Tag: employees

  • Five ways to make employees love workplace

    Five ways to make employees love workplace

    New study reveals that the best workplaces embrace trust-driven employee engagement, making for a great place to work and, ultimately a profitable business.

    The large-scale employee survey conducted by Vlerick Business School in collaboration with Great Place to Work; a global research institute; underlines five best ways to make employees love their workplace, be proud of their job and trust the management.

    1.      Pay more attention to new employees

    Employers who pay more attention to employees in their first months, make them feel welcomed and valued.  It is also worthwhile supporting employees in achieving a good work/life balance and inspiring them.

    2.      Show your employees you care

    Companies which encourage staff to share their achievements and ideas instil a feeling of pride and retain staff better. Sharing the company’s aims and objective with employees and showing them how important their role is will give meaning to their work. This will also
    create great ambassadors when it comes to the outside world.

    3.      Invest in training and development

    Training and development increase the pride employees take in their work and make them feel that they are receiving fairer treatment.  As a result, employees regard management as more credible and honest.

    4.      Offer flexible hours and the possibility to work from home

    Allowing employees to work flexible hours and work from home gives the feeling that a good life-work balance is being achieved. This shows that management trusts its personnel. Employees regard this as a sign of appreciation.

    5.      Commit to sustainability and corporate social responsibility

    Committing to sustainability and corporate social responsibility is the main way to attract a larger pool of applicants and therefore to recruit new talent.

  • Manipulation can dampen employees’ morale

    Manipulation is defined as the act of making someone think and behave exactly the way you want him to, by skilfully deceiving or influencing him. Though the person manipulating the other person or people may have his way for some time, the strategy of manipulation is not the one that is enduring – it does not last! When employees feel betrayed or manipulated, management’s attempts at motivation cannot achieve any positive result. By way of illustration, according to research, a giant supermarket chain in Florida was well known for its warm relationship with its fifty thousand odd employees.

     

    Publication

    The company published a bi-weekly bulletin that listed all the births, deaths, marriages and serious illnesses of employees and their families. For more than twenty years, the company president had sent personalised cards to the families of everyone listed in the bulletin. But when a new president was appointed in 1984, he decided to discontinue sending cards for births, marriages and illnesses. It is far better not to do something than to commit yourself to something you may not be able to deliver.

     

    Another development

    In another development, research has confirmed that when the brown aircraft of People Express took to the skies in 1980, its founders initiated a social experiment on the grandest of scales. It was probably the most elaborate attempt at corporate democracy ever. According to Donald Calvin Burr, president of People Express, “The single predominant reason why I cared about starting a new company was to try and develop a better way for people to work together.”

    So many people flocked to join the company because of this message, that only one out of a hundred applicants could be accepted. “You’re not a commodity,” Burr would stress to new recruits at the end of intensive five-week-long, six-day-a-week (without pay) training programmes. “You’re not a beaten-down worker. You’re a manager. You’re an owner.” And apparently, he meant it.

     

    Expert’s view

    Azriel Winnett, a business management expert says there were no supervisors, secretaries or vice-presidents at People Express. All employees were given the title of manager. They were rotated among jobs frequently – in the air as flight attendants, at the airports as ticket agents, or behind the scenes in the accounting or scheduling departments. One third of the corporate profit was distributed to employees. They all owned a minimum of a hundred shares of the airline’s stock. “When you fly People’s Express, an owner is never more than a few steps away,” boasted one its newspaper adverts.

     

    Elated employee

    Fired with an infectious excitement, the “owner-managers” would work ten to twelve hours per day. Since per capita productivity was high, People Express operated with about fifty staff per airplane, about half the industry average. Burr was determined that the company should become “a role model for other airlines and businesses”, and it did. Not only had it become the nation’s fifth largest airline within five years, but it had become famous for its human management philosophy. “Anyone who isn’t studying People Express and the way they’re managing people is out of their minds,” proclaimed a Harvard professor of repute. Two years later, People Express was no more. Drained by an excessively rapid expansion, Burr was forced to sell the entire airline before it was too late.

     

    Reasons for collapse

    The reasons for the company’s failure will probably be debated in business schools for many years to come, as business reporter Robert Levering points out in his fascinating book, A Great Place to Work. But parallel to the financial crash, a failure of a different kind became evident in the course of time. For all his ingenuity as a motivational expert, Donald Burr’s grand scheme for ultimate corporate democracy had long turned sour in the eyes of many of his employees. Levering masterfully analyses the reasons for this in his book. During the final week of the airline’s existence as an independent entity, he talked at length with numerous People Express employees. They talked of feeling being “manipulated”. They stressed that this feeling had manifested on a large scale long before the airline flew into financial turbulence.

     

    Abuse

    There is a special excitement about being involved in launching a company, and part of the People Express experience has occurred in countless other companies, too. Everyone feels needed and useful. The “partners” at People Express felt like winners, despite the long, uncompensated hours of work. But in this kind of situation, it is easy for the people at the top to purposefully prolong the start-up phase, and to take advantage of their workers’ love of excitement and novelty. The very responsibility given to the employees can become deceptive. Their very loyalty can become an object of manipulation.

    And although an elaborate communication system was in place at People Express, it worked well only when the going was good. But there were no viable mechanisms for handling employee complaints and concerns. The system made no provision for conflicts, because it assumed a kind of everlasting harmony between the employee-managers and the top executives.

     

    Realisation

    At People Express, many employees discovered that broken promises led to broken dreams. Perhaps the big-wigs were thinking to themselves: “Tell people whatever will make them feel good. Then they’ll work harder, and we’ll make more money.” And as any politician knows, you can win votes by making promises, but voters eventually expect you to deliver.

     

    Last words

    In an atmosphere of trust, communication can flourish. But trust is not something that can be turned on at will, like a tap. Therefore, every corporate organisation that wants to succeed in business should desist from manipulating its employees or making empty promises to them because deploying this deceitful strategy can be counter-productive in the long run.

    Till we meet on Wednesday.

     

     

     

    •GOKE ILESANMI, Managing Consultant/CEO of Gokmar Communication Consulting, is an International Platinum Columnist, Certified Public Speaker/MC, Communication Specialist, Motivational Speaker and Career Management Coach. He is also a Book Reviewer, Biographer and Editorial Consultant.

     

     

    Tel: 08055068773; 08187499425

    Email: gokeiles2010@gmail.com

    Website: www.gokeilesanmi.com

  • Firm rewards 460 employees

    Firm rewards 460 employees

    Promasidor Nigeria Limited has rewarded about 460 employees for their hard work and long years of service to the company.

    According to statement, the employees, including their spouses, were honoured for putting in 10 and 15 years of serving. The event held at Granduer Events Centre, Ikeja, Lagos, last weekend.

    Speaking at the event, Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer, Promasidor Nigeria, Chief Keith Richards, said the long service award is a yearly event meant to celebrate the company’s long serving staff and promote the spirit of togetherness in the establishment.

    Richards said:“Today is about you. We want to appreciate you for your hard work and long years of service, as well as use the opportunity to socialise and relax. We want to thank you for everything you have done to help this company.

    “When we saw the number of people to be rewarded, at first we thought it would be a challenge, but as the planning committee went on with the plans, we knew it would go well. Once again, from Promasidor group, thank you for your support and do enjoy yourselves.”

    In a message, Chairman, Promasidor Nigeria, Mr Mark Rose, apologised for his absence, but congratulated the employees for their long years of service.