What will you do with all of the free time?

Kevin*, a sixty-six-year-old employee and customer relationship trainer, entered coaching upon his retirement. Kevin enjoyed many components of his work, including conducting and analyzing customer surveys.  Retirement was difficult given that his wife still worked, and the world was in the midst of a pandemic. As a result, he had a lot of time on his hands. Although Kevin felt supported by his family, he was spending lots of time by himself and felt a little despondent about redefining this phase of his life.

According to Kevin, “During the coaching process, I overcame a couple of rough patches related to settling into retirement and feeling both unmotivated and stuck.” I added preventative care visits to my doctors, worked with a nutritionist, explored hobbies, and discovered ways to virtually stay in touch with my daughter. This period was about determining how to find meaning and maintaining a sense of well-being.

What will you do with all of the free time?This was a reflective activity and Kevin was invited to enter the process either through journaling or talking over the inquiry with his circle of influence. Playing the ukulele was a way he derived pleasure–a hobby that he and his daughter shared and brought much enjoyment to his week. He found getting out for camping trips with friends plus taking both virtual ukulele and guitar lessons were fulfilling.

During our two-year coaching relationship, Kevin attended to his health care priorities, resumed going to the gym, and adopted a nutritional approach that supported his physical well-being objective. His outlook improved, he was sleeping and eating better; and he found that he was dropping some weight. Kevin decided to share his knowledge and years of experience at a college and non-profit organization. Having these outlets gave him a renewed purpose.

At the completion of our coaching session, Kevin shared that he was on the right path for overall well-being.

“From the moment of our first call, I looked forward to our next scheduled call. I found energizing outlets, including playing the guitar and ukulele as well as reconnecting with old friends. You (Novelette) played a significant role in helping me achieve all of that. I am happy when I remember your wonderful, engaging personality and your expert coaching. You are a true professional and I wish you continued success.”

What are your plans for retirement and where do you feel stuck?

*Pseudonym for privacy

Employee Engagement: It is clear something is not adding up

There is a lot of buzz around the concept of employee engagement with more than 1,500 academic articles published in 2020. Personally, I was curious about the connections between the great resignation and the study of engagement. It seems that there is no single definition for engagement and translating science into practice might require a little more nuanced than saying happy employees are engaged. Happiness is too simplistic a perspective, and monetary rewards do not lead to lasting feelings of connection. Let’s consider that this complex process requires a deeper understanding of values, contributions, and mutual success.

The Origins of Engagement Surveys

The origin of the employee engagement survey dates back to the U.S. military World War 1 morale surveys. Companies then utilized the survey to figure out how to fight unions. Then, employers wanted to determine how satisfied their employees were with pay, benefits, and work schedules. The 1980s analyses indicated that satisfaction was not a predictor of positive job performance. Researcher William Kahn explored the concept of the employee bringing their “full selves” and energy to their jobs.

Given the diversity of the workplace, what would it take to bring one’s full self and energy to work now? The latest news about the Amazon unionization indicates the force that employees have to change work culture. What is the bridge that we need to cross to deepen our understanding of the employee engagement landscape? As a society, we are at an inflection point, and understanding deeply what both the employee and employer need to function in a mutually beneficial way is being redefined. 

Who completes the engagement surveys?

When asked, “how engaged do you feel at work rated on a scale from 1 (low) to 10 (high) engagement?”, typically:

  • An employee who is overwhelmed and works beyond their scope might feel very engaged, rating their engagement at a 10, but needing a break.
  • An employee who feels they’ve struck a relatively good work-life integration, rates their engagement at 5, believing that’s an ideal amount of engagement.
  • An employee who feels that they are being micromanaged and not able to contribute at their potential, does enough to get by and rates their engagement at an 8 given the situation.

An executive reviewing these data points might determine that a high engagement score is indicative of happy and satisfied colleagues. However, data provide clues not insights, meaning individuals are more complex than a survey response.

Many employees do not respond to employee engagement surveys because they fear that their comments might be misused, not be taken seriously, or that nothing will change. In fact, individuals completing these surveys are a self-selecting, non-representative sample, and not a true representation. Remember that surveys have limitations, and mostly measure perceptions rather than root causes.

Drawback Of Overly Engaged Employees

Garrad & Chamorro-Premuzic note that there is a potential drawback to overly engaged employees. They warn that there are four potential threats to high levels of engagement:

  1. Embracing the status quo: it is possible that proud and motivated workers resist new ways of doing things because change seems counterintuitive or even suspicious.
  2. Pushing employees into burnout: studies have found that highly engaged workers tend to suffer work/family harmony and those who fail to take downtime often face health challenges.
  3. Giving an unfair edge to certain personality types: employees who are naturally more optimistic, positive, emotionally stable, agreeable, and extraverted tend to be more engaged regardless of their circumstances.
  4. Undermining the benefits of negative thinking: defensive pessimists often perform better because they prepare for worst-case scenarios and try harder to remediate them. 

A balanced approach to employee engagement

Organizations are a representation of individuals and groups with shared identities, norms, and purposes. In general, people feel more enthusiastic about their work when they are empowered to achieve something meaningful, connect with others, and the organization treats them fairly and ethically, while rewarding them for their contributions. Engagement is a function of the cultural value-add – shaping the energy, behaviors, and attitudes over and above personal preferences and styles. It is understanding how the representatives of the organization function and work together given their varying social identities and value in the service of the organization’s mission and value. The exploratory question is where is the synergy?

Although engagement has been tied to performance (example: absenteeism, turnover, performance appraisal scores, self-reports of performance), it doesn’t directly impact individuals’ performance.

Beta Coaching Consulting

There is no universal formula to engaging employees, yet there are leadership behaviors that serve as a bridge to amplifying engagement. They include leaders who

  •  communicate well and provide clear direction with their team members
  •  can inspire and generate loyalty, commitment, passion, and enthusiasm
  • excel at creating a positive work environment
  • engender trust by “walking their talk” and showing that they can be trusted
  • focus on helping team members see themselves in a very positive light
  • ask for feedback from others and work to make improvements

As Steve Jobs noted, “Your work is going to fill a larger part of your life, and the only way to be truly satisfied is to do what you believe is great work. And the only way to do great work is to love what you do.” In what ways are you doing what you believe is great work?

At the heart of engagement is choice – saying yes to an organizational value because there is an alignment with one’s personal value as well as for an organization to go beyond thinking a happy employee (given a survey result) is an engaged employee. It is about meaningful conversations about how to curate a mutually beneficial partnership.