When I was starting out, Companies, to
my mind, were these giant edifices of stone and steel with high ceilings and
vast cold interiors, with crisp air of detachment and clipped, formal
conversations. I felt that I and several other people who went to work were
governed by the invisible yet potent forces that swept through the monstrous
Goliath we worked for, guiding us tiny Davids by their deft hand of skilful
puppeteering.
Soon enough, it dawned on me that there
was no such unseen-yet-tangible power that held sway over us and that ‘we’ were
the Company. As tiny or big, but significant, cogs we kept the organizational
machinery well oiled and moving.
Over the years I have come to know that employees
are the life force of any organization; cold stony interiors, imposingly
gleaming exteriors and thick tomes of company bibles and manuals
notwithstanding.
I have seen the wrong set of employees
break the best of places and happy, positive, motivated teams take even small establishments
to great heights of fame and fortune.
When one is younger and perched on the
first few rungs, one is brash enough to think that things will not function
smoothly if it were not for their brilliance. As you move up and along, you
realize that there are several people and things that contribute to your growth
process and keep you in the reckoning. It is the other employees, your company
colleagues and inter / intra departmental teams that help pave the path for
your company’s and your advancement.
While a lot of us, including the Top Dog,
make the mistake of thinking that we are irreplaceably important; we come to
realize soon enough that our positions are strengthened and our roles made more
meaningful by the efficacy, knowledge, cooperation and deliverability of the
significant others.
If one must grow, then one must delegate
well and help one’s team to grow. If the Company as a whole has to do well,
then it can only do so if all the little and big parts work in tandem and with
a focus towards the common goal.
Companies would just be buildings and
ill-kept ones at that, in the absence of a good workforce.
So how do you win employees and
influence them positively for the greater good of the Company and the people
that make it what it is!
Here are ten simple tricks that pack
quite the punch.
Call them by their name
With this practice I have seen strangers
step easily into my circle of acquaintance. They feel that they have an
equation with me. Leave alone educated, well-bred folk, even the construction
workers I have been dealing with, for the better part of the year, feel
identified and accepted. Imagine what this simple habit can do with people who
are well-exposed to education and advanced by experience.
The moment you address someone by name,
they feel recognized. It is an affirmation of their vital presence. It
signifies that they are important enough for people to recall their name. It is
a vocal acknowledgement of all the things – background, experience,
responsibility – the name brings with it.
Four Seasons Hotels & Resorts have
made quite the art of this Corporate philosophy. Many Four Seasoners have told
me that it is imperative for all senior executives to memorize the names of all
employees and their spouses. Think about how much positivity, a sense of
bonhomie and professional bonding, mutual respect and just the right dose of
familiarity this injects into the organizational climate, decidedly making it a
better place to work in.
When you call somebody by their name you
establish a direct line of contact with them and make them more accountable to
what your need or expectation is of them.
Calling somebody by their name is the
easiest way to show respect and the quickest strategy to convey inclusion.
Pay respect to their designation
Whether it is a bell boy or a valet or the visiting sommelier from that la-di-dah Wine Academy – pay weightage to that brass plate pinned with pride on their jacket.
At my first job with India’s premier
company in the Social Expressions Industry, I cannot tell you how proud and
appreciated I felt each time the Company owner introduced me to his business
associates thus – “Meet Aruna, our Creative Writer.” I felt such a big surge of
joy and self-confidence course through my veins making me want to deliver my
best.
I often remember two different bosses I
reported to at different times when I worked at the Australian Mission in
India. Both had distinct leadership and management styles – one was a stellar
example of the global best practices and the other falling somewhere at the
bottom of the heap with his terrible ways. Yet, they both have left indelibly
valuable lessons. While one would brush us aside in meetings or go on to say,
“This is Aruna from my Department,” the other would make it a point to give the
following introduction – “Here’s Aruna Dhir, the Media Relations Officer.” She
struck a perfect Ten, first with the full name and then the designation, every
time, regardless of who she introduced us to – an upcoming artist from Sydney
or Minister Downer, the then Foreign Minister.
Each time I have introduced my staff
appropriately – whether it has been our Residence Manager, the able Secretary
or the efficient Assistant Manager – I have noticed their body language change.
The eyes shine, the shoulders square up, the gait gets more professional and the
entire deportment reeks of confidence in oneself, self-assuredness and loyalty
for the Company they represent.
A designation is descriptive of a
person’s role and responsibility and surmises in its few letters the remarkable
experience the person brings with him and the journey he has been on so far.
