Posts Tagged ‘marshall goldsmith’

Get Employees Off the Bench and Back Into the Game

Sunday, April 11th, 2010

If you played sports, remember when you got hurt in a game? Your coach told you to shake it off and get back in the game. Well this is the situation in the workplace. Employees have been hurt by the recession – their paychecks, their opportunities, their stability and their egos. And instead of shaking it off and getting back into the game, they have gone to the bench to wait things out. Today’s employees have been scared away from exceptional performance in favor of just playing it safe.

The Global Workforce Study (conducted by the global professional services company Towers Watson) – a biennial survey of employee attitudes and workplace trends – confirms that the recession has changed the way U.S. employees view their work. In the past, job opportunity, relationship with management and development drove employee performance and loyalty. Today, employees just want job security.

As summarized in The Last Word column by John Hollon in the April 2010 issue of Workforce Management Magazine, “(The survey) paints a picture of an American workforce that is hunkered down, risk-averse and hanging on as long as they can – until, they hope they can afford to retire.”

So I have to ask. What happens to our businesses if we allow employees to hunker down? Isn’t our success built into the clever, wise, risk-taking employee responses that invent, grow and create the next generation of products and services?

Your new challenge is to find ways to help your employees get their mojo back and get out of hibernation mode. Here are some ideas:
1. Reconnect with employees. Increase your presence, communication and responsiveness with employees. Be more available.
2. Clearly define or redefine the focus of the business. Be sure all emloyees are aware of their expectations.
3. Build in more fun. Tough times require a different response. Commit to more fun and a more personal workplace.
4. Deal up front with issues. Host a monthly meeting to bring challenging and troubling national, local and personal issues up; ignoring reality stalls employee performance.
5. Ask employees what they need to help re-energize and reactivate their performance.

Today’s managers are required to deal with more human and emotional employee issues – because they impact performance. Use the resources presented in www.LiveFiredUp.com to help you learn how to manage in an intellectual age, help employees overcome their fears of an unstable economy, and get them back to working in a way that builds a stronger company and economy.

Please pass this on to someone who will benefit from it.