Corporate Culture Training at large Austin TX auto manufacturer

{{ The recording offers a rare glimpse into how Tesla is handling employee morale at a time when the electric-car maker is grappling with lackluster sales, growing public scrutiny, and some signs of internal dissent from its workforce.

A weeklong factory-wide shutdown at the Tesla factory in Austin featured training events for staffers who didn’t take time off — including one focusing on improving company culture.

Business Insider obtained a recording of the session at which an internal training instructor asked staff at Elon Musk’s electric vehicle company to raise their hands if they felt their team’s culture could be improved.

The instructor called for people to respond if they’d ever felt “I can’t work under these conditions” or had felt set back by constant change at the company.

“I know I have,” the instructor told the employees.

“A lot of people leave this company, and they have kind of a negative taste in their mouth,” the instructor said. “They think: ‘Man, it was terrible. It was bad. I got burnt out. I feel like I didn’t get anything done, nobody listened to me.’”

A spokesperson for Tesla did not respond to a request for comment.

Tesla halted production at the Austin factory, which runs production lines for its Cybertruck and Model Y, for the week of Memorial Day. During the week, workers could choose between taking paid time off or coming into the factory for cleaning and training, according to three people with knowledge of the issue.

It is unclear why Tesla chose to halt production for the week.

At the factory, several hundred Tesla employees attended cleaning and training events during the shutdown, including the session focused on improving company culture, three people said.

The instructor of that training encouraged staff to take some responsibility for Tesla’s culture and a more active role in improving it.

“Leadership has kind of another level of responsibility for trying to guide and direct that culture,” the instructor said. “But at the end of the day, it’s us as the people on the ground that are the reflection of the culture.”

The recording offers a rare glimpse into how Tesla is handling employee morale at a time when the electric-car maker is grappling with lackluster sales, growing public scrutiny, and some signs of internal dissent from its workforce.]

The instructor told participants the culture training was usually reserved for leadership but they’d decided to share it more widely.

“Hopefully you can walk out of here with almost a different sense of purpose than just the job itself,” the trainer said. }}

intercst

“During the week, workers could choose between taking paid time off or coming into the factory for cleaning and training,”

gee, a week off paid, or come in to clean and sit in training sessions. Tough choice, lol.

Article says they got 300 volunteers (out of 23,000 employees at the Tesla Austin Gigafactory) to come in for cleaning duty.

What are the odds they get any reward?

intercst

“Article says they got 300 volunteers (out of 23,000 employees at the Tesla Austin Gigafactory) to come in for cleaning duty.”

lol, in the environment I grew up in and worked in early on, being one of those 300 could easily lead to a bloody nose, or worse. But this is the modern era, where people bend over out of fear of keeping their job. But suck ups were not tolerated much back when America was great,lol.

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Maybe the company paid for lunch. :sunglasses:

As I understood it, you could either use your PTO or come in and clean the factory.

So 22,700 employees chose PTO, and 300 had that “can do” good ole’ American spirit that Texans are known for.