Those who can do
Those who can't get stuck with work experience, like Barry.
How hard is it to teach someone to use spreadsheets? Of course,
I wouldn't know, I'm entirely
self-taught. OK, so I do have a copy of
Excel for Dummies by Greg Harvey PhD
that was in the desk drawer when I first
arrived at Blaminio, and it has come in
useful now and again - especially that
summer when one of the feet came off my
desk during the big cash flow crisis.
Of course the real question is why
you'd want to teach some ungrateful
youth how to use a spreadsheet in the
first place. Whatever happened to the
school of hard knocks?
Anyway, having scraped through my
accountancy exams by dint of a shortfall
in the institute's subs, I'd vowed never to
enter a classroom again - and certainly
not to be on the other side of the desk. But
FD had other ideas. It seems Blaminio has
been getting negative press for not being
high up enough in some newspaper's
"CSR ranking". Our director of PR
knee-jerked the chairman into a rather
panicked response: a public commitment
"that we would fulfil our corporate social
responsibility obligations by extending
every area of the business to work
placement students".
Of course I wasn't watching the press
conference. I was watching our share
price going up a notch after a favourable
City comment about lean purchasing and
aggressive outsourcing practices. CSR?
Pah! Would "reaching out" to a bunch of
hoodies boost my option scheme payout?
But in fulfilment of our spinmeister's
desperate commitment, a few local
schools eagerly snapped up the chance to
get their "prize pupils" off their hands for
a week: a bunch of them landed at head
office and a number found their way to
the finance department.
FD suddenly decided he needed to
pay a visit to some reference sites for
candidate software on various projects
that he'd been "putting off for months".
Frankly, it wouldn't surprise me if he were
referencing next door's Xbox 360. So, as
the HR director tottered in with these
bewildered kids and started allocating
them to staff on a random basis, I was
first in the firing line.
My ASBO-in-waiting was called Clare.
Our trip to the vending machine pretty
much exhausted my reference points
for today's kids - soft drinks, fast food,
"banging tracks" and, er, alcopops.
Then inspiration struck. All teenagers
are short of money. One question
about her finances and there was a tenminute
diatribe about how unfair
her parents were. I smelled a real
education opportunity.
I suggested the way to increase her
allocation of resources (pocket money)
was to put forward a realistic budget
based on actual expenditure for the past
few months. OK, so it never works for
the IT department; but then she wasn't
going to be asking for squillions to spend
on router-me-web-wotsits. I explained
I could do the template, but it would
be a more productive experience if she
"owned" the spreadsheet and looked to
me only for specialist input.
After being shown to the slightly dodgy
PC in the corner - Pentium II, at least
most of the web would be inaccessible
- and told she could put her files in the
FD's "work in progress" folder - where noone
would ever see it - off she beavered.
After a couple of false starts - activities
across the top and the cost up the side, a
schoolgirl error... oh - the final version
had separate tabs for expenses such as
mobile phones, entertainment, shopping,
lunch, presents and shoes. Clare had even
produced some sophisticated analysis
projecting expenditure forward on weekly
and monthly average bases to inform
her parents how hard up she was and
would be for the foreseeable future. I even
started teaching her some of my favourite
keyboard shortcuts.
With a bit of tweaking, her spreadsheet
might make a useful template for expense
claims and cost allocations forms - which
has been on my to-do list for some time.
Hell, I've always said marketing needs
something simple enough for a kid to use.
Sadly, Clare hasn't been in touch with
news on whether the spreadsheet resulted
in more pocket money. But I wish she
would. With that kind of instinctive
flair for spreadsheet manipulation,
I'm wondering whether she might
want to boost her income with a little
subcontracted asset management and
cost analysis work, enabling yours truly to
have a bash on that Xbox 360.