Look around the conference table at your next team meeting. Who is struggling to keep their most talented team members? Who has gathered the best team around them, people who are passionate about giving their best? List the talented individuals in your organization that you can’t imagine losing. Many leaders in Thailand and beyond are anxious and challenged about getting business results while finding it difficult to a team that can execute on the mission. The best and fastest way to build a solid foundation of people who drive optimal business results is to hire the right people, and KEEP them once they have proven their potential. You can not develop a pipeline of talent if they are walking out the door.
Here are several ideas to consider; some of which may work for you to hold onto the talented people in your organizations, while you continue your search to hire and develop a pipeline of talent for the future.
Identify and Bolster Mission Critical Positions. Mission critical positions are disproportionately important to the organization’s ability to execute its strategy. Invest resources in these positions through focused selection, de-selection, promotion, development and communication.
Ask yourself and your organization, “What positions are disproportionately important to delivering or business results? What must be done to more fully engage high potential individuals in those positions?”
Remove Barriers and Stay out of Their Way. High performers love to do good work that has meaning; what they don’t like is to be given non-essential work that sucks time and effort and makes no real difference to the business. Great leaders remove distractions and administrivia. They help their people get unstuck from activity traps. What top performers want is to get into the flow of fulfilling work and stay there, while being respected and appreciated by their managers.
Ask yourself and your organization, “What non-essential work activities have we burdened our most important employees? How might these activities be re-apportioned or jettisoned?”
"So much of what we call management consists in making it difficult for people to work." --Peter Drucker
Conduct Stay Interviews Instead of Exit Interviews. Don’t wait for high-contributing talented people to announce their imminent departure. Take them under your wing. Find out what the like, and what they want. Tell them how much you appreciate their contributions and how much you want them to stay. Ask them what they would like to see happen to enrich their career. When people know they are valued and supported, they will almost always stay with that organization than leap to a new, unknown one.
Ask yourself and your organization, “Who can we bring under our wing to discuss what would be most meaningful to them for their continued career here?”
Attract and Select the Best Talent. Become a preferred employer. Is your organization known as one of the best places to work in Thailand? What positive messages can you provide prospective employees about your organization? Also, continuously improve your hiring practices to ensure you are hiring the best talent with the best fit for your organization’s needs. Good people like to work with good people. By selecting and retaining the people that fit your business, you establish a self-reinforcing, virtuous cycle.
Ask yourself and your organization, “What can we do to improve our employment brand and be clearer on what we are looking for in our candidates?”
Manage Retention and Turnover. Winning organizations use easy-to-implement approaches that create grateful employees such as giving awards for years of service or specific contributions, providing access to on-site fitness and wellness programs, making life a little easier through concierge services, or offering ways for employees to give back to the community.
Ask yourself and your organization, “Which of these approaches would be valued the most and are relatively easy to implement quickly?”
Select one or two of these ideas that you are able to institute quickly. Answer the questions in a way that will drive results and that fits your unique needs. Keep your best people and they will keep you in business!
About the Author
Brian Carlsen is the Director of Learning Solutions at the APMGroup and co-author of Attract, Engage and Retain Top Talent: 50 Plus One Strategies Used by the Best.
Sunday, October 10, 2010
Getting Your Employees In the Flow
Getting quality output from people is often not predictable, especially from knowledge workers and technical specialists doing non-linear work. But, what if you could practice a way to not only increase work quality, while also helping your people be more fulfilled? Answer: help them get in the flow!
What is Flow? It is a state of mind you achieve when you are fully immersed in a task, forgetting about the outside world. It is achieving a level of deep concentration. When you are in the state of “Flow” you are focused solely on the task and detached from all distractions, losing sense of yourself, others and time. And when you emerge from the flow state, you frequently feel happy or fulfilled and in control. This phenomenon was first described and studies by professor Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi, Director of the Quality of Life Research Center at the University of Chicago.
Flow can only happen when a person is able to balance challenges and skills; thus, avoiding the extremes of boredom and anxiety. Let us illustrate. Khun Lek wants to learn how to play piano. As she begins practicing basic scales she becomes bored. Her teacher helps her pick a harder piece of music thereby increasing the challenge in order to create a more optimal experience and develop greater skills through practice. When a new level is achieved, more challenging lessons are given. So, one way to help someone be “in the flow” is to incrementally add challenges to overcome boredom. The trick is to avoid increasing the level of challenge too quickly, thus creating anxiety in the person that he or she may fail.
