Like this article? PLEASE +1 it! Evan Signature
Evan Carmichael Top Header about About Home Profiles articles Tools forums inspirational quotes About facebook Twitter YouTube Blog
Share for a Cause











Engagement is an Inside Job

Guest post by: Jim Clemmer

Article Overview: When faced with major organizational problems, managers often hire consultants to help provide a solution. The consultant will usually interview people, run focus groups, and gather input from a variety of sources. Many good ideas are sifted through and the most relevant one presented to management along with the consultant's recommended action plan.

Free Download - You Can't Build a Team or Organization Different from You By Jim Clemmer
Name: Email:

Engagement is an Inside Job

"The man who gets the most satisfactory results is not always the man with the most brilliant single mind, but rather the man who can best coordinate the brains and talents of his associates." - Sir William Alton Jones, 18th Century English Philologist and Jurist When faced with major organizational problems, managers often hire consultants to help provide a solution. The consultant will usually interview people, run focus groups, and gather input from a variety of sources. Many good ideas are sifted through and the most relevant one presented to management along with the consultant's recommended action plan.

As a company that does a lot of this kind of work, we don't find the practice objectionable! What saddens us is how frequently the ideas that most excite managers are ones that have existed inside the organization for years. Yet managers are often hearing them for the first time. Or they are finally paying attention because the ideas are coming from outside experts. This points to a major failure of leadership within the organization.

In such cases, managers often will have tried to solicit ideas using various formalized approaches, such as suggestion boxes. These are rarely effective. A disgruntled staff member once put a sign on a suggestion box that summed up the consensus view of this approach: "Please don't put any more ideas in here. The handle is broken and it won't flush." Instead, the organization needs to focus on the leadership values of partnership, participation, and involvement. Without these values there is no system that can foster the communication necessary to keep ideas flowing.

Success Profiles studied 150 companies to understand the impact of "a business excelling in Feedback and Engagement where employees work each day in an environment where their feedback is elicited, valued, and acted upon." They found the companies that best met this description experienced revenue growth many times higher than those companies with low levels of feedback and engagement. They also studied organizational communication and employee access to information, and discovered that "companies demonstrating poor performance in this business practice had nearly twice the employee turnover as those companies achieving only average performance."

The evidence clearly shows that building partnerships through involvement and participation is the strong leadership that leads to high performance:

• "Companies that adopt employee involvement measures such as work teams and employee participation in decision making, are likely to find significant rewards on their bottom line," says a report produced by the University of Southern California's Marshall School of Business. They found that the average return on sales was 8.3% among low-involvement companies versus 10.4% among high-involvement firms. Stock price appreciation was 21% versus 44%.

• A study of franchise systems found that one of the greatest differentiators among the most successful franchisees was "a belief that employees deserve trust, enjoy responsibility and offer meaningful contributions to the business." One of the study's researchers concluded, "The managers who involve their employees were much more successful in the performance of their franchise than those who distrust employees and exclude them from decisions."

• A study by Success Profiles analyzed the relationship between effectively giving people authority to make decisions and compounded revenue growth. They found that companies who scored "Poor" in this key leadership practice had a 2.3% compound growth rate. Those companies that scored "Very Good" on giving authority to make decisions had an 11.1% rate of compound growth!

• In an article entitled "Happy Companies Make Happy Investments," Fortune reports that "you can make a killing by making nice." Companies on the annual 100 Best Companies to Work For lists had an average return on investment of 18.2%, versus the S&P 500 average of 5.7% during that same time period. "So managers, be kind and honest. Your employees and shareholders will thank you."

• A study by J. Howard & Associates in a large insurance company found that the 20% of managers that were seen as least inclusive ran the least profitable units. This contrasts with the 20% of managers considered to be the most inclusive who had units with 60% higher profitability. They also had lower turnover rates and higher customer satisfaction ratings.

Related Articles
  If you don’t take care of your employees… they won’t take care of your customers
  Global Employee Engagement Declining
  Think of Your Brand as an Orange
  Are you or your employees engaged with your organisation?
  A Basic Technique to Influence Others
  The ROI of Employee Engagement
  Social Media Management Tips
  Getting To Your Personal and Professional Best
  Eight Ways to Engage Employees and Power-Up Performance During a Recession
  Employee engagement -How do great leaders do it?
  Using Employee Engagement & Satisfaction Data to Strengthen Company Performance
  Revenue and Profitability
  IT Employees―Least Engaged…Again
  What Mask Are You Wearing?
  The Mind of the Customer
  Leading Lead Generation & Inside Sales
  Thriving on the challenges of change
  How Businesses Should Be Using Facebook Timeline
  Engaged Employees Increase Bottom Line Performance
  The demands of leadership

