It’s tough to hold on to good employees, but it shouldn’t be. Most of the
mistakes that companies make are easily avoided. When you do make mistakes,
your best employees are the first to go, because they have the most options. If you can’t keep your best employees engaged, you can’t keep your best
employees. While this should be common sense, it isn’t common enough. A survey
by the Corporate Executive Board found that one-third of star employees feel
disengaged from their employer and are already looking for a new job.
When you lose good employees, they don’t disengage all at once. Instead,
their interest in their jobs slowly dissipates. Michael Kibler, who has spent
much of his career studying this phenomenon, refers to it as brownout.
Like dying stars, star employees slowly lose their fire for their jobs.
“Brownout is different from burnout because workers afflicted by it are not
in obvious crisis,”Kibler said. “They seem to be performing fine: putting in
massive hours, grinding out work while contributing to teams, and saying all
the right things in meetings. However, they are operating in a silent state of
continual overwhelm, and the predictable consequence is disengagement.”
In order to prevent brownout and to retain top talent, companies and
managers must understand what they’re doing that contributes to this slow fade.
The following practices are the worst offenders, and they must be abolished if
you’re going to hang on to good employees.
They make a lot of stupid rules. Companies need to have rules—that’s a given—but they
don’t have to be shortsighted and lazy attempts at creating order. Whether it’s
an overzealous attendance policy or taking employees’ frequent flier miles,
even a couple of unnecessary rules can drive people crazy. When good employees
feel like big brother is watching, they’ll find someplace else to work.
They treat everyone equally. While this tactic works with school children, the
workplace ought to function differently. Treating everyone equally shows your
top performers that no matter how high they perform (and, typically, top
performers are work horses), they will be treated the same as the bozo who does
nothing more than punch the clock.
They tolerate poor performance. It’s said that in jazz bands, the band is only as good
as the worst player; no matter how great some members may be, everyone hears
the worst player. The same goes for a company. When you permit weak links to
exist without consequence, they drag everyone else down, especially your top performers.
They don’t recognize accomplishments. It’s easy to underestimate the power
of a pat on the back, especially with top performers who are intrinsically
motivated. Everyone likes kudos, none more so than those who work hard and give
their all. Rewarding individual accomplishments shows that you’re paying
attention. Managers need to communicate with their people to find out what
makes them feel good (for some, it’s a raise; for others, it’s public
recognition) and then to reward them for a job well done. With top performers,
this will happen often if you’re doing it right.
They don’t care about people. More than half the people who leave their jobs do so
because of their relationship with their boss. Smart companies make certain
that their managers know how to balance being professional with being human.
These are the bosses who celebrate their employees’ successes, empathize with
those going through hard times, and challenge them, even when it hurts. Bosses
who fail to really care will always have high turnover rates. It’s impossible
to work for someone for eight-plus hours a day when they aren’t personally
involved and don’t care about anything other than your output.
They don’t show people the big picture. It may seem efficient to simply send
employees assignments and move on, but leaving out the big picture is a deal
breaker for star performers. Star performers shoulder heavier loads because
they genuinely care about their work, so their work must have a purpose. When
they don’t know what that is, they feel alienated and aimless. When they aren’t
given a purpose, they find one elsewhere.
They don’t let people pursue their passions. Google mandates that employees spend
at least 20% of their time doing “what they believe will benefit Google most.”
While these passion projects make major contributions to marquis Google
products, such as Gmail and AdSense, their biggest impact is in creating highly
engaged Googlers. Talented employees are passionate. Providing opportunities
for them to pursue their passions improves their productivity and job
satisfaction, but many managers want people to work within a little box. These
managers fear that productivity will decline if they let people expand their
focus and pursue their passions. This fear is unfounded. Studies have shown
that people who are able to pursue their passions at work experience flow, a
euphoric state of mind that is five times more productive than the norm.
They don’t make things fun. If people aren’t having fun at work, then you’re doing
it wrong. People don’t give their all if they aren’t having fun, and fun is a
major protector against brownout. The best companies to work for know the
importance of letting employees loosen up a little. Google, for example, does
just about everything it can to make work fun—free meals, bowling allies, and
fitness classes, to name a few. The idea is simple: if work is fun, you’ll not
only perform better, but you’ll stick around for longer hours and an even
longer career.
Bringing It All Together
Managers tend to blame their turnover problems on everything under the sun
while ignoring the crux of the matter: people don’t leave jobs; they leave
managers.
Source: Dr. Travis Bradberry, Co-Author, Emotional Intelligence (LINKEDIN)
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