Flow happens only when the level of challenge is neither too high nor too low. And the intensity of the flow experience increases as skill grows.
You can practice this yourself. Attack your biggest work challenges while remembering that flow is easiest to achieve when you: 1) have enough pressure to stay engaged (but not too much), 2) you believe that your skills are good enough to perform well, 3) you have distractions under control, 4) spend no effort in criticizing your work, 5) you are relaxed and alert, and 6) you are thinking positively.
So, this leads us to what you can do as a leader to help others get in the flow so they can also focus on key work output.
1. Help employees identify the tasks and outcomes that are most important and urgent. Be clear on your expectations and how much you appreciate quality output.
2. Help employees stay challenged by their key work responsibilities rather remain stuck in routine, less valued work.
3. Openly express your trust and confidence in their ability to get important work done. Dr. Csikzentmihalyi suggests frequent, helpful feedback aids people to get into the flow state.
4. Help reduce the number and extent of distractions so productive work can happen. In a study of computer programmer productivity, study participants valued supervisors that “respected them” and “got out of their way” so they could be most productive.
5. Avoid being a micro-manager through continuous checking and status reports. If the person is good enough for the job, let them do the job without criticism.
6. Help key employees stay healthy and alert by ensuring they can balance and work and life renewing activities such as eating well, making time for friend and family, and getting their sleep and exercise.
7. Communicate that you fully expect them to do well on the project, and that you are available for support if needed—that you are in their corner.
What is Flow? It is a state of mind you achieve when you are fully immersed in a task, forgetting about the outside world. It is achieving a level of deep concentration. When you are in the state of “Flow” you are focused solely on the task and detached from all distractions, losing sense of yourself, others and time. And when you emerge from the flow state, you frequently feel happy or fulfilled and in control. This phenomenon was first described and studies by professor Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi, Director of the Quality of Life Research Center at the University of Chicago.
Flow can only happen when a person is able to balance challenges and skills; thus, avoiding the extremes of boredom and anxiety. Let us illustrate. Khun Lek wants to learn how to play piano. As she begins practicing basic scales she becomes bored. Her teacher helps her pick a harder piece of music thereby increasing the challenge in order to create a more optimal experience and develop greater skills through practice. When a new level is achieved, more challenging lessons are given. So, one way to help someone be “in the flow” is to incrementally add challenges to overcome boredom. The trick is to avoid increasing the level of challenge too quickly, thus creating anxiety in the person that he or she may fail.
Flow happens only when the level of challenge is neither too high nor too low. And the intensity of the flow experience increases as skill grows.
You can practice this yourself. Attack your biggest work challenges while remembering that flow is easiest to achieve when you: 1) have enough pressure to stay engaged (but not too much), 2) you believe that your skills are good enough to perform well, 3) you have distractions under control, 4) spend no effort in criticizing your work, 5) you are relaxed and alert, and 6) you are thinking positively.
So, this leads us to what you can do as a leader to help others get in the flow so they can also focus on key work output.
1. Help employees identify the tasks and outcomes that are most important and urgent. Be clear on your expectations and how much you appreciate quality output.
2. Help employees stay challenged by their key work responsibilities rather remain stuck in routine, less valued work.
3. Openly express your trust and confidence in their ability to get important work done. Dr. Csikzentmihalyi suggests frequent, helpful feedback aids people to get into the flow state.
4. Help reduce the number and extent of distractions so productive work can happen. In a study of computer programmer productivity, study participants valued supervisors that “respected them” and “got out of their way” so they could be most productive.
5. Avoid being a micro-manager through continuous checking and status reports. If the person is good enough for the job, let them do the job without criticism.
6. Help key employees stay healthy and alert by ensuring they can balance and work and life renewing activities such as eating well, making time for friend and family, and getting their sleep and exercise.
7. Communicate that you fully expect them to do well on the project, and that you are available for support if needed—that you are in their corner.
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