In our post-pandemic paradigm, we now know that employee productivity is a critical human resources initiative worthy of company time and resources. After all, it is directly related to higher employee retention and performance.
It is entirely possible to have a group of happy, engaged employees who enjoy their jobs but aren’t particularly productive or hardworking. It is also possible to be surrounded by productive but unengaged employees.
Here are some of the fundamentals that should help you lay the groundwork for improving employee productivity in a hybrid environment.
- Provide an environment in which employees can thrive individually: Working professionals had the opportunity to try a new way of working during the COVID-19 pandemic, which was largely successful. People are freer than ever before to work in the way that best suits them as individuals.
This is the single most important workplace change that leaders can implement to boost morale and productivity.
- Determine your values:
Your company’s core values can assist you:
- Define your company’s mission and goals.
- Explain to the public and your employees what to expect from your business.
- Choose who you will hire.
- Determine who your clients are.
Your company’s values should be as follows in terms of employee productivity:
- Clear
- Employees can easily translate their intentions into actions.
- A guideline for how work should be completed.
- Communicate specific objectives and instructions:
Your workplace must have the following to promote good communication and thus higher productivity:
Well-written job descriptions that clarify each position’s responsibilities and assist managers and employees in establishing clear, relevant performance standards and goals.
Interaction between direct managers and employees on a regular basis. This is because, ideally, managers should:
- Explain to employees how their individual activities contribute to the overall success of the organization.
- Assist in removing roadblocks
- Employees should be guided through difficulties.
- If employees get off track, redirect them.
- Set realistic deadlines:
Before assigning a deadline to your employees to meet goals or complete projects, first determine:
- What is the desired result?
- How do you determine success?
- What steps must be taken to achieve the goal?
- How much time will it take to complete the task?
- What other projects are the employee or team working on, and is their overall workload manageable?
- What benchmarks will you use to gauge progress?
In other words, any goal you assign to an employee should be SMART (Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant and Timely).
5. Accountability and authority must be balanced:
Most bosses want their employees to be proud of their work. People are more productive when they are:
- Assume responsibility for the output when given more autonomy over their work
- Others will hold you accountable for the outcome.
- Employees have a vested interest in performing well and producing high-quality work in this scenario.
More responsibility, however, must be accompanied by the authority to complete the task; otherwise, you are setting your people up for failure from the start. As a result, as a manager, you must:
- Provide sufficient resources.
- Allow employees to make decisions and put their ideas into action.
- Make management and other stakeholders available to employees so that they can obtain timely approval and buy-in.
- Remove any other impediments.
- Delegate more and micromanage less.
An effective and empowering management style requires you to check to ensure milestones are met, but you do not expect you to oversee every detail of the project.
It takes skill to know when not to over communicate and over manage, but when you do, you will be rewarded with flourishing employees.
- Listen:
More than just talking, hosting meetings, and sending emails is required for effective managerial communication. Listening is another important and often overlooked component of increasing employee productivity.
Good managers understand that maximizing team members’ performance is frequently rooted in open, two-way communication.
You can also empower employees and increase their productivity by:
- Asking employees for feedback on a regular basis.
- Challenge them to find a solution to a problem.
- Allowing them to work through problems on their own.
- Commemorate success:
It’s human nature to want to know if you’re doing a good job and making a difference. When you know you’re doing well and others notice, you keep doing it.
Employees want and deserve to be recognized when they contribute to your company’s success, so look for ways to recognize and celebrate individual, team, and company milestones. Along with bonuses and special perks, recognition can be a powerful motivator.
Never forget that a lack of recognition may drive your best talent to look for jobs where they will receive the recognition they believe they deserve.
To read our blog on “How To leave virulent workplace while keeping your mental peace,” click here