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Bosses Understand Employee Reality FAR Less than They Think

Back to blog homepage for: Strategic Employee Recognition: by Derek Irvine

Recognise This! – Stop assuming you know what your employees are experiencing. Find out!

Quick poll – if you’re a manager, how in touch do you think you are with your team members’ day to day reality? 50%? 80%?

Employees – how in touch are your managers really with what you do every day?

SmartBrief on Leadership recently ran back-to-back SmartPulse polls (manager survey and employee survey) asking each group exactly that question. The results, compared side by side, are dramatically different (if perhaps not all that surprising).

Nearly 61% differential in employee vs. manager perception on bosses’ true lack of awareness of employees’ day-to-day reality.

The good news is, there is fairly consistent agreement for “Well” and “Very Well,” but clearly half of managers need to get off of their “I’m the best manager in the world” pedestal and get into the work more with their team members.

Let’s be crystal clear:  I’m not advocating micromanaging. Far from it. I’m strongly recommending managers open their eyes and their doors to the good work employees are producing every day and, critically, the areas where employees may be simply making progress on long, arduous projects.

Then managers need to go one step farther and formally recognise and appreciate those efforts and achievements – provide encouragement and support so progress can continue whilst significantly praising final results.

I have to believe ignoring progress is a major part of the disconnect reflected in the chart above. Factor in the Teresa Amabile and Steven Kramer research showing making progress as the number one (by far) employee motivator and managers cannot deny the importance of this recommendation.

Where do you (or your managers) fall in the chart?

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Editor's Note - May 10

Had a busy week with two days at the Responsible Business Summit in London. What struck me was the appetite for sustainability in the corporate world. I spoke to senior figures from multinationals who knew wholeheartedly that businesses in the future would not succeed if the society around them failed.

Much of this appetite was understandably focused on collaboration - the future of sustainability. Words that were previously indicative of success - power, might, scale, size - are no longer enough in the open source, peer-reviewed future where opponents will not simply grumble and moan and then leave you in peace. Companies must work with governments, NGOs, charities and social enterprises as a matter of course. And even competitors, where necessary.

Facilitating this collaboration is the big challenge of the next five years. Highly-strung and ego-centric companies, feverish with the need to protect their brand, will struggle the most, but it's either adapt or die.

The business/charity relationship is one of the most interesting focal points. Business power can drive positive social change in so many ways but charities are the key holders to communities. As businesses are expected more and more to play a stake in the future, charity partnerships should be top of the corporate priority list. Businesses that don't work closely with a charity will find themselves with reputational problems.

There's a lot more to CSR, of course, but collaboration is the bedding on which CSR will rest. Businesses can no longer find the answers to all their problems in their own resources and assets.

And for many that's a scary thought.

Any thoughts, thoughts or questions, drop me a line on editor@hrzone.co.uk.

Best wishes

Jamie