"Jane was a ten
year employee. Her new manager was motivated and came to the organization with
a great reputation. But Jane's new manager was more focused on her own success,
how she looked to upper management, and whether or not her next promotion was
in her line of sight. As communication shut down, Jane felt more and more
disconnected from the company. Her manager's tunnel vision alienated Jane to
the point that she finally resigned."
"Sally was an
average employee. She did enough to get the work done, and was reliable. As her
organization went through a series of changes it seemed that Sally couldn't do
anything right. It felt like the new rules of accountability switched
overnight. Sally didn't think this was fair, and decided to look outside the
organization for help with her new problem."
"Theresa used to
fit in with her coworkers just fine. As time went by however, some new people
joined the department and the culture changed. She was now an outsider who
wouldn't go along with the new majority that weren't as dedicated or
hard-working. She felt peer pressure to change her work ethic so as not to make
the others look bad. She couldn't understand why the job she loved for so many
years was now making her dread coming to work each day."
Exceptions or Common?
Have you ever heard
stories like these before? I have too. There is something strange about how
workplace cultures can evolve and change. At a high level many companies work
incredibly hard to develop and sustain corporate cultures that reflect the
goals and aspirations of what those leaders believe in. Mission, Vision, and
Culture Statements are important tools that spread the message across the
institution.
The reality of culture
however does not play out at the enterprise level. True culture manifests
itself in departments, units, offices, break rooms, and in the endless number
of interactions with internal and external customers on an individual level.
That is where the culture lives, thrives, or slowly decays.
Leadership Makes or
Breaks Culture
In order for the three
scenarios above to have positive outcomes one thing must happen. The
organization's leadership must commit to providing a resource for employees
beyond their normal chain of command.
Whether they are
called employee advocates, employee ombudsman or
simply that the message is clear that all team members have full access to
human resources; the culture must fully support the notion that each employee's
voice is important and will be heard.
Without a formal
mechanism in place, the ability to build the sought after corporate culture
will never fully be realized.
How About You
What are you doing to
ensure your employee's voices will be heard? Are they trapped in the archaic
follow-the-chain-of-command world; or, have you helped lead the way to a
workplace that takes care of it's own people?
I'd love to hear from
you.
No Excuses.
Jay,
ReplyDeleteI find myself in a very similar circumstance. When I started my current position I had a manger who decided that they no longer wanted to be a manager, then, became the manager again. The second assignment came with a whole new set of restrictions for me making it more difficult to do my job. As I am struggling to find a TRUE HR position from my current sales/recruitment-type role, I fear that I may have to find another position VERY soon. How does someone navigate through those murky waters?