I have not been a member here for very long but I am becoming worried at what seems to be a disturbing trend, at least in the UK.
Some time ago when working as a consultant in the drilling business I discovered what happened when the workforce were allowed to care about what they do.
Their performance became astonishing and they became hugely proud of what they achieved and, apart from the financial implications, it finally felt like the right way to manage people.
I wrote about it and spoke about it and slowly discovered others who had learned the same lessons.
It wasn’t until I came across this forum that I realised that the word “Engagement” pretty much described what I had been talking about.
What is beginning to worry me now though is the way that the word engagement is being used to describe something that managers are doing to their workforces in order to get them to do what they want.
The MacLeod – Clarke Report “Engaging For Success” repeatedly quoted statements from companies who did precisely that, engaged their workforces in order to make them do something that otherwise they may have objected to.
Then this week Mr David Fairhurst, Senior Vice President, Chief People Officer at McDonald’s Northern Europe, in an interview with an online HR magazine said pretty much the same thing, that it was managements job to engage the workforce so that they would do what management wanted. (The full interview is here
http://www.hrzone.co.uk/topic/managing-people/david-fairhurst-inter...)
My concern is that we are in great danger from industry leaders who use the term “Engagement” to describe this sort of manipulative management.
The word may soon become associated with their failure.
My real question is:
“Are MacLeod and others reflecting what managers really think that engagement means, or is there a deeper feeling about what happens when a workforce are allowed to care about what they do that is more representative?”
Peter A Hunter
www.breakingthemould.co.uk