7
Management Practices That Can Improve Employee Productivity by Victor Lipman
All
companies want to improve employee productivity, but how often do they examine
their own management practices as a means of attaining it? Studies consistently
show that a disturbingly high number of non-management employees are
disengaged, not working at full productive capacity. Following are 7 practical
suggestions – steps management can take to improve productivity by putting
employees in a more productive mindset.
Design
economic incentives so employees at all levels of an organization can benefit from
them. There’s a natural tendency for management to focus most heavily
on senior-level economic incentives. While this is completely understandable,
it’s best not to neglect substantive incentives for lower-level employees… that
is, if you expect them to be vigorously committed to an enterprise’s success.
To the argument that this will be unduly costly, a program has to be carefully
structured, of course, so additional payouts reflect clearly defined revenue
and/or earnings targets.
Provide
meaningful feedback in a constructive manner on a regular basis.
Feedback is a foundational management skill; the ability to provide regular,
helpful feedback to employees in a manner that encourages, not discourages, is
a cornerstone of effective management. That’s not to say feedback is
always positive – that wouldn’t be management at all – but that the
communication is done thoughtfully… whether the occasion is encouragement for a
job well done, or that course correction is needed.
Respect
employees as individuals, in addition to the job they do.
Respect can be a simple but powerful motivator, just as its unpleasant twin,
lack of respect, has the opposite effect. When employees feel genuinely
respected (always assuming it’s warranted), they’re much more likely “to go the
extra mile” to help a company succeed.
Be
sure management at all levels of an organization receives adequate training.
There’s a tendency for companies to invest heavily in “leadership training”
while focusing far less on supervisors and middle managers. I can readily
speak from experience on this one, having received considerably more training
and development opportunities in the latter stages of my career than in the
early formative stages, when I most needed it.
Provide
support for employees when it’s genuinely needed.
Valued support can take many forms: equipment when existing is outdated or
inefficient; emotional support in the face of (occasionally) unfair criticism;
flexible support for a reasonable level of work-life balance. Management
support in times of need won’t be forgotten; it builds employee goodwill and
loyalty.
Don’t
be emotionally stingy. There’s nothing for management to gain by withholding praise and
recognition when it’s warranted. A recent employee study I came
across indicated that recognition is often a more powerful motivator than
money. While this may well be less true at senior levels as financial
rewards escalate, this post is focused on general employee
productivity…where the broadest gains can be made.
Ensure
senior leadership models behavior that makes the rank-and-file proud to be part
of the team. Nothing demoralizes employees more quickly than seeing senior
leaders act in a way they don’t respect, and few things energize employees more
than a senior team they admire. Leaders are always being watched and judged;
employees have keen eyes (and are keen data sharers!). When leadership is
“walking the talk,” it will be quickly noted – but so will “talking the walk”
without actually walking it.
To
help boost productivity, employee engagement matters. Ultimately, most
employees would much rather be part of a team they’re committed to, not just a
member of an organization. Developing and maintaining a consistent management
approach that engenders esprit de corps is a key link in the
productivity process.
Such
management – balancing appropriate levels of results-orientation with
understanding of employee needs – is neither easy nor unattainable.
It’s
also the thread from which the cloth of day-to-day productivity gains are made.
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