The level at which a business can "engage" its employeesis what determines its internal success. Yet, employee engagement has consistently averaged less than 33 percent over the past four years, according to a 2015 Gallup survey of more than 80,000 adults in the United States.
Still, the root of the problem isn’t simply a lack of effort. Rather, many leaders are not even making employee engagement a priority -- they're not, well, engaging with engagement.
Here are four ways leaders can improve on that goal:
Many people in charge get into the habit of analyzing employee engagement as a "one-and-done" process. In fact, 98 percent of CEOs only look at annual employee engagement surveys once a year and don't discuss the matter with their employees, according to a December 2015 Motivosity survey that sampled 357 of the Inc. 5000 list.
An ongoing effort has to begin on day one. Instead of in-person onboarding programsthat put new hires tosleep, incorporate technology like CovertHR to build engagement into even the earliest stages of the employee lifecycle. CovertHR online activities allow employees to have fun and socialize while they're completing tasks.
When new team members are introduced to an engaged environment and process, theyfeel more comfortable amplifying an engaged culture.
The lack of employee engagement is as much an employer’s problem as it is HR’s. So, why are a majority leaders relying on HR to fix the problem? The 2015 Motivosity survey indicated that 70 percent of CEOs surveyed were delegatingculture and engagement problems to HR.
Not surprisingly, it takes an engaged team to be actively involved in fixing employee-engagement issues. Instead of just assigning tasks to HR to fix, involve managersand employees whopossess natural engaging characteristics. present the problem and brainstorm together to come up with solutions that benefit everyone. Instead of delaying the process, or having HR come seeking approval for changes, be involved in the solution yourself.
It’s no secret -- leaders acknowledge just how important employee feedback is. 58003
Additionally, only a minority (38 percent) agreed that hearing from employees once a year throughan annual survey is sufficient to giveorganizations the timely insights they need.
So, the message is thatleaders dorecognize listening to employees as being important, yet the way they typically do that is inefficient.
Instead of sending out a survey (that no one responds to), start with an open discussion with employees. Let people freely speak their minds, and take notes on the feedback they offer. Hearing what people genuinely have to say will help you kick employee engagement off to a positive start.
At the same time, be mindful of those who are less comfortable in a large group setting. After the forum concludes,send out an anonymous survey giving theseemployees the chance to elaborate on topics they weren’t comfortable saying in front of a group.
To take employee engagement yet a step further, management and coworkers should engage on a personal level. As the company leader, put yourself in situations that will allow you to engage in activities that work for the company's culture.Considersmall-group lunches that have a "noworktalk:rule.
Or do what Namely CEOregularly Matt Strazdoes:moveyour desk to be in the middle of the action with the team.
A company is only as good as the employees behind it. That is why employers should promote innovation on a regular basis. Do this at your company by presenting problems to yourteams; givethem the opportunity to take risks (and don't reprimand them for failures).
A fun and productive way to do this is to present the same problem to different teams and promptthem to solve it. 58003
This engagement will rub off on employees and ultimately create a more productive work environment that allows constant collaboration -- making employees feel engaged all-year-round.
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