Unlocking business success through employee engagement
Today, with the fast-pace business landscape, employee engagement is one of
the defining factors for success. Engagement is also known as emotional
commitment. An engaged employee finds their job not only fulfilling and
satisfying in the obvious outer sense of those terms, but also gives them a
powerful sense of inner meaning. Anything less than energetic performance from
him today will raise questions and doubts about tomorrow 's good work too. A
wise old worker once put this as the recipe for success when he said, "Do
your job well--beyond that nothing else.' This means that in any organization
needing real innovation today it becomes imperative all employees are seen as Innovative
contributors ' irrespective of their official positions.
What makes someone engaged?
Employee engagement is not just about being satisfied in the job. It is a
comprehensive emotional commitment to organization - an employee will go well
beyond what is required of them during any given moment and strive on its
behalf as if this too were really part and parcel one's own enterprise. As
Daniel Pink writes in Drive: The Surprising Truth About What Motivates Us,
committed employees are attracted to work because they find intrinsic
satisfaction in tasks they cannot handle competently and wish for success. They
yearn for autonomy and meaning-all reasons feel engaged, alive and useful (Pink
2009). This kind of motivation creates an atmosphere at work where employees
not only perform tasks efficiently they proactively embrace issues surrounding
company objectives.
Benefits of Engagement to Business Performance
Increased Productivity
Engaged employees are more productive. Pink (2009) says that intrinsic
motivation leads people to contribute three additional hours every day at what
they do, than standing orders because if staff feel valued and trusted.
They will go beyond the bounds of their job description. Gallup's
research backs this up: organisations with high levels of employee engagement
see productivity rise by 21% (Gallup 2017). Engaged workers take initiative,
solve problems creatively and ultimately produce better results.
High engagement leads to low staff turnover and thus to fewer associated
hiring, training or personnel-related expenses (Sullivan 2003).Patrick Lencioni
puts it bluntly in The Truth About Employee Engagement: people who have fun at
their job will stay longer with a company and thus reduce hiring and training
costs (Lencioni 2015).For businesses with engaged workforces, the turnover rate
is about 59% lower than average, meaning that they enjoy greater continuity and
stability (Gallup 2017).
One of the keys to engaging employees in their work is to give employees the
tools they need, as opposed to management doing it for them. Combined with
engaging Employee Relationship Development training (ERD), this can help foster
an engaged workforce maintaining that culture is harvesting more than just
grass they're harvesting high returns.
As John A. Goodman argues in High-Profit Strategies in the Age of Techno
Service, customer satisfaction has a major impact on employee engagement
(Goodman 2014).Such services will automatically be at a higher standard, and
therefore more marketable, than those provided by indifferent staff; engaged
employees produce results. The entire customer experience is made so much
better. With these committed employees you get a more enjoyable shopping
environment, for example, or welcoming smiles when you ask a for personal
service of any kind.
Creating Engagement
There are many strategies to foster more employee engagement and get
everyone on board:
Career Development: Fees for professional education are quite high. especially
when compared with such regular expenses as production.
Recognition and Rewards:
Regular recognition of employee achievements, together with regular rewards
for above-and-beyond-the-call-of-duty effort--demonstrating The Powers of
Attainment--can raise spirits and thus motivation.
Companies included in the 100 (global) best list are those that achieve
outstanding business performance and long term successes. By offering staff
career development, reward and a harmonious corporate culture, producing large
quantities thus reduces labor-turnover. One can serve clients from home; but
what matters most is raising product appeal in the consumer market. In the not
so distant past, gaining access to customer satisfaction meant adopting such
practices as those described below; today however, it has already been achieved
in practical terms. Consequently, there has now emerged a new common language
that even somebody not engaged in marketing can understand. A break with
tradition. Investment in employee engagement not only meets strategic
objectives but has also become necessary for ensuring long-term organizational
success. It helps companies stay competitive in the market for an extended
time.
References
Gallup. (2017). State of the
Global Workplace: Employee Engagement Insights for Business Leaders.
Gallup.
Goodman, J. A. (2014). The
Customer Experience 3.0: High-Profit Strategies in the Age of Techno Service.
AMACOM.
Kruse, K. (2012). Employee
Engagement 2.0: How to Create a Workplace That Engages and Motivates Your
People. Wiley.
Lencioni, P. (2015). The Truth
About Employee Engagement: A Fable About Addressing the Three Root Causes of
Job Misery. Jossey-Bass.
Pink, D. H. (2009). Drive: The
Surprising Truth About What Motivates Us. Riverhead Books.

.jpg)
More than just employee job satisfaction or motivation, employee engagement is the emotional commitment someone has to their organization. That will boost the productivity is higher, turnover lower, customer satisfaction improved. Organizations can gain tremendous business success by fostering a culture of recognition, career growth and autonomy which will help them survive the competition. Focusing on Engagement For Sustainable Growth and Success
ReplyDeleteThe artical properly points out that investing in employee engagement is becoming more essential to long-term performance and market competitiveness, indicating a change away from traditional consumer satisfaction strategies. Good job.
ReplyDelete