Happy Thanksgiving From Brilliant HR
Wishing you a blessed holiday with good food and great company!
Wishing you a blessed holiday with good food and great company!
One piece to creating a successful employee engagement is having events in your company. Events, big or small create a sense of bonding between coworkers. They help establish relationships, which can lead to a sense of belonging to the company. Each company has their own way of bringing unity within the company. Below is a list of different types of events that your company is already doing or could maybe start to liven things up.
“A little Party never hurt nobody”
Different types of events:
Holiday parties- Oh the holidays! How they bring about such a wonderful, happy time. That happy time can create quite a positive mood with office employees especially when it comes to holiday parties. Having a holiday party is good about bringing unity and a good time outside the office. But make sure to keep a limit and don’t have the event get to out of control.
Fitness Classes- Fitness classes that the company provides, such as yoga or boot camps show another side of your coworkers. It’s a place where everyone can let off some steam before going back to work. And is a great added benefit or incentive if the company is willing to provide this outlet for their employees.
Happy Hour- an easy after work get together where everyone can go and enjoy a quick drink or some appetizers before heading home. It’s a nice way to end a work day. Some companies let employees leave a little earlier to attend, or some have the means to be able to have the happy hour in the office break room or a conference room, so employees don’t have to go far and can just head home.
Team building – Team building shows coworkers in a different light. Depending what the activities are for the day, usually they are exercises that show we need to rely on each other to get the job done. For example: Some companies have team building exercises at Escape rooms because everyone in their room is working together to get out before the time is out. Other teams do outdoor activities or go bowling to just create a relaxed environment outside of the office that also creates time for conversation besides work. Having an activity to bond about or talk about makes it easier to engage in those types on conversations as well.
Some other honorable mentions are attending Conferences with your team members and Employee Appreciation Day. The goal and benefit of all these activities is to create bonding experiences with coworkers outside of work in a more relaxed setting so that they feel a part of a community. What are other events that your company could put on to build your employees up?
Being an employee, the first thing you will think of when considering staying or changing your job is the WIIFM approach. This basically stands for, as a job seeker, “what’s in it for me” to take this new role, whether it is an internal or external role. Job seekers can have different priorities in terms of key motivators. Keeping this in mind, what is the key motivator to retain employees?
There are a lots of different reasons as to what helps retain an employee, which we will delve into in this blog series, but the key/driving factor is Career Development. Career Development deals with the progression of an employee in their career. This is something that, “over the past two decades organizations have encouraged their employees to be career self-reliant. They’ve been telling employees to ‘take charge’ of their own careers and not rely on the organization to provide guidance”.
While this works to some extent, the changing expectations of employees in the workplace requires greater collaboration. While I do believe that employees must take charge, the organization/company needs to help facilitate the process by providing clarity and opportunity.
There are different motivating factors to help retain employees that relate to their career development, such as:
In the Harvard Business Review, they found “New research conducted by CEB, a Washington-based best-practice insight and technology company, looks not just at why workers quit but also at the timing of the decision or the when. “We’ve learned that what really affects people is their sense of how they’re doing compared with other people in their peer group, or with where they thought they would be at a certain point in life,” says Brian Kropp, who heads CEB’s HR practice. “We’ve learned to focus on moments that allow people to make these comparisons.” (https://hbr.org/2016/09/why-people-quit-their-jobs)
With today’s technology becoming more advanced and with social media connecting more people together either personally or professionally, it is hard to retain employees when they feel that they should be moving forward when different life events occur (either a birthday, an anniversary, the pressure from others that they see). This goes back to the earlier statement about the “what’s in it for me” mentality that drives employees to the different choices they make in their career. Below is a list of ways that I believe companies can work with their employees even during these times and remind them what they can do to stay.
Now you can never be prepared when an employee decides they want to leave, but creating some of these perimeters and benefits that show them what is in it for them will encourage them to stay at the company. Either growing in their role or experiencing other internal roles. As companies, we need to make sure we have the right policies, processes and tools to practice this. So how employee growth and development culture ready are you?