One
of the things I love about being in leadership development is that
everyone always bring you these rich stories that sometimes causes you
to have an “a-ha”moment.
A retail chain recently did something that, for a retail company,
needs to be lauded. In retail, you have a workforce that is largely made
up of hourly employees. They are the people that face the customers
each and every day. Good mood or bad mood, they must keep the stiff
upper lip and remember that the “customer is always right.”
One
of the challenges all retail companies face is the weekly schedule.
Trying to place people in slots, or work around challenges in their
lives, is an enormous uphill battle both for the manager as well as the
employee.
Facing a challenge and everyone wins
This
company addressed that challenge head on and empowered their hourly
workers to take charge of their schedule. In a nutshell, the employee
makes their own schedule. They now have ownership and flexibility, and
the theme of this program is that it allows associates to accommodate
events that come into their life.
Imagine
for moment that you are one of those workers, whether you are a single
parent, college student, taking care of an elderly parent, or whatever.
You are now empowered to set your own schedule. Outside of the weekend
and certain key days, you are in charge. If you need to swap a day with
someone, you are empowered to just do it as opposed to bowing to some
manager and waiting for their verdict.
The
response from their workforce, as it was told to me, was huge win. The
workers thought they would never live to see the day that this would
happen.
I am always encouraged when I see companies step up to the plate and look at situations and decide that yes, we can do this.
Empowerment going forward is the key
I
was traveling and when I came back to my hotel room,
for some reason the key would not work. I tried reinserting it numerous
times but I kept getting a flashing light. A member of the housekeeping
staff saw my problem and came over and tried her key. She apologized and
called the front desk, and they in-turn called the maintenance
supervisor, who came up to my room with a crew of people.
Being
a leadership development person, I watched the workplace dynamics of
this play out — four people standing around my room trying to get me in.
When I was finally let in, the supervisor came over and apologized
profusely.
“Mr. Mclees, why not have dinner on us tonight?” he said. Knowing that I had dinner plans, I thanked him and politely declined. But he did not give up. “Why not have dessert on us then?” That suggestion I agreed to.
The residual impact of empowerment
My
question to him was how, and why, did you do that? He said that each
employee is empowered to grant these types of offerings when a customer
is inconvenienced.
I
thought of that story as I flew home. As I prepared for my next
business trip, I noticed that my work location was centered around a few
hotels. When I saw that the hotel that I had recently stayed was among
them, my choice was easy. From this point on I will try and give them as
much of my travel business as possible for the way they treated me as a
customer — and all because of one interaction.
One of most interesting books that I have read is Employee First, Customer Second by
Vineet Nayer, CEO of HCL Technologies. HCL is a leading global IT
services company. This is the firsthand account from a CEO about how he
transformed his organization, taking it from decline into an engine of
vitality and growth.
This book gives you a ringside seat to his transformational journey in turning conventional management of people upside down.
In
a nutshell, he empowered his employees and they engaged his customers
and turned around a company that was in a downward spiral.
Where is the value zone?
Vineet
Nayer coined the phrase “value zone." This zone is the interface between
employees and customers. Every employee that works within this zone is
capable of creating more, or less, value. The mission was to do
everything to enable those employees to create the most value possible.
Nayer wanted management to be as accountable to the people in the value zone as the people in the value zone are to management.
What
they found was that this approach produced far more passion, because it
proved that management understood the importance of employees in this
“value zone.” They trusted them to do what was needed to be done in a
way that they believed it should be done.
The small things win
Sometimes
we look for the big initiatives to get back on track, but more often
than not, it’s a small amount of respect and trust that causes the
groundswell.
Empower employees, and both the employee and the organization wins. Treat them with mistrust and a lack of respect, and no one wins. It is as simple as that.
Oh,
and by the way, when I returned from dinner back at the hotel, that
slice of pound cake with raspberry topping capped off a powerful day for
the “value zone.”
Check out a related post: The Secret to Empowering Employees in 2024 ( 3 min read)
To your greater success and fulfillment,
Peter Mclees, Leadership Coach, Trainer and Performance Consultant
SMART DEVELOPMENT
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