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Archive for 2010

Are Your Communication Strategies Really Engaging Employees?

Monday, December 13th, 2010

The frequency at which the word “engagement” appears in any discussion about employee communication has begun to make me wonder whether we clearly understand what the term means. More important, do we understand what it means to our clients, particularly CEOs, when they talk about engagement? We have engagement tools, but can we really say that these tools actually engage employees in the process of change? Or are employees merely engaged with the tool itself?

 There is only one question that you need ask yourself to find out whether your employee communication strategies are going to engage employees, rather than simply inform. That question is: Can you establish whether the tools and methods you are using to communicate with employees are changing attitudes and behavior or providing information?

 Employee engagement is a shared understanding of the issues that affect the business, and that understanding leads to changes in employees’  attitudes and behaviors. Unless employees truly understand the issues and make a meaningful connection between their jobs and those issues, their attitudes and behaviors will not change. To achieve engagement, three things have to happen: The business issue has to mean something to the employee personally, the employee has to understand the issue (and I mean truly understand it, not just read about why it is an issue), and most important, each employee must be made to feel a part of the change process.

 As communicators, we have the opportunity to become creative in how we communicate and engage employees. The ultimate aim in employee communication has to be to create the “Aha!” moment. This is the moment when employees have the necessary information and can say, “Now it makes sense,”  “Now I understand, ” “Now I can do something about it.”

Tools are important in this process but generally they just communicate information. What we need to strive for are creative communication methods to engage employees in the process of change.

 There are five steps for identifying what the “Aha” moment is and they include the following:

  1.  Focus group research. Ask employees about their thoughts on the organization and its competitors.
  2. Identify the largest gap between what customers think and what employees think customers think.
  3. What would create a paradigm shift in employee’s thinking?
  4. Can you measure the impact of the change in thinking?
  5. How significant is it to achieving the business objectives?

 So let’s look at an example that would be familiar to communicators: the annual report announcement. Typically an online annual report would be made available to employees via the intranet. Some employees read it, but most tend to scroll down to the last pages to check the annual salaries of the senior executive staff and then close the document.

 Let’s imagine that the results in this annual report are very poor and the CEO is determined that employees understand the issues surrounding the poor results and become fully engaged to help turn the company around. Here’s how the organization accomplished this.

 The company held four brown bag lunch meetings over four weeks—where employees could attend for free for one hour and hear from an outside professional about how to invest in the share market. Importantly, there was no obvious link between the meeting topic and the organization the employees worked for. At week three, they were analyzing annual reports and generally deciding whether they would invest in a particular company based on the information contained in the report. By the fourth week they were given another annual report and asked the same question, “would you invest in this company?” The answer was overwhelmingly no. And of course this last company was the one they all worked for, which brought them to the “Aha!” moment. Now the organization’s employees understood and were engaged and ready to become involved in turning the company around through teamwork and new initiatives.

 Here are some steps you can follow to ensure that you can come up with creative ways to communicate with employees and engage them in the process of change.

 To challenge beliefs that your employees have about your organization, you need to have facts. The marketing department is an excellent source of facts about the business, with research on brand image, customer satisfaction, customer and non- customer views on competitors and information about market segments. Each of these areas provide valuable information on opportunities to link employees with business issues that can be measured. For example, the organization should have facts about how customers feel about the service provided by the organization’s call centre. Employees will also have an opinion about how the believe customers perceive their service. By taking the results of the customer feedback and presenting it to staff this often creates an “Aha moment” because customer feedback is typically better than what employees anticipate. Once you have shared this information, the objective is to then explore ways that employees can become engaged in further improving that customer feedback. Focus groups are another excellent way to find out what employees think about different aspects of these areas and how their beliefs can be challenged as you need to help them better understand the issues that affect the business.

 Key sources of business data are customer experience data, business results by product or service stream, competitor customer feedback, and measures of the attributes of your brand. These are sources of data that you can use as a measure of improvement as a result of your employee engagement strategy.

 When selecting business outcomes as a measure for your employee communication strategy, you need to be quite certain that the strategy you implement can actually affect the business outcomes you have decided to focus on.

 Finally, when it comes to any employee engagement strategy, whether it be total transformation of a business or improvement in one aspect, you can rarely go it alone.  Partnering with other areas of your organization including marketing and human resources will ensure that the optimum outcome is achieved for your organization.

