| Working With Your
Employees
By Jane Boucher
The
role of management is to find the best people and to build teams that work together. Employers must recognize their workers'
achievements. The success of most
organizations is often credited to the ideas and hard work of their employees. Managers need to motivate employees with relevant
training. Helping to create pride in the
final work product is essential to creating team self esteem. Tangible and intangible rewards help to make goal
attainment that much more worthwhile.
Supervisors should empower their
teams by allowing employees to make decisions. They
should support their choices and the employees' effort to achieve goals. Encourage employees to feel ownership so that
there will be a sense of personal success. While
it is important for management to provide direction, it is equally valuable to listen to
employees' ideas and facilitate team meetings to achieve the goals of the organization.
Once the team is motivated to see a
project through to the end, the group must be given the tools they need to carry it out. These can be as varied as their ideas for a
project. There are business consultants and
speakers who teach team building skills to business managers. Sometimes a facilitator is needed to assign
project tasks to skilled team members. It is
important to know each of your employees and their individual capabilities. Use that knowledge to get the best out of each
employee. Consult with your employees. They may have ideas about colleagues in other
departments who can help you achieve your goals.
Develop a mission statement and ask
employees to refine it. You could be in for a
shock. They may have an entirely different
view of the organization's goals. Are you and
your employees on the same page? Give them
the opportunity to show what their capabilities are.
Encourage all employees to offer ideas and bold concepts that might excite
your workforce into new areas of success. Be
open to new opportunities. Whether you blend
your mission statement with that of your employees, or theirs with yours, complete your
company mission statement. Publish it and be
sure everyone gets a copy. Repeat the process
of revisiting your mission statement at regular intervals.
It will be a great motivator for your employees - and for you!
Conduct regular employee surveys. If employers choose, surveys can be an anonymous
way to adjust weak management skills in various departments. It can provide the employer with the types of
training that may be needed. Your workers can
safely point out efficiency flaws in production without fear of reprisals. The simple question, "how can we improve in
this area?" can lead to better products and services or cost-saving measures within
the organization. Some organizations run a
customer satisfaction survey at the same time, to examine similarities between what
employees can do better and what customers want to be better. The employer gets a win - win .
Institute a vigorous program of
education and self-improvement. The more
investment in the employees' development, the less investment in other more expensive
costs like lower productivity, turnover, rehiring and stress related illness and injuries. Utilize your best employees to teach newly hired
trainees. Instead of thrusting a new person
into a job and immediately expecting them to fit into your company culture, let your high
performers mentor your new employees to help create a smoother transition.
Management must create an emotional
atmosphere whereby people feel secure enough to ask tough questions and to ask for help
when they need it. They must not be afraid of
losing their job if they take a risk. This
is essential to developing trust. Managers
need to learn how to ask for honest feedback and to facilitate communication. Managers should strive to understand their
employees' work and personal needs. They must
also value their workers' participation in running the organization. When fear is reduced, trust is built resulting in
increased work satisfaction and commitment.
Educational programs can reduce
employees' stress, which benefits the organization. It
is far cheaper to institute wellness programs, stress-management programs, employee
assistance programs, employee satisfaction surveys, and self-improvement programs than to
pay the staggering costs of low morale, burnout and declining productivity. Employee education pays off!
http://www.janeboucher.org
http://www.janeboucher.com |