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For Love of the Game

June 1, 2013 By Leona Charles

This morning I had the privilege of attending an Executive Breakfast that focused on employee engagement and what that actually means. It was a timely discussion because I hear the phrase employee engagement in just about every explanation of what’s wrong with an organization. But what is it really? What does employee engagement mean and why is it important to your business? Here’s what I learned.

Engagement encourages individuality

Employee engagement is as individual as each of your staff members. Everyone is motivated by different things and the key to a successful engagement strategy is the recognition that what you want is not what everyone else wants. You have to get to know your staff on a personal level and find out what motivates that person individually. Some people want that corner office, some want the ability to leave when their family needs them, and some just want money. Before they can engage, you have to engage and figure out what makes them tick.

Engagement is strategic

This sounds terrible, but like any good business strategy engagement has to have a direction. Simply put you have to know what you want and how you want people to get there before you can engage them. The best part of engagement comes from the support that your staff will provide once they are engaged. If you want an engaged workforce you have to provide your staff with a map, tools and the ability to navigate to the goal.

There will be blood

I say this facetiously, but the cold hard truth is that there will be casualties on your road to engagement. The point though is that unlike other strategies, engagement forces you to have the hard conversations that reveal whether someone is in tune with your organization’s objectives or pursuing their own. You can’t be an engaged organization without the support of your staff and your staff cannot be engaged if they are pursuing their own agendas.

Engagement has to be a common language

Communication is the key to any healthy relationship and just about any dysfunctional relationship can recover when you learn how to communicate. Engaging employees is no different. You have to speak your employee’s language and that means that you have explain your objectives in a way that brings the goal into their world. It has to mean something to them, in terms that are important to them not you.

 

Engagement can sometimes be elusive and sometimes very simple, I have no answer on how to solve that. What I do know is that what worked for another company won’t work for you. The beauty of engagement is that it is deeply personal to your company and that is what makes engagement work.

 

 

Leona Charles

Leona Charles began SPC Business Consulting Ltd in 2007 to help businesses of all sizes get the most out of their performance. As a Six Sigma Black Belt, she brings a fresh and unique approach to Operations Consulting drawing on her 10 years of combined experience in law enforcement, government contracting, property management, customer service, non profit industry, and education.

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Filed Under: Leadership Tagged With: business strategy, business women, female board members, female business owners, female CEOs, female entrepreneur, Female Entrepreneurs, female leader, female leadership, leadership tips, small business strategy, small business tips, Women Business Owners, women entrepreneurs, women entrepreneurs tips, women executives, women in business, Women In Leadership, Women small business owners

Comments

  1. Jim Nico says

    June 1, 2013 at 10:40 pm

    Leona: Thank you for this wonderful article, and I am hoping more owners and managers think deeper and become more engaged because of what you say here– with their employees– the talent they have right at their fingertips–because when employees feel really valued they can do the most wonderful things.

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