Speak to many consultants and you may hear the suggestion that engagement is a free resource that you should tap and that you should always engage your work-force more—for better results. I encourage you to question this assumption. I don’t think much in life is completely “free.” There is an element of reciprocity involved in all relationships—even employer-employee relationships. Dilbert offers some wisdom about this.
Different Takes on the Psychological Contract
A psychological contract exists between employers and employees. Historically, the contract was a reciprocity of “lifetime pay and benefits in exchange for loyalty.” This month's HBR has an important article by Tamara Erickson that explains how this contract can be understood by generational differences (e.g., Baby-boomer v. Generation-X). I agree with Tamara.
It is more important, however, that the psychological contract reflects the talent management strategy. This contract is critical to understanding links between employee engagement, talent management, and leadership. In this post, I will describe these links in more depth.
Since the early 1990s, HR pundits have argued about the “new” employer-employee value proposition. The arguments goes something like this: large organizations in a more stable business environment offered continuing employment, pay and retirement in exchange for employees’ on-going loyalty and effort. As the pace of global and organizational change has increased, unfortunately this implicit agreement has been broken. The pundits, however, are still arguing about what will replace the old contract.
Since the early 1990s, HR pundits have argued about the “new” employer-employee value proposition. The arguments goes something like this: large organizations in a more stable business environment offered continuing employment, pay and retirement in exchange for employees’ on-going loyalty and effort. As the pace of global and organizational change has increased, unfortunately this implicit agreement has been broken. The pundits, however, are still arguing about what will replace the old contract.
The arguments about the psychological contract can be replaced with a question: “what does your organization need from employees to be successful and what does it offer in return?”
Fundamentally, the psychological contract is about the employee value proposition. This value proposition has two points of view: the employers and the employees. Both must be balanced. Employees must feel like they are getting a reasonably equitable deal, or they will disengage or leave. My colleague Amy Bladen wrote about this in the the April edition of Leadership Excellence (read the article here)
The universal employee value proposition is gone. In its place are a number of employee value propositions that vary according to organizational strategy, employee class (some employees are more critical to organizational success) and generation.
Organizations can literally balance and harmonize the employers and employees value proposition—try using two columns and write some words. Be careful, the reciprocal relationship in employee engagement is nuanced! It is important to think about what your organization needs as well as what your employees, or classes of employees, need. When thinking about your employees’ needs, it must be from their point of view.
Reciprocity and trust are critical to building employee engagement. Without trust for their leaders and organizational direction employee have no foundation for inspiration let alone energy for achieving the vision.
Organizations can literally balance and harmonize the employers and employees value proposition—try using two columns and write some words. Be careful, the reciprocal relationship in employee engagement is nuanced! It is important to think about what your organization needs as well as what your employees, or classes of employees, need. When thinking about your employees’ needs, it must be from their point of view.
Reciprocity and trust are critical to building employee engagement. Without trust for their leaders and organizational direction employee have no foundation for inspiration let alone energy for achieving the vision.
From the Employers Point of View
Different organizations need different types of employee engagement and as such the value proposition varies with corporate strategy. To some organizations retaining employees is critical; to others only a few years of intense effort is needed. Yet others need to retain customers and as such employee engagement with the customer is critical. Others rely on employee innovation and skill as the strategy. The list could go on—ask yourself "what does your organization really need from its employees?" In all likelihood you will need different types of engagement from different classes of employees, so you may also ask "are there groups of employees that need to have a special type of engagement?"
Some organizations have a business model based on "employee churn." Life insurance sales organizations have a reputation for paying largely on commission and accepting that a large percentage of employees will leave when they cannot make ends meet. Employee churn is a reasonable business model. Life-insurance sales organizations need producers and they can use churn to find the one out of ten applicants who can actually sell life insurance to strangers (versus selling to family and friends).
Some organizations have a business model based on "employee churn." Life insurance sales organizations have a reputation for paying largely on commission and accepting that a large percentage of employees will leave when they cannot make ends meet. Employee churn is a reasonable business model. Life-insurance sales organizations need producers and they can use churn to find the one out of ten applicants who can actually sell life insurance to strangers (versus selling to family and friends).
