Employee
Engagement
Definitions
of Employee Engagement
Employee
Engagement could be defined as the” harnessing of organization members’ selves
to their work roles; in engagement, people employ and express themselves
physically, cognitively, and emotionally during role performances”(Kahn, 1990,
p-694). Employee
engagement has created a countless interest in recent years as a broadly used phrase
in organizations (Macey & Schneider, 2008). Employee
engagement also defined as how the employees are emotionally and cognitively dedicated
towards the success of the organization (Hewitt Associates LLC, 2004). Work
engagement can be expressed as “the psychological state that accompanies the
behavioural investment of personal energy” (Schaufeli and Bakker, 2010, p-22). Moreover
this is defined as “a distinct and unique construct consisting of cognitive,
emotional, and behavioral components that are associated with individual role
performance” (Saks, 2006, p-602).
Employee
performance is the achievements and endeavors acquired at work. Performance is
maintaining the plan while focusing on the results. Estimation of performance
is the core of the performance management (Cardy, 2004).Employee
engagement is a main feature to improve employee performance (Macey
et al., 2009; Mone and London, 2010).Employee
Engagement supports the organization to increase competitiveness. Since Human Resource factor cannot be
duplicated it is considered as one of the most treasured strength of an
organization (Baumruk, 2004). Hence employee engagement is a
major concern for the leading roles of an organization (Seijts and Crim, 2006).
Besides employees are the most significant factor in any organization (Lockwood,
2007).
Types of
Employees
There
are three types of employees. Engaged employees, not engaged employees, and
actively disengaged employees. Engaged employees are highly enthusiastic, self -motivated
and satisfied. They trust and accept the company values. They are loyal and
result oriented. They are willing to take responsibilities outside their job
description. Not engaged employees do what they are asked to. They are not
bothered about the objectives and the goals of the organization. Actively
disengaged employees are not fervent about their work. They are money focused.
They influence others in a bad way and create unpleasant working environment
for others as well (Gallup, 2002; Truss et al.,
2006). Engaged employees are equipped with three general behaviours. They typically
vocal their satisfaction. They think and talk positively about the
organization. These employees cannot be taken away easily by other
organizations, and are passionate and keen to go for the extra mile to
accomplish the business goals (Hewitt Associates LLC, 2004). There
are three psychological conditions need to be encountered for an employee to be
engaged. They are meaningfulness, psychological safety and availability. Meaningfulness
means the return on investment. Psychological safety is primarily affected by
the social background. They are the relationships, methods of management and
social standards. Availability is the capabilities that employees can bring
forward to increase their performance level (Kahn, 1990).
Determinants
of Employee Engagement
Leadership and
Employee Engagement
Leadership
is an area that highly influences employee engagement (Hawley, 1993).The
behavior and the role of the leader pointers to a positive approach as
employees are vastly influenced by the leaders (Seijts and
Crim, 2006). Participative leader assists the subordinates who need more
independency while directive leaders are good with achievement focused
employees, because the leader can guide the subordinates towards objectives of
the organization (Malik, 2013). The main task of a
leader is to provide assistance to subordinates with a positive approach and direct
them to accomplish the goals and objectives of the organization (Robbins and
Judge, 2012). Trustworthy and supportive leadership increases employee
engagement by enhancing their contribution, fulfilment and eagerness for work (Schneider
et al., 2009).
Teamwork and
Employee Engagement
Teamwork
refers to a group of employees who work towards a common goal. They cooperate
each other to achieve the goal. Teamwork is a crucial element in an
organization (Senior and Swailes, 2004). Superior-Subordinate relationship
effect the quality of the teamwork and that quality affects the engagement (Brunetto
et al., 2013). Supportive setting is vital for the employees to feel
safe and to try out new things even if they are unsuccessful (Kahn, 1990). The motivation
of peer groups can bring the engagement to a higher level. Additionally the
member personality affect the engagement as well (Liao et al., 2013).
Training
and Career Guidance
“satisfaction
of growth needs depend on a person finding the opportunity to be what he or she
is most fully and become what he or she can”( Alderfer, 1972). Support the
development of the employees is a key factor in the process of employee
engagement because it helps the employees to focus on a given area. Training
programs advances service precision and service performance and eventually
employee engagement (Paradise, 2008).
