I had the opportunity recently to discuss employee engagement with several Scandinavian executives. It was uplifting to note the focus and attention this area is now receiving. This is an acknowledgment of the payoff gained from working in a targeted fashion with employee engagement.
Everyone has their own stories where a division, department, or manager succeeded in raising their standards - and where one can subsequently see how this has affected the actual performance.
When we ask Scandinavian executives, they all indicate that the challenge of motivating employees and managers is top of their list of factors that would advance their organization and create results. But why? Because a high level of engagement is an expression of a healthy and well-functioning organization, where the employees buy into the company's direction and objectives.
But also because the high level of engagement among employees goes hand in hand with a focus on the customer experience. Try to think yourself of as having the best customer experience that you have had over the past week. Is your immediate recollection one of a motivated employee, who went that extra mile in terms of service? I believe that the answer is yes.
My own best experience recently was with an employee who was smiling, proactive, and very interested in me as a guest. I needed assistance in 'saving' a critical travel situation, and the engagement of the employee really shined through in the treatment I received - and my experience as a customer was, quite simply, fantastic!
Despite being in agreement that this is an important area, the work of creating increased engagement is currently harder than ever.
Firstly, the bar has been raised in general. Quite simply there are more organizations working in a structured fashion in this area, and expectations from employees have also increased accordingly. Those factors which were previously a powerful tool in increasing motivation among employees are now an expected quality. I experience for example that regular feedback on performance is an expected quality, especially among younger generations.
Secondly, we are constantly being challenged by the changes, which rain down upon companies.
Managers can easily find themselves in a bottleneck throughout this entire process. And note as well that employees today start looking for their next job much more quickly than previously. We should take care of our managers, support them, and develop them for the new role.
Regardless of whether one is working with annual engagement surveys, pulse surveys, ongoing surveys, smiley surveys, or a combination of these, the challenge is to create an understanding of the importance of employee engagement as one of the cornerstones of an organization. That engagement is 'Always on', as Josh Bersin (Deloitte) says, and is now an integrated part of working lives - for both managers and employees.
My experience is that when it comes to working with employee engagement, organizations are very different. It is not a case of "one size fits all".
Employee engagement is more important than ever. It can be hard work, but the rewards are substantial. Let's get inspired by the best in this area and get started!
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