Employee engagement.
Employee engagement.
In an organization one of its most valuable
resources are its work force. Having an work engaged set of employees is
critical for its succession in profitability and growth. The concept of
employee engagement has been around since the 1990s and according to one of its
pioneers; William Khan its defined as “the harnessing of organization members’ selves
to their work roles; in engagement, people employ and express themselves
physically, cognitively, and emotionally during role performances”,
(Khan,1990). A successful definition of employee engag
The
key drivers of employee engagement identified include communication,
opportunities for employees to feed their views upwards and thinking that their
managers are committed to the organization (Kular et al,2008). Employee
satisfaction and employee engagement are two different things. An employee who
is very much disengaged to his or her job can be very much satisfied with the
job. A high level of Passion and a high level of commitment are two of the key
characteristics of an engaged employee - these qualities cannot be measured the
same way that one would measure job satisfaction (Macey and Schneider, 2008).
Levels
of employee engagement.
Different
literature show different spectrums of employee engagement from fully engaged
to fully disengaged. Research conducted by Gallup organization (2006),
categorizes employee engagement in to 03 levels as described below.
1. 1. Engaged
: Engaged employees put in voluntary efforts in to their work and do not depend
on extrinsic motivation (Armstrong, 2009). Such employees are similar to Mc
Gregor’s “y” type of employees who are self motivated , loves their job,
dedicated to work.
2. 2. Not
engaged ; This type of employees usually does the minimum work needed to fulfil the job
requirements and do not show enthusiasm or concern for the organization or the
customers. Not-engaged
employees can be seen as a good opportunity for improvement in an organization
in the sense that with the right “people strategy”, they can be transformed in
to “engaged” employees, resulting in great improvements in overall
organizational performance (Reilly, 2014).
3. 3. Actively
disengaged ; these kinds of employees are harmful to the irganization in the
sense that not only don’t they work but will involve in demotivating others as
well. The disengaged employees will endeavor to undermine and demotivate the
engaged employees - possible double-impact to the organizational performance
(Reilly, 2014).\
Measuring
employee engagement.
The
most commonly used tool for measuring employee engagement is an employee
engagement survey. These surveys help gauge the intensity of employee
engagement as well as evaluate the relationships between engagement and key business
results. Such surveys are mostly carried out online and should contain questions
that would help capture the essential data relating to the responder’s
biographical characteristics (gender, age, ethnicity to name a few) and other
job-related characteristics (such as department, length of service group,
nature of employment). Its best that these surveys protect the employees’
identity by applying anonymity. This information is critical when it comes to
the analysis of the responses and coming up with strategies to increase
employee engagement levels (Robinson et al.,
2004).
Employee engagement plays a major
role in an organization’s success and goal achievements. Fully engaged
employees are the major drive and is a very valuable asset to the institution. Therefore
it is critical that HR departments pay more attention on employee engagement at
present than they used to before and irganizations should invest more on
employee engagement than they used to in the past.
List
of refferences:
Albrecht,
S. L. (2010). Handbook of Employee Engagement: Perspectives, Issues, Research
and Practice. 1st ed. Massachusetts: Edward Elgar Publishing Limited, pp.05-08.
Armstrong,
M. (2009). Armstrong's handbook of human resource management practice. 11th ed.
London: Kogan Page, pp.337-339.
Kahn,
W. A. (1990) Psychological Conditions of Personal Engagement and Disengagement
at Work. Academy of Management Journal, 33(4), pp. 692–724
Kular.S,
Gatenby.M, Rees.C, Shane.E & Truce.K (2008). Employee engagement:a
literature review. Kingston business school. Kingston University.UK.
Macey
W.H. and Schneider B. (2008) The Meaning of Employee Engagement. Industrial
and Organizational Psychology, 1(1), pp. 3-30.
Reilly,
R. (2014) Five Ways to Improve Employee Engagement Now. [Online] Available
at: https://www.gallup.com/workplace/231581/five-ways-improve-employee-engagement.aspx (accessed on 1-5-2022).
Robinson, D., Perryman, S. and Hayday, S. (2004). The
Drivers of Employee Engagement. 1st ed. Brighton: Institute for Employment Studies, pp.13-20.
Hello Udana, as you have mentioned, employee engagement is viewed as a motivating factor in an organization's achievement of its goals. The good environment provided to the worker enables him to provide the best that the organization requires for the achievement of its goals and objectives (Paluku, 2016). Furthermore, Ixia Consultancy reported in a recent White Paper that employees are most engaged when they have a positive relationship with their manager. As a result, managers should value employee feedback by encouraging open communication
ReplyDeleteHello Udana , I would like to add here too , Employee engagement is becoming increasingly important around the world.
ReplyDeleteAnd it's not only a problem for an organization's HR department.
It's a business issue that needs to be taken seriously.
In this article, we'll go over what employee engagement is, why it's important to a company's bottom line, how to implement technology-enabled employee engagement, and real-world examples of employee engagement (Lalwani, 2001).
Hello Udana,This is an excellent article about employee engagement. When we are discussing about employee engagement,several models can be used for an organizational enviornment and one of those models is "Zinger model" .It explains about employee engagement as well as employee retention.Zinger’s model considers all important aspects influencing the participation, engagement and sacrifice of the employees who have high productivity in the organization (Delbahari, Soltani, & Khorasgani, 2019)
ReplyDelete