Rewards
and Remuneration
The
level of employee engagement is a result of the benefits they receive (Kahn,
1990). Attractive compensation includes a salary,
bonus, monetary rewards and non-financial rewards such as recognition. Recognition
and rewards play a significant role in the process of employee engagement.
Employees feel appreciative and recognized when they receive rewards form their
organization and return a higher level of engagement (Saks and Rotman, 2006).
The
organization which I work focuses on enhancing employee engagement by creating
a pleasant working environment and through monetary and non-monetary rewards.
The organization could further improve employee engagement by recognizing
individual and team contributions on innovations and improvements which will enhance
the organization’s performance and by creating an environment for new
ideas to flourish for the betterment of the organization. Engaged employees
work positively to achieve the objectives of the organization, and it is
difficult to achieve higher standards with lack of employee engagement, since
actively engaged employees lead the organization towards success (Hewitt
Associates LLC, 2004).
Conclusion
This
is a conceptual framework of employee engagement, signifying the relationships
between organizational cultures, leadership, teamwork, rewards as facilitated
by the employee motivation. It is revealed that a high
organizational culture and better communication makes the employees more
engaged. Organizational incorporation,
managerial communication, particular feedback, subordinate communication, business
information highly defines the organizational communication which supports employee
engagement. Therefore
its crucial for every organization to invest time, money and commitment to
improve employee engagement programs because it reinforce employees which
ultimately lead to organizations’ success and sustainability (Schneider
et al., 2009; Brunetto et al. ,2013; Saks and Rotman 2006).
References
Alderfer,
C.P. (1972). Human
Needs in Organisational Settings, Free Press of
Glencoe, New York, NY.
Baumruk,
R. (2004). “The missing link: the role of employee engagement in
business success”, Workspan, Vol. 47 No. 11, pp. 48-52.
Cardy,
R.L. (2004).
Performance management: Concepts, Skills, and Exercises, M.E. Sharpe, Armonk,
NY.
Gallup
(2002). “The high cost
of disengaged employees”, Gallup Business Journal, April 15, available
at: http://businessjournal.gallup.com/content/247/the-high-cost-of-disengaged-employees.aspx
Hawley,
J. (1993). Reawakening
the Spirit in Work: The Power of Dharmic Management , Berrett-Koehler Publishers, San Francisco, CA.
Hewitt
Associates LLC (2004).
“Research brief: employee engagement higher at
double-digit growth companies”, available at: www.hewitt.com
Kahn,
W.A. (1990). “Psychological conditions of personal engagement and disengagement
at work”, Academy of Management Journal, Vol. 33 No. 4, pp. 692-724.
Liao,
F., Yang, L. Wang, M., Drown, D. and Shi, J.
(2013). “Team-member
exchange and work engagement: does personality make a difference?”, Journal
of Business and Psychology , Vol. 28 No. 1, pp. 63-77.
Lockwood,
R. (2007). “Leveraging employee engagement for competitive
advantage: HR’s strategic role”, HR Magazine, Vol. 52 No. 3, pp. 1-11.
Malik,
H. (2013). “Relationship between leader behaviors and employees’ job
satisfaction: a path-goal approach”, Pakistan Journal of Commerce and
Social Sciences , Vol. 7 No. 1, pp. 209-222.
Mone,
E.M. and London, M.
(2010). Employee Engagement Through Effective
Performance Management: A Practical Guide for Managers, Routledge, New
York, NY.
Paradise,
A
(2008). “Influences
engagement”, ASTD, Training and Development, Vol. 62 No. 1, pp. 54-59.
Robbins,
P. and Judge, A.
(Eds) (2012). Organizational Behavior, 14th
ed., Prentice Hall, Upper Saddle River, NJ.
Saks,
A.M. and Rotman, J.L.
(2006). “Antecedents
and consequences of employee engagement”, Journal of Managerial
Psychology, Vol. 21 No. 7, pp. 600-619.
Schaufeli,
W.B. and Bakker, A.B.
(2010). “Defining and
measuring work engagement: bringing clarity to the concept”, in Bakker, A.B. and Leiter,
M.P. (Eds), Work Engagement: A Handbook of Essential Theory and
Research, Psychology Press, Hove, NY, pp. 10-24.
