed to try and I pointed out I wasn't paid to try but to succeed on average (everybody makes mistakes from time to time, everybody has to pick up new skills from time to time) and that trying's great, but if that's all you can do you're going to get let go.

    Watching management try to figure out a way to contradict me was kind of funny.

    I love getting along with my coworkers, but the purpose of employment is to provide or produce something in return for pay so the company can profit off your labour. Fail at that and you're gone.

    That said, there are limits to what is reasonable to expect from a person. Modern societies are extremely productive, and we can afford a lot of time NOT labouring to survive. Anyone who thinks we shouldn't take advantage of that has fucked up priorities. I'm not here to be someone else's slave so they can enjoy luxuries; I have my own agenda and my own happiness to pursue, as should everyone else.

    • by larryjoe ( 135075 ) on Friday May 10, 2024 @07:39PM (#64463853)

      I was at a company team building meeting where they were talking about how we just needed to try and I pointed out I wasn't paid to try but to succeed on average (everybody makes mistakes from time to time, everybody has to pick up new skills from time to time) and that trying's great, but if that's all you can do you're going to get let go.

      Watching management try to figure out a way to contradict me was kind of funny.

      Yes, tangible results are the end goal. However, how to get there is the real question. There are many ways of coaching, resulting in different outcomes for different people. Simply proclaiming that only results and not effort counts works for some people and craters results for others. Saying that only effort matters irrespective of the outcome works for some and not for others. In almost all aspects of work, sports, etc., the optimal way to coach is not obvious. If it were, scientific studies would easily show this one and only correct way, but that's not the way people are.

      Coaches try to encourage people by appealing to different psyches. Focusing on effort over results doesn't necessarily mean that results don't matter. And telling people that only results matter is not necessarily an indication of a cold heart.

      • by Bongo ( 13261 )

        People also have values, and there is a range of them. For some people, it really matters that they're working to help others. For some people, the work has to have some sense of meaning. For some people, loyalty and a shared commitment are important. These are all strong factors, or can be, depending on the person. Understanding the values of the people working in the teams probably has the biggest impact. And yes, for some people, the value is purely contractual. I'm just here to get what I need, and we'r

      • There is a sweet spot between pushing your people too hard with no concern for their well being and not pushing hard enough to maximize productive results. The sweet spot is different for different people, and the sweet spot changes for any individual over time. Communications between the manager and the employee as to what the sweet spot is and the perceptions of both parties as to whether the sweet spot has been achieved must follow. This is a feedback based never ending looping endeavor that is crea

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      If all your care about are results, you won't be motivated to help other people. Their success isn't your success, so might as well not bother, right?

      The other issue with a focus on results is that there is a perverse incentive to do a worse job if it gets you to the finish line faster. Technical debt is the classic example. Bodge it to work, screw yourself later.

  • by hdyoung ( 5182939 ) on Friday May 10, 2024 @06:40PM (#64463731)
    First, the grind-till-you-drop work culture. Second, the governments attitude towards workers, which is decidedly early-1900s. Third, the demographic sinkhole that the country is just on the starting edge of. Fourth, the changing attitudes of the young generation who arent nearly as willing to eat bitterness and bleed for the glory of the emperor. At least one or two of these things will have to give.
    • Considering that China is becoming increasingly authoritarian under Xi the Pooh, it might as well be #4.

  • She said she had tried to do a good job but had been too impatient and hadn't adopted "a proper approach."

    To quote her: "I only care about your results."

    It is possible that excoriating people for being fuckups is one place where fucking up is uniquely unsympathetic.
  • by sinkskinkshrieks ( 6952954 ) on Saturday May 11, 2024 @07:51PM (#64465797)
    Seems like China has developed a kleptoplutocracy like Russia or the US where there are a few winners but mostly domestic serfs and foreign slave labor pitted against each other.

You don't have to know how the computer works, just how to work the computer.

Working...