Employee Engagement (A Challenge)
An interesting incident occurred during a
workshop which I recently delivered for employees
working in a busy hotel. During an ideas session on
how to improve business performance, one talented,
but extremely de-motivated employee, surprisingly
suggested several positive things which would make a
difference. When later asked why he had not
previously told his manager about these ideas, his
response was fairly blunt, but very revealing: "I
don't get paid from the neck up."
Here was a guy who was so disengaged that he
saw his role as being to do, but not to think. You
might wonder why he stayed, or even why he was
allowed to stay, but the fact was, he was there and
was not contributing as much as he could to the
hotel. Although an extreme case, he is far from
alone; respected national and international research
commonly shows that as few as 30% of employees are
actively engaged in the companies they work for. It
is a disturbing thought and not something to be
ignored; lack of employee engagement is a hidden cost
and it is simply not possible to achieve business
goals or deliver excellence unless employees roll in
behind that ambition.
Employee engagement has emerged as an
important issue in recent years and whilst it might
be a current 'in' term, it's not necessarily a
totally original concept. Issues like teambuilding,
motivation, and empowerment have always been
important and engagement is essentially an umbrella
concept which pulls all these strands together. An
engaged employee is not only happy in their job
though, but translates that satisfaction into higher
productivity. They believe in what the business is
trying to achieve, are eager to help realise those
goals and play an active role in making the company a
success. Their job has meaning for them and they see
a real purpose in what they do. As such, employee
engagement involves addressing any issue which
impacts on an individual's ability or willingness to
give their all and concerns a range of factors such
as individual motivation and commitment, team effectiveness,
overall employee
satisfaction and productivity. But what
can be practically done to more fully engage
employees?
This is perhaps one of the most common
questions that I get asked; in fact, it has arisen in
one shape or form on every leadership course that I
have ever delivered. So much so that it has become
something of a personal quest to try and define what
the key drivers of engagement are. There is no magic
pill of course, but from comparing best practices
seen in companies where engagement is high, I have
come up with a list of twelve factors which all
leaders need to be concerned with:
It should be obvious that no one thing will,
on its own, fully address the engagement issue, but I
have noticed that when leadership is strong,
engagement levels tend to be higher, so effective
leadership is certainly the most critical first step.
As well as their own capabilities, to really engage
their people, leaders also need to consider the
remaining drivers:
Culture is intangible for sure but it has a
major impact on the feel or climate in any
organization. Whilst there is no 'right' culture,
there are certain environments which build
engagement, whereas others do the opposite and
leaders can play an important role in building a
culture which draws employees in rather than pushes
them away.
Relates to the make-up of teams and all
leaders need to pay close attention to how they
recruit people into existing teams. Employees do not
necessarily all have to like each other, nor will
they, but there must be a general 'fit' between all
members; otherwise it is hard to engage them because
who wants to work alongside a bunch of people with
whom you have little or nothing in common.
In this context means ensuring that
employees understand both aspirations and
expectations. Aspirations relate to the big picture
and, as a basic building block of
engagement, leaders need to help employees to fully
understand where the organization is going and how
they can contribute to that. Clarity is also required
as to what is expected of employees, as nothing will
destroy engagement faster than conflicting directions
or shifting roles and
responsibilities.
Contributes to engagement in a number of
ways. First, most employees want to build their
skills and talents at work, so to increase
engagement, leaders need to ensure that there are
relevant and regular opportunities for personal
development. Equally, all employees should be
similarly competent at what they are expected to do.
If not, others in the team have to take up the slack
and this creates resentment, or worse still conflict,
which can chip away at engagement.
Levels of cooperation in teams are both a
driver of engagement and a reflection of it. When
people work well together they build bonds and trust
increases and this in turn improves general
engagement levels because most people prefer to work
in collaborative environments.
Controlling how individuals behave within
teams is critical to engagement because when certain
team members are allowed to step out of line without
consequence, this serves as a de-motivating factor
for engaged employees as they question why they
should bother. Equally, too controlling an
environment stifles engagement because people sense a
lack of freedom and autonomy.
Is always key to the levels of engagement
seen and where communication is regular, open,
two-way and more importantly effective, employees
tend to be more engaged.
For most employees having a sense of
challenge in their work is vital to how engaged they
feel with the hotel. When work feels repetitive or
mundane, employees naturally feel less engaged so
leaders need to find ways to introduce a sense of
challenge for employees.
The manner in which conflict is managed can
have a major impact on how engaged employees are
likely to be. Constructive conflict, which leads to
new ideas and better solutions, should be encouraged,
but well managed, so that employees feel that they
can speak their minds or contribute in an appropriate
manner. Destructive conflict, on the other hand,
which adds no value should be dealt with promptly by
the leader; a failure to do so will impact engagement
levels as most people hate to work in a poisoned
atmosphere.
In the broadest sense is about people
feeling rewarded for the contribution they make. Pay
and conditions of course an important element in
this, but things like constructive feedback and
positive recognition when deserved are just as
powerful in terms of building engagement.
How change is managed can also impact on the
levels of engagement seen. Too little change can
result in stagnation which destroys engagement, yet
too much of it, or too much meaningless change can
simply frustrate employees and causes them to
disengage.
Apart from raising their own game, the best
leaders also pay close attention to these factors
because they know that in doing so they will not only
build engagement levels but more importantly that
this will in turn lead to greater productivity and
ultimately better results. They understand that
nothing can ever truly be achieved if employees do
not buy into the hotel's aims and that lifting each
individual's level of engagement, even by a small
amount, can make a big difference; they really
believe in the value of individual contributions or
as Anita Roddick, founder of The Body Shop, once
said, 'If you think you're too small to have an
impact, try going to bed with a mosquito.'
Taken from www.pakspectator.com
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