Schneider,
B., Macey, W.H.
and Barbera, K.M. (2009).
“Driving customer satisfaction and financial
success through employee engagement”, People and Strategy, Vol. 32 No.
2, pp. 23-27.
Seijts,
G. and Crim, D.
(2006). “What engages
employees the most, or the ten Cs of employee engagement”, Ivey Business
Journal, Vol. 70 No. 4, pp. 1-5.
Senior,
B. and Swailes, S.
(2004). “The dimensions
of management team performance: a repertory grid study”, International
Journal of Productivity and Performance Management, Vol. 53 No. 4, pp. 317-333.
Truss,
K., Soane, E.,
Edwards, L., Wisdom,
K. , Croll, A. and Burnett, J. (2006).
“Working Life: Employee Attitudes and Engagement 2006”, Chartered Institute of
Personnel and Development, London.
W.
H., Macey and B. Schneider, ‘The meaning of employee engagement’, Industrial
and Organizational Psychology: Perspectives on Science and Practice, 1, 2008,
3-30.
Sustaining a corporate culture that attracts and holds the most creative, competent and inspired employees is through employee engagement (Kelleher, 2014). Companies such as Virgin Group, which consists of over 400 companies in various industries and regions including trades such as travel, banking, finance, hospitality, insurance, communication and fitness, is a good example for zn engaged employee environment. Virgin Group promotes innovation and has a culture of engaging employees in almost every area of the company. There is no magic formula for a great company culture. The key is to treat employees how you would like to be treated (Branson, 2017). Motivated employees is an unquestionable way to achieve employee engagement in a company culture.
ReplyDeleteEmployee performance is the accomplishments and efforts given at work. Level of employee engagement is a result of the benefits they receive (Kahn, 1990).
DeleteEmployee engagement is the emotional commitment the employee has to the organization and its goals. This emotional commitment means engaged employees actually care about their work and their company. Measuring employee engagement is important. Measuring the right things -- those that matter most to performance and provide a framework for positive change -- is crucial. Gallup's Q12 employee engagement measurement tool is designed to initiate companywide transformation to create sustainable growth. This tool is backed by rigorous science linking it to nine integral performance outcomes (Gerard,2006) Researchers studied 82,248 work units, including nearly 1.9 million employees. This latest iteration of the meta-analysis further confirmed the well-established connection between employee engagement and key performance outcomes:
ReplyDelete• customer ratings
• profitability
• productivity
• turnover
• safety incidents
• shrinkage (theft)
• absenteeism
• patient safety incidents
• quality
Though important at the organizational level, engagement starts with each person and is subjective. Employees don't check their personalities at the door when they come to work. Knowing that they are respected as individuals at work can have a significant impact on how employees view their overall lives. Each person's potential extends well beyond his or her job description. And tapping that potential means recognizing how an employee's unique set of beliefs, talents, goals, and life experiences drives his or her performance, personal success, and well-being (Schneider,2008).
A company should engage both at the local and organizational levels. The leaders of the organization such as managers should be capacitated to generate a symbolic difference. They should identify each and every employee, their capabilities and give the opportunities for a positive change in order to enhance the engagement of the employees (Reilly, 2014).
DeleteIt is important for the organizations to identify whether the employees are engaged. According to Robinson, Perryman, and Hayday (2003) an engaged employee has emotional attachment with their job as well as the organization, They have trust in the employers of the organization and are more committed towards their work as well as organization, Create healthy working environment and respect other employees of the organization, Cooperate with their colleagues to perform effectively, perform beyond the expectation of the employers, Perform their work in view of goals and objectives of the organization, make necessary change as per requirement and keep update with the knowledge in their field.
ReplyDeleteCrim and Seijts, (2006) have stated on how organizations could engage employees’ heads, hearts and hands. They have stated that this could be done by using the 10 C’s which are Connect, career, clarity, convey, congratulate, contribute, control, collaborate, credibility and confidence. By identifying whether the employees are engaged or not an organizations could take necessary action in order to engage employees with satisfaction.
In an organization, there are three types of employees. Engaged, Not Engaged and Actively Disengaged employees. There are three psychological circumstances used to find out weather an employee is engaged. They are meaningfulness, psychological safety and availability. The leaders should be able to identify the reasons behind each type of employee.
