Generating Quality Interaction
Are your employees giving you the silent treatment? Encouraging communication can increase your profits.
- By Linda Keefe
- May 01, 2004
IN any company, communication between managers and employees is a big issue.
Employees want guidelines from their supervisors, and the management staffers
want input from their team. While most companies have little trouble filtering
information down the layers, they do have challenges when it comes to filtering
information up. That's because too many employees stay quiet about what they
need, resulting in missed opportunities, delayed projects, and failed
initiatives.
The reasons for such a communication gap are numerous, ranging from the
employees' thinking "I don't want to appear incompetent" to "Who am I to offer
ideas to management?" Additionally, because they know the management team is
busy with long-term planning and strategic initiatives, many employees don't
want to interrupt with details of the day-to-day activities. However, without
that knowledge, managers have a difficult time gauging whether they're leading
the company effectively.
Fortunately, there are steps you can take to get your employees to
communicate better and to keep the company's progress on track. The key is to
build a quality interaction between the employee group and the management team.
When you break through the barriers and get the employees and managers working
together, you help everyone understand the tremendous effort it takes to advance
the company's strategic vision and attain goals. Without support from every
member in the group, your company's progress suffers and ultimately reduces
long-term profits.
To instill confidence in your employees and encourage them to contribute,
apply the four elements of SharedKnowledge--a process that can transform your
entire organization to one that works with and for one another, not against one
another. This unique combination of elements includes organizational
communication, skills, motivation, and empowerment. Below are ways to use these
four vital components to get your employees to communicate their needs so they
can help the company grow and prosper.
1. Communicate Needs
Communication is a two way process and a shared
responsibility. Employees have just as much responsibility for speaking up, for
setting expectations and requirements, and for communicating barriers and
opportunities as does the management team. When you encourage your employees to
communicate with the senior team, you're helping each group understand the
other's job duties and what each reasonably can and cannot do, given the budget
and expectations.
Ask your employees to speak up and proactively tell the management team what
they are struggling with and what managers can do to help. Reinforce the
company's vision and state how the current objectives contribute to it, then
explain that you need the employees' input to make attaining the vision a
reality. After all, if your organization wants to produce results that leave
your customers and company shareholders wowed, you have to know your
responsibilities and what it will take to reach everyone's objectives.
2. Share Industry Skills and Knowledge
While most people are
knowledgeable about and skilled in their particular job duties, many managers
are unaware of their employees' daily activities. Encourage your employees to
educate you about their job specifics. Ask them to explain what goes into each
successful project by proactively listing all actions and costs, including time
costs.
Make it a proactive dialogue where you and your employees discuss which ideas
and action have worked in the past. Go over survey results, client satisfaction
ratings, safety metrics, or any other factual data that would begin a dialogue.
Ask questions to get your employees to offer suggestions about the present
situation. For example, you may say, "Last year we increased sales by 35 percent
and we had a 15 percent increase in marketing resources. With only a 10 percent
increase in marketing resources this year and a 5 percent staff reduction, what
kind of results do you anticipate we'll get, and what resources will you need to
overcome any hurdles?" As you listen to the feedback, offer tradeoffs, such as:
"If we allocate more marketing funds, can you increase sales by another 5
percent?" This will enable employees to see the impact on the bottom line and
will prompt them to get involved in the decision process.
3. Create a Motivation Cycle
Your input plays a big part in
motivating employees to communicate with you and reach goals. Make communicating
with management easy. Some suggestions to consider include:
- Arranging a group conference call so employees can share their ideas about a
particular project or strategic plan.
- Sending employees a personal thank-you note for a job well done, complete
with the managers' signatures.
- Setting a half-day aside to conduct roundtable discussions with employees
that address their concerns.
- Offering 10-minute one-on-one sessions between managers and employees to
discuss employee issues.
- Having senior management sit with the employees during breaks or at lunch to
discuss company issues.
When the employees see you and other managers taking an interest in their
responsibilities, they'll be excited to complete their tasks to the best of
their ability. Additionally, the senior team's interest will show that each
employee's contribution is integral to the company's strategic initiative.
Employees will actively seek out new and creative ideas to advance the
organization and will share those ideas with you. The result will be a greater
increase on the company's bottom line.
4. Establish Empowerment Expectations
Empowerment is about setting
the expectations. You and your team need to have a common understanding
documented. As in Ken Blanchard's One Minute Manager, write a one-minute goal
and the requirements in 400 words or less. For example, you may say, "We want to
increase our sales this year by 50 percent. In order to accomplish this, the
team needs a $___ marketing budget, a monthly sales meeting with all employees
and managers, and an increase in staff by ____ percent."
Discuss the goals and parameters with everyone involved before you begin
delegating tasks so that as a team, you can make the needed tradeoffs to ensure
a successful outcome. When everyone knows the specifics of what's required, you
are empowered to create the desired results. Always remember that the entire
interaction hinges upon communication, and the quality of the communication
determines how empowered you and your team are.
Results Now
If you want to encourage your employees to communicate
openly, you need to show why open communication from both sides is so vital to
the company's success. Make it a shared responsibility for all to educate one
another, express what they need, and show how specific duties affect the bottom
line. By getting everyone actively involved in the communication process, your
team will operate more efficiently and you will all attain greater success.
This article appears in the May 2004 issue of Occupational Health &
Safety.
This article originally appeared in the May 2004 issue of Occupational Health & Safety.