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How High a Priority Are Your Employees? Are You Sure?
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| Guest post by: Pat Lynch |
Article Overview: Leaders who want their organizations to be successful first and foremost must focus on helping their employees become fully successful. When employees are fully successful, their productivity skyrockets, and customers are delighted because the organization is able to deliver, or over-deliver, its promised value.
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Free Download - Three Key Elements for Addressing Organizational Challenges Effectively By Pat Lynch |
How High a Priority Are Your Employees? Are You Sure?
One question that I often hear these days is, “What can we do to be successful in today’s economy?” My answer comes in the form of two questions:
1. “How high a priority are your employees?” AND
2. “Would your employees agree with your answer?”
Leaders who want their organizations to be successful first and foremost must focus on helping their employees become fully successful. When employees are fully successful, their productivity skyrockets, and customers are delighted because the organization is able to deliver, or over-deliver, its promised value.
I learned this secret to high productivity early in my career when I worked for FedEx. Fred Smith, the founder and CEO of the company, anchored the corporate culture on this simple philosophy: People – Service – Profit. Fred’s belief was that if you take care of your people, they will provide excellent service, which will increase profits. I have yet to see any evidence to disprove his belief. To the contrary, I have seen company after company adopt some version of this philosophy. Why? Because it works!
How do you make employees a high priority? I developed a research-based tool called the Employer Performance Scorecard that identifies four areas that influence employees’ perceptions of how they are treated. I encourage my clients to use this scorecard to help them assess employees’ perspectives about how they are treated on a day-to-day basis. High scores mean you place a high priority on employees; low scores mean you have work to do!
Here are the four areas and representative elements in each one:
1. Managers and supervisors
The #1 reason why employees leave organizations and why they join unions is dissatisfaction with the immediate supervisor. You can help employees be successful if you ensure their supervisors are meeting their needs effectively. This requires that you set your supervisors up for success (e.g., provide the proper training and tools) so they are able to manage effectively.
2. Organizational culture
Employees who feel they are part of something larger than themselves and that their views are respected are likely to perceive that they are valued. You can help employees be fully successful if you ensure they have “voice” (i.e., they feel they are heard) and that they understand how they contribute to the organization’s mission or vision.
3. Organizational processes
You increase employees’ ability to be fully successful when you ensure that workplace decisions and processes are procedurally fair, that communication is two-way, and that leaders truly “walk the talk” – i.e., their behaviors are consistent with their words.
4. Rewards and recognition
Research consistently shows that pay generally is not THE reason for employee dissatisfaction, disengagement, or turnover as long as there is a reasonable level of compensation. Employee commitment to their own success (and by extension, that of the organization) skyrockets when workers are recognized for their contributions to the organization. There are hundreds of no- and low-cost ways to recognize your workers in ways that are meaningful to them. Truly, a little recognition goes a LONG way!
How would you answer the two questions I posed at the beginning of this message? Smart employers will compare their answers with those of their employees, and take immediate action to address any discrepancies.
Article Tags: employee engagement, employee retention, organizational success, priorities
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About the Author: Pat Lynch RSS for Pat's articles - Visit Pat's website Pat Lynch, Ph.D., is President of Business Alignment Solutions, Inc., a consulting firm that helps clients maximize business results by aligning people, programs, and processes with organizational goals. Drawing on her unique combination of training and experience in finance, economics, management, and human resources, Pat provides her clients with practical advice and insights that enable them to achieve desired business outcomes. She has more than fifteen years of experience working with managers at all levels in the public, private, and non-profit sectors. A former university professor, Pat taught courses at the graduate and undergraduate levels. She has published articles in both academic and practitioner journals and presents regularly at academic and practitioner conferences. She earned a Ph.D. in personnel and employment relations with a minor in employment law following a career as a senior financial analyst for a major international corporation. For additional articles please visit our web site at www.BusinessAlignmentStrategies.com. You may contact Pat at articles@BusinessAlignmentStrategies.com or at (562) 985-0333. Click here to visit Pat's website 7 Tips to Prepare for the New NLRB Candid Conversations How to Drive the Political Correctness Elephant Out of Your Workplace 8 Obstacles to Public Sector Success The Gift of Your Talents Succession planning myths and realities |
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