engage for succeess: russell grossman presentation to iabc victoria, march 2014

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Russell Grossman DipPR(CAM), ABC, FCIM, FRSA, MCIPR

Director of Communications,

Department for Business, Innovation and Skills (BIS) [email protected]

Engagement – Practical Tools For Tough Times

Russell Grossman ABC, FCIPR , FCIM, FRSA,

Director of Communications, UK Dept for Business Innovation and Skills (BIS)

Director, Engage For Success Incoming International Chair, IABC

[email protected] ###@engage4success

Russell Grossman

2008 : Dept for Business, UK Government - Director of Communications

2006 : HM Revenue & Customs - Head of Internal & Change Communications

1999 : BBC - Head of Internal Communications

1997 : Royal Mail - London Director of Communications

1996 : Nichols Associates - Senior Consultant

1994 : Jubilee Line Extension - Public Relations Manager

1993 : Riverbus - Marketing Manager

1988 : London Docklands Development Corp - Head of Information 1986 : London Docklands Development Corp Exec Asst to Development Director

1983 : Greater London Council Press Officer

[email protected]

Context for why engagement matters

Some less than

engaged staff….

In 2008 the UK Government commissioned David MacLeod to find out if there was a link from engagement to growth via productivity

Our story begins….

After…

• 8 months • 30 consultation events • 5 regional events • 60+ case studies • 255 submissions and reports • 300 on-line responses to call for evidence • 50 definitions of engagement

.......MacLeod concluded there was a strong link

The MacLeod Report on Employee Engagement

This report is at http://www.bis.gov.uk/files/file52215.pdf

Engaged Employees = Top Company MacLeod found engaged companies gave:

1. better financial performance 2. better outcomes 3. higher levels of innovation 4. more employees advocating their organisation 5. lower rates of absenteeism 6. employee well-being 7. Critical for getting through the recession

Does Employee Engagement Matter?

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•For the individual

– higher levels of wellbeing – a more satisfying workplace

•For the organisation

– better productivity and financial performance – higher levels of innovation and advocacy

•For UK plc – recession, growth, global challenge – world of work changing: death of deference, greater expectations – competitive advantage

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Active Disengagement In Action

Engage for Success : Provenance

• Taskforce Launched By UK Prime Minister in March 2011 • HRDs and Comms Directors from UK’s top organisations

– To raise the profile of the topic - To shine a light on good practice - Members from across the economy

- public, private and third sector, - manufacturing, retail, finance and services, - large and small organisations and trade unions

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“Engage for Success believes that employee engagement is about releasing more of the capability and potential of people at work……and creating the conditions to unleash the full potential of people at work.”

‘Engage For Success’

Engage for Success : >60 Companies, >2000 Active Practitioners OVER TWO MILLION WORKERS REPRESENTED

Source : Engage For Success, UK

Here’s a short film

EMPLOYEES WANT TO BE ENGAGED

www.engageforsuccess.org

“Employee engagement is about how we create the conditions in which employees offer more of their capability and potential” – David Macleod

GURU SPECIAL INTEREST GROUPS

Future of engagement

Leadership and engagement

Engaged thinking

Communicate for Success

Authentic employee engagement

Engagement in SMEs

Linking EE to other metrics

EE & passenger transport

CSR and EE EE measurement and analysis

sub groups and SIG’s

Barriers Investors Cross-cultures Third sector engagement

Well-being

Innovation Organisational integrity

Making the internal business case

Social media and EE

Sub Groups

WHO WE ARE Engage for Success : Evidence

•94 per cent of the world’s most admired companies believe their efforts to engage their employees have created a competitive advantage (Hay).

•64% of people said they have more to offer in skills and talent than they are currently

demonstrating or being asked to demonstrate at work. (Populus survey conducted in the UK in October 2012)

•Companies with high and sustainable engagement levels had an average one year

operating margin that was close to three times higher than those with lower engagement (Towers Watson, 2012)

•85% of the world’s most admired companies believe that efforts to engage employees has

reduced employee performance problems (Hay 2010).