Employee Communication: How to Change Mindsets and Behaviour

Tuesday, October 12th, 2010

The most common question I am asked in workshops is how to change the mindset and behaviours of employees who don’t want to come along on the journey of change.  What can an organisation do to change the way people think and behave?

Firstly it is important to note that by simply communicating information about change this will not change behaviour.  Secondly not everyone will come with you early on in the journey. Typically the ratio is 20% that are early adapters to change, 40%  indifferent and 40% had already decided before you even announced the change that they would not participate.

Finally process changes behaviour with a change in process no behavioural change will occur.  So by using this information how I would approach this?

 1.Identify the early adapters the 20% and ultise their support by engaging and involving them in your change process.  By leading by example and applying peer pressures and a bit of rivalry due to achievements it is a good way to start.  However this only works if the outcomes are meaningful to the other members of the team that you are aiming to bring on board.

 2.As part of your communications program ask the early adapters to be your spokespeople on the changes and to address any concerns or peers that the other managers have.  You might also ask that they participate in workshops with the next group in working on the changes – this moves the communication from information to engagement.

 3. And thirdly put in place a process to change behaviour.  So in this instance you might initiate a buddy system and regular reporting of the new group to ensure that the work is being done and the changes implemented.  If employees are required to do something different this new behaviour soon becomes a habit and the new way of doing things, so if you are introducing new values you might require each team leader to work through a different value at each team meeting and ask them to come up with what their team can do to bring that value to life.  This information would then be noted and then measured to see how effective it is.

Getting traction with change is difficult because it is about changing people’s behaviours.  Recognising the above 3 points will go some way to making your change initiatives a success. However there are two important things to remember to change behaviour and mindsets.  The first is that process changes behaviour, not information about what is happening so make sure that all your engagement efforts include a process to reinforce the change.  And secondly recognise that not everyone will come with you on the journey of change, segmenting employees into early adapters, the indifferent group and those that have already decided not to participate gives you structure to your engagement process.  The goal is to focus on the early adapters, utilise their support to engage those in the indifferent category and then focus on moving some of those in the group that have already decided not to participate to join the change process.

Employee Engagement: How changing process changes behaviour

Wednesday, June 23rd, 2010

For most organizations employee engagement is not just about the majority of employees but also about leadership teams.  This is the greatest challenge, because if you have a disengaged leadership team you have no chance of engaging employees.  The reasons why are clear:

  1. Employees look towards their leaders for direction – if they are not interested no amount of communication efforts will change that
  2. You need to change process to change behaviour – unless you put in place systems and processes which force the behaviours of leaders to change, any attempt at change management will fail
  3. What gets measured gets done – clearly if the systems are focussed on something other than the focus of your engagement strategy there is no incentive for the leadership team to change

Now we should all remember that change is hard, and it is scary for individuals, no matter what level of leadership.  The other point is that just because someone has made it to a leadership role that does not mean that they have the skills to engage their teams.  People generally learn from role models and whilst people might be technically brilliant at their role and achieve outstanding results they may not bring out the best in their teams.

Here a few ideas of how process can change behaviour and therefore achieve employee engagement at all levels:

  1. Focus on the leadership team and put in place a process for them to engage their teams. In one organisation the leadership team was unsupported of a new software system that was going to be introduced, and all communication with staff was left to the IT area.  By making one simple change and requiring the business leaders to find out how the system will work and impact on their area they have the confidence to speak about it.  Then put in place a simple format and support them in designing a brief presentation on the system to their teams.  Like a sports team, one win and momentum and enthusiasm increases but you need to make sure that they feel “safe” about taking this step and don’t set them up to fail.
  2. Build on this momentum by identifying business decisions that need to be made and hold the leadership team accountable.  Bottom line is that once they feel that they have            ownership they will be more comfortable and confident talking about changes.  By  letting  all team members know what is happening, what the focus is of the leadership team  on the changes and what decisions they are focussing on will require the leadership team to come on board.
  3. Open communication channels so that team members feel confident to ask questions about changes and make sure you provide real answers.  So again put in place a new process whether this is a dedicated email address, formalised team briefing process or regular change updates.  Most importantly it is not only two way communication but across communication talking with their peers and conveying the merits of change.

