We have in our “interesting read file” a great article, The 3 Fears Employees Have About Engagement — and How to Confront Them. The article was written by Chris Powell of TLNT | Talent Management and HR. It was written so well that we wanted to share the main gist of it with all of you. Chris hit the right points about employee engagement, so we figured we wouldn’t reinvent the wheel. Here’s a bit of what Chris had to say.
______________________________________________________________
Employee engagement initiatives don’t have to be stressful. Too many
times, we’ve seen organizations dragging their feet on engagement work. And we
get it; change is hard, and a new
engagement initiative can mean big changes in culture and operations
at an organization. But, those changes result in very good things — like better
retention, more satisfied employees, higher productivity, and a healthier
bottom line.
In many cases, the source of stress is actually unfounded fears. Here
are the most common fears we see at the companies we’ve worked with, along with
some pointers on how to successfully manage them.
1. Fear of the unknown
If you’re considering an employee engagement initiative, it’s probably
because you believe people are disengaged at your organization. You’re losing
employees or productivity is down. But what if it’s even worse than you think
it is? What if you
survey employees and the results spell out exactly what they don’t
like about working there?
For many leaders, contemplating those questions are a fast track to
stress. They get frozen by fear of what they don’t know and what might be
uncovered by an employee survey. And that simply compounds the
problem, especially if any announcement about improving engagement was made to
the employee population.
The reality:
It’s impossible to manage engagement without knowing your baseline. It may be
an eye-opener to see results from a survey, but you can’t change without it.
You know you want to improve engagement at your organization, so keep in mind
that knowing the specifics will help you manage it more effectively.
2. Fear of irrelevance
Some HR departments hold off on engagement initiatives because they may
think that employee engagement is a passing fad or another box to check off.
They may resist implementing a change because they think in the next year or
two there will be another trend to chase after.
The reality:
Employee engagement initiatives get proven results. When Gallup
performed a meta-analysis on its Q12 measure, it found that engaged
organizations perform better. It describes the relationship between engagement
and performance as “substantial” and that this relationship is applicable
across organizations.
Employee engagement represents an opportunity to coordinate employee
attitudes and business goals for long-term success.
3. Fear of extra work
Once an organization commits to doing an employee engagement survey and
gets the results, it faces a critical question: Who will do the work to improve
engagement? Not doing anything is even worse than not surveying in the first
place; it only gets employees’ hopes up that something might change, and when
it doesn’t, they can be even more disengaged.
The reality: The results you get from your
employee survey will provide a path you can follow to boost engagement, but
remember that the path is made up of many small steps. It’s impossible to
change engagement levels overnight, and there’s no reason to try to do so. Managers
are often on the front line when it comes to instituting engagement efforts, so
find ways to educate and empower them to take on engagement-boosting efforts as
part of their work.
Thinking about your business objectives and the role employees play in
achieving them can help ease some of the stress around engagement. An
engagement initiative can help identify things managers need to know to drive
performance and keep them in front of problems before they happen.
Employee engagement is not a switch you can turn on. It’s a series of
small steps that the entire organization must take over time to achieve change.
The process doesn’t have to be hard; it simply takes a commitment from people
at all levels to make changes in the way the company operates internally.
__________________________________________________________
At
Tweed-Weber, we make implementing an Employee Engagement Survey easy. We can
help you Know More, so you can Do More. Call us toll-free at
1-800-999-6615, email us at mail@tweedweber.com
and/or visit us on the web at www.tweedweber.com.
Also, be sure to follow us on LinkedIn (Tweed-Weber, Inc.) and Twitter
(@TweedWeber).
No comments:
Post a Comment