Posts Tagged ‘great manager’

Employees Must Earn Their Place on the Team

Monday, May 3rd, 2010

The recession has been an education. It showed us many things, the most significant being that every employee must be a value-builder, a team player and a customer connector, or they are not needed. There are no longer any rights of employment. Today, an employee must earn the right to be on the team – and that comes from the way they add value.

So I thought this week, I would help managers communicate this message to their employees. Here is a draft letter; consider editing and using this with your employees:

Dear employee,
We have been through some very tough times lately; this recession has taught us many things. We have learned to better watch our world and respond in a more value-building way. We have learned to better listen to our customers and refocus on loyalty, not satisfaction. We have learned that every employee must contribute in a significant way, or they do not have a place on our team.

The recession has ushered in a new workplace – the rules of the workplace have changed. We have had to learn to do more with less. We now rely very significantly on every employee to add real value. This is how you earn your place on our team – you add and build value. There are no more entitlements. No more just showing up or doing the job as it has always been done. To be on this team, you must come to work each day ready to make the greatest difference you can. You must think, invent and respond. You must own your performance. You must earn your place.

We are committed to helping you achieve greatness here. We will coach you, give you the skills you need and look to activate your passion for your work. In exchange we require you to make a significant difference each day.

The rules have changed. Show up, step up and stand out. This is what it takes to be on this team.

Your manager

Times have changed. There is no right to a job. Employees earn their place by adding value. Be sure they know this. Help them achieve this. This will influence your success.

Please forward this to someone who will benefit form it and contact me to help your employees earn their place on your team.

Which of These Do Your Employees Say?

Sunday, March 21st, 2010

Do your employees say, “I have to go to work”? Or do they say, “I can’t wait to go to work”?

I know you think many employees will always be down about or disinterested in work. But consider this. What if your employees actually loved what they did for work? Wouldn’t their energy, creativity and performance be better?

Most companies are stuck in an outdated perspective that work is a necessary evil; it is only something you do to make money. But the great performers, those that Seth Godin speaks about in his book Linchpin, are those who know themselves well enough to identify roles that allow them to do what they are good at and passionate about. The result? They love work, find great personal value in it and consistently outperform others.

So managers, it is your responsibility to hire people who are a good “fit” – employees who meet today’s new definition of performance:
o They are good at doing what the job requires (it matches their brain hardwiring – their talents and intrinsic strengths), and
o They like doing it (it appeals to them).

Any job can be better completed by someone who likes what he does. A customer service employee who loves to work with people connects so much better with customers than someone who is not interested in connection or relationships. An accounting employee who loves details, reporting and analysis (and yes, there are these people out there) is so much more effective, productive and efficient than someone who would prefer to be around people all day. Fit matters.

Maybe there are some people who will always hate work. Well, let those people work for other companies. For your team, find people who are good at what the job requires and like doing it. Think “fit.” Then you’ll have employees who actually say, “I can’t wait to get to work.”

The Seven Steps to Finding the “Right” Job – Step 5

Tuesday, September 15th, 2009

Work, ” for many people, is a four-letter word. Most people don’t believe that it is possible to love your job – to love what you do and to be passionate about doing it. Most feel that work is how you make the money to have the life you want. But in today’s world the right job is one that plays to your strengths, activates your passions, allows for your best performance and adds great value to your life. Finding the right job is not complicated but it does require you to take the time to know your talents, strengths, passions and interests. There is no reason for you to hate your job; with a little direction, you can learn to define and hired into your dream job. Now is the time to find the right job and a job you love.

We are almost through all seven steps…today I introduce Step 5.

Find the right job Step 5:
What careers, roles or jobs need what you are great at, passionate about and meet your definition of success? These are opportunities that play to your strengths and activate your passions. These opportunities will allow you to be the most connected and most engaged. This will encourage your greatest energy, performance and impact. You now know yourself well enough to know what are the right jobs for you – the jobs that “fit.” So go ahead and create a list of your “Right” jobs, roles or careers. Consider everything that meets your criteria. You may find that the best job for you does not yet exist and if created would add great value to an organization. Don’t be afraid to invent your ideal job. Be true to yourself – put yourself in a job that will show off what you are great at, and activate your passions.

Two final steps and we’re done. I introduce Step 6 tomorrow. Don’t miss it. And share these with your friends and families who are job hunting…learn a better way of looking for the right job – one that will give you a job you love (and will excel in). For more information see “Stand Out and Get Hired” . Know yourself, what you are great at and what you are passionate about. Then find a job that allows you to use these. That is the “right” job for you.