Without change in process there is no formal reason why behaviours will or should change.  The only way employee engagement at all levels will be achieved is when something in the way they reach decisions, do their work or are measured changes and requires them to behave differently.  Change communication on its’ own will not achieve the level of employee engagement that brings about sustainable change.

How To Get Traction With Leaders And Employees On Business Strategy

Sunday, January 31st, 2010

The greatest challenge any CEO faces with a new business strategy is getting traction.  In terms of developing an engagement and change strategy, determing strategies for how to deal with leaders that publicly support the change but in reality don’t is the first issue you need to deal with.

Here are some reasons organizations fail to get traction with leaders and employees on business strategy and what to do about it.

1.     A divided leadership team

2.     Launch with huge fan fare then no messages on actual updates or achievement

3.     Change fatigue – organizations that appear to constantly change direction

4.     Organization has a poor track record in successfully sustaining change

5.     Waiting too long to implement employee engagement strategies

So let’s tackle each point and identify some things we can do as employee engagement specialists to minimize the impact of these impediments to successfully implementing change.

A divided leadership team

One of the most overlooked aspects of change management is alignment of the leadership team with the new business strategy. One quick tip is to facilitate a session on how the successful implementation of change is largely dependent on a united leadership team.  They need to understand their role in engaging employees in the change process and what employees will be looking for in terms of signs of support and commitment.  This is the key message, whilst the leadership team may not all be in agreement, and it should be noted that they rarely are, they must be aligned.  That is, they will give 100% commitment to the new strategy and what they need to communicate and do to engage their teams. This is important because the first thing employees look for is a divided leadership team to discredit the new strategy.

Launch with huge fan fare then no messages on actual updates or traction

Another important tip is to make sure that as the “expert” on change management you are able to convince the CEO and their executive team of your strategy.  Often they are so excited that they tell you what they want in terms of employee communication and usually this involves major announcements and forums when they have finally reached alignment on the new business strategy.  However the significant risk is that the time between the launch and the actual first visible achievement of some change is too long and employees begin to believe that change will never happen.  Loss of credibility is an enormous risk for the leadership team when implementing change so you need to provide convincing  reasons for your employee engagement approach.  Drawing a timeline indicating the gaps between the launch and expected first actual achievement of a project milestone should be enough to convince any leadership team of the importance of taking a strategic approach to employee engagement.

Change fatigue – organizations that appear to constantly change direction

Leaders and employees become increasingly disengaged when they do not understand why the organization seems to continue to change direction on business strategy without giving the prior change strategy enough time to work.  Often these are not new strategies but enhancements or the next progression of the original business strategy.  When developing your employe engagement strategy you need to establish the links between each business strategy and be able to demonstrate to leaders and employees what these links are.  The best way to do this is to design activities that engage employees in the process of change as it relates to them.  There are many change strategies that you can implement that are focussed on activities that will ensure leaders and employees will finally say, “Aha, now I get it!”

Organization has a poor track record in successfully sustaining change

Employees have a long memory and if the organization has a poor track record of successfully sustaining change they will be quick to justify why they shouldn’t become engaged with this latest change in business strategy.  Therefore part of the engagement strategy needs to include specific data and facts about what is different this time and how the changes being introduced will be sustained;  reverting back to the “old ways” of doing things will not be possible.  Where ever possible real examples that demonstrate the each step of implementation need to be communicated, not only emphasizing why employees can’t revert back to previous processes but also the benefits of the new changes.

Waiting too long to implement employee engagement strategies

Finally waiting too long to engage leaders and employees will also risk traction on business strategy.  At the outset of any discussion of change in business strategy, the employee engagement expert needs to be involved to understand timeframes, key milestones and impact.  It is only then that you can develop meaningful strategies that focus not just on information and key messages about what is happening and when; but also engagement strategies that focus on the individual and how the changes will impact them and the way they do their work.  By implementing employee engagement strategies early on, rather than what most change strategies focus on which is information, employees will feel some ownership and connection to the new business strategy from the beginning.

Whenever an organization embarks on a new business strategy, whether for a division or the whole of organization, and this includes government departments, leaders and employees react in exactly the same way.  There will be those groups that support the new strategy even without all the facts at hand, those that preach the mantra, “it will never happen” and those that wont support the strategy until they see some commitment and evidence that it will happen.  The challenge for change managers is to focus on the leadership team first and develop a strategy to deal with each of these three groups.

I look forward to hearing more about how you have managed to ensure traction with new business strategy.