•70 per cent of the more engaged have a good understanding of customer needs as against only 17 per cent of the disengaged (PwC).

•Our evidence is supported by academic research, and by research houses such as Towers

Watson, Kenexa, Hay, Aon Hewitt and Gallup. It also comes from case studies compiled by many leading companies and organisations.

WHO WE ARE Engage for Success : Evidence

• Most countries have an employee engagement deficit.

• In the UK, only around a third of workers say they are engaged, placing the UK ninth in engagement levels among the world’s twelfth largest

economies.

• Australia is one better – eighth - on the same scale

• The loss in Gross Domestic Product (GDP) performance and productivity this waste represents in the UK : c£26 billion ($AUD48bn) per

year.

Source : Kenexa 2012 : THE MANY CONTEXTS OF EMPLOYEE ENGAGEMENT A 2012/2013 KENEXA® WORKTRENDS™ Median margin of error across countries is +/- 3.

Employee Engagement By Country : 2012

1: Strategic Narrative

Strong, visible, empowering leadership provides a strong strategic narrative about the organisation, where it’s come from and where it’s going.

This gives a line of sight between the job and the organisation’s vision. The story is communicated clearly, consistently and constantly.

The past You are here The future

Four Key Enablers THE FOUR KEY ENABLERS : 1. STRATEGIC NARRATIVE

1: Strategic Narrative Four Key Enablers THE FOUR KEY ENABLERS : 1. STRATEGIC NARRATIVE

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1: Strategic Narrative Four Key Enablers

Line of sight between the job and the organisation’s vision. The story is communicated clearly, consistently and constantly.

Typical story framework: - the six questions • Why are we here, what is our role in the world? • What are our strengths, achievements, challenges? • What should the future look like? • Whose needs are we satisfying (customer / client / citizen)? • How will we get there – what values do we want to apply? • What is our personality?

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1: Strategic Narrative Four Key Enablers

BIS is going through this exercise at the moment with “WHY?” consultants

Line of sight between the job and the organisation’s vision. The story is communicated clearly, consistently and constantly.

2: Having Engaging Managers

They……

focus their people, offer scope and enable

the job to get done

treat their people as individuals

coach and stretch their people

Four Key Enablers 2: Having Engaging Managers Four Key Enablers

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2: Having Engaging Managers

Reasons to not:

Four Key Enablers

“Spare me another **** HR/comms initiative” “Don’t you know there’s a recession on?” “I’ve not got time for the soft and fluffy stuff” Plus Command and control Micro-managing Takes time, application, consistency and effort

And beware…… “We did the survey so we’ve done the engagement”

Communication in organisations, especially in changing times, is a

behaviour of leadership and a transfer of energy

Are we helping leaders transfer energy? Is that energy positive?

How does it feel – for them and for you?

2: Having Engaging Managers Four Key Enablers

It’s not about spewing lots of corporate messages to staff

LEVEL 1 – TRANSACTIONAL

Compartmentalised Thinking

NB:

CIPD: 75% of Employee Engagement focused as above Reactive engagement. About discretionary effort

Territory, Market Sector Strategy

STRATEGY FOR: IT; ESTATES; CAPITAL

ETC

EMPLOYEE / HR STRATEGY Do survey & act on it, eg

leadership communications, ‘feel proud’ etc

Two Levels of engagement

“We act on employee feedback through survey”

2: Having Engaging Managers Four Key Enablers

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“ONE PAGE”: Market Sectors, CA, Country, Positioning Strategy AND

Values/Behaviours to deliver it WE TRACK PROGRESS OF

STRATEGY

NB:

CIPD: 25% of Employee Engagement focused as above About proactive engagement

WE MEASURE: Concerns, commitment, feedback

People give continual

VOICE

People help shape

strategy

People at heart of delivery and at

heart of strategy

TWO-WAY

LEVEL 2 – TRANSFORMATIONAL “It’s a way of running a top company”

Two Levels

A belief that people are the solution, not the problem

2: Having Engaging Managers Four Key Enablers

Transactional or transformational? TRANSACTIONAL….OR TRANSFORMATIONAL?

