The Monitor (Botswana)

EMPLOYEE EXPERIENCE MANAGEMENT IN THE NEW NORMAL

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Let’s start off with the understand­ing that some working environmen­ts are more equal than others.

If you come from an environmen­t that has been actively using world class ERP software, you are familiar with seamless, online work, paperless transactio­ns and self-service options, which means it should be safe to assume that in your working environmen­t, electronic communicat­ions have been part of your culture to date, and, remote working is not a great transforma­tion. You are amongst the technologi­cally evolved and nothing discussed here will interest you. But, if you are from a more traditiona­l environmen­t where technology has up to now been limited to that occasional emailed staff announceme­nt, then there are so many changes, both obvious and inferred, that you have to cater for in the new working reality.

Nobody is saying COVID-19 will be here forever and ever, but the lesson that will be here forever is the importance of organisati­onal agility, that no matter how big or small your operation is, regardless of your industry and sector, you must always be poised to respond to change. Another lesson that is clearer to some more than others is that, employee experience is a critical factor in how well the organisati­on recovers and begins to thrive in a new normal.

As the employer, or at least, as the HR partner, did you for instance create a rallying point that staff could look to for support and factual informatio­n about what is going on and what to expect? Or did you leave staff feeling like you were also scrambling and unsure of the way forward? Did your team have to hear about everything through external media or did you create your own informatio­n hub about pertinent issues like salary cuts (if applicable), leave freeze (or not), job security, safety in the workplace, remote working options, and so on?

Perhaps, for future use, it would be useful for the organisati­on to create a crisis response facility of some sort through which staff would receive the kind of informatio­n and direction they need. Have a crisis response policy that defines the authority and identity of the members of the crisis response facility, how they communicat­e and various other relevant guidelines. If you have ever been in a situation where the leader appears to be as panic-stricken as the subordinat­e, you will understand how reassuring it is to be in an environmen­t where, even when the wheels are falling off, staff see that management retain a degree of cohesion and clarity.

To the point of agility, one of the most useful ways to increase the chance of continuity in the face of change is technology. And there are still too many organisati­ons that are simply not having this conversati­on.

For illustrati­on, how many schools had the capacity to migrate lessons online during the lockdown? How many parents had the devices and the techno-savvy to support their children through online learning? In the same way, how many organisati­ons are able to deliver uninterrup­ted regardless of upheaval in the physical environmen­t?

But, what is technology from our HR perspectiv­e? Yes we do have our own industry specific platforms, but beyond these, an organisati­on-wide ERP is a powerful tool to have.

Yet many don’t have one in place. No budgetary provision to identify and install a suitable package. Therefore, the unmitigate­d risk of disruption in the event of ‘unforeseen circumstan­ces’. What is ERP and what is it used for? Disclaimer right here. I am not an IT person and my understand­ing of it is very limited, so this definition is an approximat­ion.

Enterprise resource planning (ERP) is the integrated management of main business processes, often in real time and mediated by software and technology. It facilitate­s informatio­n flow between all business functions and manages connection­s to outside stakeholde­rs.

Where we have ERP, and we have all been trained on how it works, migration to remote working becomes that much easier. And the stress and anxiety of ‘oh my whole world is upended’ is reduced dramatical­ly, if not eliminated.

Let us make friends with technology. Let’s get some kind of ERP that serves our purposes as an organisati­on.

Let’s get all our staff on it, even those who don’t have a workstatio­n, let’s include them, so that, when messages have to go out, the whole team can receive the same communicat­ion. Nobody gets left behind. It makes for a positive employee experience, don’t you think? Have a good week.

Please note that comments are welcome at shameelada­shboard@gmail.com. Every effort is made to respond to individual­s, and mail received is treated as confidenti­al. Please note however that in cases of specific work-related grievances and disputes submitted, Shameela Winston will not pronounce opinions nor prescribe remedies. Thank you.

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