Title: The Essence of Engagement: Achieving Results Through People
1The Essence of EngagementAchieving Results
Through People
- Anna Erickson, Ph.D.Director, Consulting
ServicesQuestar, Organizational Insights
Groupwww.questarweb.com - Presentation to
- Association of Information Technology
Professionals - Northwest Chapter
- October 7, 2008
2Who am I?
- Industrial Organizational Psychologist
- (Curious? Learn more about I/O Psych at
www.siop.org) - 15 years experience
- Employee Selection/Hiring
- Succession/Talent Management
- Leadership Development
- Employee Surveys
- Lead consulting team at Questar Data Systems
Organizational Insights Division
3Who is Questar?
- Survey research company based in Eagan, MN with
offices in the United Kingdom - Founded in 1985
- 100 Employees
- 3 Divisions
- Organizational Insights Group
- Customer Experience Management
- Public Sector Research
- Global Data Collection
- Multiple methods paper, internet, IVR
- 75 countries, 48 languages
4Trends weve seen
- Workplace stress on the rise
- Growing importance of senior leadership
- Better understanding of business outcome
implications - Increased attention toward building Employee
Engagement
5Research Says
More than 80 percent of employees feel that
companies are expecting too much work from too
few people. (Randstad) The average workweek has
increased since the 1970's while leisure time has
decreased by 37. (Louis Harris Poll)
6Employees Say
- We are under a great deal of stress here in the
field. The company doesnt truly value our work
as employees. - I sometimes feel that managers think that a job
can be produced by pushing a button once an idea
has happened.
7Research Says
Two-thirds of both men and women say work has a
significant impact on their stress level, and
one in four has called in sick or taken a "mental
health day" as a result of work stress. (American
Psychological Association)
8Employees Say
- The pace of each day is grueling.
- Employees in my work group are stretched far
too thin, the workload is heavy and constant, and
the work day is very long. As a working mom, I
find my job enormously gratifying but hugely
demanding. - The balance is a struggle each day.
-
9Research Says
- 62 of American workers said that their workload
has increased over the past six months and that
they had not used all of their allotted vacation
time in the past year. - (Kronos Inc.)
10Employees Say
- We work grueling hours, sacrificing time with
family and friends and those sacrifices on a
daily basis don't seem to be appreciated.
11Research Says
- 70 of employees say you have to work late and
work overtime to get ahead. - 62 of employers agree.
- (Randstad)
12Employees Say
- Management's philosophy seems to be to devalue
individual employees... - to create a sense that the employee should be
grateful just to have a job.
13Research Says
- One-fourth of employees view their jobs as the
number one stressor in their lives. - (Northwestern National Life)
- Workplace stress causes approximately one million
U.S. employees to miss work each day. - (American Institute of Stress)
14Employees Say
- Because we are such a competitive industry, a
lot of behaviors from management that would not
be generally accepted in the population at large,
are rampant here. - Screaming supervisors,
- cursing supervisors regularly reduce staff
members to tears. -
-
15Research Says
- Problems at work are more strongly associated
with health complaints than are any other life
stressor. - (St. Paul Co.)
- Workers who must take time off work because of
stress, anxiety, or a related disorder will be
off the job for about 21 days. - (US Bureau of Labor Statistics)
16Employees Say
- I have been humiliated, insulted and treated
really bad by my manager. We cannot express our
opinions or suggestions. The stress level is so
high and my manager blames everything on me.
17Research Says
- Productivity losses related to personal and
family health problems cost U.S. employers 1,685
per employee per year, or 225.8 billion
annually. - (Stewart et al.)
18Employees Say
- People are looking for growth.
- Most employees are more than willing to go the
extra mile but the reward is often a punishment
of being trapped in a position that is no longer
motivating. -
19Research Says
- Companies with higher revenue growth are better
at motivating employees and provide more
opportunities for growth and development. - Employee engagement levels in these high
performing organizations are more than 20 higher
than those of their counterparts. - (Hewett Associates)
20Employees Say
- There is still a "good ole boys network" here
that some opportunities are awarded based on who
you know and not what you know.
