BusinessMirror

Engaging thE ‘polE vaultErs’ on your staff

- Katie Bailey is a professor at King’s College London. Emma Soane is a professor at the London School of Economics. By Katie Bailey & Emma Soane

You may know the five principles for increasing employee engagement, but firms should also tailor engagement programs to reach different types of workers. After studying eight companies with a total of 180,000 employees, we classified workers into four groups and identified effective ways firms have customized programs.

Our findings suggest that such efforts lead to more-engaged employees, who, in turn, perform better, are more loyal and enjoy better health and personal well-being. See if you recognize the types from our study.

Grand prix drivers

NEARlY always strongly engaged with their work, they’re ideal employees much of the time—but they’re also at risk of burning out.

The Challenge: Prevent them from carrying too much of the load, especially in projects they’ve initiated.

Best Practice: South Africa-based Nampak Plastics Europe made a conscious effort to spread work equitably among team members and establishe­d delivery timetables only with input from the people who have to meet the deadlines. A few years ago United Kingdom support-services firm Amey began offering workers stress-management workshops, holding sports tournament­s and running health campaigns. About a year later, sick leave fell from 9.6 days to 7.1 (below the national average), attrition dropped from 13 to 7 percent and new hires referred by employees jumped from 5 to 10 percent.

Pole vaulters

ThEY’RE strongly engaged, but their episodes of engagement are less frequent than those of Grand Prix Drivers. Pole Vaulters tend to be energized only by certain aspects of their work—cutting the important deal, for example.

The Challenge: Get the most out of their on-again, off-again enthusiasm.

Best Practice: Amey appoints these workers to its Engagement

Champions network of more than 150 employees. Participat­ion in the network, which promotes engagement companywid­e, encourages Pole Vaulters to deepen and broaden their involvemen­t with all company initiative­s.

Long-distance runners

ThEY’RE reliable and consistent, but they’re less engaged than Grand Prix Drivers and Pole Vaulters (when the Pole Vaulters are engaged).

The Challenge: Keep them involved, and increase engagement.

Best Practice: UK-based consulting and constructi­on firm Mace Group focused on the creation of interestin­g, challengin­g and varied projects for staff members. Mace has also stepped up its corporate social responsibi­lity activities in response to employee concerns that the company wasn’t doing enough for the community.

Flatliners

ThEY’RE rarely engaged, and never strongly so. In fact, they can easily become actively disengaged and have a demotivati­ng effect on colleagues.

The Challenge: Reverse their negative feelings and foster engagement.

Best Practice: Nampak implemente­d several programs (such as visible recognitio­n systems) to engage this group. having compared its own survey data with ours, the company believed it reduced its Flatliners from 13 to 7 percent of its work force.

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