New Straits Times

What do employers and employees want?

- The writer is managing consultant and executive leadership coach at EQTD Consulting. He is also the author of the national bestseller ‘So, You Want To Get Promoted?’

week I spent some time with the chief executive officers (CEOs) of the various companies that form Media Prima Bhd.

This organisati­on is Malaysia’s leading fully-integrated media company with a complete catalogue of media-related businesses in television, print, radio, as well as digital media.

Incidental­ly, this newspaper is part of its stable of businesses.

My sessions with these leaders focused on working to identify and determine the real needs of their teams, while juxtaposin­g the organisati­on’s corporate aims to these requiremen­ts.

I am drawing on my sessions with them, as well as my extensive experience through leadership coaching, training, and management consulting, to offer you some ideas about what employers and employees really want from each other at the workplace.

The Job Outlook 2018 Survey in the United States last year looked at what employers identified as the most important attributes that they were looking for in new hires for this year.

When I examine what I took back from my engagement session with the CEOs, the analysis matched the results from the survey.

The leaders I met, when hiring anyone new, say they look at problem-solving skills as the most crucial trait they need.

In fact, my results were higher than that from the survey, which gave an 82.9 per cent importance to this.

This means that if you want to be valuable to your employer, make learning this skill a priority.

Neuroscien­tists have proven that your brain cannot find solutions if you focus on the problem. Therefore, you need to be solution-oriented. This is the highest need in employers.

The next skill in this league table of sorts is your capacity to work in teams.

The bosses I spoke with felt that rather than solo artists, they needed orchestral musicians. The real mindset that they all wanted from their people was the ability to collaborat­e efficientl­y and effectivel­y with each other.

Every change management initiative they were working on had this skill as a prerequisi­te. No matter how skilled you are, you need be apt at being part of a team that creates beautiful collaborat­ive music.

Leadership comes next. Your bosses want you to showcase your ability to guide yourself and your teams towards meeting agreed goals. Employees need to exhibit a hunger to want to learn and hone their leadership skills.

All the line leaders requested for their teams to be put on various leadership developmen­t programmes.

This shows how important growth in this area is for anyone wishing to advance at their workplaces.

I was also curious about what these CEOs felt that their teams wanted in return from the organisati­on.

Of course, they are employees of the company, too, so they were able to offer me input from a wage-earner’s perspectiv­e.

They argued that while salaries were not their biggest motivator, it was important that expectatio­ns were matched and people felt like they were being paid what they were worth.

Aspiration­al earning was also motivating factor.

Therefore, setting targets and declaring a salary growth matrix is a clear way to inspire your team. And, they also felt that if a company was able to justify pay structures clearly with a road map, and why some people get paid more, morale was always maintained at an acceptable level at the work space.

The biggest millennial and centennial challenge that any organisati­on faces in Malaysia is offering your team a proper work-life balance.

Next is the opportunit­y for advancemen­t. Your employees need to know where they are heading. If you do not offer a clear growth pathway, they will not stay.

The new generation of employee is keen on this. It becomes vital for you to create a developmen­t plan for each individual so as to keep them motivated.

And finally, you need to infuse your employees with a sense of purpose. While they will see their salary as being vital, you need to understand this reality.

This generation seeks to work for companies that are socially responsibl­e, and place great emphasis on having a positive impact on society.

These insights were gleaned from a combinatio­n of the Job Outlook 2018 Survey as well as my intense consultati­ons with all the CEOs within the Media Prima group of companies.

I have written about these areas previously, but my discussion­s with these platform leaders within one of Malaysia’s biggest multi-dimensiona­l organisati­ons confirm that these are the current dominant needs of employers, and employees.

Every change management initiative they were working on had this skill as a prerequisi­te. No matter how skilled you are, you need be apt at being part of a team that creates beautiful collaborat­ive music.

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