DeleteA review of the article based on the 10 C's for employee engagement by the author, George Ambler (2007) pulled the facts and highlights from the full story in the Ivey Business Journal and also summarized the explanation of the 10 C's as follows:
ReplyDelete1.Connect
2.Career
3.Clarity
4.Convey
5.Congratulate
6.Contribute
7.Control
8.Collaborate
9.Credibility
10.Confidence
Sarangi,P. and Nayak, B.(2016). Employee Engagement and Its Impact on Organizational Success. IOSR Journal of Business and Management (IOSR-JBM), 18(4),pp.52-57
According to the current economic state, most of the organizations have to cut down the headcount which leads an increase in the workload. Increased workload with minor benefits create disengaged employees. Hence the 10Cs are crucial to implement in an organization
DeleteEmployee engagement will results in high gain for the organizations. According to Reilly and Brown (2008) the terms ‘job satisfaction’, ‘motivation’ and ‘commitment’ are replaced now in business by ‘engagement’. Engagement happens when people are dedicated to their work and encouraged to accomplish high levels of performance. And engagement is affected by the quality of work and job design, the quality of leadership, the quality of working environment, and intrinsic and extrinsic reward systems (Armstrong, 2010). Hence, it is very important for HR managers to identify these factors to motivate the employees to be engaged in their jobs satisfactorily.
ReplyDeleteEmployee engagement is a workplace access emerging the right conditions for all members of an organisation to give of their maximum every day, dedicated to their organisation’s goals and values, interested to contribute to organisational success. Employee engagement is based on confidence, honesty,integrity, two way assurance and communication between an organisation and its members
DeleteAccording to Kennedy and Daim (2010), employee engagement results sustainable competitive advantage. In contrast, companies where employee disengagement is high, the low levels of commitment result in increased absenteeism, less productivity, and lower profitability (Markos & Sridevi, 2010). Despite this, it has been reported that employee disengagement has become increasingly common worldwide in organization (Saks & Gruman, 2014). The above substantiate the importance of Employee Engagement and benefit for the organization through Employee Engagement.
ReplyDeleteHuman Resource have become the primary cause of competitive advantage. The Brookings Institute (2003) freshly observed the main source of market price in today’s organizations and how it has transformed over time. In 1982, 62% of the market value was from tangible assets like machines, products and facilities. By 2002, the primary source has flipped. Almost 80% of the market value was from intangible assets like brand names, patents and the quality of the workforce. Engagement is the fuel that drives the worth of intangible assets
DeleteAccording to Robinson et al (2004) engaged employee demonstrate followings;
ReplyDelete1. Belief in the organisation
2. Desire to work to make things better
3. Understanding of business context and the ‘bigger picture’
4. Respectful of, and helpful to, colleagues
5. Willingness to ‘go the extra mile’
6. Keeping up-to-date with developments in the field.
Further, Employee Engagement has clear overlaps with the concepts of commitment and organisational citizenship behaviour, but there are also differences. In particular, engagement is two-way; organisations must work to engage the employee, who in turn has a choice about the level of engagement to offer the employer.
Robinson D, Perryman S, Hayday S, 2004. The Drivers of Employee engagement, Institute for Employment Studies
Employees become unseen if they are not recognized. They should be recognized, praised and acknowledged. Employees have a sense of comfortability and companionability with the business.
DeleteBarclays suggests a formal definition of employee engagement might be,‘the extent to which an employee feels a sense of attachment to the organisation he or she works for, believes in its goals and supports its values.’ Barclays also suggest that it is possible to ‘gain a good sense of someoneʹs engagement by
ReplyDeleteasking a simple question, would you recommend Barclays as a good place to work?’.
(Barclays, 2008)
The organization should follow the methods and strategies to keep the employees.By providing the guidance to career development and giving rewards are two of them.
DeleteI tend to keep my home life separate and if I’m going to do something I will do it outside of [work] rather than…I don’t like mixing too much with home and work”. Nevertheless, as work and home life become increasingly integrated (Khallash & Kruse, 2012) achieving balance between the multiple commitments creates an on-going challenge for employees and human resource professionals (Pradhan et al., 2016). However, it is worth noting that there will always be those individuals who do not wish to bring work home or bring home to work; “some people genuinely need to come in, do their job, and go home for family reasons” (Cassandra, disengaged employee).
