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Engagement: Seven Ways to Increase It
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
For more than twenty years I've
been doing an exercise in the opening session of supervisory
skills training programs. Participants identify a time when it was
great to come to work.
Then they develop a list of why it
was great. In other words, they make a list of the characteristics
of a great workplace.
The lists were always the same. The
words vary a little bit from one class and group to another. But
for twenty-plus years I've listened to people in class tell me
about great workplaces they've experienced and what makes them
great.
My trainees describe teams that are
highly productive. They're proud of the work they did in those
teams and what the teams accomplished.
They describe their own behavior
and feelings, too. They were excited. They worked hard. They came
up with ideas to make things better. They pitched in. That's the
kind of workforce you want.
You want engaged employees because
they produce better results. There's been a lot of research on
this, but one powerful study was done in 2006 by ISR, a consulting
firm based in Australia.
They surveyed more than 664,000
employees from around the world and correlated engagement with
financial performance. Over a one-year period, the operating
income of high engagement firms increased by almost 20 percent
while income for low engagement firms fell by almost a third.
Other research has found positive
results that aren't strictly accounting measures. Engaged
employees treat customers better. They're less likely to leave for
greener pastures.
What I've learned in decades of
watching trainees describe these "times when it was great to
come to work" is that they describe a consistent set of
characteristics for great work situations. Here's my list.
Safe and Friendly Workplace
People want their workplace to be
safe. They want to be safe from physical dangers, from unchecked
bosses and from workplace bullies and jerks.
People also want to work with
people they get along with and who pull their weight. Sirota
Survey Intelligence polled 34,330 employees on this issue. They
found a 73 percent engagement rate, almost double the national
average, in companies where employees felt that management was
taking steps to remove poor performers.
Bosses can be the problem instead
of part of the solution. In a study presented at the Academy of
Management convention in 2007, only about a fifth of employees
responding said that a bad boss they worked for was either
punished or removed.
Interesting and Meaningful Work
People find work interesting when
they're striving for excellence or mastery. They find work
interesting when they're learning and developing. Sometimes the
interest comes from competition with other teams, competition with
"standards" or competition with the team's own prior
performance.
People in great work situations
describe their work as meaningful. It might be meaningful because
it's intrinsically important, the way a police officer might
describe what he or she does. Or it might be meaningful because of
contributions to the company or to other people.
Clear and Reasonable
Expectations
This is pretty simple. People want
to know what they're supposed to do and they want to be able to do
it. They also want to know where they stand.
It's great if people know what
their company stands for. But it's more important that their
supervisor sets clear and reasonable expectations for their work.
Regular and Usable Feedback
In a great workplace, feedback is a
way of life. That's because it improves both performance and
morale.
In a 1988 study, researchers tested
how much feedback, goal setting and incentives affected
performance. Feedback alone increased performance by 50 percent
over the baseline.
In great work places people who
aren't performing up to expectations get early feedback that helps
them correct. Effective feedback is limited to behavior and
performance, leaving out words like "motivation" or
"attitude" or "personality."
Feedback also improves morale. In
2006 researchers led by Teresa Amabile at Harvard found that
feedback was one of the key behaviors that result in a perception
that the team leader is supportive.
Fairness
People want to be treated fairly by
their company and by their boss. They don't necessarily want to
make a ton of money or have the best benefits. But their pay and
benefits should match up well with other people doing similar
work.
The boss delivers the consequences
of behavior and performance. People describe that as fair when
behavior or performance and consequences match up.
Be careful not to confuse treating
everyone fairly with treating everyone the same. In fact, treating
people differently according to their behavior and performance is
the key to fairness.
Consistency
People will tolerate a wide variety
of styles in their leaders. But they want their leaders and the
system to be consistent.
They don't want their boss to have
mood swings. They don’t want a different reward system or
initiative every time they turn around. Every day when they come
to work, people want to have a pretty good idea of what it's going
to be like.
Maximum Control Possible over
Work Life
People want to make as many basic
decisions about their work as possible. They're not unreasonable
about this.
Workers expect the boss to give
more freedom to experienced workers and top performers. But they
value a boss who helps them develop so they merit more of that
freedom in the future.
Supervisors are Key
Supervisors make the difference.
Companies create reward systems and offer benefit packages. But
the supervisor has more to do with the quality of day-to-day work
than any other person or influence.
If you have a bad boss, you will
have a terrible workplace. If you have a great boss you can have a
great workplace in the most awful and dysfunctional of companies.
This article first appeared in the Three
Star Leadership Blog.
It is based on material in Wally's Working
Supervisor Support Kit.
Wally
Bock helps organizations improve productivity and morale, as
well as deal with the challenges of massive Boomer retirements. He
is the author of Performance Talk (http://www.performancetalk.com/).
He writes the Three Star Leadership blog (http://blog.threestarleadership.com/),
coaches individual managers, and is a popular speaker at meetings
and conferences in the United States and elsewhere. Read
more about him in his own words: http://www.threestarleadership.com/learnwally.htm
and contact
him at email: wally@threestarleadership.com
and website: http://www.threestarleadership.com
.
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Short summary
Employees consistently describe what makes a great workplace.
Keywords
and relevant phrases
Accountability, commitment, consistency, control, customer
service, development, emotions, engagement, expectations,
fairness, feedback, innovation, management, mastery, meaning,
morale, motivation, performance, pride, productivity,
responsibility, rewards, safety, skills, supervision, support,
teamwork, training, working environment, workplace.
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