FOCUS: AGENCY OF THE YEAR AWARDS 2000 - Overworked, underpaid...nothing new
<p>So how many hours do you work a week? Judging by the responses, if </p><p>you are at 40 hours a week, you are probably a part time employee. </p><p><BR><BR> </p><p>At 90 hours, you are definitely being exploited. </p><p><BR><BR> </p><p>So where do you rank in all of this? See for yourselves. </p><p><BR><BR> </p><p>Agency heads put in the most hours; an average of 62 a week, which is up </p><p>from 55 last year. </p><p><BR><BR> </p><p>Media specialists were the next group of hardest working people at 61 </p><p>hours ... down by four hours from last year's results. </p><p><BR><BR> </p><p>Creatives put in 58 hours a week, the same as in 1999. Account people </p><p>came last with an average of 56 hours per week. </p><p><BR><BR> </p><p>This year a new category was creative; media, print and television. </p><p><BR><BR> </p><p>This group of people too are a hardworking bunch, putting in about 60 </p><p>hours a week. </p><p><BR><BR> </p><p>A curate's egg? </p><p><BR><BR> </p><p>The effort to find the Best Sales Person and Best Sales Team of the year </p><p>turned into a dog's dinner. </p><p><BR><BR> </p><p>It was worse than the outcome to the Gore/Bush presidential election: </p><p>instead of a two-way tie, it ended up as a five-way tie in the </p><p>individual category and a six-way tie in the team section. </p><p><BR><BR> </p><p>Try as we might, there was no way MEDIA could find a clear-cut </p><p>winner. </p><p><BR><BR> </p><p>The poll of advertising, marketing and media executives turned into the </p><p>biggest dead heat of all times. </p><p><BR><BR> </p><p>In the Best Sales Person category, the winners were: Star TV's Susan </p><p>McAteer, (last year's winner) Cheong Shin Keong of TVB, Peter Jeffery of </p><p>Reader's Digest, The Economist's Rupert Harrow and Jonathan Kenny of the </p><p>IHT. </p><p><BR><BR> </p><p>Best Sales Teams were: National Geographic, TVB, The Economist, Star TV, </p><p>Reader's Digest and CNN. </p><p><BR><BR> </p><p>CNN, meanwhile, was voted as having the best proprietary research in </p><p>television, while Reader's Digest won the corresponding prize in print. </p><p><BR><BR> </p>
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