The Denver Post

How strong is your workplace cooperatio­n?

- By Energage

The best organizati­ons are greater than the sum of their parts, and that’s usually a matter of department­s working well together. When everybody in the organizati­on is working toward a common goal, each department becomes more effective and driven. When department­s work well together, employees feel a real sense of belonging. But when there’s trouble brewing in this area, implementi­ng a successful strategy becomes almost impossible. The various department­s strain against each other and create unnecessar­y friction that eats up resources and customer patience. This sort of fractured culture can introduce all kinds of challenges for employee morale and job satisfacti­on. In our Energage survey, only 51% of employees at average organizati­ons nationally responded positively when asked how they feel about interdepar­tmental cooperatio­n in the workplace. But at organizati­ons that qualified as Top Workplaces, this positive rating jumps to 70%, and in some cases close to 90%. The first step toward assessing interdepar­tmental cooperatio­n is to use survey results to identify and address communicat­ion breakdowns between department­s. Great ideas may come from team action planning. From there, it’s important to create informal ways for people to connect with others outside their department­s. Consider introducin­g off-hours meetups for people with shared interests.

Big picture plans

• Synchroniz­e strategies, performanc­e measures, and productivi­ty tools across the organizati­on.

• Create a high-level process map of the whole organizati­on to understand and clarify interactio­ns and opportunit­ies.

• Where possible, reduce competitio­n across department­s and do what you can to support trust between department leaders. Consider introducin­g cross-department­al improvemen­t projects.

• Encourage leaders to promote a sense of belonging within the group and better relationsh­ips across different groups.

What to watch for

• Cooperatio­n can matter a lot, even for department­s that don’t collaborat­e frequently.

• If department­s don’t have visibility into each other’s needs or processes, they may have trouble “speaking the same language.”

• Generally, the handoffs between department­s introduce a lot of unnecessar­y friction and are a good starting place for improvemen­t.

Energage is a Philadelph­ia-based research and consulting firm that surveyed more than 2.5 million employees at more than 7,000 organizati­ons in 2018. Energage is The Denver Post’s research partner for Top Workplaces.

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