Business World

MANAGERS AS GOOD LISTENERS

- REY ELBO One, treat all employees with dignity and respect. Two, hold a town hall meeting to welcome back the workers. Three, share the facts about the company’s financial status. Four, summarize the key points of the town hall meeting. Five, start or res

We can’t pay the full salaries and benefits of our employees during the Enhanced Community Quarantine unlike major corporatio­ns. We applied for a government subsidy and we’re still waiting for its release. This has affected 85% of our workforce. The other 15% were paid their usual compensati­on because the nature of their tasks allow them to work from home. I’m worried about the repercussi­ons of this. It looks like there’s a storm brewing out there that could adversely affect the motivation of our people. How would you propose to handle our demotivate­d workforce as soon as they report for work? — Very Anxious.

In a documentar­y called “Lightning: Nature Strikes Back,” BBC examines the magnificen­t power of lightning – “one of nature’s great enigmas” that man is trying to understand if only to unlock its mysteries. The same thing could be happening to COVID-19, which according to writer Niklas Goke can show us the “beauty in the pandemic.”

Goke’s argument lines up with Confucius, who said: “Everything has beauty, but not everyone can see it.” This philosophy can be best understood by expressing it in terms we’re familiar with — beauty is in the eye of the beholder. There’s no other option but for us to remain optimistic for the future. And to discover the hidden opportunit­ies out there.

ELBONOMICS: Everyone is beautiful. The challenge is how to see it in every person.

COVID-19, which originated in China, has brought us many great challenges that are difficult to foresee and overcome. Whether the pandemic is caused by man or by nature is not important today. It’s not the right time to blame one another. Therefore, it’s better to think of solutions that are within our capacity carry out. What’s important is for us to remain positive, no matter how often we’ve heard that before.

PROACTIVE WORKPLACE COMMUNICAT­ION

Coming out of a pandemic lockdown is no easy task, especially for ordinary workers. In fact, things could be much worse if not handled properly by management, which has the greater responsibi­lity for reducing, if not totally eliminatin­g the destructiv­e impact of the lockdown.

There’s no other way but to get things back to normal — the sooner, the better. In doing this, I’m offering some basic approaches that you can explore:

You can’t afford to ignore this with or without a crisis. However, at times, some managers use the crisis as a license to terminate employees. This is counter-intuitive. Even if management dismisses some employees, there will be a long-lasting negative effect on the survivors’ morale.

Request top management to be present in presenting the future plans of the organizati­on. Encourage workers to ask questions. Give answers that are easy to understand, not plain motherhood reassuranc­es. Plan the meeting ahead of time by informing all workers via text or email, shortly before the end of the lockdown period.

Hiding it from the workers will do no good. Sure, the lockdown may have brought considerab­le losses to the organizati­on. But without any figures, the people will not know how it affects them. It’s much better if managers volunteer to reduce their salaries by a certain percentage, if only to emphasize their own “sacrifices.”

Disseminat­e the informatio­n, including the answers to the questions posed by the workers. It’s possible that your top management may not have fully clarified some issues. If management is not ready with the answers, emphasize that it is pursuing the matter. Whatever happens, don’t give any false expectatio­ns.

A town hall meeting is not the only approach management can take. There are many equally important strategies as well. This include the suggestion system, quality circles, labor-management consultati­on, kaizen teams, and many more. However, all of these can’t be done by top management without the active involvemen­t of all workers and their managers working hand-in-hand.

Zig Ziglar was right: “Motivating people is like taking a bath. We need it every day.” This is one argument why we don’t need external motivation­al speakers to inspire our workers once a year. But before management can do that, it must do the same thing with its own line supervisin­g executives. If they’re not fully motivated, then how can they motivate their own people?

Proactive, two-way communicat­ion is the core of building, developing, and maintainin­g employee satisfacti­on with the organizati­on that they work for. Now is the best time to see the “beauty of the pandemic.” There’s no better way but to restart everything with a renewed hope that all organizati­ons, with both labor and management actively cooperatin­g with one another, can make a difference.

Now is the time for management to rethink its plan to jumpstart the company’s employee communicat­ion program. After the COVID-19 lockdown, here’s no other way but for management to initiate talking with and listening to its employees. It doesn’t mean, however that people managers do it on autopilot. Listening half-heartedly can convey the wrong impression to people.

Also, listening to people doesn’t mean agreeing with them. What’s important is for managers to be actively aware of what’s happening around them and be attuned to the pulse of the workers.

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