The Herald (South Africa)

Growing awareness of empathy’s benefits

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EMPATHY can help bring value to staff and customers, and grow your business.

Ground-breaking business leaders the world over are turning their backs on the traditiona­l top-down autocratic business style, choosing instead to lead with empathy.

Forming a sense of integrity underpins the ethos of any company, setting up a leadership style which staff look up to and which customers respond positively to.

A recent study by consultant­s KRW Internatio­nal has highlighte­d a link between a business’s performanc­e and the integrity of its leader.

According to the study, companies in which employees rated a CEO’s moral principles highly outperform­ed other companies whose upper tier management received lower character ratings.

It is a secret tool of success which any new-age business needs in order to build a solid foundation for bringing added value to staff and customers alike.

I am not alone, although many business leaders still dismiss this view as a gimmick.

A case in point: When UK airline Ryanair last year reported its first full-year decline in profits since the late 1990s, bombastic Ryanair boss Michael O’Leary decided to inject empathy into its product mix.

O’Leary was quoted saying later: “If I’d known being nicer to customers was going to work so well, I would have started many years ago.”

Injecting a sense of authentici­ty in his leadership style has helped customers connect with staff, and in turn has helped staff connect with customers.

From a pragmatic perspectiv­e, the training involved in setting up any position within the company takes time and effort – and some considerab­le cost.

Treating company employees like just another number will more easily translate into a higher staff turnover, which in turn leads to higher overhead costs in the long run.

Rather, making staff feel like they have a stake in the company and hearing them out entices a greater sense of commitment from them.

With this empathy, you create a familial sense within the company.

If a business owner can understand where his or her staff are coming from – and what their needs are – it creates a bond which is hard to break.

Furthermor­e, greater morale, higher productivi­ty, and low rates of absenteeis­m are all benefits of this system. Treating staff as people rather than numbers has been one of the best business moves we could have made.

This approach might not stop attrition within the business, but it certainly makes employees think twice before leaving.

 ??  ?? Colin Smith MD: The Trink
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Colin Smith MD: The Trink Group

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