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Archive for the ‘ Work ’ Category

Why Employee Engagement …?

Posted on November 14, 2011 by | No Comments

Came across this nugget in Employee Engagement To What End? – High Performing Companies Keep The End In Sight a report from TNS Employee Insights.

What is the end HPCs are keeping in sight? Their customers, of course.

For High Performing Companies, measuring and action planning around employee engagement, compensation, supervisor relationships, and meaningful work is more than a ‘nice to have,’ more than an academic exercise.
It truly is the engine that drives performance and profitability.
The good news is this: employees who are engaged will likely work harder and be less likely to leave the firm.
The better news: if the powerful engine of employee engagement is directed outward, if the ends are the customer and the future, everyone wins in the end.

Read the summary

Read the complete report

Go inside-out

Posted on October 20, 2011 by | No Comments

I really like this message.

Communicating effectively requires that communicators eliminate clutter and sharply define the core concept they want to get across. The payoff is a simple, memorable message. Here is a similar, but slightly different vantage point on that notion.

In this TED video, Simon Sinek introduces the Golden Circle (I’ve reproduced his drawing at right). He says most people and organizations start at the outside and work their way in – first describing what they do or make, and how they do it. Why they do what they do gets short shrift.

The problem is, [More]

Simple isn’t easy

Posted on October 12, 2011 by | No Comments

Simple can be harder than complex. You have to work hard to get your thinking clean to make it simple.

– Steve Jobs

 

Of all the smart and/or inspirational Steve Jobs quotes I’ve seen since his passing, this one might be my favorite. Jobs and Apple certainly mastered the art of making the complex simple. I have no idea what goes on inside an iPod or iPhone, but turning them on and making them do what they do is as easy as falling off a log (which I don’t think I’ve ever done, so the iPod is easier, in my experience).

My only contention with the quote would be the idea of “can be” where the quote applies to my profession. Achieving simplicity and clarity in communication is always harder than leaving things complex and muddled. You whittle away everything but the core message you’re trying to get across — and then you mold what’s left into a memorable creation.

To be memorable, a concept has to be simple, its meaning immediately grasped (one of my all time favorites is “Where’s the Beef?!”). If the idea requires lengthy explanation to achieve meaning — or an eighty-six page PowerPoint deck — the message has no chance of landing.

A colleague chided me a couple years ago for my determination to achieve simplicity in communicating our brand value proposition. “We need to accept that this concept is inherently complex,” she said. Others agreed and a complex approach carried the day. Not surprisingly, the initiative died for lack of support because no one was willing to sit through a lengthy explanation colored by many shades of nuance.

Most people say “Keep it simple.” That makes it sound easy.

You have to make it simple. That’s hard work worth doing, because simple is smart.

Genius & success: who needs ‘em?

Posted on September 29, 2011 by | No Comments

Genius is in simplicity and specificity.

Success is in consistency.

 

Translation: Keep ideas simple and focused … and adhere to them until they inspire action.

Isn’t that really the “how to” of effective communication? And marketing?

What kind of player …?

Posted on September 20, 2011 by | No Comments

“There is a saying: If you’re a “B” player, you’ll hire “C” players to work for you because you don’t want them to look smarter than you. If you’re an “A” player, you’ll hire “A+” players because you want the best result.”

  • What kind of players do you work with?
  • What kind of players do you work for?
  • What kind of player are you?

Read more: The Top 10 Lessons Steve Jobs Can Teach Us — If We’ll Listen (Forbes)

“No one asked us to do this”

Posted on September 6, 2011 by | No Comments

Say what?!A friend of mine recently recounted a meeting he had with his management team. The team was considering how to communicate to company executives eye-opening findings from a project my friend and his team had undertaken. They set out to gauge employees’ reaction to a set of questions about the business, and learned that employees and leaders weren’t in sync on delivering a critical element of the company’s strategy.

One of the managers in the meeting said, “The problem we’re going to have to overcome is, no one asked us to do this.”

“I don’t think I heard another word the rest of the meeting,” my friend said. “I just kept hearing, ‘The problem is … no one asked us to do this …‘ I was struck dumb. Would our higher-ups really be more comfortable marching ahead without all of the information they needed to be successful? Or was it a matter of us being fearful about delivering potentially bad news (even if it would necessarily involve helping to develop a plan to keep the strategy on track)?”

Sad to say, the learnings from my friend’s project are gathering dust on a shelf.

Look around your work place and ask yourself: Is the fact that no one asks you to do something that could generate real value for the business (even if the effort gives rise to an unexpected result or a need to take a hard look in the mirror) a good thing … or a problem to be overcome?

If it’s the latter, you’re working for the wrong people.