3 ways to retain and engage your valuable employees
By
Joel Garfinkle
Valuable in-demand leaders are what
turn a company from good to great. An organization’s most important asset is
its talented, high-performing employees. Companies that prioritize retaining
valued employees understand retention’s direct impact on their success.
To maintain the company’s greatness,
it must commit and invest resources in the vast pool of quality talent across
the company. The most effective way to maintain a competitive advantage in
today’s marketplace is to fully utilize your top performers. This will directly
differentiate your company from its competition. But how do you do this? Begin
to implement these three strategies today:
1.
Think outside the job.
Motivated employees want a
challenge. They are anxious to contribute to projects outside of their specific
job descriptions. Look around you. How many people do you see who are
underutilized? Who could contribute something more than they currently do? Take
steps to evaluate your peoples’ skills, talent and experience.
Ask them what they want and tap into
this valuable talent bank.
Case study:
Brenda, a mid-level marketing
manager, was assigned the job of coming up with a new ad campaign utilizing social
media. Steve, a company sales rep with extensive social media interest and
experience, continually volunteered to help. But that wasn’t his job, and
Brenda hired a team of outside consultants to create the campaign. Steve was so
disheartened by the company’s lack of interest in utilizing his talents that he
put his resume out on the street and within a few weeks he accepted an offer
from one of the company’s competitors.
What did it cost the company?
Probably close to 100% of Steve’s compensation package in hard costs. Intangible
costs are harder to figure, but could include a costly candidate search; the
expense of training Steve’s replacement; loss of his knowledge and skills; and
of course the mourning time and insecurity of his coworkers.
2.
Practice total transparency.
When you wonder why people are leaving
your company, look up. People leave their managers far more often than they
leave the company. It’s critically important that managers give their team
members clear expectations and consistently open communications. When the
manager fails to show employees a clear pathway to growth and success, it makes
employees feel uncertain and undervalued.
Case
study:
Jill loved her job as an IT manager
but David, the company VP and her boss, was a puzzle. He was nice enough, but
Jill was totally stressed out by his lack of communication. She had no idea
where she stood or where she was headed. Eventually she left the company in
frustration — and for a lower paying job. At her exit interview, she told HR
what she wasn’t getting: clarity about David’s expectations, specifics about
her earning potential and future with the company and frequent feedback about
her performance.
In the absence of free and open
communication, people will assume the worst — that the
Company doesn’t value them and has
no plans for their future success.
3.
Hand out the Oscars.
Your people want to feel rewarded,
recognized and appreciated. Frequent “thank you” go a long way. Even better —
acknowledge people publicly for specific accomplishments. Brag about them to
your boss, or even to your boss’ boss. Of course people appreciate monetary
rewards, bonuses and raises.
However, these have more impact when
they are tied to specific milestones and Accomplishments. In a tough economy
with high unemployment in many sectors, it’s easy to get complacent about
compensation and figure your people will hang around because they need a job.
Don’t do it! Keep up with the compensation statistics in your industry and make
sure you’re paying competitive salaries, maybe just a bit better than the
industry average.
Case
study:
Matt, the president of a small
manufacturing company, prided himself on having a casual, friendly, fun work
environment. He wanted his workers to feel relaxed and to enjoy coming to work
every day. He instituted pizza Fridays and bowling tournaments and felt he had a
loyal, productive workforce. But lately he’d been hearing a little undercurrent
of grumbling and complaints. So he called everyone together for an informal rap
session. That’s how he learned that several other companies in his industry had
just given their employees a 20% across the board salary increase. Matt wanted
to be fair, but he also wanted to pay for performance. He asked the employees
to create a task force and to come up with a new salary structure that would
reward people for reaching specific personal and company goals.
A motivated, productive workforce
doesn’t just happen. It takes constant vigilance to remain
Aware of industry trends as well as
the attitudes and needs of your employees. Awareness is the first step toward
engaging and retaining your greatest asset — your people.
Source:
www.garfinkleexecutivecoaching.com
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