Conflict resolution strategy

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Levi Strauss & Co. is the largest maker of brand-name clothing in the world. It has had a long history of being profitable, good to its workers, and charitable to its factory towns. Compared with other companies in the apparel industry, Levi Strauss had been known for generous wages and good working conditions. According to chairman Robert Haas, Levi’s treatment of its workers and concern for their welfare is far greater than that in other companies in the industry. When other American apparel firms moved their manufacturing offshore, Levi Strauss & Co. maintained a large American manufacturing base and was often ranked as one of the best companies to work for. In fact, in 1997 the company received an award from the United Nations for improving global workplace standards. Up until 1992, Levi’s employees worked on their own operating machines in which they performed a single, specific and repetitive task, such as sewing zippers or belt loops on jeans. Pay was based on a piece-rate system, in which workers were paid a set amount for each piece of work completed. A worker’s productivity and pay was highly dependent on levels of skill, speed and stamina. By 1992, however, Levi Strauss & Company began to feel the pressure of overseas, low-cost competitors, and realized it needed to increase productivity and reduce costs to remain competitive and keep their North American plants open. The company decided that the best solution was project-teamwork. In a memo sent to workers, Levi’s operations vice-president wrote, “This change will lead to a project-managed work environment and help employees become more productive.” Project-teamwork was felt to be a humane, safe and profitable solution that would be consistent with the company’s philosophy. Under the new vision, gone was the old system of performing a simple task all the time and the piece-rate system that went with it. Now groups of 10 to 50 workers shared the tasks and would be paid for the total number of trousers that the group completed. The project team-based system was expected to lower the monotony of piecework by enabling workers to do different tasks and to therefore lower repetitive-stress injuries. Although employees were given brief seminars and training on project team-building and problem solving, it was not long before problems began to arise. Top performers complained about their less skilled and slower teammates who caused a decline in their wages. Meanwhile, the wages of lower-skilled workers increased. Threats, insults, and group infighting became a regular part of daily work as faster workers tried to rid their group of slower workers. To make matters worse, top performers responded to their lower wages by reducing their productivity. Not surprisingly, employee morale began to deteriorate. Another problem was that whenever a group member was absent or slow, the rest of the team had to make up for it. This exacerbated the infighting among team members and resulted in excessive peer pressure. In one instance, an enraged worker had to be restrained for throwing a chair at a team member who constantly harassed her about working too slowly. In another incident, a worker threatened to kill a member of the team. An off-duty sheriff’s deputy had to be placed at the plant’s front entrance. Because the groups had limited supervision, they had to resolve group problems on their own, and they also divided up their work of absent members themselves. In some plants, team members would chase each other out of the bathroom and nurse’s station. Slower teammates were often criticized, needled and resented by their group. Some could not take the resentment and simply quit. In one group, a member was voted off her team because she planned to have hand surgery. And although workers were now part of a project-team system, management was not given guidance on how to implement the system. As a result, each manager had his or her own idea of how the project-team system should work, including project-team size, structure, pay formulae, and shop-floor layouts. One former production supervisor described the situation as worse than chaos and more like hell! Many of the workers complained because they did not have sufficient time, material and equipment to get the job done to meet deadlines of the orders. As a matter of fact, most of the employees felt the fact that they did not have “enough tools to get the job done” was because management wanted to save money. To make matters worse, the project-team system did not improve the situation for Levi. Labour and overhead jeans costs increased by up to 25 percent during the first years of the project-team system. Efficiency, based on the quantity of pants produced per hour worked, dropped to 77 percent of pre-team levels. Although productivity began to improve, it is now only at 93 percent of the piecework level. Even in some of the company’s best plants, production has fallen and remained at lower levels since the introduction of teams. And although one of the reasons for adopting the project-team system was to lower costs of injuries that resulted from workers pushing themselves to achieve piece-rate goals, these costs continued to rise in many plants even after the project-team approach was implemented. Profit margins also began to decline as competitors began offering private-label jeans at two-thirds the price of Levi’s, and Levi’s market share of men’s denim jeans in the United States fell from 48 percent in 1990 to 26 percent in 1997. As costs continued to increase, plant managers and supervisors were warned that they would face an uncertain future unless they cut costs by 28 percent by the end of the year. Project-teams did, however, result in some improvements. For example, the average turnaround time of receiving an order and shipping it was reduced from nine to seven weeks. As well, because the project-teams were responsible for producing completed pairs of pants, there was less work-in-process at the end of each day compared with the piece-rate system, where each worker did only one part of the job. And according to Chairman Robert Haas, project-teams allowed workers to manage themselves and to find better and safer ways of working. Nonetheless, the project-team system did not help Levi’s achieve its objectives. In February 1997, then-CEO and current board chair Robert Haas announced that the company would cut its salaried workforce by 20 percent in the next 12 months. The following November, the company closed 11 factories in the United States and laid off 6,395 workers. In an unusual response to being laid off, one worker described it as a “relief” from the burden and stress that had become part of her job. Commenting on the project-team approach, a now-retired former manufacturing project manager said, “We created a lot of anxiety and pain and suffering in our people, and for what?” According to a production supervisor who has taken early retirement, “It’s just not the same company anymore. The perceived value of the individual and the concern for people is just not there.” A veteran worker who had gone back to the old system of doing a single task and was now paid in part for what she produced said, “I hate teams. Levi’s is not the place it used to be.” In February 1999, as sales of Levis’ jeans continued to fall, the company let go another 5,900 workers, or 30 percent of its workforce of 19,900 in the United States and Canada, and announces that it would close 11 of its remaining 22 plants in North America. According to company officials, plant closings might have been sooner and job losses greater if they had not adopted a project-team system. In 2003, due to substantial drops in net sales over the last three years, the company implemented more measures to recoup some of its losses, including closing 37 of its factories worldwide. The company closed its remaining North American manufacturing facilities; its San Antonio operations closed at the end of 2003 and its three Canadian operations closed in March 2004. The closures affected some 2,000 employees. The Canadian plants were considered among the most efficient in the company. As such, Levi’s now manufactures 100 percent of its jeans for the North America market outside of North America, compared with 15 percent in 1991, and none 20 years ago.

1. What conflict resolution strategy is best out of (Forcing,Problem solving, Compromising,Avoiding & yielding) to solve the conflict in this scenario? Explain your rationale?

 

Reference no: EM132266916

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