Original article from the Flevy business blog can be found here:
http://flevy.com/blog/help-them-help-you-good-managers-inspire-good-employee-performance/
Gallup released its “State of the American Workplace” report, a comprehensive look at employee engagement and performance in the U.S. The study found that 30 percent of employees are engaged and inspired by their work, and at the other end, 20 percent are actively disengaged and uninspired. In the middle is the remainder: 50 million (50 percent) Americans who are not engaged by their work or their managers. They’re just kind of there.
Gallup holds managers entirely responsible for an employee’s level of engagement. The top 25 percent of teams (the best managed) have 50 percent fewer accidents and 41 percent fewer quality defects than the bottom 25 percent (the worst managed), and they incur far less in health care costs. With this in mind, we think that one of the most important decisions you can make in business is who you name manager. Good managers embolden your employees; bad managers hurt your bottom line. The good news? These four performance solutions can help at every level.
Health Care
Health care plays a vital role in a motivating a workforce. Research from Cornell University shows medical insurance has a great influence on an individual’s task performance, which affects workplace safety and performance. Cover your staff—it indicates you care about their well-being and inspires them to be safer and perform better.
Company Culture
Companies tend to this issue the least, because it doesn’t yield tangible results, but company culture is often the first link in a chain of subsequent performance defects. There isn’t a single formula to tightening the family ties of your organization, and it’s a big job—but you should be doing it, as it pays big dividends. Two examples to get you started:
Help Them Help You: Good Managers Inspire Good Employee Performance
1. Help Them Help You: Good
Managers Inspire Good Employee
Performance
Contributed by Shane Avron on February 18, 2014 in Organization,
Change, & HR
Gallup released its “State of the American
Workplace” report, a comprehensive look at
employee engagement and performance in
the U.S. The study found that 30 percent of
employees are engaged and inspired by their
work, and at the other end, 20 percent are
actively disengaged and uninspired. In the
2. middle is the remainder: 50 million (50 percent) Americans who are not engaged by their
work or their managers. They’re just kind of there.
Gallup holds managers entirely responsible for an employee’s level of engagement. The top
25 percent of teams (the best managed) have 50 percent fewer accidents and 41 percent
fewer quality defects than the bottom 25 percent (the worst managed), and they incur far
less in health care costs. With this in mind, we think that one of the most important
decisions you can make in business is who you name manager. Good managers embolden
your employees; bad managers hurt your bottom line. The good news? These four
performance solutions can help at every level.
Health Care
Health care plays a vital role in a motivating a workforce. Research from Cornell University
shows medical insurance has a great influence on an individual’s task performance, which
affects workplace safety and performance. Cover your staff—it indicates you care about their
well-being and inspires them to be safer and perform better.
3. Company Culture
Companies tend to this issue the least, because it doesn’t yield tangible results, but company
culture is often the first link in a chain of subsequent performance defects. There isn’t a
single formula to tightening the family ties of your organization, and it’s a big job—but you
should be doing it, as it pays big dividends. Two examples to get you started:
Business cards used to be a necessity, exclusive to client-facers, but the more hats we wear
professionally, the more we blur those lines. Equipping the most removed workers with
brochures, catalogs and other business collateral keeps them feeling in the loop, and
numerous sample and pricing options are available to managers who want everyone
representing their brand to be able to network with others.
Yes, people should be having fun at work. But no one wants or needs more fake fun . Don’t
schedule another trivia contest or dress-down Wednesday—find ways to make the work
itself more rewarding.
Performance is also closely tied to building a corporate culture of excellence. Read more about this topic in this
article: Strategy Implementation: Why Culture Matters .
4. Telecommuting
Alongside a rise in cloud computing has risen an opportunity to extend the boundaries of
work to the home. Letting staff dictate where they do (a portion of) their work desensitizes
the pressures of that work and yields a 12 percent increase in overall efficiency, according to
a Gensler study.
Positive Reinforcement
Commended employees will work harder for you, but sometimes we just forget to say it.
Revive or revamp your employee recognition efforts to make sure your employees know
their efforts are appreciated. A “thank you” backed up with something tangible like a gift
certificate for a massage, lunch on the company or a gas card is a small but lasting bump to
employee performance.
Check out this Employee Performance Guide for a basic introduction to performance management, the process,
setting objectives, providing feedback, the performance discussion between manager and employee.
5. About Shane Avron
Shane works in Internet advertising, and writes about advances on the social Web and more.
6. Flevy (www.flevy.com) is the
marketplace for premium documents.
These documents can range from
Business Frameworks to Financial
Models to PowerPoint Templates.
Flevy was founded under the principle
that companies waste a lot of time and
money recreating the same foundational
businessdocuments. Our vision is for
Flevy to become a comprehensive
knowledge base of business
documents. All rganizations, from
startups to large enterprises, can use
Flevy— whether it's to jumpstart
projects, to find reference or comparison
materials, or just to learn.
Contact Us
Please contact us with any questions you
may haveabout our company.
• General Inquiries
support@flevy.com
• Media/PR
press@flevy.com
• Billing
billing@flevy.com