Yet another large company is facing a potential low-wage worker mutiny: Weight Watchers. According to a Tuesday New York Times report from labor reporter Steven Greenhouse, workers at the leading weight loss company have “have inundated an internal company Web site with complaints about poor wages and being pressured to work many hours unpaid.”
“They know my love for the program, but I can’t say we’re treated right,” Weight Watchers employee Tammy Williams told Greenhouse. “We are professionals, we have to dress nice, but we are paid less than kids who work at McDonald’s.”
Williams is a professional Weight Watchers “leader”—a former customer who has successfully lost weight on the program and now guides new customers through the weight loss process. An official leader recruitment page promises applicants “personal satisfaction in helping others” and “flexible hours … compensation and benefits.”
Weight Watchers’ strategy of cultivating loyalty among employees and identifying them as “leaders” is far from unique. Many jobs—particularly low-wage service sector jobs, staffed predominantly with women—have similar approaches to labor management. This is an element of what sociologists call “emotional labor“: this sort of labor encompasses not just the work that goes into demonstrating a particular feeling in front of customers, but also the ways in which managers will try to condition a particular emotional state into their employees.
To accomplish that goal, employers might change worker job titles to reflect a particular workplace philosophy. This may be the reason why Weight Watchers employees are known as “leaders,” and Walmart employees are called “associates.” The fast food outlet Subway calls its workers “sandwich artists.”









