Engaged Employees Are More Productive
Hopefully by now we all get it: this economy is challenging,
things are changing, and everyone is looking for ways to do more with less.
Unfortunately, as many companies struggle to adjust to this new reality,
opportunities are being missed. Often we are so focused on stretching an
organization’s financial and other resources that we become less effective in
managing our human resources.
Why do you think that is? A lot of the time, it’s just a matter of focusing on
the tangible rather than the intangible. If you can improve a machine’s output
by 10 percent, that’s obviously a good thing. But improving an employee’s
productivity…that’s much more difficult to turn into a percentage (or a dollar
figure).
Regardless, it is the manager’s job to get the most out of his or her employees.
And that goes far beyond counting hours or studying performance evaluations. How
do you get them to want to do more with less, work harder, and actually care?
You engage them in the process.
Engaged employees are invested in what they do and are committed to their own
success and to the success of the company. A disengaged employee will do what is
necessary to keep receiving a paycheck. An engaged employee will go the extra
mile. And the gap between the two can be the difference between the success and
failure of an organization.
Read on for five ways to build a more engaged – and thus more productive –
organization:
Regain focus. When you are under pressure to produce results, sometimes
you just need to step back and acknowledge that you and your team can’t do
everything. And chances are many activities eat up time but don’t add tremendous
value to the organization. Be merciless as you get rid of low priority tasks
that aren’t advancing the big-picture objectives of your group. The better your
team is able to focus on activities that are at the heart of what they do, the
happier, more engaged, and more productive they will be.
There’s a good possibility that regaining focus is something you’ve been
struggling to accomplish anyway…maybe for years. The recent perfect storm of bad
economic news might be a good opportunity to finally make it happen. Minds are
open. Limitations are being acknowledged. Hard choices are being made. The
timing might finally be right to make the case for getting back to basics.
Empower your people. Nothing kills engagement like not having the
authority or resources necessary to do the job at hand. Of course if your staff
feels powerless, frustrated, or micromanaged, they’ll be less effective. But
also consider how those feelings will influence morale, day in and day out.
Eliminate as much needless bureaucracy and as many levels of approval for things
that you possibly can. Weigh the importance of double or triple-checking every
task against what would happen if a mistake were to slip through. You’ve hired
people to do a job. It is important that they be allowed to do it without
feeling like they aren’t trusted or seen as capable.
Sometimes being a good manager means realizing that sometimes it really is
better to ask forgiveness than approval.
Communicate. Uncertainty will eat away at productivity from the inside
out. Keeping your folks in the dark about what is happening with the company
will lead to problems ranging from general anxiety and gossip to infighting and
résumé polishing. None of these are conducive to an engaged staff or a
productive working environment.
Even if there is nothing particularly consequential going on at the corporate
level, it is important to repeatedly communicate with your staff about how
things are going, what level of performance is expected, and what might be on
the horizon. Keeping them in the loop shows that your value their perspective
and respect their feelings. That makes them much more likely to be there for you
when you need performance that is beyond the ordinary call of duty.
Ask the experts. When it comes to employees' everyday responsibilities,
nobody knows the subject better than they do. Never underestimate how much there
is to be learned from your team.
And don’t just observe. Interact. Ask questions. Let them speak.
Hold a small, informal, low-pressure meeting where your people can tell you what
ails them. Ask about their big frustrations. Then ask about their small ones.
Not only will you develop a more intimate perspective on the work they do, you
can also find opportunities to identify and tear down productivity roadblocks
that you might not even realize are there.
Just remember, your job is to listen, guide discussion, and find ways to use
your position to advocate for better ways of doing things. Doing so can lead to
great, innovative ideas that save money, eliminate waste, and improve
productivity at every level.
Manage the clock. Asking people to put in long hours is a great tool but
a lousy way of life. If you overdo it, your team will end up tired, resentful,
and burned out. There will always be more to do than hours to do it, so turning
a 60-hour workweek into the norm isn’t going to solve problems in the long term.
The time to rally the troops with longer than normal hours is when you have a
specific, tangible objective that can be met in a reasonable timeframe; a
particular project that needs to be done; or a specific goal that needs to be
met. Make sure that everyone understands what you are trying to accomplish with
the longer hours and get them working together towards that end.
Once the need for extended hours is met, take the time to acknowledge success,
celebrate accomplishments, and show your people how much you appreciate the
effort.
So what’s the bottom line here? Engaged employees are more motivated, better
focused, and more likely to buckle down and perform when you really need them
to. It’s easy to see why improving engagement is good for the bottom line,
especially when the ideas that I’ve mentioned here tend to cost little, if
anything, to implement. If your goal is to get more than 40 hours worth of value
out of a 40-hour work week, a happier and more engaged workforce is priceless.
Make it a productive day! (TM)
(C) Copyright 2009 Laura Stack. All rights reserved.
© 2009 Laura Stack. Laura Stack is a personal productivity expert, author, and professional speaker who helps busy workers Leave the Office Earlier® with Maximum Results in Minimum Time®. She is the president of The Productivity Pro®, Inc., a time management training firm specializing in productivity improvement in high-stress organizations. Since 1992, Laura has presented keynotes and seminars on improving output, lowering stress, and saving time in today’s workplaces. She is the bestselling author of three works published by Broadway Books: The Exhaustion Cure (2008), Find More Time (2006) and Leave the Office Earlier (2004). Laura is a spokesperson for Microsoft, 3M, and Day-Timers®, Inc and has been featured on the CBS Early Show, CNN, and the New York Times. Her clients include Cisco Systems, Sunoco, KPMG, Nationwide, and 3M. To have Laura speak at your next event, call 303-471-7401. Visit www.TheProductivityPro.com to sign up for her free monthly productivity newsletter.