So who’s responsible for employee engagement? Is it the HR department or the IC team?
This is where the lines get blurred. Employee engagement requires a consolidated effort and both HR and IC have a responsibility and opportunity to facilitate and promote engagement, and it is clear that for best results they shouldn’t be working in silos.
People are emotional, so it should be expected that employees will react emotionally to any change or announcement that affects them. Still, that is better than keeping them in the dark, because when employees are kept in the dark, confusion and issues can arise that can hinder growth and destroy trust. That’s why it’s extremely important to keep your employees up-to-date with what’s going on in the company.
The IC team needs to outsource information from the HR department, such as company news, partnerships, product updates, events, financial reports, etc., in order to keep everyone on the same page, and to ensure efficiency, avoid confusion and stimulate productivity.
For that matter, both IC and HR professionals need to address employee well-being and pay attention to their requests, ideas, complaints and even feelings.
This can be done through surveys, polls, questionnaires, etc. This will help create a high level of trust and culture where individuals are encouraged to speak their minds, put forward ideas and feel appreciated by and close to their company leaders.
Internal influencers are people within your company who exercise influence over the workplace. Aim for their collaboration to get advice and to support the messaging sent out about any organisational changes. They tend to be well informed and have a good feel for the workforce sentiment as they’re the ones that colleagues tend to confide in regarding a workplace crisis or problems with their managers.
Maintaining open and good communication will help to build and strengthen the company culture. This will make HR specialists and managers more attentive and will encourage employees to openly share their ideas and innovations.
One of the most important things that employees care about is their development. For a lot of people, choosing a job depends on whether there will be an opportunity for growth or not.
Employees love it when their superior shows they care about them and their career, and having an HR team that oversees their needs will certainly make them happy.
For the training programmes to be engaging and on point, organisations need the collaboration of HR to detect what employees’ needs are and to align those needs with what the technological advancements require, as well as the help of IC teams to promote and advocate those training programs to the internal audience and indeed, the whole organisation.
When employees feel that they are treated with care and that their employer is mindful of them and their needs, they will be more loyal and stay with the company for a longer period of time. And one of the key attributes of loyal employees is that they become more engaged, and engaged employees work harder.
“Employee recognition programmes” are one of the many tactics that organisations use to get their employees onboard with their vision and to help retain their talents.
HR departments can help by conducting quantitative and qualitative surveys to help figure out what your employees’ preferences are, in what way they want to be recognised, what efforts should be promoted and to ensure that management is listening to them. They also can help you set your employee recognition objectives, whether that be increased productivity, enhanced company culture, retaining and/or attracting talents, or higher employee engagement, etc.
IC specialists on the other hand can help you provide your employees with the launch date of your programme, as well as communicating its benefits and features, creating anticipation and making your employees eager to discover and use the programme to its fullest extent.
Giving their potential to drive employee engagement, both HR and IC leaders and teams need to understand the effectiveness of their actions and to collaborate accordingly.
By sharing information with each other and seeing what’s working within the organisation and what’s not, the impact can be huge.