The Employee Engagement Network

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Engaging Books

This group is for anyone who want to talk about books on engagement, work, leadership or management. You can recommend a book, ask others about a book, or join in a discussion about a book.

Members: 73
Latest Activity: Dec. 17, 2009

What Are You Reading / What Have You Read?

This is the place to weight in or voice your perspective on books related to employee engagement.

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Jennifer Schulte Comment by Jennifer Schulte on June 26, 2009 at 10:25am
I have to agree with Vicki - I just finished "The Art of Engagement" and am recommending it as a reading for a senior leader development program in our organization. Any others that are aimed at senior leaders - tips to help them role model as "engagement" leaders and practical advice?
Tom Rausch Comment by Tom Rausch on June 16, 2009 at 10:10am
A recent favorite of mine is Igniting Inspiration by J Marshal Roberts. It is a manual for creating messages that inspire- certainly a central challenge for leaders wanting to engage employees:http://bit.ly/Twmkd

Help for organizations committed to employee engagement:
http://www.leadershipbeyondlimits.com
Rob Fox Comment by Rob Fox on June 16, 2009 at 9:49am
Hi Vicki,

I attended a session with your CEO here in London last fall - I enjoyed it and thought it very insightful indeed.

You might like to visit www.engagingideas.co.uk to read of the Engaging ideas card pack.

Used by HSBC, Virgin, Shell, Pfizer Vodafone and many more, it provides practical exercises, tools and ideas designed to inspire higher employee engagement and change.

Best Wishes,

Rob Fox
Vicki Timman Comment by Vicki Timman on May 20, 2009 at 3:58pm
I may be very partial, but I would like to recommend the book written by the CEO of the company I work for, Root Learning, called "The Art of Engagement". The book is a plain-spoken look at the Root Methodology and how it has and continues to be applied to engaging employees at all levels to drive results in organizations. It is a very easy read, full of fascinating information with a lot of pertinence in the engagement arena and on top of it all, is a national best seller!

Please visit our website with more information about the book at

http://www.rootsofengagement.com/

I hope you will find it informational, interesting and valuable.

All the best,

Vicki
Jay Forte Comment by Jay Forte on March 19, 2009 at 6:19am
One that everyone should read is Bruce Tulgan's "Winning the Talent Wars". Another must read is "The Age Curve" by Ken Gronbach - a great book written by a demographer with amazing insight into trends in buy and in the workplace brought on by the changes in generations. And of course, I have to recommend my book, "Fire Up Your Employees and Smoke Your Competition; How to Invite, Incite and Ignite Employee Performance." This is a new and interactive resource that makes the process of learning how to connect to employees and how to connect employees to performance, an easy and effective process. The book interacts with the website (www.FireUpYouEmployees.com) to bring the theory of the book into practice with worksheets, exercises and activities. Download some of the chapters for free on the website and check out the new assessment tool. Let me know what you think. And be sure to get Tulgan's and Gronbach's books - they belong in everyone's personal library.
Karen Schmidt Comment by Karen Schmidt on March 18, 2009 at 10:10pm
I really liked "Love 'em or lose 'em" by Beverley Kaye and Sharon Jordan-Evans
Paul Lush Comment by Paul Lush on March 17, 2009 at 3:59pm
I've had a VP of Operations change his perceptions towards engagement after reading Patrick Lencioni's book titled "The 3 Signs of a Miserable Job". Pre-recession (Or economic downturn, whatever the accepted term is today), operations in western Canada attempted to "fix" attrition patterns by throwing more money on the table but found that it was not an end-all solution. It took a focus on the team and a positive management presence!
Sanna Wolstenholme Comment by Sanna Wolstenholme on September 25, 2008 at 11:22am
I recommed a book by David Croston: Employee Engagement The People First Approcah to Building a Business, 2008
Rob Fox Comment by Rob Fox on September 22, 2008 at 12:26pm
Hi,

You might like to know that my pack is now available on the mighty Amazon. Search Engaging ideas Rob Fox.

Alternatively see www.engagingideas.co.uk. Its being used by Shell, Virgin, HSBC and more.

