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Feature
An engaged employee is more productive
Employee engagement is vital for building a high
performance culture—to drive the business forward, writes Vinita
Gupta.
Employee engagement is about building a truly
great relationship with the workforce and in ensuring that the bond
lasts. Any organisation that embraces fine employer principles,
recognises an employee’s talent and potential, and is committed to
providing an enriching professional experience, is bound to
succeed.
Prashanth LJ, Assistant VP and Global Marketing
Head, Infinite Computer Solutions, says, “Engaged employees work
with passion and have a visceral connection to their company. They
drive innovation and move their organisation forward. They perform
better, stay longer, act responsibly, and advocate their company’s
values and hence investing in an employee’s growth leads to
productivity and profitability for the organisation thereof.”
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"Companies ensure that they are
developing emotionally engaged workforces"
- Sampath
Shetty VP, Permanent Staffing Business
Unit TeamLease Services |
According to Sampath Shetty, VP, Permanent
Staffing Business Unit, TeamLease Services, engaged employees work
with passion and feel connected to the company’s overall objectives.
Such positive linkage has employee’s engagement with performance
scaling up to the business needs.
“Engaged employees are committed and loyal and
bring in valuable referrals into the organisation. For them, the
organisation is family and not just a part of their lives, but
something more than that,” says Kalpana Srinivasan, HR Head, Aspire
Systems.
Increases productivity
Employee engagement is directly related to the
growth of the company. If an employee is not engaged enough the
first thing that gets affected is his productivity.
Prashanth LJ believes that while employee turnover
can be forcibly controlled, productivity cannot be. A committed and
loyal employee automatically becomes a high performer which results
in a positive bottom line for the organisation.
He asserts that when an employee is kept
motivated, both professionally as well as personally; he
automatically feels that he is a part of the company. Hence they
make it a point to invest in the development and training of their
people. Prashanth adds, “At Infinite, we have innovative training
programmes for our employees. We also organise fun activities, both
outdoors and indoors, to encourage our employees to develop their
personal skills and hobbies. We feel a healthy mix of official and
non-official activities contribute to the happiness and security of
every employee and make them more productive and committed at the
workplace.”
Shetty feels that an employee looks for clear road
map/career path, personal development, training towards enhancing
their skills (reskill or upskill) to take new responsibilities in
his employment. All these elements ensure and result into engagement
of employees resulting in productivity outcome.
“The more engaged an employees is, the more is his
commitment level towards making a plan successful. Each one of us
should think like the CEO of our company, because each one of us run
the company we work in within our own boundaries. Therefore, its
success is very important for our own growth and that of our
company. The day we think like a ‘CEO’ of our roles, there’s nothing
that can stop us from reaching the top,” says Nagdev Bindiganavale,
HR Director, Network Appliance Systems (NetApp).
Engaged employees do not look for organisational
support every step of the way. They are self-starters and believe in
supporting the organisation in all its endeavours.
Srinivasan believes that engaged employees are
always willing to put extra efforts to get things done. They
showcase the organisation in the best manner to the outside world—be
it customers, potential employees, family, friends,
investors—whoever it may be. All these intrinsically translate to
overall greater levels of productivity and cost savings for the
organisation. He adds, “The longer an employee remains with an
organisation, the more they are able to understand organisational
philosophies and strategy. They are able to get better aligned to
organisational goals and hence can get all the more engaged.”
- Works with passion and performs
better
- Motivates other
employees
- Leads to productivity and
profitability for the organisation
- Self-starters and believe in
supporting the organisation
- Gets better aligned to
organisational goals
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Creating an engaged workforce
Engagement is not about driving employees to work
harder, but about providing the conditions under which they will
work more effectively. This is more likely to result from a healthy
work-life balance than from working long hours. Organisations
focussing on emotional engagement, cognitive engagement and physical
engagement see a lot more of employees engaged. Employers/managers
should encourage employee feedbacks and participation to
organisation’s key deliverables would be critical. The most
important thing is communicate to find out how their work adds to
the bottom line of the company.
“Employee engagement is all about giving an
employee a bonded eco-system to work in, wherein he shares a common
goal, belief and values with the team, with each member having a
clear understanding of the goals. Emplo-yees should get
opportunities to put their skills and talent to use. It’s about
giving employees a work culture where they are free to take up
initiatives,” says Bindiganavale.
Srinivasan explains that firstly the managers need
to understand that employee engagement is the key to an
organisation’s success. They need to constantly have feedback and
interaction cycles with their people and get them to partake in the
organisational initiatives, voluntarily or involuntarily. She adds,
“Managers need to keep their people updated all the time on the
organisational vision and mission. They need to act as a bridge that
can connect organisational values and goals to those of individual
values and goals.”
Business managers should pay more attention to
creating an engaged workforce. The relationship requires regular
attention and maintenance but, if not carefully managed, HR business
partnering can lead to neglect and damaging impact on
engagement.
Shetty explains, having fair, transparent
management processes are important in driving up levels of
performance. Organisations should review their communications and
particularly their arrangements for listening to employee opinions.
He adds, “Employees are engaged with the immediate work at hand and
are positioned to leverage their individual strengths in their work.
Coaching also becomes imperative for their managers and executives.
Companies ensure the right employees are placed in the right jobs of
their organisations and that they are developing an
emotionally-engaged workforce.”
Infinite offers flexible work hours, career
growth, recognition, leadership and job enablement as the company
believes that it is the intangibles that make an employee stay
engaged with the organisation. They also invest time in designing
and implementing a career development programme that is in tune with
the employee’s expectations so that he develops a certain sense of
ownership of his targets.
“We make sure our managers maintain a clear
communication channel with every employee so that they can
concentrate on what they do best, and are encouraged to do more of
it at every stage,” adds Prashanth LJ.
Communication is crucial
Engaged employees feel a strong emotional bond
with the organisation that employs them. They demonstrate a
willingness to recommend the organisation to others and commit time
and effort to help the company succeed. Hence it’s very important
for an organisation to take immediate steps when they spot this
engagement level slipping.
Through dialogues and one-on-ones NetApp tries to
figure out the reasons that had led to the fall in engagement and
later thinks about the kind of resources would an employee need to
engage himself better with the job. Based on the feedback provided
by the employee, the company ensures that he gets what he wants in
order to engage better. Following this, they track the definite
productivity milestones of the employee in question. Bindiganavale
agrees that it is about communicating well to team members. Each
employee should be told that he is an essential part of the team and
the company at large and that his contribution is critical to the
company’s success.
He adds, “Most employees leave because they are
not given the work content required for their progression. Mostly
people are tired of the monotony of their work. A good way to avoid
this is job alteration within a particular department, wherein the
employee gets introduced to every work process within that
department.”
Infinite also encourages the employee to see how
his work contributes to the organisation’s future. The company holds
workshops and overall development programmes regularly for every
employee and encourages his interaction and participation, so he
builds his talents into strengths and also develops a sense of
loyalty to the organisation and stays engaged at all times.
“We invest a great deal of time in conversations
with our employees about their expectations for their roles. We also
challenge the employee to think creatively and in an out-of-the-box
manner so he is exposed to different scenarios at the workplace and
his intellect is stimulated at regular intervals,” says Prashanth
LJ.
Thus it is these initiatives that escalate an
employee’s engagement at the workplace, which in turn will lead to
the financial growth of the company. |