Other organizations have an up-or-out value proposition. These organizations often provide great opportunities a highly stimulating environment and these organizations benefit from hiring younger employees with alacrity. If employees run out of engagement in a few years, more can be hired.
Companies pursuing a product innovation strategy often rely upon skilled employees who have a deep understanding of their product--for example consulting, technology and pharmaceutical firms. In these companies the value proposition has to do with retention and reward of the key talent that enables the innovation-- for example expert consultants, critical skill engineers and R&D/Commercialization professionals. Again, employee value proposition should vary with strategy.
Also some employees, within an organization, need to be especially engaged. Consider actuaries in the life insurance industry. Few life insurance companies want actuary turnover—the few individuals can accurately predict mortality to set insurance rates are rare and critical to a business success. While high turnover of sales representatives is acceptable, actuary turnover is not.
Organizations, for cultural reasons, often have a general employee value proposition. Thus, some life insurance companies may overlook low engagement or high turnover. In many pharmaceutical companies, retention-tactics are applied to all employees; these tactics, such as higher pay, lead to higher HR costs.
From the Employees Point of View
Employees view the world through their own eyes. As the Tamara Erickson's article highlights, Gen-X employees believe that their employer seems them as “replaceable,” and this colors their interpretation of corporate life. Baby-boomers are more likely to believe in the old psychological contract and act accordingly.
Employees will engage in any organization, even those with a churn or an up-or-out employee value proposition. However, the value proposition must be transparent to earn engagement.
A leader can build trust if he or she is transparent about the employee value proposition. I consider transparency to be part of being authenticity. A young and ambition prospective employee is likely to join a leader who says “I’m going to give you an opportunity and it will be challenging. You will learn a lot that will be useful in your career. If you are successful you are likely to make some reasonable money.” If, however, the employee value proposition is not made clear some new hires will have other expectations and be disappointed. This is the basis of the realistic job preview.
High potential employees may have another worldview. They may, realistically, see themselves as having more opportunities than typical employees. As such, they may require more opportunities or compensation in return for their engagement and loyalty.
High potential employees may have another worldview. They may, realistically, see themselves as having more opportunities than typical employees. As such, they may require more opportunities or compensation in return for their engagement and loyalty.
Implications for HR and Leaders
The challenge for organizations is to understand the links between the value propositions and strategy and then to make the contract explicit. This becomes more difficult when you have multiple value propositions in the same organization. This is where front-line leadership comes in; supervisors need to authentically relate to employees and build trust on the basis of reciprocity. Organizations need to ask themselves:
- "Are our managerial ranks are up to this task?”
- “Does the organization support supervisors to have authentic relationships with employees?”
As ever, I would like to hear your thoughts. Does your organization have an aligned employee value proposition? Does your organization have multiple value propositions for different employee classes, or should it?
8 comments:
Charley, Great Post! On the topic of employer-employee relationship you might be interested in listening to this podcast of Vineet Nayar. http://www.vineetnayar.com/everyday-leadership-with-dan-mulhern/
John
Thanks for referencing my article Charley - I think your points are very interesting and I surely agree that different organizations have differing strategies that "leak over" into the way they pursue their talent management agendas. I do, however, disagree that they are all equal but different. For example, the large pharma company that has a 17 yr drug cycle to market (a life or death problem ensues from a mistake) make take the same strategy in talent management - a six month or more hiring process - overly cautious and leading to the loss of many qualified candidates. The same goes for the life insurance companies you reference - while these firms use a strategy that works in the ranks of their producers - this churn approach may very well leak over into other areas (e.g., HR, legal) and they could use short term layoffs to remove highly qualified folks from their ranks as I described in my own article. Such moves will debilitate their reputation and ability to attract talent in a better economy. In my opinion, regardles of the "value proposition" of the company - talent management must be a long term strategy, particularly where the Millenials are considered! Just my beliefs....
Bart/Amy, I absolutely agree-- But it makes me think about employee branding. Consistency is key to brand and if you have two approaches in the same company you could be sending different branding messages... Hmmmm...
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The psychological meaningfulness relates to employees’ need to feel valued about their work by others and by themselves. The creation of clear goals, with adequate level of challenge juxtaposed with creativity and autonomy help developed a feeling of meaningfulness.
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