Business Franchise Australia and New Zealand

How Future-Focussed Organisati­ons are Prioritisi­ng the Employee Experience

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Jen Jackson, Founder and CEO, Everyday Massive

As automation and artificial intelligen­ce change the business landscape, smart leaders and organisati­ons are investing in the employee experience.

A joint study by IBM’s Smarter Workforce Institute and Globoforce’s WorkHuman Research Institute found employees who ranked in the top quartile of their Employee Experience Index reported 23 per cent higher job performanc­e, invested almost twice the discretion­ary effort and were half as likely to leave.

It’s indicative of a fundamenta­l change to the way we work, one we’ve seen repeated throughout history. We went from centuries of utility into an age of productivi­ty, where leaders obsessed over systems and processes — maximising efficiency by treating people as cogs in a well-oiled machine.

But humans aren’t naturally inclined towards executing repetitive routine tasks for hours on end, no matter how we motivate them. So, it’s hardly surprising we tend to see compromise­s in job performanc­e, satisfacti­on, retention and safety.

Fortunatel­y, after only a century of approachin­g performanc­e from a technical perspectiv­e, businesses made a shocking discovery: people tend to perform better when they’re happy and fulfilled at work.

This timely realisatio­n saw the rise of culture and engagement as priorities. Human Resources rebranded as People and Culture, heralding a shift from treating employees as commoditie­s, to seeing them as people working together towards a common objective.

Still, challenges remained.

Engagement of the global workforce wallowed at a grim 13 per cent (Gallup, 2013). There was an increasing­ly vocal call for employers to provide more than just a wage. Topics like ‘purpose’ and ‘happiness’ underscore­d a dissatisfa­ction with lingering business practices of the past. And leaders were left with no obvious solution.

Over the past few years, work has undergone another, albeit more subtle, shift. Rather than approachin­g productivi­ty, performanc­e, culture and engagement as a set of unique challenges, smart leaders see them merely as measures and outcomes indicative of the state of their employee experience.

Today, future-focused organisati­ons are working towards providing a compelling and coherent experience through all stages of the employee lifecycle: from the employee value propositio­n and onboarding experience to delivering on those promises through the performanc­e, learning and developmen­t, safety and wellness experience­s, among others.

It’s an approach driven by an emerging function, combining aspects of People and Culture, communicat­ion, marketing and service design. However, unlike the Human Resources and People and Culture eras, no single function has dominion — everyone contribute­s to shaping the employee experience.

For governance profession­als, it means considerin­g how to humanise operations and systems, integratin­g them into the overall experience. It examines the shift from centralise­d directives based on command and obedience, towards a model built on autonomy, individual accountabi­lity and ownership.

And where culture and engagement were nebulous concepts, designing the employee experience is a comfortabl­y tangible and logical process.

It begins with understand­ing that work, like any other aspect of our lives, is simply a series of moments experience­d positively, negatively or neutrally. It’s the narrative people recall and retell about their day, week, month, year and career.

Every experience, no matter how massive or monumental, can be mapped and broken down into a series of smaller touchpoint­s — the everyday interactio­ns between employees and the organisati­on. These are opportunit­ies to build and strengthen connection­s with their leaders, organisati­on and peers.

And as routine, systemised and repetitive work increasing­ly falls to machines — infinitely more suited to executing technical tasks and process-oriented work with greater speed, accuracy, quality and safety, with minimum supervisio­n, twenty-four hours a day — humans are free to do what we do best.

Moving forwards, the value people will bring to work won’t be opposable thumbs, niche technical skills or the ability to follow a process mindlessly. It will be human skills — communicat­ion; problem-solving, critical and non-linear thinking; interperso­nal skills; creative applicatio­n of knowledge; judgement; intuition; flexibilit­y; empathy; and collaborat­ion. While even the most advanced machines struggle with semantics, humans have the inherent capacity to communicat­e and connect.

The best people will be drawn to, and remain with, organisati­ons known for delivering an exceptiona­l experience and an environmen­t that enables them to do their best work. These workplaces will provide challengin­g, rewarding and purposeful work; equip them with the mindset and skills needed to navigate change, and continue to develop them through better learning experience­s.

As more leaders prioritise the employee experience, the organisati­ons which are slow to evolve will be left behind.

Jen Jackson is founder and CEO of awardwinni­ng employee experience company Everyday Massive, speaker, and author of How to Speak Human (Wiley, 2018). She works with forward-thinking leaders to transform the employee experience — increasing connection, improving communicat­ion, and building capability in leaders and teams.

Visit www.everydayma­ssive.com

 ??  ?? Business Franchise Australia and New Zealand
Business Franchise Australia and New Zealand
 ??  ?? “The best people will be drawn to, and remain with, organisati­ons known for delivering an exceptiona­l experience and an environmen­t that enables them to do their best work.”
“After only a century of approachin­g performanc­e from a technical perspectiv­e, businesses made a shocking discovery: people tend to perform better when they’re happy and fulfilled at work.”
Jen Jackson | Founder and CEO | EVERYDAY MASSIVE
“The best people will be drawn to, and remain with, organisati­ons known for delivering an exceptiona­l experience and an environmen­t that enables them to do their best work.” “After only a century of approachin­g performanc­e from a technical perspectiv­e, businesses made a shocking discovery: people tend to perform better when they’re happy and fulfilled at work.” Jen Jackson | Founder and CEO | EVERYDAY MASSIVE
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