The Employee Engagement Network

I am developing a presentation/workshop for an industry association. I read one of the posts regarding "specific behaviours that support engagement", and that was very helpful. Now let's go to the darker side of this question and brainstorm the top 10 engagement killers. I will start the list and hope that many of you will add/refine the list. Here goes:

Job boredom
Performance issues do not get addressed around me
Salary well below market for my level of responsibility and performance
Little/no respect for my boss
Uncaring executives
Feel like a cog in the machine with little opportunity to be involved in the business
Company culture is to resist continuous improvement and waits for things to break before fixing
In a job that does not contribute to my career goals, just putting in time
I don't understand how my job contributes to the business
The workplace is highly political with hidden agendas and undercurrents everywhere
We really don't care about our customers

Share

Replies are closed for this discussion.

Replies to This Discussion

David,
An interesting forum post. I am a bit too busy right not to respond but I would like you to keep this in mind as a contribution when we collaborate on the Employee Engagement Top 10 book.
David
You've got some "good" (i.e., BAD) ones on your list. I'll just amplify one of yours, "Feel like a cog in the machine with little opportunity to be involved in the business."

- unnecessary micromangement that is little more than meddling by higher ups who "don't have enough to do"

- no real involvement and participation by front-line employees; though management "talks a good game," all decisions are made at a higher level

Both of these stem, I believe, from management's misunderstanding of their role and priorities, and lack of faith and trust in employees.

Terry
David:

Here are a few more:

Engagement is used solely as a tool to suck discretionary effort out of employees.

The organization declares that people are our greatest resource but treat people like oil.

Rather than seeing people as humans we add the word capital and turn people into human capital.

Energy in the organization is so depleted that all engagement efforts feel like just another energy drain or something to add to an already overflowing plate.

In tough times we engage others by saying, "you are lucky to have a job."

There is a few from my perspective.
Hello David

You have already got a good (bad!) list so I don't feel the need to add to it......
But another serious engagement killer is the serious mismatch of what employees want in terms of recognition/reward and what they actually get. When coupled with the senior teams perception of what employees want and are getting the gaps that emerge can and do derail large and small organisations.
If you are interested a good description of a process to identify these gaps is described in "Discovering New Worlds" on apterinternational.com/art

Peter

RSS

Latest Activity

Michael Lee Stallard added a blog post
Do you ever wonder how past leaders could have missed what seems so obvious in hindsight? Sadly, most leaders live in an environment that makes them vulnerable to managerial failure. The problem lies in a little-recognized reality of leadership: iso…
8 hours ago
12 hours ago
Aravind Gangadharan, Brush Read, Margaret Cernigoj and 2 more joined The Employee Engagement Network
12 hours ago
Terrence Seamon "Galvanize into action" is my new free e-guide for job hunters, available via the Box.net app on my LinkedIn profile
15 hours ago
16 hours ago
Dear Ray, Your concern is well founded. Employees look forward to surveys like they do a visit to the dentist! The Horsepower Survey, however, is an employee-focused survey to measure how rewarded employees feel about their work. It consists of sev…
16 hours ago
16 hours ago
16 hours ago
16 hours ago
Mike, I will make mention of this new group in the next newsletter. Thank you for starting this and I wish you well and all European members the best with this focus. David
17 hours ago
Jason: Good points about trust and aligning the strategic engagement with employee engagement. We need results for all. I am concerned you will lose readers due to lack of formatting on this post. I encourage you to ensure that you format your pos…
17 hours ago
Thanks for sharing this information, Roy. When I was Research Director at The Loyalty Institute, we found that the #1 driver of employee commitment was an organization's efforts to build a sense of spirit and pride. This was true in the US as well…
17 hours ago
As a survey consultant I guess that I should like the idea of conducting monthly surveys, but I am concerned that employees may feel that they are being "over surveyed." There are options, of course. An organization might randomly assign each emplo…
18 hours ago
Kelly Lefebvre, Rob Robson, Chris Hewitt and 1 more were featured
18 hours ago
This is a great read, a great story. I smiled the whole time as I read this. If this conversation is possible in your organization, then I'd say your leadership is trusted and transparent. Thanks for this story.
18 hours ago
Paul M. Mastrangelo added a blog post
I won't be wishing you "Season's Greetings" or "Happy Holidays" this December. These secular, generic salutations are popular in corporate America because they are not specific to any one religion or belief system. The business world, like America's…
20 hours ago
David Zinger Mentally engaged with the Great Wall of Saskatchewan as a metaphor for work legacy. http://bit.ly/77lwav
20 hours ago
Hello Paul: "if you want to improve productivity and reduce costs, you need to tap into human nature’s pleasure-fueled engine." I could not agree more but if we wait until after we hire someone we have waited too long. Bob
20 hours ago
A Manager shall know one's team member more than his/her mother knows him/her. Offered by Shweta Mohanty Posted by David Zinger
20 hours ago
Mike Klein Thinking about intersection of sustainability, employee involvement and political activity-things will be more interesting post-Copenhagen
21 hours ago

Groups

Engage Today. Join the growing employee engagement network.

© 2009   Created by David Zinger on Ning.   Create a Ning Network!

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Privacy  |  Terms of Service