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Understanding employee engagement

Opinion & Analysis
Employee engagement is a workplace approach designed to ensure that employees are committed to their organisation’s goals and values.

Employee engagement is a workplace approach designed to ensure that employees are committed to their organisation’s goals and values, motivated to contribute to organisational success, and are able at the same time to enhance their own sense of well-being. HR Talk with Paul Nyausaru

According to David Macleod “This is about how we create the conditions in which employees offer more of their capability and potential.”

There are differences between attitude, behaviour and outcomes in terms of engagement. An employee might feel pride and loyalty (attitude); be a great advocate of their company to clients, or go the extra mile to finish a piece of work (behaviour). Outcomes may include lower accident rates, higher productivity, fewer conflicts, more innovation, lower numbers leaving and reduced sickness rates.

But according to Macleod, the three — attitudes, behaviours and outcomes — are part of the engagement story. There is a virtuous circle when the pre-conditions of engagement are met when these three aspects of engagement trigger and reinforce one another.

Engaged organisations have strong and authentic values, with clear evidence of trust and fairness based on mutual respect, where two-way promises and commitments – between employers and staff – are understood, and are fulfilled.

Although improved performance and productivity is at the heart of engagement, it cannot be achieved by a mechanistic approach which tries to extract discretionary effort by manipulating employees’ commitment and emotions. Employees see through such attempts very quickly; they lead instead to cynicism and disillusionment.

By contrast, engaged employees freely and willingly give discretionary effort, not as an ‘add on’, but as an integral part of their daily activity at work.

But is employee engagement something new, or simply old wine (long-standing management approaches) in new (fashionable management-speak) bottles?

Is it just the latest management fad? It is believed that while it does have clear overlaps with analytical antecedents such as commitment, “organisational citizenship behaviour”, job involvement and job satisfaction, there are also crucial differences.

In particular, engagement is a two-way process where organisations must work to engage the employee, who in turn has a choice about the level of engagement to offer the employer. Each reinforces the other.

An engaged employee experiences a blend of job satisfaction, organisational commitment, job involvement and feelings of empowerment. It is a concept that is greater than the sum of its parts.

Despite there being some debate about the precise meaning of employee engagement, there are three things known about it: it is measurable; it can be correlated with performance; and it varies from poor to great. Most importantly, employers can do a great deal to impact on people’s level of engagement. That is what makes it so important, as a tool for business success.

Paul Nyausaru is Training & Development Practitioner. You can contact him on email [email protected], [email protected]; www.cshrmanagement.com Views contained in this article are personal