Does your business pay attention to ways to improve your employee engagement? Employees that feel insignificant rarely make a significant contribution.
employee engagement
Employee engagement.
Like making employees feel they are making a significant contribution?
More than 100 studies have now found that the most engaged employees — those who report they’re fully invested in their jobs and committed to their employers — are significantly more productive, drive higher customer satisfaction and outperform those who are less engaged.
Related:  10 Ways Personal Development Can Improve Long-Term Success
A Towers Watson global workforce study found that only 20% of employees are truly engaged in their work — heart, and soul. As a student of management for over 40 years, I’m depressed by the fact that so many people find work depressing. Wow, that is a number that will impact business in lots of ways, yes?
Engaged employees who are satisfied with their jobs and feel that they’re making a contribution to their organizations and helping customers are more likely to work hard for their company’s success. It is therefore imperative for organizations to make sure that they achieve and retain high levels of employee engagement.
It’s a disconnect that serves no one well. So what’s the solution? Where is the win-win for employers and employees? Was it a pip template?
The answer is that great employers must shift the focus from trying to get more out of people, to investing more in them by addressing their needs, and to bring the best of themselves to work every day.
We have all heard the importance of developing engaged employees at our workplace, but too often the articles are full of theoretical discussion instead of practical steps to make it happen.
Here are some simple steps to consider when starting your program.
 

 Survey your employees

Establish a benchmark by conducting an employee survey that measures what matters to your employees. When conducting an employee engagement survey, commit to act on the results or don’t bother spending the time and money conducting the survey.
Survey as part of the planning and six months after launching the program to gauge the success of your initial planning and execution. External vendors can be used to ensure an objective survey is developed that won’t have unintended skewed results.

 

employee engagement ideas
Employee engagement ideas.

Employee engagement ideas … build a Business Case

Build the business case to show the financial benefits. Studies show that companies with strong employee engagement programs had improved financial performance, reduced attrition, and higher employee satisfaction. Each organization has different engagement drivers, and every organization needs to build their business case.

 

Offer the latest tools

Hiring similarly motivated teammates is extremely important.
Nothing is more demoralizing than being surrounded by mediocre people. It tells a worker that their employer doesn’t understand or value the work they’re doing.
Offering the best tools is crucial as well. “If you’re forced to work with pickaxes and shovels (Java, .NET), you quickly become disillusioned when the other team is operating jackhammers and trucks (Ruby, Python).”

Make it personal

 Ask people how they perform when they are not engaged versus when they are engaged and consider the implications for the organization. Then dig deeper to determine what contributes to that engagement.

 

Create a vision

Create a mutual vision of what an engaged culture can look like. Ultimately, you want the attitudes of your employees to generate behaviors that contribute to desired business results. It is key to acknowledge that each department or function may have different engagement drivers, so build in flexibility.

 

Don’t micromanage

We advise managers to the only plan for a few weeks in advance. Trying to design a big system upfront is a fool’s game that requires employees to be fortune tellers… and forcing them to be is going to make them discontent.
Don’t micro-manage or check in too frequently.

 

Build a strategic framework

Building from your vision, create a document that is easy to understand and that aligns the organization vision, values, and aligns desired behaviors with results.

 An example

Hilton Garden Inn operates on the premise that happy employees lead to happy guests. The company has invested heavily in training to give employees a sense of engagement with the brand. Alan Roberts, vice president for brand performance, notes that this is especially important since the vast majority of people working at the 544 Hilton Garden Inns around the world are employees of the various franchises.
“We need to push engagement through different initiatives to make them feel part of the organization, even though they don’t receive their paycheck from us,” Roberts says. role-play across the different properties. “We want to keep employees happy and on the same track,” Roberts says.

Team environment

employee engagement activities
Employee engagement activities.
Create a strong team environment. Strong employee engagement is dependent on how well employees get along, interact with each other and participate in a team environment.

 

Recognize desired behaviors

Build your recognition programs around desired results — both behaviors and business results. Focus on letting employees devote themselves to their strengths.

A second example

Hampton Hotels is a firm believer of the philosophy on ensuring that the 50,000-odd team members who work at Hampton Hotels properties use their strengths. “When people are passionate, they can deliver a memorable experience to guests,” says Gina Valenti, vice president of owner services at Hilton Worldwide.
In a bid to help its people do their job better and create connections, Hampton Hotels developed a Website to share content like videos and best practices and also allow individuals to seek support from their peers or share success stories.

 

Communicate, communicate, and communicate

This cannot be overemphasized. Make sure that communication is consistent and ongoing. Rarely do you over communicate?

 

Part of the process

Employees need to feel like they are part of the process, that their thoughts and ideas matter and that they have a voice in how their work is performed
 

 

Measure what counts

Metrics are essential for understanding adoption. Engagement metrics must first be aligned with the organizational goals and then embedded into senior leader performance plans. Build a balanced scorecard that measures business results AND desired behaviors. Incorporate the results into your business planning process and performance plans.

 

 

Make managers a priority

If the managers do not buy-in, the program is doomed to failure. Spend extra time ensuring they understand and endorse the program. Leaders need to see that engaged employees can directly tie to their business results and make a difference for them: attrition, productivity, customer satisfaction, etc. Build engagement in their performance reviews.

The bottom line

Once business leaders recognize that employee engagement is directly related to optimal customer experience and will have an impact on their bottom line, they are more willing to invest in it. But they should be careful not to spend all their allocated dollars on one-time initiatives but focus more on their individual employees, making each feel valued.
At the end of the day, how you treat people is what they’ll remember. Employee’ engagement is built each day.
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So what’s the conclusion? The conclusion is there is no conclusion.  There is only the next step. And that next step is completely up to you. But believe in the effectiveness of employee engagement. And put it to good use in adapting to changes in your business environment.
 
It’s up to you to keep improving your ability to mentor and coach. Lessons are all around you. In many situations, history may be providing the ideas and or inspiration. But the key is in knowing that it is within you already.
 
It’s up to you to keep improving your coaching and experience from all around in your environment.
 
All you get is what you bring to the fight. And that fight gets better every day you learn and apply new lessons.
When things go wrong, what’s most important is your next step.
Test. Learn. Improve. Repeat.
Are you devoting enough energy continually improving your continuous learning?
Do you have a lesson about making your learning better you can share with this community? Have any questions or comments to add in the section below?
 
Mike Schoultz is the founder of Digital Spark Marketing, a digital marketing and customer service agency. With 40 years of business experience, he blogs on topics that relate to improving the performance of your business. Find them on G+Twitter, and LinkedIn.  
Digital Spark Marketing will stretch your thinking and your ability to adapt to change.  We also provide some fun and inspiration along the way. Call us for a free quote today. You will be amazed at how reasonable we will be.
  

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