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JOB SHARING STARTS TAKING OFF; PARTNERS PAIR IN ALTERNATIVE TO FULL TIME.


Byline: Diana Kunde The Dallas Morning News

It was the sale of their careers for Ann Sedita and Carlene Swensson.

Both Dallas-area women had left successful jobs in radio advertising sales to spend more time with their young children. Now they wanted to get back in as a team, sharing one full-time job.

``I just missed the business. At the same time, I wanted to be home with my girls,'' Sedita said.

Job sharing job sharing
Noun

an arrangement by which a job is shared by two part-time workers

job sharing job nJobsharing nt, Arbeitsplatzteilung f 
 was a new idea to Dallas radio stations when Sedita and Swensson shopped their proposal early in 1995, although there was one job-sharing pair at KYNG-FM (105.3). After some chilly reactions, they found a receptive receptive /re·cep·tive/ (re-cep´tiv) capable of receiving or of responding to a stimulus.  ear in general manager Dan Bennett at KLIF-AM (570).

Two and a half years later, their shared cubicle at the talk radio station is lined with sales award plaques. In August, the ``twins'' - as they're dubbed dub 1  
tr.v. dubbed, dub·bing, dubs
1. To tap lightly on the shoulder by way of conferring knighthood.

2. To honor with a new title or description.

3.
 by colleagues - broke another sales record for the station.

``Would you rather have a full-time, mediocre me·di·o·cre  
adj.
Moderate to inferior in quality; ordinary. See Synonyms at average.



[French médiocre, from Latin mediocris : medius, middle; see medhyo-
 salesperson or Ann and Carlene, who set records sharing a job?'' Bennett asked. ``Hey, give me Ann and Carlene any day of the week.''

Job sharing has grown steadily in recent years, along with other types of flexible work schedules. In a typical arrangement, two people work three days each, with one overlapping day. They share pay. Sometimes, both partners receive full benefits. In other cases, firms prorate To divide proportionately. To adjust, share, or distribute something or some amount on a pro rata basis.  benefits or don't extend them at all. Of 1,050 large firms surveyed by Hewitt Associates Some of the information in this article may not be verified by . It should be checked for inaccuracies and modified to cite reliable sources.

Hewitt Associates
 Inc. in 1996, 258 offered job sharing, compared with 161 in a similar survey five years earlier.

A few large firms known for family-friendly work policies have hundreds of job sharers. The DuPont Co., for instance, estimates it has 175 to 180 pairs, and Hewlett-Packard Co. has 400 to 500 employees sharing jobs.

Still, the common experience for companies that offer job sharing is to have relatively few takers, said Jackie Church, a work and family consultant with Boston-based WFD WFD Water Framework Directive (UK)
WFD World Federation of the Deaf
WFD Westminster Foundation for Democracy
WFD Weltfriedensdienst (Germany)
WFD World's Fastest Drummer
 Inc.

``That's the case with every type of flex work that requires a decrease in pay and benefits,'' Church said. Sales may be an ideal job to share because the results are easily measured and can increase if the partners work well together, she said. ``In those ways, it's a very nice fit.''

Dallas-area radio stations apparently are starting to agree. At least five stations have a job-sharing pair among their advertising sales staff. ``I get calls from around the country'' with questions about the concept, said Ken Roberts, general sales manager sales manager ngerente m/f de ventas

sales manager ndirecteur commercial

sales manager sale n
 at KYNG. The station may soon add its second job-share position.

The idea hasn't always been easy to market, KLIF's Sedita and Swensson said, and experts say it's highly unusual to market a job-share when first applying for a position. The arrangements usually are proposed when a full-timer wants to cut back.

Sedita's view, however, was that she and her partner were offering something special: two seasoned professionals taking two sets of talents to one job.

Some reactions from station managers were ``comical com·i·cal  
adj.
1. Provoking mirth or amusement; funny.

2. Of or relating to comedy.



com
 at best,'' Swensson said. ``They said, `Oh, is that so you can have extra time to go shopping, to get your nails done?' They didn't get it. We wanted to make them money and us money.''

Bennett ``got it,'' the two said, and negotiated the deal upward through corporate management. It was the first job-share for KLIF KLIF Key Data Processor (KDP) Loading and Installation Facility  and its parent company, Susquehanna Radio Corp.

The two are paid strictly on commission. Each receives full benefits, which they argued for and won after a year. While they declined to reveal their incomes, Sedita said they're exceeding their original annual goal by 30 percent.

From the start, Sedita and Swensson worked to make their operation seamless to clients. They have one business card with two names but one phone number and one fax number. They also share voice mail.

The women try to schedule new-business calls for Wednesdays, the day they both work.

Sharing the same work ethic work ethic
n.
A set of values based on the moral virtues of hard work and diligence.


work ethic
Noun

a belief in the moral value of work
 is key, both women said. They believe they have different strengths: Sedita in customers' strategy, Swensson in creativity.

They keep meticulous me·tic·u·lous  
adj.
1. Extremely careful and precise.

2. Extremely or excessively concerned with details.



[From Latin met
 files and try to respect each other's days off. Still, both carry cellular phones for the inevitable calls.

``Ann called me last Friday around 4 o'clock. I was in the pet store with my kids buying crickets for the lizards,'' Swensson said. The beauty of the arrangement for her is that ``I have the job I want, the company I want to work for, and I know that if I'm not going to be in the office, everything's going to run as though I'm there.''

CAPTION(S):

Chart

Chart: Workday flexibility

Sixty-eight percent of 1,050 large companies surveyed last year offered flexible work to at least some employees. Options offered

Knight-Ridder Tribune Graphics Network
COPYRIGHT 1997 Daily News
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1997, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:BUSINESS
Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Date:Sep 29, 1997
Words:793
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