21Research Says
- Only 23 percent of U.S. adults report engaging in
regular, vigorous exercise for at least 20
minutes three or more days per week and 40
report no leisure time physical activity at all. - The major barriers to increased physical activity
are lack of time, inadequate access to convenient
and affordable fitness facilities and lack of a
safe environment in which to be active. - (U.S. Department of Health and Human Services)
22Employees Say
- If people do try to workout at lunchtime to
relax, get into shape, or de-stress, they are met
with a management mind frame which frowns upon an
extra 10 minutes of lunch time exercise - and yet this same management is ok with an extra
10 minutes of outside smoking time periodically
throughout the day. - What is wrong here????
23Research Says
- Despite the proven success of interventions, only
about a quarter of companies with 500 or more
employees provide smoking cessation services at
the worksite and only 22 percent of health plans
offered by employers with ten or more workers
provide smoking cessation benefits. - (William M. Mercer)
24Employees Say
- There is no reason why we should have to
breathe in other people's smoke and have our
clothes smell of smoke when we are trying to
enter our office building.
25Research Says
- Depression results in more days of disability
than chronic health conditions such as heart
disease, hypertension, and diabetes. - (National Committee for Quality Assurance)
- According to the National Institutes of Mental
Health, depression costs an estimated 23 billion
in lost workdays every year.
26Costs of Job Stress Job stress is estimated to
cost U.S. industry 300 billion annually.
27Research shows performance decreases
with increases in work-related stressors
including
- role ambiguity
- role conflict
- role overload
- job insecurity
-
- work-family conflict
- environmental uncertainty
- situational constraints
Even subtle suggestions related to power,
ability, expectations and stereotypes have
measurable impact on individual performance.
Gilboa, Shirom, Fried, Cooper (2008). A
meta-analysis of work demand stressors and job
performance Examining main and moderating
effects. Personnel Psychology, 61,
227-271. Smith, Jostmann, Galinsky, van Dijk
(2008). Lacking power impairs executive
functions. Psychological Science, 19, 441-447.
28History of Research on Employee Attitudes
- Hawthorne Studies 1934
- Increase in Employee Morale Surveys during WWII
- Cold War Skepticism
- there is little evidence in the available
literature that employee attitudes of the type
usually measured in morale surveys bear any
simple or, for that matter, appreciable
relationship to performance on the job
(Brayfield Crockett, 1955) - Skepticism continued into 1980s
- satisfaction and performance are only slightly
related to each other (Muchinsky (1985) - Employee Engagement emerged in mid 1990s
29The Holy Grail of Employee Research
- Employee Morale
- Employee Satisfaction
- Employee Involvement
- Organizational Commitment
- Job Enrichment
- Employee-Customer-Profit Chain
- Employee Engagement
30What is Employee Engagement?
- Studies show that engaged employees
- know what is expected of them
- make optimum use of their skills
- feel valued by their leaders
- enjoy the people they work with
- deliver quality
- And most importantly
- have confidence in the company and leadership
31(No Transcript)
32These employees
- will be more productive
- stay longer with the company
- become spokespeople for the company a
valuable source of PR - contribute to the bottom line and company value
33Higher engagement ? higher productivity
Based on research by the Corporate Leadership
Council (Building the High-Performance Workforce,
2002) Hewitt Associates (The Link Between
Employee Engagement and Business Results, 2003)
Watson-Wyatt (Watson-Wyatt Work-USA Survey, 2002)
and Towers-Perrin (Working Today Exploring
Employees Emotional Connections to their Jobs,
2003)
34Engagement and Customer Satisfaction
Stores with highly engaged employees.
Stores with moderately engaged employees.
Stores with less engaged employees.
Year 1
Year 2
Year 3
35Engagement and Comparable Store Sales
Stores with highly engaged employees.
Stores with moderately engaged employees.
Stores with less engaged employees.