Best,

R.
Matthias Olavi Comment by Matthias Olavi on August 31, 2008 at 10:49pm
Stephen Denning was an executive at the World Bank. In his book "The Leader's Guide to Storytelling - Mastering the Art and Discipline of Business Narratives" he talks about a key experience that led him to write this book "... I was facing a leadership challenge that made the traditional tools of management seem impotent. In trying to communicate a new idea to a sceptical audienc, I found that the virtues of sharpness, rigor and explicitness weren't working. Having stumbled on the discovery that an appropriately told story had the power to do what rigorous analysis couldn't - to communicate a strange new idea easily and naturally and quickly get people into enthusiastic action."
I find this an excellent book for people both strong and weak in communication, and especially if you your thinking talents are strong at the expense of relating or influencing talents. This book is a nice "manual" in story telling, with several "templates" (narrative patterns), such as "ignite action", "communicate who you are", "build your brand", "instill organizational values", "get things done collaboratively", "transmit knowledge and understanding", "neutralize gossip and rumor" and "lead people into the future".
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Members (73)

Robert Morris David Zinger Larry Underwood aaron Andrew Rondeau Mike King Paul Herr Brad Federman Chris Tyler Ian Buckingham Nick McCormick Susan Stamm Anja Schuetz Paul Lush Adam Hibbert Terrence Seamon Randy Mayeux George Reavis Amy James Brain Raven Art Bingham Loretta Donovan Jay Forte John Kmiec Phil Gerbyshak Peter A Hunter Ethan Bondelid Michael Lee Stallard Carol Cole-Lewis
 
 

Latest Activity

5 members updated their profile photos
11 minutes ago
Jon Weedon and Robert Manolson joined The Employee Engagement Network
14 minutes ago
Saurabh Gahrotra Does complete talent fitment lead to absolute performance???
25 minutes ago
32 minutes ago
A manager should always remember he/she is "on stage"- and his/her subordinates notice every little trait so always exhibit the behavior you would want them to emulate.
34 minutes ago
As a Leader it is your job to facilitate progress, be the agent of change not the barrier to it.
53 minutes ago
Jim Taggart added a blog post
From Jim's Blog: Changing Winds I love Leo Babauta’s Zen Habits, in which he writes on simple productivity and life issues. His recent book The Power of Less is a compact and practical guide to reclaiming your life from busyness and inefficiency. I…
1 hour ago
Hi Ben... Thanks for the reply! Question--what have you seen as a "clear, coherent script" that assures success? And do you think such scripts need updating to address the shifts we've seen in organizations and the marketplace? All the best from…
1 hour ago
In my experience, achieving engagement creates huge increases in productivity per person, morale, retention, profits, sales, and every other "devoutly to be wished" result. So it is always worth the effort. But the company person, CEO or executive…
1 hour ago
1 hour ago
Latest EE news is now posted for Friday.
1 hour ago
Do two things: trust your employees unconditionally and give them more responsibility than they would ever expect; they will rise to the occasion and surpass all expectations.
1 hour ago
1 hour ago
Mike Klein--The Intersection added a discussion
In the wake of "The Great Recession" and in appreciation of the changes in the economy and in the nature of employee-employer relationships, the idea of “employee engagement” (“Engagement”) presents an intriguing dilemma. While some say a focus on…
1 hour ago
Interesting question. I'm drawn to less is more, and even that may be too much :) My experience has shown me that the more fearful the organisation is, the more often it seeks to measure as a means to try and stave off the fear. It then often ends u…
3 hours ago
I would contend never is too soon. If you understand what engagement is and how to achieve it, then you know what an engaged employee sounds like and acts like as compared to one who is somewhat engaged or disengaged. Surveys turn people off while…
4 hours ago
Look beyond generic engagement tools: focus on personal drivers from employees, group them accordingly and align engagement tools.
5 hours ago
The real challenge to engage employees is to gain trust by giving them autonomy to shape their own jobs to their own wishes, interests and strengths but always aligned with an open and transparant organisational vision and strategy.
5 hours ago
Before you start engaging an employee, know him and respect him as an individual first and engagement will follow.
8 hours ago
Listen! Zip your mouth. Don't interrupt them when they are opening up to you and expressing there feelings. Remember, its about them not you!
9 hours ago

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