yeah, that's all fine&dandy. let me provide a $25 service, for $10 =fuck me. yeah, I don't think so. you want people to care, you gotta pay them to care. a lot of people don't have an "interest" in there jobs, other than a paycheck.
This is possibly one of those
just me things. I grew up having grandfathers that lived through the raging 1920's and Depression struck 1930's. They all held the same work ethics. All of them taught me "if you go to work for someone else as a boss, you damn well earn that paycheck." It's not even about caring. You can learn something but not care about it. I've learned a lot from various jobs I've done. I don't care about most of it because I still get listed as "unskilled labor".
I kick myself for missing an opportunity my wife's dad offered. "I'll pay your way, go up to the 'local', tell 'em I sent you and give 'em my letter. I'll get your ass on as a certified millwright," He once told me. At that time they were taking on trainees & he knew three out of four of the instructors heading up the course, and knew I could have done it. In my defense, I missed it because I thought the way her brother in law and her sister talked they were looking to open up an Internet Cafe & local ISP. Turned out that was all bullshit talk. I could have easily done whatever that work required too.
How can I do whatever any work requires? I learn how to do it. Does that mean I care about the work, or the new skill/s I learn? No, not always. It simply means though I'm earning my paycheck from whoever happens to be a
boss. I can even work with folks I don't respect as people, but still respect their position of being supervisor. And all this while I was getting shit pay. So suggesting you need to pay people to care is silly to me. Because to me and how I see it, it's not about people caring, it's about people doing their job.
Of course, ultimately you may say that returns to caring. You might be correct. Although I still don't see doing your job as caring so much as simply doing your job.