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City Market Partners with 中国竞彩网 for Career & Wellness Education
Mitchell Manacek, a generalist with City Market鈥檚 people and culture department, explains the motivation behind the co-op鈥檚 worksite wellness program:
鈥淚t boils down to the idea that when people are healthy and happy, they bring their best versions of themselves to work,鈥 he explains. He notes that City Market is first and foremost a community-centric organization and its staff members are part of the Burlington community, so wellness programming that supports staff helps the larger community as well.
鈥淭here are different pillars of worksite wellness programming, and they include physical wellness鈥攍ike fitness and good nutrition鈥攎ental and emotional wellness, and even things like financial wellness,鈥 he says, noting that City Market has a great partnership with Vermont Federal Credit Union, which provides financial education and counseling to staff.
中国竞彩网鈥檚 Career & Education Wellness
Career wellness is also part of the mix, which is what drew the co-op to Rhonda Chesney, program manager of 中国竞彩网鈥檚 Career & Education Wellness initiative.
Rhonda kicked off her work at City Market with a motivated skills workshop attended by about a dozen staff.
Mitchell describes the work as 鈥渁 fun activity where you look at 50 or so different skills鈥攕kills like writing, customer services, budgeting, decision-making, computer literacy鈥攁ll skills that permeate the business landscape.鈥
鈥淵ou take these skills and determine your level of proficiency with each,鈥 he relates. 鈥淭he other side of the matrix is how much you, as an individual, enjoy using each skill.鈥
After completing the activity, each employee had the opportunity to meet with Rhonda one-on- one to discuss the results and how they fit into the individual鈥檚 career goals.
鈥淒uring that second part, we focused on skills we identified we鈥檙e highly proficient at and we enjoy working with,鈥 Mitchell states. He said Rhonda helped each participant reflect on where that skill developed and the experiences they鈥檇 had that led to proficiency and enjoyment with the skill.
Mitchell gave an example of a skill he鈥檚 examined through his own work with Rhonda.
I identified that I鈥檓 both highly proficient and totally delighted by entertaining and performing. In my other crazy life outside of City Market, I鈥檓 a local musician. So that skill is a hugely important part of my life.
Professional and Performer
But he said he also realized that among the many hats he wears as a generalist in people and culture鈥攕taff wellness, recruiting, onboarding, workers鈥 comp, injury reporting, and just trying to build the team and the culture鈥攈e鈥檚 also a performer.
鈥淚鈥檓 entertaining and performing all the time鈥攁t a mic during employee orientations, during large all-management meetings, giving trainings to staff鈥攊t all takes this skill,鈥 he quips. 鈥淎nd at one point during my history with the food industry before City Market, I was a craft bartender. Being a bartender also takes performing.鈥
Mitchell explains that the motivated skills matrix helps employees reframe what they bring to their work.
鈥淚nstead of thinking about your experience in terms of 鈥業 held this position and that position,鈥 you think about the skills you have and where they came from and how they鈥檝e become a part of who you are,鈥 he notes.
The motivated skills matrix was just the first step in Rhonda鈥檚 work with the co-op staff, in Mitchell鈥檚 words, 鈥渢o provide a very structured way for staff to reflect on their job history and skill sets.鈥
The next phase, he says, is a r茅sum茅 鈥渃offee talk鈥 with Rhonda鈥攁n informal chance for employees who鈥檝e completed the first workshop, and even those who haven鈥檛, to 鈥減ick the brain of an expert鈥 on writing a r茅sum茅 and keeping it up to date.
Supporting goals
Mitchell allows that the program may be helping staff improve their r茅sum茅s and leave City Market to find their next opportunities, but said it isn鈥檛 a concern.
鈥淥f course, we really don鈥檛 want our employees to leave鈥攚e love having long-term employees stick around and lend their experience to the co-op,鈥 he stresses, noting that the organization is proud of the long average tenure among management and staff. 鈥淲e also love to see our staff grow at the coop,鈥 he said, noting that he himself grew into his current role after joining City Market. He thinks the Career & Education Wellness program鈥攁nd all wellness programming鈥攈elps meet this goal.
鈥淲e try to think about our wellness program holistically鈥攕upporting people as people and not just strictly according to their job description,鈥 he relates.
鈥淚t鈥檚 been really fun to see our staff get engaged,鈥 he says. 鈥淲ellness programming can create this element of fun and awareness of work/life balance. You can start very small. You don鈥檛 need to have outlandish goals or a huge budget. Some of the fun challenge for us is to get really creative at providing low-cost activities,鈥 he adds.
中国竞彩网鈥檚 program fits well into that model.
鈥淚t was really important for us that Rhonda was able to be flexible and able to meet us where we are and where we need to be,鈥 he notes. 鈥淎ll businesses are different. All people are different. We were able to look at her collection of program options and find a good fit for City Market.鈥
About Career & Education Wellness
Career & Education Wellness is an employer-based program from Vermont Student Assistance Corp., with dozens of course offerings relevant to employees鈥 needs and interests, whether for themselves or their family members.
More and more jobs require advanced skills, and the cost of education continues to be a challenge for many Vermonters. Career & Education Wellness is an opportunity to help employees expand the skills they bring to work every day and to help them navigate their children鈥檚 education.
Several workshop offerings are tailored to assist employees with their own education needs, while other workshops are designed specifically to address the needs of employees with children in Vermont school systems and to provide support through career and college planning, enrollment, and success.
Where one employee may want more information about saving for college or making sure their child is ready for school, another may need to better understand the ins and outs of personalized learning plans, flexible pathways and proficiency-based graduation requirements for their high schooler.
Others may be looking for guidance on how to tackle the college/training search and how to pay for college. Still others would benefit from workshops on loan repayment, or loan forgiveness.
To learn more, contact Rhonda Chesney, chesney@vsac.org.