The Myth of Employee Engagement
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Talk about employee engagement has never been louder than it is today. But much like the distortion you get in your music when you turn your speakers up to the max, more talk hasn’t made this topic clearer. Let’s take a few minutes to dispel the myth of employee engagement, turn down the volume, and get clearer about what it is and how we can create it.
How Important is Employee Engagement?
Before we get to the myth, let me be perfectly clear. The goal of having an engaged and committed team is one of the most important goals an organization or leader could have. When employees are engaged, a whole list of powerful and valuable things will be true. When people are engaged in their work, they are more likely to:
The list could go on, but I talk to leaders all the time who are looking to improve just one of those things. Often, the answer is increasing employee engagement.
In other words, the importance and value of employee engagement isn’t a myth at all. It is a profound truth.
The Myth
But there is a myth – that employee engagement is something leaders and organizations do to people. It is seen as programs to be added, perks to be provided, or some magic mixture that, when provided, leads to employee engagement. The thinking goes… “What do we need to do so they will be engaged?”
The Truth
When we are engaged, we feel a sense of ownership. We care about our work and those we do it with and for. And we are willing to do what is needed to create success.?
This truth leads to two important points:
Think about it:
Employee engagement is a choice each team member makes individually. People choose to engage (or not).
While the approach of leaders and the environment they create can help create employee engagement, and while well-intended efforts of senior leaders may help, ultimately none of it “solves” employee engagement.
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Your Next Step
Organizationally, if your goal is to create greater employee engagement, you need to do four things:
As an individual leader, you don’t have to wait for the organization to take any of these steps. Since individuals choose to engage, you can set your own goals, work to understand what your team members want and need from work and help them choose to engage – for reasons that matter to them. When you do this, you are approaching employee engagement based on what it really is, not as a mythical thing to achieve.?
It’s your turn: What’s your take on employee engagement and how to increase it?
A version of this article first appeared in our blog .
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Have a great week – The resources below will extend this article and support you in getting Remarkable Results.
You are Remarkable!
Kevin ??
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Assistant to Assistant Vice President at Enterprise Information Systems, Texas A&M
1 年It sounds to me like "Employee Engagement" is the modern attempt to replace the decreasingly seen "work ethic." Work ethic was/is/could be a personal lifestyle in which an employee decided whether they were going to give their very best effort to the job and the result was their own acceptable level. feeling of achievement. For me, it is a matter of personal integrity, ethics and spiritual obedience (work as unto the Lord and not as unto man.)