Engagement is a familiar
buzz word in Human Resources today and like other professions our terms and
definitions are changing as our profession evolves. Terms like compensation have morphed into
total rewards, personnel has changed to human capital management, and
empowerment to engagement. What is
happening is that our profession is establishing newer and better metrics to
evaluate company performance and employee successes.
The question for the
future is will the concept of employee engagement remain with us or will it go
the way of TQM, visioning and other programs?
My guess is that engagement is here to stay. Given the research today engagement has a
direct correlation to the success of companies.
Top-performing organizations understand that employee engagement with
the business is a key driver of business success. Satisfied and engaged
employees are productive and customer focused.
Engaged employees care
about the future of the company and are willing to invest time, energy and
effort to support the strategic direction and vision of the organization.
Engaged employees produce results, are more productive and lower turnover is
the result.
Current research
suggests that companies that score high levels of employee engagement are
successful and have a dynamic leadership team.
They also have a clearly defined operational succession plan, and a supportive
administrative infrastructure and programs to support and enhanced
productivity. As a result, organizations
where there are high levels of engagement are more likely to be financially
successful.
Engagement can also
be quantified, and companies can compare and contrast their engagement indices
with other companies that subscribe to the same metric. Engagement and the values that are the result
are also perceived as valuable to executives as they have the ability to rank
their successes by their engagement index.
High levels of engagement also can support high performer’s perceptions
of themselves. High levels of engagement
are key indicators – good leaders make good business decisions.
While it’s true we
have our own constantly changing vocabulary in the HR profession, that’s no
different than any other profession. Our terms and definitions need to evolve
and the programs that are created need to have terms that all employees and our
business partners can understand.
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