The Employee Engagement Network

With all the talk of the UK going into a recession, triggered by the US sub-prime market and the failure of Northern Rock, how do you see this impacting on employee engagement in your company?

A recession increases the fear of being fired amongst employees but fear is a poor motivator and mitigates against innovation. How can we keep our employees engaged and innovating? What advantages can we take in this recession to improve the long term engagement of employees, help the company to weather the recession and emerge stronger and more vibrant when the economy picks up again.

Stephen

Share

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

Thanks for starting this Stephen!

I think you have picked up a very good point.

How can we use the recession positively? How can we use the short term but real distress of many people to find ways forward that put is in a better position from whence we came?

Reply to This

Hi,

I sense that there is a greater appetite for systemic organizational and political change now, than in the prior two decades.

My experience, supported by some survey data, is that many people are feeling deeply frustrated by their experience at work because they have limited outlets for their energy and enthusiasm for engagement and change; and the block to this is senior management and leadership who are fast battening down corporate hatches to minimize risk, in order to preserve the position and power that they have.

The key to unlocking this is to provide core enabling engagement processes, supported by tools, that offer outlets for peoples innovative and change orientated energies and ensuring that these form bedrock - of equal importance as say the job evaluation, pay or grading systems - organizational foundations.

I for one would legislate that organizations over say 10,000 people strong, are required to design and institute engagement and innovation processes that all individuals are able (if they wish) to participate in and contribute to.

Beyond this, I feel that the key to engagement across organizations (and party politics) is to focus on discrete issues.

I believe there is one trade union who is campaigning for free broadband access for all - a fantastic idea, and a great example of issues based, change focused social good that could be inherently engaging.

The cynical, or more worldly, could well argue that leadership work to design a complacent followship, after all politics, whether organizational or social, is well defined as the persuit and preservation of power? Breaking this requires:

1) Issues that inherently enthuse

2) Processes and tools that inherently enable engagement

Interesting question by the way - not sure this answers it at all!

I

Reply to This

I guess one way of looking at difficult times is that, should individuals have difficult choices thrust upon them (and I'm coaching a client through such a time at the moment), it is an opportunity to see the corporation for what it is and liberate yourself from the shackles of loyalty, duty and fear of failure and actively seek out a lifestyle and organisation in tune with your core values. Easier said than done though as most folk have mortgages to pay!
Of course the enlightened organisations will be looking to dust down their employer brand and be looking to retain their best people and prepare for the upturn. Would love to be able to point them out but very few names trip off the tongue.
There will doubtless be increasing opportunities for the communication, engagement and "connections" practitioners to provide professional support in order to manage inevitable bad news and tough messages (issues that engage? Yes but....), which should create opportunities for practitioners in that market and sort the "wheat" from the "chaff" but as many of the "wheatier" folk are now running boutique operations and clients tend to look for "safe pairs of hands", it's certainly going to be an interesting time!

Reply to This

...one more thing - it's a great opportunity to test those pragmatic, harder-nosed skills to create business cases for "soft skills" interventions (i.e. prove this stuff has cost saving benefits or is cost effective and we'll consider it). Measurement and lateral thinking about outcomes will be key!

Reply to This

I can't help thinking that now might be the time to sketch out very broadly the working environments that we need in the UK (and that we know people want) and strategize how to build the institutional support for these environments.

I have always been impressed with the way Martin Seligman openly strategized the institutionalization of positive psychology.

Any one interested?

Reply to This

Hi Jo,

I sense that one issue that causes frustration right now is that the experience of work that many individuals have is vastly different from the experience of work they know they could potentially have. And it is this chasm that causes frustration.

Let's face it, most people have more access to expertize and insight via google, than they do from their leadership or indeed, the internal training function.

The world is flatter, and the world of work hasn't caught up with this fact yet; we have industrial age work environments/structures/processes into which information age powered people are force fit.

Helping to liberate the potential of people means at least eliminating this lag ; so yes I wonder what these future environments might be, and how would you go about discovering/sketching them out?

Maybe its a co-creation thing?