ReplyDeleteIndeed, while work-life balance is a powerful leverage point for promoting individual and organisational effectiveness (Shankar & Bhatnagar, 2010),when employees feel that corporate responsibility impedes on work-life balance it can drive disengagement. “For some people at 5.30 pm, that’s it you just want to go home. People just need to work and you get some people like that”, suggests one disengaged employee, Charlotte. Other employees suggested that not every employee’s lifestyle is conducive to CSR, emphasising challenges of time, family balance, and responsibilities as caregivers. However, while the majority of concerns raised by respondents centred on work-family balance, Shankar and Bhatnagar (2010) stress the importance of acknowledging the restrictive focus of these terms and their general disregard for single individuals and those without caring responsibilities.
Employee engagement enhances sustainable competitive advantage (Kennedy and Daim (2010). If the organization has a higher level of disengaged employees, is clearly visible in the productivity and profitability(Markos & Sridevi, 2010).
DeleteAccording the JD-R model, Halbesleben, Harvey and Bolino (2009) debate that employee who are extremely engaged are other than to find work life interfering with their family lifecycle. Macey and Schneider (2008) propose that individuals only have a limited amount of resources and energy, and frequently utilizing them to maintain a maximum of engagement may evidence challenging in the long run (Halbesleben, Harvey & Bolino, 2009). Those who are additionally engaged at their job will be more likely to experience work interference with family due to having spent so much of their energy and resources being engaged at work. Further more Halbesleben, Harvey and Bolino (2009) examined how an employees’ family life could be negatively impacted by being too engaged at employment.
ReplyDeleteThere are three types of employees in an organization. Engaged employees, not engaged and actively disengaged employees (Gallup, 2002; Truss et al., 2006). Typically, if the employees are satisfied they happily work in the organization. They do not think twice to go on the extra mile and help to accomplish the goals and objectives (Hewitt Associates LLC, 2004).
DeleteLevinson (2007a) also suggests that employees who are happy in their work are more likely to stay in the organization, and Demourouti (2001) found that work engagement is indeed positively related to organizational commitment. BlessingWhite (2008) reports that 85 per cent of engaged employees plan on sticking around compared to 27 per cent of disengaged employees. In addition, 41 per cent of engaged employees said that they would stay if the organization is struggling to survive. Hetrick,(2006). Says employer brand, being an employer of choice which attracts and retains the best talent, which can be done by building a culture that enables employees to engage in their work, organizations may benefit from staff who are willing to go the extra mile and achieve better financial performance (Baumruk, 2006).
ReplyDeleteOrganizations constantly investigate paths to raise employee engagement. While changes in benefits, rewards, and compensation are generally treated as the best solution, engagement results in powerful improvement.
DeleteEngagement is a Shared Responsibility
• Identify differences between employee views and motivators
• Aid the crucial dialog between employee and employer
• Cultivate a common responsibility for engagement
• Create a culture of engagement
Align employee elemental components with organizational outside causes to increase engagement.
Employee engagement is the emotional commitment employees feel towards their organisation and the actions they take to ensure the organisation’s success; engaged employees demonstrate care, dedication, enthusiasm
ReplyDeleteaccountability and results focus.When employees care - when they are ‘engaged’ - they use discretionary effort.
They stay behind to get a job done because they are committed and feel accountable and want to, they pick up the cups left behind on the table in the meeting room or the rubbish that missed the bin because they care about their workplace. They stand up for their company because they are proud to be a part of it, they find solutions to problems and create ideas to improve; they are emotionally engaged with their organisation and they care
Employee Engagement could be interpreted as the” harnessing of organization members’ selves to their work roles; in engagement, people employ and express themselves physically, cognitively, and emotionally during role performances” (Kahn, 1990, p-694). Engaged employees vocal their satisfaction without a hesitation. They are dedicated and enthusiastic in what they do.
