The Power of Empowering

The Power of Empowering

With the new normal of “working from home” in South Africa, arriving in the light of COVID 19, many organisations are being forced to transition from being an input-based time watchdog to an output-based productivity matron.

In my experience, the “old school” directors who I currently (and previously) worked with, and those within my network, are now entering uncomfortable zones in which they no longer physically see employees in the office. The fact of the matter is, many have had no choice BUT to adapt to this new norm, especially with cashflow restraints.

Many organisations are cutting costs to stay profitable (or to conserve cash) as the economic impact of the pandemic spreads around the globe. Office space appears to be a popular cost cutting target. The lockdown has forced us to use technology for communicating with both internal and external stakeholders. Have a look at the spike in Zoom users over the last 3 months, and you can quickly see how profound and, in many cases, successful this communication pivot has been. 

Within our own organisation and many of my executive colleagues we have been called upon to diversify our leadership style, to what I personally refer to as bottom up leadership.

What is bottom-up leadership?

The concept of bottom-up leadership has not shown much popularity in recent scholarly studies. However, as leaders implement this new norm of operating their business remotely, this leadership style may well be called upon more frequently. In my personal experience, the below 3 steps are the leadership fundamentals to this approach succeeding should you move to remote work in the long term:

Step 1: Set up your employees to succeed

This step may sound simple, but it is easy to fall short on! Upfront investment of time is required to correlate what tools and technology are required for employees to deliver efficient and effective results that will drive the organisation’s overall success. This may require a period of “trial and error” before deciding the infrastructure that works best for the entire organisation. In identifying the best fit infrastructure, joint research from all employees often provides a quicker deadline in deciding what works best. As each department shares their input, this is an ideal time to standardise critical internal business processes (assuming they are not)

The time invested in this step should be viewed as a long-term investment that avoids churn in the future.

Step 2: Invest in your employees

Investing in your employees is an ongoing process, not once off! Many leaders ignore this aspect of leadership, missing out on the long-term benefits of an effectively skilled workforce. Investing) is upskilling and providing employees with ongoing training that helps them (both) from a work perspective and a personal perspective. Training is can be combination of formal and informal. Depending on the level of complexity within your organisation, never underrate the value of an employee wellness course. Benefits include uplifting self-confidence within employees as individuals, together with self confidence in their ability to execute on their roles within the organisation. Depending on budget capacity, I would highly recommend considering the Proctor Gallagher Institute Paradigm Shift course which focuses on how we build habits, and how these adversely affect what we view ourselves as, and the opportunities ahead of us. By better understanding ourselves, the paradigm shift course helps individuals approach change and challenges “hands-on”.

Step 3: Employees need to be in right headspace

In my opening paragraph, I mentioned the output-based productivity matron. A productive employee is one who is in the right headspace i.e. their wellbeing is taken care of; and this can be done using “just in time” motivational feedback, especially when working remote employees often feel lost.

Some employees may find it difficult adapting to the remote work lifestyle, whilst others may adapt quickly. As leaders, assuming our personal working environment suits our deliverables may not necessarily mean our employees environments are similar e.g. we may not have children, dedicated space to work from or other family members to take responsibility of, however other employees do. In South Africa, the concept of Black Tax places significant social pressure on individual bread winners to provide for their extended families this may in turn affect their productivity and managers need to be cogniscent of such circumstances.

To overcome the above, identifying employees’ personal challenges (either via a survey, or one-to-one discussions) can potentially reduce the negative impact on employee productivity. In identifying the various challenges and implementing the required solutions, an employee in the right headspace will lead to notable outputs delivered = notable outputs desired.

Financially, employees are reflected as a labour cost. How effective a ROI we receive on this cost is a decision we (leaders) make. By empowering our employees to be at their best, a labour cost can become an invaluable intangible asset.  

 


Michael Ferrara

?????Trusted IT Solutions Consultant | Technology | Science | Life | Author, Tech Topics | Goal: Give, Teach & Share | Featured Analyst on InformationWorth | TechBullion | CIO Grid | Small Biz Digest | GoDaddy

8 个月

Hiten, thanks for putting this out there!

Kaushi Biddappa ??

Here to help you 'SHOW UP' with Intentionality and Confidence, as your Personal Brand Coach

3 年

Thoughtfully done Hiten Keshave CA(SA) MBA and I thought this was a meaningful reflection- As leaders, assuming our personal working environment suits our deliverables may not necessarily mean our employees environments are similar

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