28 March 2011

Don't Take Your Employees for Granted

It’s been a stressful and scary time out in the professional world, and senior management has had the upper hand over their staffs for the past few years. Some unethical people in power have taken despicable advantage of employees fearful about job security - demanding more productivity and longer hours without additional compensation. “You are lucky to have this job”, is the thinly veiled message from the dude with the cattle prod at your back.

Many corporations have been managing through bad times. There has been serious pressure from low business levels, plunging profits, the need to cut expenses, and noise from unhappy shareholders. If this reality is properly communicated to employees in the form of actions necessary to keep the organization financially viable (and jobs on the payroll), most workers will rally and paddle in tandem with management to weather the storm. They don’t need to be threatened or abused, and they mustn’t be taken for granted.

Better days are coming, slowly but surely. Imagine what will happen as the tumultuous tides recede and your employees have a chance to contemplate their hard-won survival…

• There will be resentful people that will hold a grudge for how they were treated during bad times. The next perceived loss suffered at the hand of the corporation may be the last straw. (Remember the guy in the movie Office Space who set fire to the place because they took his stapler away from him?)

• Some talented individuals have been tolerating abuse just until the job market opens up, and they have an opportunity to go somewhere they will be appreciated and well compensated. That’s the bitch about taking advantage of the passing fears of your employees.

• Training and development of employees is widely abandoned when funding is scarce. If you lose critical resources you have been relying on, do you have anyone prepared to step up to the plate and complete critical projects in progress?

Take a good look around at your team. Are they listless, exhausted, and shell-shocked? Do they show signs of being disengaged, unmotivated, or even angry? You’d better be talking with them, thanking them sincerely and repeatedly for their efforts, supporting them through this recovery period, and helping plan their career development. If you take them for granted much longer, they may just be ready to move on. Opportunity is burgeoning in 2011.

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