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Don't Try to Make Your Workers Happy
Copyright © 2007 Wally Bock
Used with permission of the author (http://www.threestarleadership.com/bookreviewpermissionform.htm)
Author: Wally Bock
Email: wally@threestarleadership.com
Website: http://www.threestarleadership.com
13 December 2007
You've heard the advice: if you
make your workers happy, then they'll be productive. It's
nonsense.
For years, soft-headed types have
looked at highly productive work groups and noticed something.
Workers in the top performing groups also had higher morale than
workers in other groups.
"Aha!" thought the
soft-heads, "happiness causes productivity." Never mind
that there's no good research to support that. Never mind that the
fields of business are littered with the dead bones of companies
that believed it.
Take the example of a small,
regional air carrier from some time ago. Company management
believed that if they made their workers happy, productivity and
profitability would follow. They set about doing the things they
thought would make their people happy.
They paid their people very well,
much more than other airlines. They gave them lots of perks on the
job. And they gave employees lots and lots and lots of paid time
off.
Workers got paid time off for just
about every holiday on anyone's calendar. They got paid time off
for their birthday, unless they worked. Then they got triple time.
There was lots of paid family leave. You get the idea.
Productivity didn't go up. The
airline was no more productive than the competition. But it was a
lot less profitable because it was paying a whole lot more than
competitors for the same amount of work. Eventually the airline
went out of business. Then the employees were very sad.
"Ok," you're thinking,
"If top performing groups are filled with workers who are
both happy and productive, and if happiness doesn't cause
productivity, it must be the other way around." Nope. It
turns out that some slave ships make pretty good time.
Consider the early years of the
Ford Motor Company. Henry Ford's vaunted assembly line set the
pace of work and it was a brisk pace indeed. Workers and their
families were scrutinized by Ford security and those of "poor
moral character" were let go.
The Ford assembly line wasn't a
happy place to work then. But it was very productive. It was so
productive, in fact, that Ford was able to buy vast holdings all
over the world without borrowing a penny. The profits from the
Model T were enough.
If you're starting to despair,
don't. Stay with me. Because we know what it takes to grow work
groups that are both productive and happy.
To be productive and happy, people
need to feel like they're being treated fairly. They want to make
enough money. They want their salary and benefit package to be
comparable to other people doing similar work within the company
and in other companies.
After that, though, monetary
rewards don't make a lot of difference. If people are being
treated fairly and paid enough by the company, it's their boss
that makes the big difference.
Jeff Immelt is now the CEO of
General Electric (GE). But his dad worked on the line for GE while
Jeff was growing up. Here's what Jeff Immelt says.
"When I would sit around the
kitchen table with my dad, I never knew who the CEO of GE was. I
knew my dad's boss. . . . [when he had a bad boss] He came home in
a bad mood, uncertain about the future. And when he had a good
boss, he was pumped."
That's the secret to a happy and
productive workforce. Give them good bosses up and down the line.
Don't concentrate on making your
workers happy or on making them productive. Instead concentrate on
making your bosses good.
Select your bosses, the people
responsible for group performance, from a pool of qualified and
engaged workers. Give them the training they need to be a good
boss. Give them regular and usable feedback on how they're doing
their job.
Then, help your new bosses become
good, experienced bosses. Keep training in basic one-on-one
leadership skills, but go beyond the training room. Help your
bosses get development opportunities where they can develop both
skills and vision. Help them connect with other bosses to discuss
leadership situations and issues.
It's no mystery, but it's not easy.
It takes time and resources. But building a cadre of great bosses
is the way you build workgroups with high morale and high
productivity. And those workgroups help you build a profitable
company for the ages.
Short summary
Job satisfaction has more to do with management skills than remuneration
packages or benefits.
Keywords
and relevant phrases
Appreciation, development, fairness, feedback, happiness,
leadership, management, morale, motivation, performance
management, productivity, profitability, remuneration, resources, responsibility,
reward, time, training.
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