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Adrian Gostick

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Beschreibung

There is a crisis in business today: the invisible employee. Feeling threatened, ignored, and unappreciated, invisible employees fight back the only way they know how--by staying hidden in the corporate shadows, doing just enough to get by, grumbling about this and that, and passing these techniques along to new workers. After all, why bother shining when no one notices your achievements? Why bother trying when you could be let go in the next batch of layoffs? A business fable packed with hard-won wisdom, The Invisible Employee follows a group of people who live and work together on a mysterious island. In this second edition--updated with new case studies and current survey results--managers learn how to combat one of the most common negative attitudes in business: that smart employees keep their heads down and never do more than is asked. Bestselling authors Adrian Gostick and Chester Elton show how effective leaders change this mind-set by engaging their people in their cause--setting clear goals, encouraging productive behavior, and celebrating every success along the way. The end result is an organization of productive employees who feel noticed, valued, and appreciated. In other words, they feel visible. In today's competitive environment, all of us are looking for the next big product, the next big capability or solution. But great managers are finding that recognizing people leads to a more engaged workforce and a more successful business. The Invisible Employee shows you how to bring out the hidden potential in your team and your business. Learn more about growing a Carrot Culture at carrots.com

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Seitenzahl: 205

Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2010

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Table of Contents
Praise
Other Books by Adrian Gostick and Chester Elton
Title Page
Copyright Page
Acknowledgements
Introduction
CHAPTER ONE - Invisible People
INVISIBLE EMPLOYEES
SURVEYS: AN EYE-OPENING EXPERIENCE
CHAPTER TWO - Blink Outs
BLINK OUTS
TURNOVER IS COSTLY
CHAPTER THREE - The See-er
THE SEE-ER
BREAKING THE BREAD BARRIER
CHAPTER FOUR - Recognizing
RECOGNIZING
50 WAYS TO RECOGNIZE
CHAPTER FIVE - Visible Results
VISIBLE RESULTS
CHAPTER SIX - Blink Backs
BLINK BACKS
CONCLUSION
NOTES
The Invisible Employee Resources
About the Authors
Carrot Talk
More Praise forThe Invisible Employee
“A gem of a book . . . finding that workers who are recognized are more productive, have fewer on-the-job accidents, and translate their satisfaction into customer satisfaction.”
—The Financial Post
“An incredible book I could not put down. Managers beware, lest your star employees go from Number One to gone in a blink of an eye. Read and apply the lessons of this book! Or better yet, don’t and I’ll hire all your stars when they leave you.”
—Anthony Lopez, Managing Director DePuy, a Johnson & Johnson Company
“The Invisible Employee captures the essence of how great leaders use employee recognition to drive excellence. There are gems in every chapter that will help any manager build a more productive team. This is a delightful book that every manager should not only read, but study.”
—Jean-Luc Butel, President, Medtronic, Asia/Pacific
“This book is a must-read for any employer who wants to keep talent motivated, inspired, and on board for years to come. The Invisible Employee helps managers tap into the real driver of employee motivation. Learning what motivates individuals will enable any employer to retain top talent, provide employees with personal and professional growth opportunities, and cultivate employee loyalty.”
—Scott Northcutt, Global Executive Vice President, DHL Express
Other Books by Adrian Gostick and Chester Elton
The Carrot PrincipleA Carrot a DayThe 24-Carrot Manager
Books by Adrian Gostick
The Levity EffectThe Integrity Advantage
Copyright © 2010 by O. C. Tanner Company. All rights reserved.
Published by John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Hoboken, New Jersey. Published simultaneously in Canada.
No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, scanning, or otherwise, except as permitted under Section 107 or 108 of the 1976 United States Copyright Act, without either the prior written permission of the Publisher, or authorization through payment of the appropriate per-copy fee to the Copyright Clearance Center, Inc., 222 Rosewood Drive, Danvers, MA 01923, (978) 750-8400, fax (978) 646-8600, or on the web at www.copyright.com. Requests to the Publisher for permission should be addressed to the Permissions Department, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 111 River Street, Hoboken, NJ 07030, (201) 748-6011, fax (201) 748-6008, or online at www.wiley.com/go/permissions.