Transactional engagement • A set of activities or targets • Usually focussed around a survey

Transformational engagement • Employees integral to developing and delivering the business strategy • Requires deep belief in the power of people to contribute

• new and creative products/services • Outstanding customer/client service and efficiency • A belief that our people are the solution, not the problem

This means that to be effective you often have to be….. • the grit in the oyster…

• without being the pin in the balloon…

• and the jester at the court of King Lear

2: Having Engaging Managers Four Key Enablers

You also need….. And you need to have….

Judgement, Resilience, Courage, Intuition, Leadership, Tenacity, Good Grace And, very often, a sense of humour

Are you in and visible? Or are you invisible?

How does the management team feel about communications before you arrive in their room?

“anyone can do

this, who is this time-

waster?”

“I’m willing to listen and

be persuaded”

“the guy talks

regularly to me

about this still so I’ll go with it”

“all good ideas, but

actually my experience

differs”

“Whatever. Can we get on with the P&L risks

discussion please”

“does she really get

our business?”

1. Get yourself in the right places at the right times 2. Lead, don’t follow, don’t just stay where you’re put 3. Actively advocate the communications practice 4. Think creative, be optimistic, push boundaries 5. Don’t struggle alone, work with others 6. Know how to say no nicely – be ‘sympathetically repulsive’ 7. Join a professional org : eg IABC!! 8. Strive for the best team you can get, avoid compromises 9. Use LinkedIn effectively 10. Get enough sleep (you cannot delegate this one) 11. Know your value and have the evidence to defend it

Always do the reality check

try not to look like this….

….all the time (or at least when anyone

else is looking)

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3: Employee Voice

There is employee voice throughout the organisation, for reinforcing and challenging views; between functions & externally; employees are really seen

as your key asset – not the problem.

This voice is informed. Views sought early / followed up; explanations given if ideas not adopted. Collective voice matters – TUs etc part of the architecture

Four Key Enablers THE FOUR KEY ENABLERS : 3. EMPLOYEE VOICE

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3: Employee Voice

• Employees’ views are sought out; they are listened to and see that their opinions count and make a difference.

• They speak out and challenge where appropriate • A strong sense of listening and responsiveness permeates the

organisation, enabled by effective communication. • This voice is an informed one –not just a ‘tea and toilets conversation • Views are sought early and followed up; explanations are given if

ideas/views not adopted. • Trade unions/staff representatives are part of the engagement

architecture – collective voice matters

This voice is informed. Views sought early / followed up; explanations given if ideas not adopted. Collective voice matters – TUs etc part of the architecture

In practice

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3: Employee Voice

• if it is heard • If it is informed • If it is proactive • If it is adult to adult • If it is seen to make a difference • If it influences the future - change

SURVEYS only scratch the surface of voice. They tell you (depending on the questions) WHAT people may be thinking. THEY DON’T TELL YOU WHY

Voice is only effective:

BUT NB!!!

Credibility “Management keeps me informed about important issues and changes”.

“I believe management would lay people off only as a last resort”. Respect

“I am offered training or development to further myself professionally”. “Management shows appreciation for good work and extra effort”.

Fairness ”Everyone has an opportunity to get special recognition”.

“Promotions go to those who best deserve them”. Pride

“I’m proud to tell others I work here”. “People look forward to coming to work here”.

Camaraderie ”People care about each other here”.

“This is a friendly place to work”.

…for a productive workforce

Five dimensions to target......

4: Organisational Integrity

This gives a line of sight between the job and the organisation’s vision The story is communicated clearly, consistently and constantly

Four Key Enablers

There is organisational integrity – the values on the wall are reflected in day to day behaviours.

These expected behaviours are explicit and bought into by staff.

Keep it real – staff see through corporate

spin quicker than customers or the public.

Integrity enables trust: no engagement without trust

THE FOUR KEY ENABLERS : 4. ORGANISATIONAL INTEGRITY

3: Employee Voice

Questions?

Four Key Enablers

[email protected]