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Kiplinger
Kiplinger
Business
Alexandra Svokos

Letter from the Senior Digital Editor: Work Values

Four coworkers enjoy coffee together standing by an office window

What do you value about your job?

It's a question I've been thinking over this week as I've had conversations with friends, colleagues, and younger people seeking career advice, and especially after reading Kiplinger audience engagement manager Ben Demers' coverage of two surveys this week. 

The easy answer is the paycheck. Of course, we take jobs because we have bills to pay and lifestyles to afford, and in exchange we provide value to our employers. As I like to remind people pushing through a muddy period, if a job were only doing things you like to do, they wouldn't have to pay you for it. 

But while pay's important, we all know it's not the only thing we value about a job. In many cases, too, pay is not enough to keep you around if other work conditions are falling short. As one friend told me, the checks are nice, but it's having good friends in the office that makes her stay at companies. 

In fact, as Ben wrote about in an article about the reasons people say they quit their jobs, the top reason was poor work-life balance, not pay (...although pay came second). Many people were prioritizing flexibility, including the option to work remotely and opportunities for growth and learning, according to the FlexJobs survey. 

Ben found similar ideas in another survey he covered this week, this one on the concept of wealth, from Schwab's 2023 Modern Wealth Survey. Again, while money was important for someone to consider themselves wealthy, "factors like family strength and good health increasingly factor into respondents' calculations of what 'wealthy' means," Ben wrote.

Like many of us, my relationship to work shifted over the course of the COVID-19 pandemic, from someone who wanted that nonstop grind to someone who wanted to be able to be there for my family and protect my own well-being. That's why I was so interested to see the results from that Schwab story and hear I'm not alone in shifting values. 

Yes, checks are valuable, but so is a good culture, the fulfilling feeling of building something useful for society, recognition and inspiring leadership, and opportunities to learn and grow. It seems we're at a period now of recognizing a holistic sense of work, rather than just chasing paper. 

I'm interested to know what you like about your job — drop me a note if you want to share.

Thanks,
Alexandra

What I learned this week:

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