Engaged Workers Impact Your Bottom-Line
By Rick Dacri, Dacri & Associates
LLC
As a consultant, I spend a lot of time on the road visiting my
clients. For those who travel, you know, you like to find places
where you can quickly grab lunch. My criteria are a good healthy
meal, friendly and courteous service, and a relaxing atmosphere.
When I’m in Falmouth, which is a lot lately, O’Naturals hits the
spot. In fact, I love O’Naturals.
If you’ve never been to O’Naturals, it is set up like a
cafeteria. You enter the restaurant and the person who greets
you is also the person who takes your order and prepares it. I’m
on a health kick (doctor and spouse orders) so soup and salad
has become my staple and their lentil soup is as close to my
mother’s as I can find.
Every time I go there I am greeted with a smile and welcome.
It’s like walking into Cheers! The person who waits on me always
engages in friendly conversation—even though she must be feeling
the stress of the regular lunch time crowd that forms a line out
the door. But no, at that point in time, I am number one and I
appreciate that. I also that they have a steady crew who have
got to know me and my particular needs. You can’t get that if
you’re churning your workforce.
I get my meal, sit down, and relax. When I go there alone I
watch the people. The employees are always working hard, keeping
the place clean, but all seem to be doing it with a smile—they
are fully engaged and are clearly having fun. They are all
young—late teens to mid twenties—you know, that generation of
workers who give all of us fits. Not this group.
So what’s different at O’Naturals? I’m sure it begins with
strong front line supervision. A recent Gallop study found that
front-line supervisors matter most in an organization and that
these supervisors positively drive the results to the
bottom-line. The relationship between supervision and workers
can make or break an organization.
Companies will always be successful when they engage their
employees. To begin, engaged workers show up for work –every
day. In fact, engaged workers average 27% less absenteeism than
those that are actively disengaged. Think about—wouldn’t it be
nice to eliminate “mental health days?” Being able to count on
all your staff showing up every day is a real god-send.
Not only do they show up, but they stay. Restaurants
notoriously, as an industry, suffer from high turnover. Most
managers assume turnover is the cost they must accept when they
hire low skilled, college-aged workers. Yet, operations with
fully engaged staff suffer 51% less turnover—and think of the
cost of replacing these workers. In entry level positions the
cost is 25% to 80% of the person’s first year wages. But if
you’re turning over skilled workers like nurses and engineers,
the cost can rise as high as 400%. Turnover is expensive.
A disengaged workforce can cripple an organization. Besides
absenteeism and turnover, employers can expect higher levels of
shrink (retailers know all about shrink), increased accidents
and workers’ comp costs, and lower productivity, service and
quality. When workers are not engaged, nothing seems to work.
The evidence is clear. Those employers who focus on optimizing
their employee’s contributions reap tremendous bottom-line
benefits. Remember, unhappy employees make unhappy customers.
The good news is that creating and maintaining high employee
engagement is all within an organization’s control. Employees
will respond to management that takes care of them. Engaged
workers are focused, hard working, and productive—and customers
positively respond to them. There is a tremendous financial
impact, so managers cannot afford to ignore their employees.
I’m a happy O’Natural’s customer. They take care of me. I
regularly go there and I shout their praise for all to hear.
Isn’t that what you’d like your customers to do?

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 |