The Employee Engagement Network

Derek Irvine

Building Alignment and Engagement into 2010 Planning

Watson Wyatt Worldwide and WorldatWork recently issued their 2009/2010 US Strategic Rewards Report: Looking toward Recovery – Realigning Rewards and Re-Engaging Employees. The report evaluates the impact of the workforce-based actions of the recession on companies’ ability to emerge in a competitive position and able to retain top-performers in the recovery. Three key findings were:

1) Organizational restructuring has been pervasive and deep
2) There has been significant negative impact on employee engagement (an alarming 25% for top-performing employees as compared to 9% across the board)
3) Employees believe the changes made by their companies are affecting work quality and delivery to customers

The extreme disconnect between management and line employees the report highlights in these last two points are particularly unsettling:

“Top-performing employees are 20% less likely to agree that they understand the link between their own goals and the company’s goals in 2008.”

“Forty-one percent of employees indicate that changes have had an adverse impact on quality and customer service, while only 17 percent of employers believe this is the case.”


Looking at those two findings together, I can only conclude that employees don’t know what they should be working on and how it contributes to company success (alignment problem again) and that quality and customer service is suffering as a result.

It is heartening to see that companies are finally beginning to understand the ineffectiveness of cash-based bonuses (anticipated to drop 24% from 2007 levels) while 23% of companies are increasing their use of recognition programs, defined by the report authors as “offering a cost-efficient opportunity to recognize the contributions of top-performing employees at a time when the average company has reduced core forms of compensation and benefits.” Why is this good news? Bonuses target a small cadre of elites and rules for achieving the bonus often seems to be a moving target. Recognition, on the other hand, is available to all as an after-the-fact show of acknowledgment and appreciation for a job well done.

How are you building alignment and engagement into your 2010 process? Share your approach in comments.

Tags: alignment, employee, engagement, objectives, priorities, recognition, strategic

Share  Twitter

Comment

You need to be a member of The Employee Engagement Network to add comments!

Join this Ning Network

Derek Irvine Comment by Derek Irvine on October 23, 2009 at 3:22pm
Couldn't agree more, Keith. As I said in this post, Layoffs, mergers, acquisitions, restructuring, reorganizing – all outfall of the recession in the majority of companies to some extent and all creating the greatest challenge facing organizations in 2010 – alignment. The massive organizational upheavals leave so many employees floundering in what to prioritize and what really matters. In the midst of these organizational changes, many companies also changed or adjusted their strategic objectives to align with the new priorities, but in doing so neglected to tell the employees how their work and specific tasks should also change to achieve those revised objectives.

Bottom line: people need to know where you're going if you expect them to ever get there.
Keith Bossey Comment by Keith Bossey on October 20, 2009 at 2:29pm
Derek, this downturn has caused mis-alignment across the board. Strategies have been thrown out the window as companies keep dialing down expectations for the year. Furthermore, because many companies do not have a strategy, they do not know what their employee resources should look like, causing continued RIF, which in turn cause uncertainty and demotivation. At some point, companies will have to pull themselves out of the immediate and look out to at least the intermediate term, create a strategy and communicate it internally. Comp changes will do nothing until people have some solid footing.

Latest Activity

Look beyond generic engagement tools: focus on personal drivers from employees, group them accordingly and align engagement tools.
56 minutes 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.
1 hour ago
Before you start engaging an employee, know him and respect him as an individual first and engagement will follow.
3 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!
4 hours ago
5 hours ago
Engagement is to be seen not as an activity but that is the only way the society works.
5 hours ago
5 hours ago
The management equivalent of ‘Air’ is to practice transparency with team members by managers. Dr. Jose M F, India, Bangalore
6 hours ago
There are 521 blog posts on The Employee Engagement Network
7 hours ago
26 new members joined during the past week
7 hours ago
8 hours ago
8 hours ago
8 hours ago
8 hours ago
8 hours ago
The most important priority for leaders is to cultivate, appreciate, and leverage the vast untapped potential of every employee in their organizations.
8 hours ago
If you focus on engagement, productivity will follow. If you focus on productivity, you may not get it. To begin engagement, sit down with each employee for 40-60 minutes, privately, quietly, and confidentially, and get to know them better -- thei…
8 hours ago
4 members updated their profile photos
8 hours ago
8 hours ago
Faye Schmidt added a discussion
I'd appreciate hearing from others on best practices regarding the frequency of employee engagement surveys. I've seen lots of debates on what is the best interval to use for regular measurement and it wouuld help if you could share how often you do…
8 hours ago

Groups

Engage Today. Join the growing employee engagement network.

© 2010   Created by David Zinger on Ning.   Create a Ning Network!

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Privacy  |  Terms of Service