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R.G. Consultants: July 2014

Thursday 3 July 2014

Managers, are you really getting the most from your people?

As a manager, it is very tempting to ignore requests for change from employees; these requests often mean spending large chunks of money on a new process or system, or a request for a salary increase. What we often fail to see, is that even just by listening to someone and showing your empathy and understanding, but often doing little to change the situation, can help. 

Listen to your people

Ultimately, it is likely that your teams know more about their working challenges than you do, due to the simple fact that they work with the challenges on a daily basis. Listening to your people is vital. Sadly, this is often ignored, especially when it comes to large scale change across organisations. 

There is a well known psychological study which led to what we know today as the Hawthorne Effect. This phenomenon occurs when people improve their behaviour or productivity output due to the simple fact there has been a change in their working environment, whether or not the change results in an improvement to their working conditions. 

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This change can be as minor as being observed for a short period. Of course, we can't observe everyone all of the time, and we wouldn't want to because the effect would wear off, but by showing people you care, they will respond accordingly. The key is sincerity. 

Granted, this is a temporary measure, but it shows the potential positive impact of creating an environment of listening, sharing and displaying genuine concern for one another in the workplace. It also provides you with vital insight into the workings of you teams; you never know when this information might be useful. 

The crux of this is that people want to feel like they matter. Employees want to feel they are part of something important and without them the end goal wouldn't be as possible. But in order to bring people with you on your journey, you need to understand their motivations for work. 

Understanding your people

Knowing your people is the key to a happy workforce. In our modern world of non-traditional male and female roles, and the widespread introduction of flexible working, you are very behind the times if you are not sensitive to the work / life balance needs of your people. 

I recently spoke to a friend of mine and she relayed to me the challenges she could see across her national team, and that she knew she could help to make changes to ensure the team operated more efficiently. However, she is also the mother of a young child and was concerned to speak up at the fear that she may have to travel extensively and work long hours to achieve her goal. 

This fear factor is exactly what we should be trying to eliminate if we want a successful business. The environment we should be creating is an open forum for ideas and discussion and the opportunity for people to take calculated risks. 

The lack of this in the workplace, again comes back to our fear of spending; if people are allowed to have ideas, it often means spending and change. But, by talking together about reaching a larger purpose or goal, the smaller things become easier to achieve because they are in service of a bigger purpose. You become more creative, more resourceful as a team and can get things moving in the right direction - together.  

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It is sad that people have less passion for their work because they don't want to travel or leave work late instead opting to be at home with their child; but why wouldn't they?? It's normal to want a work / life balance. But whilst at work, we are not getting the best from our teams because they don't want to rock the boat and put themselves in a difficult position. We need to get the best from our people to get the best out of our business. 

There is another common principle used in psychology called the psychological contract. This is an unwritten contract between you and your people; an expectation of how you will both behave during your contract together. By being mindful of what your employees want, expect and need from you, you will get more back from them.

Here are some tips to help you do that:

1. Talk to people - find out their honest career goals - what do they really want out of their career and what work / life balance do they want. Give a little back to your employees, and they will give you more. 

2. Be flexible with hours. If someone needs to leave at 4.30pm to collect their child from school - let them do it. You've likely lost their engagement for the last hour of that day anyway because they are thinking about where they would rather be and should be - with their family. Even if they are only there for six hours a day, but they are happier and more motivated, you will get more from them than you would in their normal eight hours.

3. Provide people with the best resources to get the job done. Don't just say - it's too expensive to send you to X so you can't visit that team or take that course. Ensure you talk freely with them to come up with an affordable but effective option for making the job possible. You will get more from people if you work WITH them, not against them.

Being a manager is a tough job, but it can be made much easier if you have happy and effective employees. Take some of these tips on board, and you will be surprised at what can be achieved. 





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