What Are Your Employees Thinking...And Why Should You Care?
by Richard P. Dacri
You’ve just lost a key employee. Everything seemed to be OK with him, yet he is
quitting. Why? You recently added a new employee benefit at great expense to the
company, but employees are complaining. Why? For the third straight month
productivity has declined even though better systems and processes were just
implemented. Why?
It seems that the more you try to improve things for your company and employees,
the more problems are created. What are your employees thinking?
How can you find out what your employees are thinking, and frankly, why should
you care? Well, when turnover increases, productivity decreases, and employees
generally seem unhappy, you need to find out why...and fast! And your employees
probably have the answers. So how do you find out what they are thinking?
Frankly, the easiest way is simply to ask them.
Employees are a great source of information. They are often the closest to your
production, services, and customers. They often see problems before you do, hear
about issues earlier, and have ideas that can improve overall company
performance. Yet in to many situations, employees will never bring the
information to you unless you ask for it. So how do you ask for it?
There are a number of effective ways. Tom Peters made famous the acronym MBWA
(Management By Walking Around). By being visible and
LISTENING to what your employees are saying, you will learn so much. But you
must do it consistently, care about what they are saying, be open to them, avoid
being defensive, follow-up where appropriate, and do what you promise. The key
to getting people to talk to you is trust...and trust doesn’t just happen, it is
earned.
Other methods to open up communications include attitude surveys, where
employees respond anonymously to a questionnaire. Attitude surveys, in fact, are
probably one of the best tools managers have for taking a barometer reading of
what is happening in the workplace at any given point. Listening sessions are
round table discussions between a group of employees and a key manager. In these
sessions employees are free to discuss any item they choose and the manager’s
role is to listen and respond...not to defend. Finally a fourth tool is a focus
group, where a manager will assemble a group a employees to discuss a particular
issue.
There are many other tools to open up communications and to find out what your
employees are thinking. The key is to find a method that you and your employees
are comfortable with using and then to integrate this methodology into your
normal everyday business process. If it is regular and genuine, and if employees
trust you, then communication will flow.
When managers truly know what their employees are thinking, then dramatic things
occur. Besides improved understanding, companies often experience greater
employee retention, productivity, morale and communications. That’s why you
should care!

Rick Dacri is an organizational development
consultant, coach and featured speaker at regional and national conferences.
Since 1995 his firm, Dacri & Associates has focused on improving the performance
of individuals and organizations. Rick can be reached at 1-800-892-9828,
or
rick@dacri.com |