[ad_1]
It would be an understatement to say that the devastating spread of COVID-19, and industry’s collective reaction thereto, prompted a seismic shift in how businesses are beginning to operate in the post-pandemic era. One particularly notable pivot is toward staff empathy and engagement.
This profound cultural shift is requiring business leadership at all levels—from C-suite executives, division and department heads and team leaders, to entrepreneurs of every ilk—to level up and evolve their managerial skillsets to meet new occupational expectations.
Professional training purveyor Dale Carnegie, famed for helping professionals develop the kind of leadership and communication skills that inspire and motivate others, is assessing and addressing that burgeoning need and demand. Executives throughout this leadership and development company are helping employers become more compassionate, engaging with staff and celebratory of workforce successes, both individually and as a group.
By proactively improving such practices, the end game is to establish more welcoming, tolerant, enjoyable and rewarding places to work.
“What we’ve found is that our own employees, and those at companies we work with around the world, are increasingly looking for a meaningful purpose in their jobs, to reduce stress and achieve better work-life balance,” said Joe Hart, Dale Carnegie CEO. “The current trend of ‘quiet quitting’ is one glaring example that too many companies are falling short of this. Exacerbating the problem is that revealed in recent published reports citing that remote and hybrid work is, itself, proving to be more physically and mentally stressful.”
Amid these new and ever-fluid dynamics, numerous Dale Carnegie executives have indicated that companies are approaching them for training on new ways to adapt their workplace cultures to become more attuned to employee needs and more engaging in general.
“As leaders, we’re entering new territory,” Hart highlights. “What’s important is that today’s breed of businesses take the time to encourage employees to ensure they feel good about their work and themselves.”
This indubitably includes managers at all levels being accessible and proactive, taking the time and effort to carve out more one-on-one time with team members to listen, learn, commiserate and congratulate.
“We must take time to stop long enough to truly celebrate successes,” urges Seth Mohorn, managing partner of Dale Carnegie in the mid-south.
“Lead From The Heart” author Mark C. Crowley is following emerging science supporting the idea that human beings are not as rational as we’ve always believed.
“Up to 95 percent of the decisions we make every day are driven by feelings and emotions,” he says. “That means employee engagement is a decision made by the heart—and managers who want to drive the greatest loyalty, commitment and productivity need to intentionally focus on how their employees feel.”
For Neville De Lucia, managing partner for Dale Carnegie Central and Eastern North Carolina, today’s managers and executives “must engage in staff conversations that glean insight into the ‘whole person’ in order to understand what is happening holistically in an employee’s life, and not just what is going on at work.”
Doing so is no longer optional, he argues. “It’s imperative to create time and opportunity to have meaningful human-to-human conversations about “them”’ … be it over lunch, Zoom or by telephone.”
A 2023 Better Business Bureau (BBB) bulletin distributed amid August National Wellness Month indicated the need for employers to implement practices that support a positive workplace mental health culture. Tips they offered to achieve this led with “taking the time to connect,” citing a Harvard Business Review report emphasizing, “a culture of connection is key.”
The bulletin further underscored the importance of stepping up manager training to better equip office leaders to navigate sensitive conversations, build trust and create authentic staff relationships.
A third notable in the BBB report promoting the importance of work/life balance cited findings from The Happiness Index, a platform dedicated to happiness and engagement in the workplace. It underscored how “maintaining a healthy work-life balance can enrich health and relationships, improve productivity and performance and minimize burnout.”
Phillip Zeller, Dale Carnegie location owner and Master Trainer for Southwest Michigan, concurs with these top-line tips, having stated, “It’s key to take quality time to connect with team members in ways that foster a mental health check, while also seeking a better understanding of that person’s talents and personal aspirations,” he says.
“In doing so, that leader can then identify and address any wellness concerns, work-life imbalances and otherwise help align the employee’s purpose with that of the organization. As well, the employee can better understand and appreciate the meaningful difference that they are making through their work, while also feeling seen, heard and cared for by leadership.”
Now is an appropriate time for leaders and staffers to have the kind of discussion that helps them mutually reassess the job role, review current projects, and realign tasks along the company’s goals, Zeller insists. This can result in a powerful perception—and motivational—shift as employees can realize with far more clarity how they are contributing to the overall success of the company, while satisfying their own desire to live a purposeful life.
[ad_2]