Really Hearing Your Employees

Human beings need to have a purpose, they need to matter.?When we feel irrelevant or unimportant our energy and commitment tank.?We accomplish less.?We are less kind and less patient.?When we are heard, when someone pays attention to our emotions, our actions, our experiences, or our suggestions, we feel valued.?We feel that we have worth as a person.?

Everyone experiences not being heard.?The one not hearing us may be our child, partner, friend, neighbor, acquaintance, teacher, doctor, customer, employee, colleague, boss, or stranger.?If an acquaintance or stranger doesn’t notice us or listen to us, it is usually not a big deal.?They aren’t part of our daily life so we have no need to be valued by them.?But when we feel undervalued by members of our household, our close social circle, or a colleague who is important to our workplace success, the quality of our life is impacted.

Employees may be excited to tell their boss they have finally mastered a key task, but we don’t take two minutes to hear about it and acknowledge their success.?They may be struggling to understand an assignment, be completely stuck on the next step, need a technology upgrade to handle the current volume of work, or have an innovative idea that could enhance productivity and the bottom line, but we don’t listen to their bottlenecks and provide the support that would help them achieve company goals.?Your team member may wish to ask if they could do their end-of-day paperwork remotely the week their children’s after-school babysitter is on vacation.?Perhaps it would be a relief if they could come in half-an-hour later the week their take-the-kids-to-school carpool parent recovers from surgery.?How open are we to helping reduce their anxiety so they can be more focused at work?

The job of supervisors and managers is to help their employees be successful.?When we don’t take time to hear them out, to consider their requests and their ideas, we become their biggest bottleneck.?You may not realize that as leaders, we control 70% of the factors that affect our team’s performance.?Yes, our employees only control 30% of the factors that impact their results. ?Some research suggests that employees might control as little as 20%! ?How intentional are we about reducing the bottlenecks that our employees can’t control?

When employees incorrectly interpret our instructions regarding an urgent assignment, the emergency gets worse.?If a virus or software update prevents them from doing important computer work, we may want them to focus on another high priority task.?When they figure out a way to improve results by tweaking a standard procedure, we might want to listen when they try to tell us about it before they teach their more successful method to everyone in two departments.?When we suddenly assign an urgent task to busy experienced employees without helping them reprioritize their normal critical responsibilities, we are setting them up for failure.?

Results-oriented employees seldom make excuses.?If they say ‘but’ they are likely about to share a real bottleneck – a challenge they don’t know how to solve.?They are interested in both the company’s success and their personal reputation and they are trying to figure out how to accomplish the increased workload or which tasks can be rescheduled or put on the back burner.?As leaders, we need to be thankful they are sharing their concerns with us and asking for help.?In a few minutes, we may be able to put their mind at ease so they can focus on the priorities at hand. ?Without our help, their mental over-whelm or under-informed decisions may negatively impact the speed and accuracy of their work for days.?

When we make a habit of not listening to employee concerns or not considering their ideas, they often feel that we don’t want them to be their best, to solve problems, or improve performance.?They stop asking questions to clarify expectations and understand the context of their work. They stop trying to engage or innovate.?They stop trying to be open, honest, and collaborative.?Eventually, they decide to either cope with their workplace disappointments or join the great resignation.?

Leaders have the greatest impact on employee retention.?Our job is to equip and support our employees for success, not to spur failure and disenchantment.?It is important that they feel valued for sharing their challenges and ideas for improvement.?We have to ensure they feel heard.?

What is one thing you can do differently to help your employees feel heard??


Freda Molenkamp-Oudman

Consultant and Coach - Facilitating organizations in adopting effective governance practices, leading their organizations with clear and intentional strategies, and supporting them to be the best they can be!

7 个月

Excellent article Cathie.

回复

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Cathie Leimbach的更多文章

  • Understanding the Analytical Behavioral Style

    Understanding the Analytical Behavioral Style

    Being aware of your and your employees' primary and backup workplace behavior styles will make you a better leader…

  • Reaching Your Dreams by Focusing on Clear Goals

    Reaching Your Dreams by Focusing on Clear Goals

    At just 19 years old, Manjit Minhas embarked on an ambitious journey to start her own wholesale liquor business. Her…

  • Understanding the Expressive Behavioral Style

    Understanding the Expressive Behavioral Style

    Being aware of your and your employee's primary and backup workplace behavior will make you a better leader. This…

  • The Four Cs of Effective Conversation

    The Four Cs of Effective Conversation

    Based on “Four Cs of Effective Conversation” - The Ohio State University Leadership Center. Ever walked out of a…

  • Understanding the Decisive Behavioral Style

    Understanding the Decisive Behavioral Style

    Being aware of your and your employees' primary and backup workplace behavior styles will make you a better leader…

  • Improve Leadership to Boost Workplace Productivity

    Improve Leadership to Boost Workplace Productivity

    Today's workplaces are changing, and managers play a key role in increasing workplace morale and productivity. Research…

  • Behavioral Styles Can Make or Break Your Team

    Behavioral Styles Can Make or Break Your Team

    Do you ever experience this? Teams that aren’t effective, even though the members are talented. Conversations that go…

  • Start with the Hard Task

    Start with the Hard Task

    Rory Vaden, a well-known author and speaker, highlights a common challenge many face: avoiding hard tasks or jobs we…

  • Tips for Business Success from a Fashion Designer

    Tips for Business Success from a Fashion Designer

    Jerry Lorenzo, founder and owner of the Fear of God luxury casual clothing line, is an intentional leader. His faith…

  • Learning Removes Obstacles

    Learning Removes Obstacles

    Lisa Bilyeu, the co-founder of Quest Nutrition, is a powerful example of what it means to be a lifelong learner. Her…

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了