DeleteEmployee engagement is effectively connected to a scope of business achievement factors. For what reason ought to organizations endow in employee engagement? The appropriate response is on the grounds that employee engagement is related altogether with critical business results. Studies have discovered positive connection between employee responsibility and engagement and hierarchical execution results: employee maintenance, efficiency, gainfulness, client steadfastness and wellbeing. Investigates likewise show that the more connected with employees are, the more probable their manager is to surpass the business normal in its income development. Research likewise shows that engagement is decidedly identified with consumer loyalty Coffman (2000) Ellis and Sorensen (2007). Drawn in employee reliably shows three general practices which make strides authoritative execution.
ReplyDeleteAn organization should support the development of the employees. Benefits given to the employees decide the level of engagement (Kahn, 1990). Benefits include both monetary and non-monetary rewards. Salary increments and bonus are considered as monetary benefits and appreciation and recognition are considered as non-monetary rewards. Training programs should be conducted in order to develop the skills needed (Paradise, 2008).
DeleteThere is enough data to enable top management of all organizations to make sure that employee involvement becomes one of the top priorities. Organizations should try to find out the current level of engagement within their organization, find the reasons why they do not have full engagement, try to remove these reasons and implement strategies to reach full engagement. It is also essential that these initiatives continue to maintain engagement once it is achieved. Employee involvement can be difficult not only to achieve but can be easily lost with inadequate attention and constant continuity. (Gray, R, insightlink)
ReplyDeleteHuman Resource is the most valuable strength of an organization since it cannot be duplicated (Baumruk, 2004). Employee engagement also defined as how the employees are emotionally and cognitively dedicated towards the success of the organization (Hewitt Associates LLC, 2004).The organization should provide necessities to the employees such as rewards to make them satisfied. Satisfied employees try to go on an extra mile to achieve the objectives of the organization.
DeleteEmployee engagement is a direct result of a strong company culture. It refers to how employees feel about their culture and their jobs. The stronger a company’s culture, the better employees understand what is expected of them and what they’re working toward. Engaged employees are more likely to stay happy, motivated, and committed to your company.
ReplyDeleteOverall, an engaged employee is more:
Connected to your company’s mission
Motivated to exceed their goals
Proactive about learning new skills and starting new projects
Positive in their approach to work
Creative in solving problems
Committed to developing their careers are your organization
Engaged employees also provide a whole bunch of benefits to your organization: Higher productivity, better customer relations, and lower turnover.
Employee engagement is a crucial component in work performance and employee confinement. Work engagement shows up to be good for both the organization and the employee. Organizations may wish to make use of methods and strategies which enhances employee engagement.
DeleteA positive organizational culture also aids in the engagement process due to the fact that a positive workplace supports its employees. Building employee engagement calls for many aspects of a positive organizational culture. Sirisetti (2012) notes that improved engagement happens when there are positive working relationships, employee input in decision making, and supporting growth and development with learning opportunities.
ReplyDeleteAgreed with your view.Employees should know how much they do for the organizational success. Their ideas and opinions should be considered.
DeleteSometimes there are some policies which are not to be discussed by the company to the subordinates. Some things are to be kept in secrecy so in such a case, it is not good to engage the subordinates in to the major discussions or say into the meetings or the workshops and so on.
ReplyDeleteAlso the difficulty to match the IQ level:
The meetings in which high officials sit and discuss, it becomes difficult for the members to match the discussion as per the subordinates. So, this way the conversation gets imbalanced and the difficulty level increases to larger extent which is not a positive sign as it not just wastes time but also it waste lot of energy.
Agreed, there are many definitions for this topic according to the authors and their research output.
DeleteIn today's organisation structure it is very important that employees engage in day to day tasks actively. According to Sakas (2003) engaged employees produce high revenue and minimise the production cost.Also it is very important that the employees are given the necessary tools and training o perform there jobs effectively , by the organisation.Employees who are engaged with their job and employer are more productive because they are motivated beyond personal factors
ReplyDeleteYes it is true. Engaged employees do not hesitate to go on the extra mile for organizational success.
DeleteStandard Chartered Bank it was found that branches with highly engaged employees produced 20% higher returns than branches with lower engagement scores. Marks & Spencer reported that a 1% improvement in employee engagement produced almost a 3% increase in sales per square foot. JCPenney reported that their stores with top engagement scores generate about 10% more sales per square foot and have a 36% greater operating income than similar stores with low engagement scores (Gallup, 2006; Dow Jones Business News, 2007).Further, Molson Coors Brewing Company reported multi-million dollar safety savings through strengthening employee engagement (Singh, 2013).
