Human Resource Blues
September 26, 2008
What do you think is the most commonly found difficulty in owning and running your own business? Some may say access to capital, access to markets or managing a work-life balance. Ask a handful of business owners and you’ll find that managing employees is their toughest challenge.
From hiring, firing and counseling through the dramas humans attach themselves to, maintaining a happy, productive and cost effective workforce in any business is challenging. To make the challenge more interesting, the workforce is seeing dynamic differences in the generations represented within most companies. These differences have frustrated both ends of the spectrum.
Yet, one of the most commonly seen problems with employees is the tie between salary and production. Business owners have seen trends in employees arriving at work with an entitlement mentality. Often times, employees assume their work is solely for the benefit of the business owner. In reality, most business owners earn less per year than the bulk of their employees.
Employees go further in their entitlement mentality, buy expecting yearly pay raises and bonuses. However, the amount of work being produced by the employee seldom increases. In order for a small business to prosper, the business needs to prosper financially in order to pay an increased salary.
Michael Alter with Inc.com recently wrote about employee compensation. He noted, “most employers don’t have a problem giving raises to their employees if the employees are doing their part to ensure business growth and profitability.” Michael went further by stating: “However, in many companies that’s a big ‘if.’ When profitability plateaus, employees generally interpret flatline compensation as a sign of disrespect instead of making the connection between compensation and job performance.”
One way business owners can escape from the employee entitlement mentality is by creating a performance incentive program. Rather than paying employees their salary and bonuses automatically with the assumption they he/she would earn at least a cost of living raise every year, turn the table onto them. If an employee wants a raise or bonus, develop an incentive program with clearly defined goals the employee has to reach in order to receive more money.
In establishing goals for the employee, make sure they are realistic, fair and have value for the company. Communicate with the employee throughout the year about where they are, what they have achieved and what may be going wrong. Have conversations with the employee at least once a quarter or more.
As a business owner, also utilize noncash rewards for good work being produced. In between the pay checks, if an employee or a team rises above the your expectations, take the time to thank them. You can get creative in ways to encourage their work. From buying lunch to putting a thank you card on their desk, small personal incentives often go much further in motivating than cold cash.
Finally, remember employees typically seek work that is rewarding to them rather than seeking large sums of money for their time. Creating an environment where they feel appreciated and motivated to deliver the productivity the company needs is a win-win situation.
Entry Filed under: Leadership. Tags: Business Leadership, Employees, Human Resources.
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bensimo1 | September 27, 2008 at 3:28 pm
Incentives and cash rewards rarely achieve the purpose of making a significant improvement in performance. The route to this goal consists of causing employees to unleash their full potential of creativity, innovation, productivity, motivation, and commitment. Employees naturally have plenty of these but management treats them in a way that demotivates and demoralizes employees.
Most managers do this by using some form of the traditional top-down command and control approach to managing people. Top-down concentrates on producing goals, targets, visions, orders and other directives in order to control the workforce and thereby achieve organizational success. Focusing on giving direction prevents these managers from doing much of anything else.
Thus top-down treats employees like robots in the “shut up and listen, I know better than you” mode, and rarely if ever listens to them. By so doing this approach ignores every employee’s basic need to be heard and to be respected. In addition, not listening to employees makes top management ignorant of what is really going on in the workplace thus making their directives misguided at best and damaging at worst.
In top-down, nobody listens to employee ideas, nobody values their opinions, and nobody gives them any recognition. The only way that the workforce can deal with managers who treat them in this way is to disengage and ignore their behavior. In the workplace this is seen as being sullen, uncommunicative, having a poor attitude, low morale and/or apathy.
(During the first 12 years of a 30+ year career of managing people, I used top-down and was never aware of how bad my leadership was. It was not until I started really listening to employees that I began to understand.)
In this way and others, top-down demeans and disrespects employees sending them very negative value standard messages. The standards reflected in this treatment “lead” employees to treat their work, their customers, each other and their bosses with the same level of disrespect they received. No one can become committed to company goals while being treated so poorly.
The alternative to top-down achieves truly magnificent results characterized by employees who love to come to work and are so creative, innovative and productive that they literally blow away competitors. I proved this in achieving success in four different turnarounds of management disasters. I was quite stunned by the results my people achieved.
To learn about the tools I used, please read these Leadership Articles starting with the article “Leadership, Good or Bad”.
Best regards, Ben