According to a
2016 Deloitte report, “The biggest challenge in leading engagement programs is
shifting from a transactional, once-a-year mind-set, to an ‘always on,’
continuous listening approach to monitoring engagement.”
Many leading
management books will tell you just how important the art of listening to
employees is. In ‘The One Minute Manager (1982)’ authors Kenneth Blanchard and
Spencer Johnson, tell us that the best way to create employee engagement is to
allocate time to listen to them.
You may be
hearing employees, but if you’re not listening, you’re missing out on
opportunities to improve engagement and satisfaction. Listening is a more
advanced skill than passively hearing, and better listeners are more in tune
with their company, employees, and clients.
As Simon Sinek,
author of ‘Start with Why?’ says, “Good listeners have a huge advantage. For
one, when they engage in conversation, they make people ‘feel’ heard. They
‘feel’ that someone really understands their wants, needs and desires. And for
good reason; a good listener does care to understand.”
When you’re
actively listening to employees, you can understand if they are truly excited
to work at your organization, within their teams, and in their roles.
But it’s not
just about listening to lower-level employees -- you can learn a lot from
listening to their managers, as well. You can determine whether your people
managers are aligned with your strategy, supported by your leadership, and have
the necessary resources to lead.
Employee
listening gives your employees a voice. Prioritizing employee listening is
critical for improving engagement and benefits your business.
Here are a few
more benefits to employee listening:
1. Demonstrate
that you care about your employees.
Listening to
your employees’ concerns and anxieties shows that you value their opinions and
want to understand how they are feeling—that you care about the human being on
the other end. Even if your organization’s engagement has been strong and
competitive against benchmarks, it’s important to give your employees a
microphone, even in turbulent times.
2. Gain
real-time feedback to take action or make adjustments.
Employee
feedback can help identify areas of opportunities and risks. You may not be
able to solve everything for everyone, but any action is better than no action.
Look for low-hanging fruit or bigger opportunities that you can address.
3. Empower your
managers to engage their teams.
Beyond diving
into work or a performance conversation, focusing on feedback helps managers
make time to connect on a personal level. Additionally, if you share team-level
feedback with managers, they will have a better understanding of their team’s
challenges and topics that are top of mind. This knowledge will help them coach
accordingly.
4. Gain
intelligence on how to move your business forward.
For your
business to eventually thrive, you need to move your business forward. And this
doesn’t necessarily mean business as usual. We’re facing an unprecedented
crisis and attempting to do business in unusual times.
Asking for
feedback during this time not only helps you understand how employees are
feeling and performing—it helps you uncover key insights that will allow your
organization to move from today’s chaos to setting goals, recovering, and
thriving.
While their
focus may have shifted from things like career development and
high-performance, having this insight allows you to narrow in the areas that
need the most help so you can move forward more quickly. Consider how you might
address the following situations.
If employees
are feeling:
Scared → How
can leaders build trust?
Exhausted → How
can managers help them reprioritize or flex on goals?
Overwhelmed →
How can leaders and managers provide clarity on a common goal?
Anxious → How
can you build trust with goal clarity and priorities?
Disrupted → How
can you recognize great work and inspire more of it?
It’s time to
pay attention. Employees want to be heard. If you don’t listen, they’ll become
disengaged, even finding their way to your competitors. That’s not going to
help anyone – and we all know how talent retention rates can affect a business.
In addition to
these valuable insights, listening to employees and managers helps to build
trust and rapport, and relationships play an important role in keeping
employees happy and engaged.
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