Most companies are asking employees to do more with less. These demands may produce positive results in the short term, but they are not sustainable in the long term. “Organizations can do more with less simply by not leaving so much untapped performance on the table.” The frustration people often face in these conditions is not an engagement problem; it is more often an enablement problem.
Mark Royal and Tom Agnew of the Hay Group, explain that The Enemy of Engagement is frustration caused by a highly engaged employee’s inability to succeed in a role due to organizational barriers or the inability to bring the bulk of his or her talents, skills, and abilities to the job. Ironically, the more engaged they are, the more frustrated they get because they care more.
“Doing more with less doesn’t mean conjuring higher levels of motivation out of thin air, but rather allowing motivated employees to perform at their best. It’s about harnessing and unleashing the full potential of frustrated employees—those who want to give their best but can’t due to organizational barriers and constraints.”
Typically we associate better engagement with leadership, but what drives it is better management. Fixing engagement means dealing with the frustration of thwarted employees. Specific management practices detailed by the authors include:
- Create specific, measurable goals and clearly lay out what employees need to do—the precise behaviors and activities—to achieve them.
- Provides employees with regular, concrete, and constructive feedback about their work and its value to delivering business strategy.
- Empower employees to make the decisions necessary to execute and excel at their jobs—and make sure employees understand which decisions they control.
- Prioritize investments in resources and staff with an emphasis on providing employees with the tools and support they need to succeed.
- Assign and coordinate roles with serious consideration of each employee’s strengths, reward and reinforce teamwork and collaboration.
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