The world has an employee engagement crisis, with serious and potentially lasting repercussions for the
global economy.
Though companies and leaders worldwide recognize the advantages of engagement, and many have instituted
surveys to measure engagement โ employee engagement has barely budged in 18 years.
Many surveys have been done studying and tracking of workplaces since 2000. Though there have been some
slight ebbs and flows, less than one-third of United States employees have been engaged in their jobs
and workplaces during these 18 years. According to Gallup Daily tracking, under 30 percent in the United
States are engaged, meaning they are involved in, enthusiastic about and committed to their work and
workplace. Worldwide, only 12 percent of people working for an organization are engaged.
Why Arenโt the Numbers Moving?
With so many organizations focusing on engaging their employees, the question is: Why arenโt engagement
levels across the world increasing? On one end of the spectrum are scientifically and experientially
validated approaches that lead to changes in individual and business performance, supported by
strategies and tactical initiatives.
At the other end of the spectrum are invalidated, unfocused annual surveys. Much like a traditional
employee satisfaction survey, this type of survey usually measures a multitude of workplace dimensions
that often have limited alignment with other business objectives and can be difficult to take action
upon after receiving results.
Technology also makes it easy to create an โemployee surveyโ and call it an engagement program, which
allows a company to fulfill an apparent organizational need and check a box. But metrics on their own
donโt drive change or increase performance.
In reality, when companies focus exclusively on measuring engagement rather than on improving engagement,
they often fail to make necessary changes that will engage employees or meet employeesโ workplace needs.
These shortcomings include:
These flawed approaches pose significant barriers to improving engagement, increasing performance,
promoting manager development and achieving lasting change.
Why Arenโt the Numbers Moving?
Integrate engagement into the companyโs human capital strategy. Organizations must have a clear purpose
behind their strategy for engaging employees; leadership involvement and commitment must be present.
Use a scientifically validated instrument to measure engagement. Since the engagement industry began in
the late 1990s, it has taken on a life of its own. Almost every employee survey, regardless of its
purpose, is referred to as an โengagementโ survey. But few instruments have been proven or validated. As
a result, many companies are attempting to increase engagement by focusing on problems that may not
affect engagement or by tackling problems in the wrong order.
Understand where the company is today, and where it wants to be in the future. Many businesses seek to
chart the same one-, two- or three-year journey to improved engagement. But every companyโs starting
point is different, as is its internal capabilities and how fast it can change. After a company takes a
baseline measurement, a three-year road map is a recommended strategy; however, it should be based on
the companyโs needs for improving engagement.
Look beyond engagement as a single construct. Some companies focus on moving the overall engagement
number while overlooking the tactical elements that drive improved performance. Engagement isnโt
determined by an abstract feeling; itโs the result of concrete performance management activities, such
as clarifying work results getting people resources to do their work, providing growth opportunities or
promoting participation in projects.
Align engagement with other workplace priorities. Engagement shouldnโt be โsomething elseโ an employee,
manager or leader has to do, instead, it should be how work gets done. Engagement is about investing in
everyday working moments and incorporating engagement concepts into the workflow, even as businesses
change and adopt new initiatives. Creating a culture of engagement requires more than completing an
annual employee survey and then leaving managers on their own, hoping they will learn something from the
survey results that will change their daily behavior.
Major companies that are examples of
solid employee engagement
All of these companies are HR centric meaning that they have employee engagement as a priority and invest
in programs, events, benefits, recognition in this order:
Customers
Employee Engagement
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Shareholders
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