ReplyDeleteYes It is true.Engaged employees highly contribute towards organizational success.
DeleteEmployee engagement is not something that can be obtained by force, Instead employees themselves must be thought about the value of being engaged in archiving organizations goal. It all begins when the employee joins an organization. HR & Special departments such as Talent Acquisition departments are responsible for hiring right employees to the organization. It is all about hiring the right person for the right job. Then begins the leaderships responsibility of shaping an employee & setting the mindset of an employee to align them towards organizational goals & make sure the employee understands what benefits it will bring towards that individual by actively engaging in organizational goals.so the employee will be a productive, successful and an engaged employee willingly knowing that will benefit & improve their life as well.
ReplyDeleteAgreed, Employees should be well informed about their job responsibilities and how they are important to achieve the targets of the organization.
DeleteRobinson et al. (2004) defines employee engagement as “a positive attitude held by the employee towards the organization and its values. An engaged employee is aware of the business context and works with colleagues to improve performance within the job for the benefit of the organization.” Markoset al. (2010) argues that employees that are not engaged are more likely to waste their efforts on low priority tasks, fail to fully commit to tasks and will only remain with the business for a short period of time.
ReplyDeleteEmployee engagement is “harnessing of organization members’ selves to their work roles; in engagement, people employ and express themselves physically, cognitively, and emotionally during role performances” (Kahn, 1990, p-694). Most of the time engaged employee vocal their satisfaction. These employees cannot be taken away easily by other organizations
DeleteEmployee engagement has become a hot topic in recent years among consulting firms and in the popular business press. However, employee engagement has rarely been studied in the academic literature and relatively little is known about its antecedents and consequences.
ReplyDeleteThere is a meaningful difference between job and organization engagements and that perceived organizational support predicts both job and organization engagement; job characteristics predicts job engagement; and procedural justice predicts organization engagement. In addition, job and organization engagement mediated the relationships between the antecedents and job satisfaction, organizational commitment, intentions to quit, and organizational citizenship behavior.( Saks,2006)
Creating a Culture of Engagement is very important to enhance employee engagement
DeleteHarrison Assessment's Engagement & Retention Analysis provides with prosecutable data, based on leading symbols of employee expectations, to plan and align excellent approaches that will motivate employees at the individual, group and organization levels.
Harrison's particular technology helps to assess the employee expectations regarding the following essential measurements:
• Development
• Remuneration
• Authority
• Social
• Appreciation
• Communications
• Personal
• Work Life Balance
when employees are engaged they are more productive and innovative, less likely to leave an organization, and more likely to be excellent ambassadors for your company’s employment brand.
ReplyDeleteThe organization should play an immense role to retain the employees. If the employees are satisfied it is very difficult to remove them form a particular organization. Employees should be given both monetary and non-monetary rewards.
DeleteEmployee engagement is based on trust, integrity, two way commitment and communication between an organization and its members. It is an approach that increases the chances of business success, contributing to organizational and individual performance, productivity and well being.
ReplyDeleteYes as you have stated both parties in an organization should contribute in order to enhance employee engagement
DeleteMost drivers that are found to lead to employee engagement are non-financial in their nature. Therefore, any organization who has committed leadership can achieve the desired level of engagement with less cost of doing it. This does not mean that managers should ignore the financial aspect of their employees. In fact, performance should be linked with reward. As Buckingham and Coffman (2005) said, pay and benefits are equally important to every employee, good or bad. A company’s pay should at least be comparable to the market average.
ReplyDeleteKeep posting such a interesting article with us! If you want to boost employee engagement, Then checkout our list of top 50 Online employee engagement activities that your work from home employees will enjoy!
ReplyDeleteAmazing Blog! Are you searching for a monthly engagement calendar? If yes, then you’re in the right place. This calendar is a way to communicate with your employees. It's a great idea to use this as a reminder of all your company events. It includes monthly ideas and activities to enjoy with your coworkers.
ReplyDeleteWonderful blog! Thanks for sharing this informative blog. We have shared employee engagement calendar ideas to improve every day in the office and boost employee's enthusiasm and morale.
ReplyDelete