Limit of Liability/Disclaimer of Warranty: While the publisher and author have used their best efforts in preparing this book, they make no representations or warranties with respect to the accuracy or completeness of the contents of this book and specifically disclaim any implied warranties of merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose. No warranty may be created or extended by sales representatives or written sales materials. The advice and strategies contained herein may not be suitable for your situation. You should consult with a professional where appropriate. Neither the publisher nor author shall be liable for any loss of profit or any other commercial damages, including but not limited to special, incidental, consequential, or other damages.
For general information on our other products and services or for technical support, please contact our Customer Care Department within the United States at (800) 762-2974, outside the United States at (317) 572-3993 or fax (317) 572-4002.
Wiley also publishes its books in a variety of electronic formats. Some content that appears in print may not be available in electronic books. For more information about Wiley products, visit our web site at www.wiley.com.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data:
Gostick, Adrian Robert.
The invisible employee : using carrots to see the hidden potential in everyone / by Adrian Gostick and Chester
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
eISBN : 978-0-470-57573-4
1. Employee motivation. 2. Psychology, Industrial. I. Elton, Chester. II. Title.
HF5549.5.M63G67 2010
658.3’ 14-dc22 2009032183
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The Invisible Employee is the culmination of many people’s contributions, and thanks are due to a number of people.
First, to Larry Alexander and Laurie Harting at John Wiley & Sons, Inc., who so quickly saw the vision of this idea and, within a week of seeing a proposal, secured the book for John Wiley & Sons, Inc. And to our new editor, Shannon Vargo, who has made this second edition a reality.
Next, to our key contacts at the companies we have quoted, including: Bill Newby at Xcel Energy; Ray Mageau at EPCOR; Cheryl Hutchinson at Friendly’s; Rich Siegenthaler, Debbie Vorndran, and Bob Joyce at Westfield Group; Tony Treglia, Joan Kelly, Rosemary Magrone, and Scott Northcutt at DHL; and Eric Lange at VNU Media Measurement.
To our many clients from whom we have learned so much and who have graciously shared so many stories and examples with us, only a few of which could fit within these pages.
To David Jackson and Alan Acton at HealthStream Research for your research assistance on this book. And to our valuable copyeditors and researchers, Todd Nordstrom, Christie Giles, and Glen Nelson.
To our family at O. C. Tanner that includes Joyce Anderson, Kaye Jorgensen, John McVeigh, Kent Murdock, David Petersen, Kevin Salmon, David Sturt, and Tim Treu, and their incredible teams, for their leadership and vision. We thank all those in marketing and sales, and all those we’ve neglected, for your thought-leadership in the world of recognition and rewards.
To our amazing Carrot team of Scott Christopher, Steve Gibbons, Bob Ann Hall, Angie Haugen, Christy Chatelain, Chris Kendrick, Todd Nordstrom, Andrea Gappmayer, Kim Coxey, Andrew Hahn, Patrick Poyfair, Stephanie Rodriguez, Shauna Raso, and Jarond Suman.
And as always, we must thank our families: to Jennifer and Tony, and to Heidi, Cassi, Carter, Brinden, and Garrett. We have spent countless days away developing these ideas, and we thank you for your patience, love, support . . . and laughs.
It is not possible to create a list like this and remember everyone. To those who read these acknowledgments and feel left out . . . invisible if you will . . . please feel free to write and let us know and we’ll send a humble apology.
Finally, to all the good bosses out there, thank you, thank you, thank you, for bringing your employees out of the shadows. To all the good bosses we’ve had, thanks for your great example. And to those lousy ones? Well, we appreciate the comic material you provided us.
INTRODUCTION
You can imagine how happy we were when The Invisible Employee: Realizing the Hidden Potential in Everyone was first published in 2006 and became a New York Times bestseller. We knew we had an important message to share about the potential of underappreciated employees. We were eager to show organizations how to transform themselves by engaging these assets into a juggernaut of accomplishment. We were thrilled that the book has been such a success. We continue to be pleased that several years later it was still being read.
Even more gratifying have been the conversations we’ve had with tens of thousands of managers around the globe. The Invisible Employee is helping them to discover the treasures hiding in their own offices: their employees. Showing appreciation is a simple concept and a powerful one. It is easy to implement and gets bottom-line results fast. That is what has made the book so successful.