36Key Drivers of Employee Engagement
My Job
My Job
Company Image
Company Image
Senior Leadership
Senior Leadership
Overall Engagement
Overall Engagement
Quality/Customer Service
Quality/Customer Service
Key
Key
Improved performance
Improved performance
Drivers
Drivers
Increased morale
Increased morale
Decreased turnover
Decreased turnover
Supervision
Supervision
Co
-
Workers
Co
-
Workers
Employee Value
Employee Value
Performance Management
Performance Management
37Many people believe that
People dont leave the company, they leave their
boss.
38Drivers of Intention to Leave
Relative Importance
Employee Value Company Image Senior Leadership My
Job Performance Management Quality/Customer
Service Supervision Co-Workers
Includes data from a cross section of employed
adults across industries and employers
38
39An Emerging Trend
- Across companies and industries, supervision is
among the least important drivers of intent to
leave. - In several individual studies for specific
companies, the same trend emerged. - Conclusion while the employee-supervisor
relationship cannot be ignored, its NOT just the
boss!
40SHRMs Job Satisfaction Survey
- According to Employees
- Benefits
- Compensation/pay
- Feeling safe in the work environment
- Job security
- Flexibility to balance work/life issues
- Communication between employees and senior
management - Relationship with immediate supervisor
- According to HR
- Relationship with immediate supervisor
- Management recognition of employee job
performance - Benefits
- Communication between employees and senior
management - Compensation/pay
- Opportunities to use skills/abilities
- Flexibility to balance work/life issues
From April 2005 issue of HR Magazine published
by The Society for Human Resource Management.
41Impact on Turnover
- In a study comprising a cross-section of employed
adults across industries and employers - 48 would remain with their companies even if
offered a comparable job elsewhere - 25 would NOT and 26 arent sure!
- Strongest intent to leave is seen among younger
employees
42How likely are employees to leave?
- Item I would remain with this company even if
offered a comparable job in another company. - Examined the percent of people who strongly
disagreed with that statement people who are
the most likely to leave - Variables dealt with aspects of the supervisor,
the job, senior management, and the company
43Employees are highly likely to leave if
No pride in Dont see Values arent Dont know
working for job related to aligned with what
is company company goals company expected of
me values
44Contrast that with
Not No opportunity Supervisor Supervisor recogniz
ed for growth doesnt cant manage for good and
understand people work development our work
45Conventional wisdom may be wrong
- Conventional wisdom said that issues closer to
the employee supervision, working conditions,
pay benefits had the greatest impact on
whether you stayed or left. - Today, it appears that this decision is being
made based on broader issues - Do I believe in this company? Is it a good fit
for me? - Is it being run properly? Will it remain
successful?
46Company Image driven by
- Actual products and services produced
- Emphasis on the value of employees
- Confidence in Senior Leadership
47Drivers of Confidence in Leadership
- Looking for key drivers of confidence in senior
leadership across a number of organizations,
several themes emerged. - Interpersonal factors seem to be more important
than factors related to competence or
organization direction. - Integrity, fairness, and respect
- Employees feeling valued
- Communication and support for change
48Building Engagement
- Minimize impact of stress on everyday work
interactions. - Find ways to empower employees.
- Look for and communicate clear expectations for
performance and deliverables. - Align with company values and understand
contribution to larger goals. - Understand larger constructs like company image
and senior leadership as well as items actionable
at a work group level. - Continually monitor reasons for turnover within
your organization.
49Most Common Mistakes
- Assume that pay doesnt matter
- Gather data but fail to act
- Or fail to make action a priority
- Miss warning signs for turnover
- Miss relationships in the data
- Gather data in a non-objective way
- Fail to monitor progress
- Blame the boss
50Dont forget to follow-up
- Stop asking my opinion when its so painfully
obvious from the results of the last two surveys
that you dont want to fix what were telling you
is wrong.
- This survey is a complete fraud. Why does the
company waste its money on this? It no more
gives a damn about what employees think than
yesterdays underwear.
- . . . surveys are without a doubt interesting,
but they often fail to live up to expectations.
51- For more information, contact
- Anna Erickson, PhD.
- Director, Consulting Services
- Questar Organizational Insights Group
- aerickson_at_questarweb.com
- 651.683.8697