The Employee Engagement Network

Derek Irvine

One More Engagement Definition * BlessingWhite

This week I wrote on the MacLeod Survey's definition of engagement, Aberdeen's recent definition and now Blessing White's. These posts have generated great discussion. Curious what the network thinks of this one...

BlessingWhite’s recent advice to “Align Your Hamsters & Honeymooners” offers:

“Full engagement represents an alignment of maximum job satisfaction (“I like my work and do it well”) with maximum job contribution (“I help achieve the goals of my organization”). Engaged employees are not just committed. They are not just passionate or proud. They have a line-of-sight on their own future and on the organization’s mission and goals. They are enthused and in gear, using their talents and discretionary effort to make a difference in their employer’s quest for sustainable business success.”

BlessingWhite’s definition hits the key points of discretionary effort focused on the company’s mission and goals. And their explanation of “Hamsters and Honeymooners” in the organization neatly describes the difference between those who are satisfied in their work, versus those who are truly engaged. These groups are those who have “relatively high levels of job satisfaction, but low levels of contribution.” Hamsters are those spinning their wheels: “working enthusiastically – but on the wrong things so they don’t deliver the results you need.” Honeymooners are “new either to the organization or their role. They’re excited about this new stage of their career and about making a difference in your organization, but they aren’t fully productive.”

So the question becomes, how do you advance your Hamsters and Honeymooners from Satisfaction to true Engagement? BlessingWhite offers four steps to communicate, translate, drive accountability, and leverage managers.

What other ways are there to engage Hamsters and Honeymooners? What methods have you used?

Tags: employee, engagement, leadership, recognition

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Vijay Kumar Shrotryia Comment by Vijay Kumar Shrotryia on August 31, 2009 at 4:58am
thanx for sharing this.... Let me go through this in detail and compare it with the last years report....

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