But times, they are a-changin’. As we write this, the global economy is in such a precarious state that any reasonable person has to wonder whether it will all implode. Layoffs, bankruptcies, bail-outs, foreclosures and going-out-of-business signs have become the new landscape of business.
At your office, we can imagine the talk around the water cooler. The former hangout for sports pools, politics, and office gossip has now become a meeting place for misery: “Have you heard who’s getting the axe next?”
Not a lot of work is getting done, is it?
The result is a team of employees running around like chickens with their heads cut off. Every one of them thinks that he could very well be next. Panic breeds panic. Everyone wonders, How long will the craziness last? The Guinness World Record for a headless chicken’s survival—in case you’re wondering—is 18 months, roughly the same length as an average economic recession.
Those in your office might not think they have anyone to rescue them, however. They see management as the enemy. So what is their strategy, these headless chickens? They hide and hope to wait it out, doing just enough to get by. They become invisible.
Funny thing, though, this psychological frenzy can go on and on, even after the crisis is over. The behavior of playing it safe to avoid being singled out becomes ingrained. Even the people with the most potential, those who would normally become leaders of a team, stop taking risks. They don’t want to fail. They imagine that the consequences of failure are too great in this economy.
If ever there was a time for a manager to discover and nurture his employees, to encourage innovation, to keep the best and brightest, it’s now. In fact, given the urgency of current events, it’s now or never.
Lately, the media has repeatedly compared the global crisis of 2009 to the catastrophe of 1929, and it has made us think of our parents who grew up in the wake of the Great Depression. How did they do it? And even after the Depression was over, how did it affect the way people work? Their values?
One of my (Adrian’s) favorite photographs of my parents was taken in the 1950s. In the photo, my dad is on a ramshackle Norton 500 motorbike, and my mother is seated next to him in a sidecar. On her lap is their border collie, Puccini. On the pillion behind my father is strapped a bulky canvas tent and a suitcase.
They were taking a vacation—before the kids arrived—camping on the English coast. A quick escape from my dad’s job at Rolls-Royce. Riding in their first, rather modest “car.”
When I saw the photo a few years ago, I smiled and teased my dad, “They didn’t pay you very well at Rolls, did they?”
He chuckled and told me the story of joining Rolls-Royce in Derby, England, as a very young draftsman of jet airplane components. Now, he agreed that the company never did pay exorbitant wages. In fact, twenty-five years later, he would finally leave England for Canada and triple his salary. And while he did receive numerous promotions along the way, I’m also afraid Rolls couldn’t offer Gordon Gostick growth into senior leadership—since there was a bottleneck of older talent ahead of him. Still, he did stay there more than two decades. Why?
My dad explained, “You know, I enjoyed every day. You weren’t just a number going to work at Royce’s. Managers actually talked to you and listened to what you had to say. When we identified a problem coming up in taking an engine concept to manufacturing, those above you in your department—and in other departments—would accept the knowledge you’d built up in your certain area, and they’d modify the design to improve the final engine. Everybody had their input.”
When asked what happened when an improvement idea came from him, he said simply, “My name was on the drawing.”
What a simple formula. When he spoke, someone listened. When he did something remarkable that furthered the company’s progress, his name was on the drawing that went up to management. And that meant that, every day, he enjoyed going into work, which is a big deal.
Is it a big deal for you? For your employees?
Here’s a question for you: Does anybody actually enjoy going to work today?
Wouldn’t it be great if your company were filled with employees like Gordon Gostick—people who were excited to go in to work? Not full of employees who mumble a sad prayer on the train, “Dear Lord, please strike me down before I get there,” “Please don’t let me get a pink slip today,” or worse yet, “Please bless that my boss died over the weekend in a freak gardening accident.”
In good economic times as well as bad, the formula for business management success is constant: innovate, improve, and compete. The best companies take advantage of every opportunity, and that includes risks and rewards. They keep their best employees, they reward them and motivate them. They take the long view. In difficult times, especially, productivity is key. Managers often have to do more with less. But how?
Unfortunately, most of us work for organizations like those cited in a study published by the New York Times, where:
• 25 percent of employees reported being driven to tears in the workplace.
