The Newest Case For Human Capital
by Eileen McDargh
The United Kingdom-based Institute
of Personnel and
Development recently released a study showing that
investing in people
rather than technology makes a far greater
contribution to an
organization's bottom line. The seven-year study of
more than 100
medium-sized companies found that the way people are
managed and
developed accounts for 19 percent of the variation in
profitability
between companies and 18 percent of the productivity
difference. R&D
accounted for only 8% percent of the variation in
profitability
between companies and 6 percent of the difference in
productivity
while new technology, quality and competitive
strategies each
accounted for 1 percent difference. In short,
meaningful results don't
come in a plug-and-play box. Rather, engaging the
contribution and
talents of employees is the true, sustainable key to
long-term
success.
What does it take for engagement? It takes
conversation. Not too ago,
the mantra was "stop talking and get to work." May I
suggest that the
new rallying cry is, "Start talking and get to work."
As technology
distances us from each other, we need to find ways to
have extended,
meaningful interactions which allow people to voice
concerns,
feelings, opinion, ideas, and questions. Relationship
first has risen
to challenge the old task orientation. Employees want
to share
attitudes, beliefs, as well as workspace.
Conversations begin with
employee orientation and progress through a variety
of programs,
forums, and focused retreats. Conversations center
around
contribution, concerns, outcomes, and yes, fun.
Let me give you some examples. Greet Street, a maker
of greeting cards
over the web hands, a new employee their "desk in a
box". You set up
your own phone, computer and then literally start
wandering the halls
to talk with people. You can sit in on any meetings,
make connections
and finally, you create your own job title to reflect
what you will
bring to the company. John Chambers, CEO of Cisco, a
$6 billion
networking giant, hosts a monthly birthday breakfast.
The purpose is
not only to celebrate, but to have employees voice
opinions, ask tough
questions, and for Chambers to find out what's not
working. Along
these same lines, Richard Block, president of AGI, a
printing firm,
holds "Stump the President" sessions. Any question is
fair game and
the employee who asks the most difficult question (as
determined by a
panel of employees), receives a reward (usually
dinner and tickets to
a Chicago Bulls game).
While these are some concrete ideas, true engagement is a process
of continuously learning how to create a community of diverse talents
joined by a shared vision. This comes only with time and clear intention.
Lastly, the heart of meaningful conversation and engagement is also
a willingness to suspend judgment, to listen without ego, to challenge
without malice, and to have a fanatic devotion to maintaining trust.
Consider this a lifetime journey. And there are many of us who offer
our services as "traveler's aid".
[1]
Workplace
Visions, Jan./Feb 1998. SCHRM
© Eileen McDargh, McDargh Communications. All rights reserved. You may reprint this article so long as it remains intact with the byline and if all links are made live.
Since 1980, Hall of Fame speaker Eileen McDargh has helped Fortune 100 companies as well as individuals create connections that count and conversations that matter. Her latest book is Gifts from the Mountain-Simple Truths for Life's Complexities. Her other books include Talk Ain't
Cheap...It's Priceless and Work for a Living and Still Be Free to Live, one of the first books to address the notion of balance and authentic work. A 59 year-old grandmother, she recently returned from climbing among the highest mountains in the world. Find out more about this compelling
and effective professional speaker and join her free newsletter by visiting http://www.EileenMcDargh.com.
.
McDargh
Communications
(949) 496-8640
Eileen@EileenMcDargh.com
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www.EileenMcDargh.com
© 2008 McDargh Communications, All rights
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