New Outlook in the Same Kingdom

Once Upon a Time, I was doing research and I got lost. The internet is like a forest in Fairy Tales. You are out picking apples and you wind up gone for years trapped in a turret growing your hair. If only Rapunzel had Pinterest, she would have found the perfect style while growing out her bangs. See, my mind is like the internet. You start out looking in one direction and wind up somewhere else. Sometimes, you find you have wasted five hours and all you have are new shoes and a pile of work still left to do or sometimes you find a gem.

They say the best way to write a blog is to read blogs. It’s a great theory if all you have on your hands is time. I tend to feel guilty for reading during the day. Which is crazy since my job is about research and staying ahead of the changes in my industry. I have set up a bunch of blogs that I read on a regular basis and have to clean out because it gets to be too much. (Please don’t clean me out) On a tangent once, I found this great blog, MWF seeking BFF, she blogs about friendship and it’s both interesting and hilarious. Her latest blog post talked about another blog (see it’s not just me) that was called Friendship with Benefits (get your mind out of the gutter, this is an HR Blog). It is about how your old friends can teach you something new. She posts video tutorials of different things she’s learned from her friends. She learned to make Sangria, organize her life and make sun somethings (I could have lived without that one). It got me thinking about our employees. Do they have skills we overlooked, forgot about or have they developed new ones?

Once we evaluate our employees and friends, we tend to put them into certain positions and leave them there. Cinderella came in to clean the office and we never followed up to find that she’s been taking classes and she has an associate degree in marketing. Sleepy was a factory worker that was always doing the minimum because he was tired. We didn’t know he was volunteering at a local shelter for women and raising money to build a new wing. Cinderella may be able to help us with our social media because her degree is recent. Sleepy would never have been considered for sales but he raised $30,000 for that shelter. I had an older employee that was afraid of computers. I never give her a new project. Then one day she told us her kids bought her a computer and paid for a class so she could email and she loves it. Now I know I don’t have to get past her fear, I can give her new work.

I challenge you to talk to your employees. Ask them what new things they’ve learned in the past year both personal and professional. They may both apply to work and they wouldn’t even know. Sleepy never would have said he was good in sales because that was volunteer work. Cinderella may not see a job posting so she’s looking somewhere else for a job because she doesn’t want to pressure you.

I can’t tell you how many times I’ve heard from employees – “They never even asked us”. You never know what you can learn from your current employees or friends. You may have the perfect solution to your problems right in your own Kingdom.

Let us know what great things you learned from your employees!

Related Articles:

MWF seeking BFF – Friendship with Benefits

Friendships with Benefits – Blog

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Best and Worst of Management in the Kingdom!

I’ve been glued to the Olympics this week.  I can’t get enough of the clothes and the stories of motivation.  I was determined to write this amazing Olympic article and then never did it because I was busy watching.  Then while out and about in the Kingdom I stumbled across the best and worst case scenarios of motivating employees.

First stop was a national retail store for my husband.  The Prince and I had to go to the restroom so they ushered us to the back of the store.  While waiting I read all the policies and memos plastered to the door.  Very appropriately (wink, wink) on the bathroom door.  There was some kind of graph with numbers that were not great and then the “uplifting” note from the manager…”Very Disappointed Team! You’ll have really drop the ball.  How

Motivational?

are you going to fix this!”  Let me say again, THIS WAS WRITTEN BY THE MANAGER AND POSTED ON THE BATHROOM DOOR! ( My husband walked back to see what’s taking so long and almost dies as he sees me taking a picture of the memo.  I couldn’t help myself.)  So instead of a meeting and a plan, these employees were scolded and given a sarcastic statement on fixing the problem.  How does the manager blame his team?  And, if they are so bad shouldn’t the manager come up with his own plan to fix the numbers?  If I’m working at this place for a little over minimum wage, I am not going to care about making this manager successful when I look at this every time I walk in the back room.  It would do the opposite of motivate me.

Then we went on to our next destination, Wrigley Field Season Ticket Holder Appreciation Day.  We were given tickets and I think I was more excited than anyone in my family.  After walking in to the clean park, on a day all these people would regularly be off, we were greeted with huge smiles and asked to have a seat because Mr. Ricketts wanted to speak with us.  He thanked everyone for their support of the team and then introduced the Management Team.  He explained that they would be around to answer any questions we had about their part of the team. Amazing Customer Service I thought.  Then he and the Department heads introduced their staff.  They said their names, what they did at the park, what they enjoyed in their personal life and why they were great.  For some it was the music they liked, some it was family (and they mentioned people by name) and for some it was where they went to school.  They had all of us clap for each person.  Did we care that Sarah scrapbooked?  No, but Sarah cared that her manager and Mr. Ricketts paid enough attention to her that they mentioned it, you could see that in each employee’s smile.  Later in the park, they were around answering questions about the grounds and taking suggestions on other issues.  This year the tickets were of old baseball cards and in the beginning of the year a season ticket holder asked about getting copies because the tickets were so great.  Someone in the ticket department took that to marketing and they gave out posters with pictures of those tickets.  People were thrilled and the ticket person was so happy that marketing got it done.  It showed that the organization listened to both it’s customers and the employees.  It showed they valued each other and their suggestions.  If only we could get to the World Series, but that’s another blog.

What was different with the two styles? Discussion vs. written accusation, blame vs. team approach.  I’m sure there are issues within the Cubs, you can always find a disgruntled employee.  But you can tell by an environment how it’s employees are treated overall. “The best bosses are empathetic and fully aware of how their decisions and the decisions of upper management affect their employees” –Sebastian Bailey, President of the Mind Gym, Inc.  The retail store manager was clearly void of empathy or personal responsibility,  which will trickle down to the staff.  I guarantee those numbers will not get better.  The Cub management team was ready to take responsibility for everything from field maintenance to team selection.  Some of those discussions wouldn’t be pretty, but they stood front and center.  It showed the character of the executive team and that trickles down too.  What is your style and how is it affecting your employees? Good or bad, you should evaluate this at every level.

I started researching and found the amount of information on bad bosses was staggering.  There are several websites on bad bosses and a movie about them, so many examples of why I’m in HR.  I have been called by countless employees and bosses that I could come up with my own website detailing the horrible managers.  Unfortunately, I could have equal stories about employees.  Sometimes managers are just jaded.  But that is no excuse for treating employees badly or giving up.

“39% of 595 employees were “very satisfied” with their relationship to an immediate supervisor.  Employees responding to a Society for Human Resource Management survey rated these relationships among the top five factors most important to their job satisfaction” –SHRM  That leaves 61% unsatisfied.  Where are you in that breakdown?  Look around.

It’s easy to tell the worst boss story.  Tell me your BEST boss story!

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