Voir le résumé
How anger makes people show their true colors is a filmed educational case. This
medium-length film comes along with an educational note, available (in french) on
the associated interactive educational space: Quand la colère fait tomber les masques. Prize of the best experiment filmed to the Festival of the educational university movie.Sonia Ricard was recruited
as product manager for a multinational company for alimentation, which
used to be a family business and has kept its paternalist culture. But
then the group estimates its profitability is too low, renews the
management team and launches a restructuration. The new marketing
executive freezes Sonia off with his “smiling mask”, but the new CEO
plays on proximity and wins her trust. However, a few months later, the
head of human resources announces to Sonia, she will be dismissed,
without the caution she would have expected. She feels betrayed by her
superiors, anger takes her, and she takes advantage of a delay to get
involved in a trade union. This move generates a misunderstanding, and
anger in return, for her managers. Then will follow three years of an
epic fight. The pedagogic case study movie, thus beholds the
experimental feedback of a person, wounded in her need for love, in the
sense of Maslow. It focuses on the moment of this wound, precisely the
denial of talk, felt like a personal injustice, when a great
consequences decision is announced (organizational behavior theories
call it the Churchill effect). The case sketches the consequences of
this, on personal and collective grounds. It suggests ideas for a
solution.
Mot(s) clés libre(s) : fiction, Human resources management, Ethics in company, Filmed case study