Clients do not come first. Employees
come first. If you take care of your employees, they will take care of the
clients. – Richard Branson
Writing for Talent Management and HR (http://bit.ly/1KWCe2t ), John Hollon cites a survey
concerning the state of employee engagement. Among his finding that employers
need to pay attention to include: More than 54 percent of employees have felt
frustrated about work; only 38 percent of workers strongly agree that their
manager has established a strong working relationship with them; some forty
percent say they don’t get their company’s vision, or worse yet, have never
seen it; nearly 67 percent of American workers can name at least one thing that
would prevent them from taking any kind of risk at work.
Intuitively,
many leaders know that employee engagement is critical to the success of their
organization. Sadly, many employees feel that their leaders in management are
out of touch. In fact, forty percent in the cited survey said they don’t get
their company’s vision or haven’t even seen it. How is this possible?
Let’s be
clear- a mission or vision statement hanging on a wall in some obscure place in
the break room is not employee engagement. Yes, a mission statement is
important. It’s important that your employees understand your vision and the
role they play in seeing it fulfilled. But that alone will not suffice.
At times
this is a concept lost on many leaders. Crystalizing a key point on this topic
is the former president of Starbucks International, Howard Behar. In his book, It’s Not About The Coffee, he writes,
“At Starbucks we’re in the human service business, not the customer service
business.” That’s the distinction. Behar adds, “I’ve always said, we’re not in
the coffee business serving people, we’re in the people business serving
coffee.”
Employee
engagement begins with leadership engagement. Employee engagement begins with
leaders who are engaged in the lives of the people who make the mission of the
work possible. It’s that simple and it’s that difficult. It takes work. It
means that as a leader you have to come out from behind your desk and get
connected to your people. So what does leadership engagement look like and what
are some core characteristics? Here are three for your consideration.
Leadership engagement is proactive.
So long as
your approach to employee engagement is a reactionary one – one that responds
only during a crisis- it does not qualify as a model of employee engagement.
Leadership engagement, for example, says that the health and well-being of your
people is important and an investment in them and will include a wellness
program because you know that when your employees are healthy they will be more
productive.
There are
many ways to be proactive and engage your employees but sitting back and
waiting to put out the next fire is not one of them. Your mission statement
means little to your people so long as your commitment to them is an
afterthought.
Leadership engagement is personal
A smart
leader understands that people are your most appreciable asset. You can have
the best business plan in the world, and the best mission statement to go along
with it, but without people you are going nowhere. Leaders who excel at
employee engagement understand this principle and take to heart the importance
of building meaningful relationships. Your connection to your customer/clients
flows through your employees. It’s so much easier for your employee to advocate
for your brand and your product when the relationship with its leadership is
strong.
Make it a
practice of your leadership to get to know your people and build relationships.
At the end of the day your people want to know that you care about them and not
just the bottom line.
Leadership engagement is a practical
Employee
engagement works best when at the end of the day it’s practical. Your
engagement with your people is critical but is it must be practical in its
application. For example; if communication within your organization is lacking
and information is not reaching the right people in a timely fashion; a
workshop on retirement options on Monday at 9:00 a.m. may not be the most
urgent event on the calendar.
Leadership
engagement is all about knowing the pulse of your organization, understanding
the needs of your people, and cutting through the layers of bureaucracy to get
results. Never underestimate the power of being practical.
Employee
engagement issues will continue to be front and center in most organizations.
There is always room for improvement. A commitment to employee engagement
begins when leaders are engaged with their people.
What do you
say?
© 2016 Doug
Dickerson
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