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Jan 4, 2021
Brenda Smyth
Employees who feel valued at work are motivated to do their best. The (APA) American Psychological Association gave us this survey information almost ten years ago. A whopping 88% of the employees they surveyed who reported feeling valued, also reported feeling engaged.
Compassion.
Kindness.
Empathy.
These are the management buzzwords of today — the newest employee engagement salve. But the bottom line is: If you want workers to give their best, show them you care about them as people.
Admittedly, not all managers and leaders are good at this.
And there’s mounting evidence that if you don’t possess the “empathy” gene, you’re going to struggle with this one. Feeling what someone else feels is not always easy. Instead, we feel sympathy. (Nice, but not the same thing.) We feel pity. (Not at all the same thing.) We feel compassion. (Getting closer.)
Think about your own organization. When someone hits a goal or milestone, how do you find out? Maybe your organization announces these things in meetings or through internal communication. Maybe there are ceremonies or trips. Many organizations work hard to acknowledge, celebrate and reward achievement. And these recognition efforts are important. Great work should be recognized. But, there’s more to it.
Authors Rudy Karsan and Kevin Kruse point out the struggle facing organizations (and individual managers) in making workers feel truly valued. “As a whole, organizations are especially weak in creating an environment where employees truly feel valued.”
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When we let people know that we’re glad they’re part of our teams, they feel valued. How can managers and leaders do that?
You don’t need to be an empathy guru to show employees you value them as people. But to boost worker engagement, you do need to be self-aware and sensitive to how you’re interacting with each person on your team as an individual — how you’re showing them they matter.
Brenda Smyth
Brenda Smyth is supervisor of content creation at SkillPath. Drawing from 20-plus years of business and management experience, her writings have appeared on Forbes.com, Entrepreneur.com and Training Industry Magazine.
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