It鈥檚 official 鈥 as the Bureau of Labor Statistics just reported, across the economy.聽 That鈥檚 the good news.聽 The bad news 鈥撀燼nd it鈥檚 no news to employers 鈥 is that companies are finding it harder than ever before to fill vacant positions and keep the staff they have.
Nowhere is the market for skilled labor tighter than in the financial services sector, where official unemployment is now a tiny 1.7%.聽 Economists usually say that a 4% unemployment rate (at a minimum; it may be higher) is really full employment, because that rate comprises 鈥榝rictional unemployment鈥 鈥 people who are genuinely 鈥榖etween jobs鈥 because they are switching, so they have a job to go to, and the 鈥榙iscouraged鈥, meaning those who are unemployed but not looking for work.聽 So an 鈥榦fficial鈥 unemployment rate of 1.7% is really negative unemployment of at least 2.3%.
At Valent Communications, our conversations with enterprises in the Financial Services sector 鈥撀燼nd several other sectors 鈥 suggest that unfilled positions are now typically running much higher than 2.3%.聽 In many cases the rate is into double figures.聽 Retention and recruiting efforts have become ineffective.聽 Businesses are turning away customers because they don鈥檛 have enough staff to do the work.聽 Catastrophic failure looms.聽 There has never been a time when employee engagement has been more urgent 鈥 but what is employee engagement really, and how can it be done effectively?
What is Employee Engagement?
It is two closely related things:
- A positive state of mind in employees towards their work and their employer, such that they identify with the organization and its goals and so naturally try to do their work well (put in 鈥榙iscretionary effort鈥).
- The process and routines by which employers bring about that positive state of mind.
Is there such a thing as a perfectly engaging workplace or employer?
No.聽 There is no such thing as the perfect job.聽 If there were, we wouldn鈥檛 call it work.
If there鈥檚 no perfect job, what then?
It鈥檚 human nature that most employees, most of the time, want to do their work well 鈥 because that鈥檚 intrinsically more satisfying than doing it badly.聽 Employees do not expect the perfect job. 聽They will try hard, giving effort and showing initiative, so long as five conditions are met.
What are the five elements of employee engagement?
In decreasing order of immediacy, and increasing order of difficulty to provide, the hierarchy is:
- A positive work environment: beyond being provided physically safe, reasonable space to do their work etc., employees need to feel that their co-workers and particularly their immediate boss have an appropriate concern for their wellbeing.
- Adequate, not exceptional, compensation: employees must feel that they are receiving adequate pay and benefits in exchange for their work. What is perceived as 鈥渁dequate鈥 varies.
- Appreciation: employees must feel that they are achieving something in their work. That 鈥渟omething鈥 is as varied as work itself, but employees need to know that they are contributing and that their contribution is valuable: they need regular feedback and appreciation for their efforts.
- Development opportunities: employees should feel that they have scope to grow in their careers and develop new skills. A lack of opportunity for development is a key cause of losing high-performing talent.
- A coherent, positive organization: employees want confidence in the company鈥檚 leadership and direction, and to understand how their own work contributes to the whole. 聽Ideally, they want to believe that the organization鈥檚 purpose is worthwhile. Once they do, they become effective brand ambassadors for the company not just in its service of customers, but also in its capacity as an employer.
If it鈥檚 that easy, what goes wrong?
Most employers understand the importance of the five elements, but instituting them all is easier said than done.聽 The higher the number of an element in the hierarchy listed above, the more difficult it is to achieve in the everyday running of a business. The higher-numbered elements, 3, 4 and 5 need a proactive, dedicated effort to become reality.
Why is Employee Engagement suddenly such a big deal?
Historically, most employers did a reasonable job of elements 1 and 2 and for many, element 3 took care of itself.聽 That was enough.聽 Then, in the last two years, everything changed.
First, the U.S. economy, recovering from the 2008 financial crisis, effectively hit full employment in the spring of 2016.聽 In some sectors it was slightly earlier, in some later.
Second, scores of online employment sites, from Monster to Indeed to ZipRecruiter and beyond, have made it much easier for employers to poach each others鈥 employees.聽 We now operate in a LinkedIn environment. In economics terms, labor markets have become more transparent, efficient and liquid.
Consequently, retention and recruitment have become a major problem 鈥 some would say, the major problem facing US businesses today. Understaffing has eroded operational effectiveness 鈥 and at higher levels, led to catastrophic failure.聽 Employers realize, though, that compensating above market, or offering cushier benefits, is ineffective in all but the very short term.聽 It just raises labor costs and does little to encourage retention.
Enter employee engagement 鈥 but in the modern economy, the engagement bar has risen.聽 Elements 1, 2 and some of 3 are no longer enough to compete in today鈥檚 job markets.
What can be done?
When Valent , our work follows this sequence:
- We cross-check the engagement issues identified by the leadership with sensitive, discreet, permission-based 鈥榮ense-making鈥 in the organization.
- Sometimes, we discover a 鈥榮ubstantive issue鈥. If it is related to pay or benefits, that鈥檚 usually straightforward to measure and correct.聽 Also, sometimes, basic training in people management (鈥榖eing a better boss鈥) works wonders, and we can provide it quickly and at low cost.
- Most often though, what we discover is communication vacuums. So we help leadership craft a series of messages, topics and stories, often including: strategic direction of the organization; how the parts fit the whole; the organization鈥檚 mission, values and ways of working; issues in the organization and in the environment in which the organization operates, and changes both expected and underway, so that employees feel included.
- We then create the communications architecture, comprising both digital and up-close-and-personal methods, to communicate on those topics. We are usually able to build on elements that already exist in the organization鈥檚 management, human resources and communications structures.
- Then we鈥檙e able to facilitate an enterprise-wide conversation that engages employees by connecting them and their work directly with their organization鈥檚 goals and direction. The organization begins communicating with itself much more effectively, on the important issues that bind it together.
The end result 鈥 the strong, coherent employer brand
Companies like our clients, who realize that engagement is not about pay and perks, but about involving their employees in the organization鈥檚 strategy, opportunities and challenges, are much more likely to succeed.聽 By tackling workplace engagement with collaborative, continuing communication, our clients are able to create something special: a strong, coherent employer brand, one that makes clear to employees the 鈥榳hy鈥 of their work, what their employer stands for, why its culture is special, and how their own work contributes to the whole.聽 Engaged that way, employees stick with their companies and attract recruits.
