Keeping Your Best Engaged
The tough economic environment of the past year and a half has made organizational leadership an even more challenging job than usual. A recent article in HR Executive Online by Lin Grensing-Pophal reports on a somewhat surprising aspect of that leadership challenge.
Drawing on a recent study conducted by Watson-Wyatt and World at Work, Pophal notes that employee engagement levels during the recession have dropped by nine percent since last year. That's not so surprising given everything that's gone on in the past year. The news that leaders should pay extra attention to, however, is that the engagement of top performers is down by a whopping 25 percent.
The combination of economic uncertainty and the need to do more with less can take a toll on everyone. Of course, on both a short and long term basis, leaders need to pay particular attention to the high performers who can deliver results. Pophal offer some good suggestion in her article about how to do that including developmental assignments and flexible work arrangements.
She also mentions connection to the bigger picture as a key way to provide the intrinsic motivation that keeps the best engaged. As I've written here before, Bill Bridges' four P's communications model is one of the best frameworks I know of for making that connection. Like most good leadership tools, it's simple and easy to remember:
- Purpose: why are we here and what difference does that make?
- Picture: what will things look like when we're fully successful?
- Plan: how will we get to that picture of success?
- Part to Play: this is how what you do fits into the plan that creates the picture that fulfills the purpose.
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ABOUT THIS BLOG
Executive coach Scott Eblin’s goal is to help you succeed at the next level of leadership. Throughout the week, he’ll offer his take on the leadership lessons in the news and his advice on your most pressing leadership questions. A former government executive, Scott is a graduate of Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government and is the author of The Next Level: What Insiders Know About Executive Success.











Although it does not start with the letter P, an important leadership tool missing from the four tools noted above is employee recognition (monetary and otherwise) for a job well-done.
Nick Posted Tuesday, October 27, 2009 11:16 AMAdding another "R" to the recognition mentioned by Nick, s Realism - in workload, in goals, in expectations. One thing that seems to happen to the top performers is management, seeing they have someone who gets the job done, proceeds to overload them until they break. Top performers are smart enough to see reality and you can only drive them so far until they back out or disengage in the current jargon.
bmj Posted Wednesday, October 28, 2009 11:17 PM