Best,

R.

Reply to This

Hi Stephen

Some great comments on here.

I think adversity is sometimes a great catalyst for engagement. Its not easy to do but if you can get a workforce to see it is not an employee v company/management thing but a competion with other companies thing this can get employees engaged. If the company and employees share a common enemy they can bond and become better engaged as they combine their efforts to fend off the competition.

People who go through adversity together tend to become very engaged ( though they not always have a succesful outcome) Miners are a classic example

Reply to This

Good morning Stephen, Ian and Rob,

I'm impressed that we generated this discussion and agreement so fast. I think we agree on the 'state of work' in the UK and the state of leadership too. I am a relative newcomer to the UK so I have the benefit of looking at conditions from outside them and I would say most people agree. They now that life should be more vital but they believe nothing can be done.

a) Maybe the cynicism and learned helplessness is right and live with it is the right advice.
or
b) Something can be done. In which case, how will things change and what will be our role as engagement specialists?

So to summarize, I am impressed by the agreement - I hope I am right! I believe we feel similarly to the public-at-large.
What next? What is the goal? How big is the goal? And what does that imply about our role?

Reply to This

LOL! You'll find that cynicism, sarcasm and irony are simply part of the culture Jo, regardless of prevailing market conditions. This rock in the North Sea has seen so much change down the centuries that people aren't exactly fans of the "rah, rah" approach to engagement! However, avoid spoon-fed communication cascades and treat people in an authentic way that speaks to their local culture and is sensitive to their need to "criticise" as well as "suggest" and you'll find that the results will speak for themselves. The miners are a good example Stephen as is the way, in my experience, employees dealt with the BCCI debacle here, Barings scandal, Maxwells et al. The press may moan but "backs to the wall" is arguably what the Brits do best so I've little doubt there will be a creative response from the engagement community ("what, no more events?....well let's put the Top Team on a truck and get them out there....LOL!).

Reply to This

OK I'm trying to make sense of what I am hearing!

a) Having a say is important.

b) Having influence is not????

Reply to This

Of course both are important and hopefully one leads to the other.
I believe the biggest challenge change agents and engagement professionals face is to establish employee engagement as a legitimate and professional discipline rather than a marginalised nice to have or an adjunct of channel management and tactical "newsroom" activity, as it is currently being positioned (you only have to look at the employment press to notice this pattern where employee engagement roles are now being advertised for £30k).
This will partially be achieved through damn good, inspirational yet bottom-line focused contemporary case studies (this is what we did and how we did it) and partially through thought-leadership which touches key influencers within the boardroom. I do believe Europeans in general tend to be a tad more sceptical of anything with a whiff of marketing or insincerity about it..........
That's my perspective as a lapsed southern hemisphere-loving Englishman.
I'm interested in what you would propose, Jo, having had enough time to have drawn conculsions about the way things are done over here?

Reply to This

I've just posted this blog on a UK HR site. May enrich this lively topic further (and broaden its reach).

http://www.changeboard.com/hrcircles/blogs/communication/archive/20...

Ian

Reply to This

RSS

Latest Activity

13 minutes ago
Aravind Gangadharan, Brush Read, Margaret Cernigoj and 2 more joined The Employee Engagement Network
23 minutes 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
2 hours ago
4 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…
4 hours ago
4 hours ago
4 hours ago
4 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
5 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…
5 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…
5 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…
5 hours ago
Kelly Lefebvre, Rob Robson, Chris Hewitt and 1 more were featured
6 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.
6 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…
8 hours ago
David Zinger Mentally engaged with the Great Wall of Saskatchewan as a metaphor for work legacy. http://bit.ly/77lwav
8 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
8 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
8 hours ago
Mike Klein Thinking about intersection of sustainability, employee involvement and political activity-things will be more interesting post-Copenhagen
9 hours ago
"If managers cannot commit, then they shouldn’t expect their employees to commit either." Well said and very true. I much enjoyed your article and share your views. Bob Carpenter's experiences in turnarounds are the same as mine although I only di…
10 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