• 50 percent call their place of work a place of verbal abuse and yelling.
• 30 percent are regularly given unrealistic deadlines.
• 52 percent must work 12-hour days to get the work done.
The sad thing is most leaders of people have no idea about the unhealthy state of their work places. They’re headless chickens, too. They have a pretty clear idea of what their bosses want. They know quite a bit about their customers and their needs. They can recite by heart their product lists. But what do they really know about the needs of the people who actually get the work done for them? Hmmm . . . not so much.
And why is that important? Because, quite simply, employees work harder for people who care about them as individuals—don’t you? Think about it for a moment. Whom do you work harder to please: the boss who is aloof and inattentive, focused on furthering his career, or the leader who is actively interested in your work achievements and asks about your kids and your week end fishing passion? The old adage “I don’t care if they like me as long as they respect me,” is not only wrong; it’s dangerous in the modern workplace. Honestly, would you ever say, “Every one hates her guts, but you’ve got to respect her leadership?”
This leadership attitude is causing more than a few problems with our workforce. One problem is called presenteeism. Now absenteeism is easy to spot, but presenteeism describes workers who show up every day, but who really aren’t there. They are present, but are limited by physical or mental issues, obsessed with problems at home, or, most often, overly concerned with on-the- job worries. Too many of these folks are burned out, stressed, underutilized, or simply ignored by their leaders. The Harvard Business Review estimates presenteeism costs American businesses $150 billion annually in direct and indirect costs. And, even though most studies report that absenteeism accounts for an average of 4 lost days of productivity per employee annually, some studies report that presenteeism accounts for anywhere between 16 and 31 days of lost productivity per employee annually. A full month lost?
Here’s more sobering news about our managerial effectiveness. According to several recent studies, as many as 30 percent of the average workforce is “actively disengaged.” That means up to 3 out of 10 people in your workplace are not only uncaring about their jobs, the quality of their work, or giving you their best ideas and energy, but are actively recruiting others in their dissent.
And the word on the street is that it’s not going to get better any time soon. According to one survey, 90 percent of workers say they want their leaders to notice their efforts and improve their recognition and rewards before they will feel committed to their organizations.
In short, we could write a book about the epidemic of Invisible Employees and the chaos they leave in their wake. And, actually we did.
We began this book a few years ago as part of our “Carrot” series of business books. Many of those who read the books asked us to speak in their organizations, and we found ourselves meeting leaders and line managers from a variety of industries in countries around the world.
At first blush, every single one of the managers we met looked great. They all wore spiffy, professional clothes, had the right vocabulary and flawless posture, knew their industries and the right jargon. But the real revelation of their competence came when we spoke to the employees working for them. For the most part, the people who worked for great bosses were confident and outgoing. They seemed to be able to do any thing, and weren’t afraid of change or competition. These employees seemed to revel in giving their best work and best ideas to further the goals of the organization.
But we also met a group of employees who were very different. Some of these folks were quieter and more reserved, others were obsessed with frightening market conditions that threatened their futures. In the worst cases, some were openly contemptuous. They complained about their needy customers, their co-workers and, especially, their lousy bosses.
What makes a lousy boss? It’d seem fitting if we created a bulleted list, or maybe a questionnaire here. But, the truth of the matter is this: If employees feel that a manager is lousy, then, that manager is lousy. Call it unfair, or unjust, but it’s the truth. A manager’s job is to manage. If employees don’t respond appropriately to that manager, problems arise—enormous problems.
Employees we talked to, who worked for bosses they deemed average or lousy, spent their days quietly undermining the efforts of their teams, managers and companies. Some were actively cynical. Why? Because they lived in the shadows, rarely noticed.
They were . . . invisible.
We wish we could say we didn’t understand how they felt. But, personally, we’ve worked for good managers and some lousy managers ourselves. And the difference is dramatic. So when we thought of all the people suffering through pitiful bosses in this world, and of all the managers who want to be good bosses but just don’t know how, or don’t have the time or the tools, we knew we had to write this book.
