An "engaged
employee" is one who is fully absorbed by and enthusiastic about their
work and so takes positive action to further the organization’s reputation and
interests. Last week our local
CIPD Midwest committee and the University of Limerick organised a seminar on
Employee Engagement which was a big success as 92 people attended this seminar.
For the CIPD Midwest this was probably the highest number of people ever
attending such an event. This success was due to the involvement of the Human
Resource Section of the University of Limerick. A big thank you to them!
There were four
speakers at the seminar, three from UL; Sarah MacCurtain, Michelle Hammond and
Paddy Gunnigle and one outside speaker Kieran Dunne from MSD, who from practical
experience spoke about a major change process in a Multinational and how to
engage with employees during such a process. In all it was an excellent
seminar!
I was intrigued by
Sarah MacCurtain’s lecture regarding a more personal engagement. Sarah asked the
question how engaged are you yourself? Great to increase the engagement of all
staff members but if you are not engaged yourself how can you ask others to be
so? As a manager you need to establish what engages you and how visibly engaged
you are with your work and company. Your levels of engagement have an effect on
your employees as employees will spot if you are not really engaged and just
going through the motions. So as a manager check how engaged you are and
increase if necessary your own levels of engagement before trying to engage
others with work and company.
Furthermore the
levels of trust between a manager and his employees are critical for the
success of the engagement process. If there is no trust then it will be
difficult to engage the employees. Trust is something which doesn’t happen
overnight it has to be nurtured over a period of time where a manager in his
dealings with staff members has proven to be trustworthy, in effect he does
what he says he will do and the manager is working both for the good of the
company and the staff members. If you have a manager who is engaged himself and
trustworthy then he could try to successfully engage his workers to increase
their engagement themselves.
There is one more
element which is important and that is integrity. Basically you are honest and
will tell the truth when it matters, because if a manager has integrity you
will trust him.
It shows the
importance of the manager’s behaviour. You might say that this is too much for
me as my behaviour can’t be held to scrutiny in such a way. Unfortunately as a
leader and manager you need to be congruent in your day to day actions. That is
the basic requirement to successfully engage others.
You might say this
isn’t worth it. However I might remind you that in the seminar it was
highlighted that research
from the Hay Group finds that organisations with highly engaged employees
outperform those with the most disengaged employees, by 54% in employee
retention, by 89% in customer satisfaction, and by 400% in revenue growth. It
is pays as a manager to be trustworthy, have high levels of integrity and
behave in a congruent manner.
The global
financial crisis has, however, taken its toll on engagement, as employees
endure pay freezes, benefit cuts and layoffs. As a result it is even more
important to be trustworthy as a manager!
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