supporting and engaging teams in difficult times

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Supporting and engaging teams in difficult times Kevin Ruck, Founding Director, PR Academy

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Presentation at LGComms Academy workshop in Nottingham on 26 May 2011

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Page 1: Supporting and engaging teams in difficult times

Supporting and engaging teams in difficult times

Kevin Ruck, Founding Director, PR Academy

Page 2: Supporting and engaging teams in difficult times

When the going gets tough where are your leaders and line managers?

Page 3: Supporting and engaging teams in difficult times

Confused?

What is engagement?

How should we manage change?

What is engagement?

How should we manage change?

Page 4: Supporting and engaging teams in difficult times

What would you choose to do to engage people?

1. Give people a five per cent pay rise2. Take your team out to a special event3. Tell people what is going on4. Introduce a new suggestion scheme5. Say “well done” for a good piece of work6. Give people a say in what the organisation does7. Give people a bonus day’s holiday if they take lessthan 5 days off sick a year

Page 5: Supporting and engaging teams in difficult times

What would you choose to do to engage people?

1. Give people a five per cent pay rise2. Take your team out to a special event3. Tell people what is going on4. Introduce a new suggestion scheme5. Say “well done” for a good piece of work6. Give people a say in what the organisation does7. Give people a bonus day’s holiday if they take lessthan 5 days off sick a year

Page 6: Supporting and engaging teams in difficult times

The secret to successful engagement

There is no secret.There is no secret.

Page 7: Supporting and engaging teams in difficult times

LIVE model of engagement

Empathy

Page 8: Supporting and engaging teams in difficult times

Leadership

Understanding and living the business strategy, values, goals

60% understanding (TowersWatson)54% senior manager involvement in communication (IABC)48% senior managers have a clear vision (Truss et al.) 30% consistency in behaviour (IABC)

Page 9: Supporting and engaging teams in difficult times

Managerial strategies for communicating about change

Strategy DefinitionSpray and pray Management showers employees with all kinds of information in

the hope that employees will be able to sort out significant and insignificant information

Tell and sell Management selects a limited set of messages regarding core organizational issues. Management “tells” employees about these issues and then “sells” employees on the wisdom of the chosen approach

Underscore and explore Management focuses on fundamental issues related to change success and allows employees the creative freedom to explore various possibilities

Identify and reply Management listens to and identifies key concerns of employees and then responds to those issues as they are brought up

Withhold and uphold Management withholds information as much as possible. When management is confronted with questions or rumours they uphold the party line.

Adapted from Clampitt, DeKoch and Cashman, in Miller, K (2009, p186)

Page 10: Supporting and engaging teams in difficult times

Leadership visibility

Challenges

Comfort with ambiguity

Guide not god

Saying I don’t know

Supporting line managers

Page 11: Supporting and engaging teams in difficult times

Information

49 per cent of employees feel fairly well informed about important organisational issues29 per cent said they received only a limited amount of information13 per cent reported they received not much at allTruss et al (2006)

In general, satisfaction with organisational information ranges from 53% to 64%.

Page 12: Supporting and engaging teams in difficult times

Information – getting the basics right

Facts: How will the re-organisation be done? For example, job matching? What’s the process?

Plan, plan, plan: day by day, even hour by hour to make sure everyone hears the right thing in the right order, regardless of where they are based and what shifts they work.

Process: Always do what you say, if things change say why.

Collaborate: Work with HR and Operations, and lead the communication. 

Page 13: Supporting and engaging teams in difficult times

Voice

Give all employees opportunities to have a say, don’t just pay lip service to this. Make sure points raised are collated and then covered in regular updates.

Trade Unions - ensure you are involved so that messages and timings are aligned.

Leadership - walking the floor.

Give all employees opportunities to have a say, don’t just pay lip service to this. Make sure points raised are collated and then covered in regular updates.

Trade Unions - ensure you are involved so that messages and timings are aligned.

Leadership - walking the floor.

Page 14: Supporting and engaging teams in difficult times

Empathy

30% performance not discussed (Truss et al.)44% of managers rarely/never coach employees (CIPD)

What is bothering staff is very often different to what managers think will bother them.

Line manager has to step up to the coach role, training may be required for this. 

Page 15: Supporting and engaging teams in difficult times

Roles and skills for Internal Communication

Extent of need

Extent of solution

Adapted from Quirke (2008: 304-6)

Page 16: Supporting and engaging teams in difficult times

Examples

Ultimately, our team is engaged because they get to do what they’re best at; like the people they work with; and personally connect with Innocent’s purpose.

The other day I was in a Waitrose distribution centre that we’d acquired from a rival. I asked a driver the differences he’d noticed since we took over. Before, he said, he’d just been told what to do by his management and now he was asked. He liked the difference.Charlie Mayfield,

Chairman, John Lewis Partnership

Richard Reed, Co-founder, Innocent

Page 17: Supporting and engaging teams in difficult times

Invest more time in communicating

Successful change management communication does not have to cost a lot of money. It’s an investment in time. Communicating is not an add-on, it’s part of the job.

Replace expensive surveys with support for actual communication. Mega surveys usually only tell you what you already know. Stop doing them and re-invest the money saved in internal communication actions.

Page 18: Supporting and engaging teams in difficult times

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