So here it is. The pages that follow contain the stories of leaders who have learned how to man age employees in ways that make those people feel valued and appreciated. The key word here is learned, because most of us have to learn to recognize and appreciate the great work of our team members. Our natural instinct tells us to look out for number one and to keep other people down. But the best managers have committed to learning the art of recognition and appreciation. And it’s well worth the effort. In the end, seeing—and rewarding—employees for their efforts pays off in ways nothing else can:
• As a strategic force (you reward behaviors you want repeated)
• As a superior communication methodology (no one tunes out when a peer is being recognized)
• By creating an emotional bond between employees and managers (when’s the last time a company newsletter had that kind of impact?)
• By making managers and employees better (when you get an award, you can’t help feeling more committed and filled with a stronger sense of purpose)
• By impacting your bottom line (people who feel appreciated do what they do better—creating returns to shareholders as much as three times higher than competitors, according to our research)
In today’s competitive environment, all of us are looking for the next big product, the next big capability or solution. And a workforce of visible, committed, caring employees is the only way to achieve those results. Look for inspiration in the project spreadsheet or strategy document or any other place and chances are, you’ll miss it entirely. A wise investment of your time in seeing and rewarding your employees is an investment in the continued success of your company. It’s an investment that truly appreciates.
You can bank on that.
And so, as you begin, our hope is that The Invisible Employee will be a profit finder in your organization—guiding you in the secrets of engaging the people you already have to enhance the strength of your organization. As you will find in the coming pages, recognizing great work and engaging people is not the soft side of business. It is the very basis of business success. And it’s the basis of success in life in general. Everyone needs to be recognized and appreciated—from the CEO of a worldwide corporation to a kindergarten child.
I (Chester) will always remember the unhappy, moody child I noticed at the elementary school while waiting to pick up my own son. His caregiver (maybe his mom) was listening half- heartedly to the teacher, who was saying what an improved day the obviously challenging boy had had, and was trying to outline some of the specific, positive things the boy had done. Finally, cutting the teacher off, the woman nodded and said, flippantly, “Oh, well, isn’t that just great. See you tomorrow.”
The child’s face fell, and he shook his head while the woman dragged him off. How much effort do you think that kid will put forth in repeating those behaviors? Not much.
Contrast that with Sandy Simon, a team leader at Xcel Energy in Denver, when we spoke to her. She had just been one of several winners of the company’s highest achievement, the Pinnacle Award.
“All I could think about when I was stepping off the stage was, ‘What am I going to do to get back here next year?’ ” she said.
That’s an employee who is on fire. That’s an employee who will make a difference for her company this year and next—and all because her contributions were seen and rewarded. Sandy was not only prepared to repeat the behaviors that had won her the award, but was also already searching for ways to outperform her winning behaviors.
So our hope is simple: that you will find the invisible employees in your organization or team and bring them out of the shadows—realizing their full potential. For us, this book is a manifesto of the unseen and unrecognized, dedicated to all those people who work hard and achieve so much every day. By seeing and recognizing their accomplishments, we know you will build stronger teams and companies.
And you’ll find, seeing is achieving. Every time. Everywhere. With everyone.
CHAPTER ONE
Invisible People
Invisible People. That’s what the Highlanders of the Island called the mysterious beings who filled their vaults with treasures—but were rarely ever seen.
On special occasions, in candlelit halls, the elders sometimes gathered the Highlanders together. In low voices, they repeated the legend of how the Invisible People had once lived openly among them, but had slowly faded into the background until they were mere hints of the men and women they had once been.
“Yet, they live among us still ...” the storyteller would say, looking vaguely past the flickering lights. “They are a part of us. It is they who scale the mountains for the valuable jewels. It is they for whom we leave the Fruits of the Laborer.”
A thrill would run up the Highlanders’ backs. Many would glance nervously at the shadows of chairs and children and water jugs dancing around the edges of the room. But the Highlanders’ eyes, dimmed by generations of disuse, saw nothing more.
Always at this point, a child would innocently ask in a high voice, “Doesn’t anyone ever see them now?”
“Never.” The elder would say firmly. “It is the way.”
And around the room, all would breathe a collective sigh of relief. It was good to know that tomorrow things would go on as they always had on their island in the Medeokr Sea. Invisible hands would do the work. The Highlanders would go on seeing what they always saw, missing what they always missed. All would be in order. And that was enough for them . . .