Home > Leadership > Jim Clemmer > Engagement is an Inside Job >
Article Tags: leadership
Referred by: http://www.searchengineworkshops.com

About the Author: Jim Clemmer
RSS for Jim's articles - Visit Jim's website

Jim Clemmer's practical leadership and personal growth books, workshops, and team retreats have helped hundreds of thousands of people worldwide improve personal, team, and organizational performance. Jim's web site, http://www.JimClemmer.com, has over 300 articles and dozens of video clips covering a broad range of topics on change, organization improvement, self-leadership, and leading others. Sign-up to receive Jim's popular monthly newsletter, and follow his leadership blog. Jim's international bestsellers include The VIP Strategy, Firing on All Cylinders, Pathways to Performance, Growing the Distance, The Leader's Digest and Moose on the Table. His latest book is Growing @ the Speed of Change.

Click here to visit Jim's website
Dashed Line

More from Jim Clemmer
Blame Management for Poor Service
Innovation Calls For Leadership
More Change Demands More Leadership
Strong Leaders are the Real Deal
Change Checkpoints and Improvement Milestones


Related Forum Posts
Evan's Engaged! Congrats! Evan's Engaged! Congrats! - CONGRATS! on the Engagement!
Re: What I'm reading this weekend - Sept 24, 2010 Re: What I'm reading this weekend - Sept 24, 2010 - Hi Evan, Another place where I could put the Zen ebook would be on my "Inside The Tiger's Cave" blog where I try to connect Japanese themes with online business...
Celebrity Response Celebrity Response - I have no clue how to get a product to a celebrity in the mannor you are speaking of 9but I have heard of those gift basket for celebrities). I did a loan for a client who began her home based business with a website she just threw together. She said she had the site for a year and never really paid much attention to it and one day decided to just start givng it her full attention. Inside of a few months she was contacted by a celebrity who purchased a product....well word of mouth must have flew as more and more celebrities were purchasing her products...and then she was asked to go on a talk show regarding her quick succes ( i suppose). I guess she just got lucky, but i am sure interested in hearing if anyone knows about this. I will be watching this post carefully.
Re: Which would you start: a Blog or Online Community? Re: Which would you start: a Blog or Online Community? - It is a difficult decision to make. Lets start it this way - What are you more interested in? Money? or Friends? or Both? If its purely Money, then Blog might be an appropriate answer. But consider this - It will be people (visitors) that will bring traffic to your blog and then Money will follow. This will be possible after a time and during this time it will be your friends who will be the starters. If you are looking for friends only, then its true that not many will be interested in knowing how you have beaten them in the game or the other way round. So it will be preferable to have a Forum where they can share ideas with you and others. But you can share your insider knowledge with them and invite comments from your Blog. You can also put up information on what others (including your friends) don't know about Tennis. The blog you create can provide News, Inside Information and also Techniques that can be used by the new entrants in the world of Tennis.
She Wins, You Win: The Most Important Rules Every Businesswo She Wins, You Win: The Most Important Rules Every Businesswo - She Wins, You Win: The Most Important Rules Every Businesswoman Needs to Know Gail Evans, 2003 Also author of Play Like A Man, Win Like A Woman Inside jacket: Every time a woman succeeds in business, every other woman's chances of succeeding in business increase. Every time a woman fails in business, every other woman's chances of failure increases. Gail realized that one of the most important elements of the men's game, which was missing from the women's, was support: The boys know how to take care of one another. In order to create lasting success, women need to help one another and band together as a team. TOC The Woman's Team Why you must play on the woman's team How to join the team Tips for the team 1. Be a mentor 2. Rainmake 3. Uncover and share information 4. Keep quiet 5. Unite with all women at all times 6. Make team-related choices 7. Weave a female web Challenges of the Team Twelve team members to watch out for The eleven most common team questions (and answers) Conclusions Acknowledgements My own view Haven't read this yet, but it seems like she's advocating an "Us against them" mentality. Neverthless, networking with fellow women - and men! - only makes good sense.


Share this article with your friends. Fund someone's dream.

Leave a comment below or share on the left and you'll help support entrepreneurs in Africa through our partnership with Kiva. Over $50,000 raised and counting - Please keep sharing! Learn more.



Featured Article

Bottom Footer



Newsletter

Get advice & tips from famous business
owners, new articles by entrepreneur
experts, my latest website updates, &
special sneak peaks at what's to come!
Name:
Email:
Popular Articles

How to Set Sales Goals that Work

Setting Goals for your Home Based Business

Suggestions

Email us your ideas on how to make our
website more valuable! Thank you Sharon
from Toronto Salsa Lessons / Classes for
your suggestions to make the newsletter
look like the website and profile younger
entrepreneurs like Jennifer Lopez.