Sunday Tribune

Increased autonomy improves employee happiness

- TAMARIN DUNCAN * Duncan is head of HR at Payspace

EMPLOYEES want more control and autonomy. But that doesn’t always require a four-day week or working from coffee shops. Self-service portals can consistent­ly improve workplace loyalty and satisfacti­on by giving employees more control over their work affairs.

The business world is currently in a tug-of-war. Employers are trying to get employees back to how things operated before the pandemic years – but employees have been exposed to a higher degree of autonomy. Concepts like work-life balance have shifted from fanciful management ideas to practical realities for workers. No wonder employers encounter a lot of resistance from their employees when trying to reconfigur­e remote working and flexible hours.

This conflict presents an opportunit­y for employers to question what really makes employees content, even happy, with their workplaces. While there are many answers, the battle over work hours and locations shows that autonomy is often the best.

AGENCY AND CHOICE

Autonomy is very important in a business. Foremost, it makes sense because it’s more efficient. A business where everything is slow, manual and micro-managed does not perform well. And it also makes a lot of sense for employees – both because it shows the degree to which you trust and respect them, and it gives them space to arrange their profession­al lives.

The connection between autonomy and happiness is not just anecdotal. A 2022 Journal of Positive Psychology study measured which activities make people happier. They discovered that the type of activity mattered far less than whether people could do it at their own volition.

The fine line between “have to” and “want to” seems to have an outsized impact on personal and profession­al happiness.

If we only did what we wanted to, we would likely be happier – at least for a short while. But that isn’t autonomy.

According to those researcher­s, genuine autonomy is the sense of wanting to take action instead of being coerced into action.

It’s surprising how often this dynamic appears. An obvious example is a management culture that bullies employees into long hours and unrealisti­c expectatio­ns.

But we can easily overlook the more subtle encumbranc­es.

For example, how easy is it for an employee to apply for leave? They might willingly apply for leave, but then feel aggrieved by having to fill in a pile of paperwork and manually co-ordinate schedules. How easy is it to get a payslip? While relying on overworked and stressed HR staff to deliver the slip promptly might not be coercive, it definitely won’t feel like a positive choice for the employee.

Another point to consider is that everyone has access to technology. People are used to convenienc­e and getting what they need when they need it. These expectatio­ns don’t take a back seat when people enter the workplace.

It’s the opposite. Employees often judge their business tools and processes by the same standard; and then become frustrated and annoyed when things fall short.

CREATING SELF-SERVICE

Employee autonomy and happiness may not require remote working and similar gestures. In many work environmen­ts – factories, mines, retailers, to name a few – remote or hybrid models are impractica­l or only serve a small part of the workforce.

But if we consider that technology enablement has increased expectatio­ns of autonomy and focus on creating universal self-services for employees, every business can contribute significan­tly to satisfacti­on and happiness.

The examples of leave and payslips are apt illustrati­ons of this synergy.

One of our most popular services is a Whatsapp bot that engages with leave processes and payroll services on behalf of the employee. They don’t need a laptop or even an email address.

They just jump onto the app, chat to the bot, and get what they need. In one move, they get access to important business services and enjoy the same technologi­cal autonomy they experience with other services.

Other examples are also starting to emerge. Most recently, generative artificial intelligen­ce is helping employees access business knowledge and data analysis through plainlangu­age interactio­ns. And employee super-apps that combine multiple self-service and informatio­n features into one applicatio­n are popular at large enterprise­s.

These concepts represent ways to bring autonomy more readily and reliably into a business. However, there is a catch: you can’t do this on yesterday’s technology infrastruc­ture.

The best self-service tools for employees and customers are powered by cloud-native platforms. Otherwise, it becomes far too complicate­d and expensive to do things like integratio­n and automation, or to design forms and interfaces without relying constantly on IT teams. The best cloud platforms have these features built-in and ready to deploy, at a fraction of the cost of trying to do it all yourself.

Research has confirmed that autonomy is the most significan­t ingredient for happiness, while the digital age has shown people the satisfacti­on of self-service. Now businesses can harness both forces together.

Some employees might still want to work remotely, and a few will probably never like their jobs. But for the vast majority, a selection of self-service portals in the right places could make the difference between just showing up and wanting to excel.

 ?? ?? Research shows that having agency and real choice can significan­tly impact personal and profession­al happiness. | Freepik
Research shows that having agency and real choice can significan­tly impact personal and profession­al happiness. | Freepik

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