When sport and work collide
Look around your office, can you tell me three things you
know about each person working there? Often times, the further the person sits
from you the less you know about them. It is only natural, the people you interact
with most during the day are the ones you work closest with, figuratively and
physically.
Muhammad Ali once said, “It’s just a job. Grass grows, birds
fly, waves pound the sand. I beat people up.” I’m rarely one to disagree with
The Greatest, but when it comes to MY job it IS much more than that.
So, how is it that I enjoy coming into work in the morning?
How is it I am happy enough to stay later if needs be or work the odd weekend?
A lot of it is down to the people I work with, who I have come to know and have
since become friends. And they don’t just sit beside me.
How did they get there? As much of it is linked to what goes
on outside the day to day work. When I first arrived at Hays, over a year ago,
we enjoyed a Thanksgiving feast together, organised by our American colleague
Kelly, to raise money for Barretstown. This was quickly followed by the usual
Christmas fare like Secret Santa and the Christmas party. Then with the new
year upon us - and a desire to get more active - a group of us signed up for
the Great Ireland run, then there was tag rugby, zip lining and most recently a
5 a side football team.
The basketball player Bob Cousy said, “Sports create a bond
between contemporaries that lasts a lifetime. It also gives your life
structure, discipline and a genuine, sincere, pure fulfilment that few other
areas of endeavour provide.”
No stronger was that bond felt than when the Hays tag rugby
team took to the field. Almost to a player we had very little idea what we were
doing, why we were doing it or who we were doing it with. But as the games went
by one thing remained constant - we kept turning up. Thankfully, what changed
were our fortunes, we started to grasp the rules and the ball and suddenly we
were scoring tries and defending our own line like a team. Regardless of our
status within the workplace, from MD to new starter, we created a talking point
for the office, one we could all participate in.
The sense of achievement that we all experience during our
workday, is often only shared with our immediate teams. Tag rugby – and the
other activities we took part in – allowed a relationship to build that went
much further than our closest colleagues. In its simplest form it allowed
imaginary boundaries to be broken down and conversation to flow that may have
previously been stifled.
It is hard to disagree with Martina Navaratilova when she
says, “Whoever said, ‘it is not whether you win or lose that counts’, probably
lost”, we may not have won as much as we would have liked but it definitely
counted for something.
Philip Bourke
Marketing
Executive
Ireland
HAYS Recruiting experts worldwide
16 Upper Fitzwilliam St
Dublin
2
HAYS Recruiting experts worldwide
T: +353 1 619
0580
Labels: #ali, #barretstown, #hays, #navaratilova, #office, #sport, #tagrugby