Display importance in the role & responsibility
they bring to the table
Behind that brass plate is years of
qualifications, experience and wisdom which enables your company to run
smoothly. Show importance, be sincere and mean it.
No person is an island unto himself and
no team can work in isolation. It is such an obvious fact that we all would be
completely rudderless, disoriented and non-performing if the interconnected
webs in the organizational matrix did not bring all the value that they
individually do into the big pool of resources which then gives direction,
movement and headway to a company’s onward path.
Every role – big or small, front of the
house or back of the house, black suited, blue collared or white aproned –
brings with it multi-dimensional value and such amazingly wide range of
experience that must always be optimally harvested.
To cite a little personal example – No
matter how self-reliant, independent and charge-taking I may be, purely on account
of practical reasons and the quantum of work I may be needed to handle, I would
find it extremely difficult to concentrate and deliver well if the Housekeeper
had not run her magic hands through my office, my Assistant had not helped me
pick up some of the balls that I must throw simultaneously up in the air, my
Printer had not cooperated in helping me meet the deadline, my colleagues from
other departments had not shared information and handled their end of the deal
adequately, the General Manager had not given his timely approvals and so on.
With hotels, every minor cog or a big
component is essential to the smooth running of the hotel machinery. From
Chauffeur to Chef, Doorman to Director – Food & Beverage, Engineering hand
to Executive Director, Laundry Valet to Liaison and Finance Controller, Sales
Executive to Spa Expert, Concierge to Communications Chief, Housekeeping Head
to Horticulture Manager – each individual is integral to the flawless
functioning of the hotel. Each must be valued for the nous they bring with
them. You ignore any part and you end up losing both guests and
reputation.
Get to know them
In the service industry at large and in
hotels in particular, we end up doing long hours and work on shifts that never
seem to end.
When an organisation is so much about
people – on either side of the table – it makes a whole lot of sense to invest
in this software and make genuine efforts to know the team members.
That is why there are employee meets, Annual
Sports Days, birthdays that are celebrated collectively, Employee-of-the Month
Recognition, Staff parties, Team events, Departmental outings. Also the formal
appraisals and reverse appraisals. Make use of these tailor-made occasions; or
else create special opportunities to really get to know your people.
Learn about their ambitions,
aspirations, drives; encash it where necessary, employ the talents where they
fit in and carve a path of succession for them.
Your people pool is one hell of a
goldmine of talent and experience that can help you reap rich business
benefits. In turn, you give fillip to the vertical and horizontal growth
trajectory for the people who bring power to the organization.
Get to know them up, close and personal
That is why Bowling events, staff day
outs, Quarterly Picnics and the like were invented.
That fellow in the starched uniform is
actually a fun guy with a special talent for singing or mimicry. He is the
heart of any party. That lady Housekeeper who makes the beds perfectly has a
great hand with origami. No wonder then that she churns out jaw-dropping works
of towel art that take the breath away of guests from around the globe.
At almost all the hotel chains I have
worked with, there are these two important fixtures on the HR Events Calendar –
the Annual Staff Party and the Departmental get-togethers. The Human Resources,
Sales and PR Departments go all out to make these events a resounding success
by creating fantastic party themes and mini events that keep the evening
buzzing right through and by going to lengths to ensure wonderful gifts for as
many employees as possible. At one such event, my Assistant won the ‘Miss XYZ
Hotel’ title, the euphoria from which stayed with her for a long time giving
itself away in the spring in her step, the twinkle in her eye and a radiant
smile. From iPods to Chanel first edition scarves to trips to Maldives or Dubai
– we have had hotels think up the best tricks to make these bonding events
difficult to forget.
Then there are the out-of-station
get-to-know-your team trips from which colleagues come back knowing an
impressive lot about the boss or the direct supervisor or the cubicle neighbour
– all in the way to create happy, productive, non-conflicting work atmospheres.
If you know your people well you not
only know what keeps them ticking, you have the knowledge to utilize their best
attributes in the right place at the right time making them feel more involved
and appreciated. You can also do an easy SWOT analysis to see what are the
traits that can be underplayed or aspects that can be trained upon to improve
or shoved under. I knew this Sales colleague who was extremely good with
numbers and had a keen business sense. He was always the one to make the FRM
presentations for his Director. He went on to do due diligence for the Hotel
Owner in his next role and eventually moved into international strategy and
business development for a multinational chain.
On my part, not only my command over the
language but my interests in training saw me offer tailor-made capsules to a
wide range of people from the telephone operators to chefs, engineers to the HR
folk.
Therefore, knowing your employees is an
integral baseline to a happy organization and a healthy bottom-line.
Get to know their family and the family dog
This actually happens at some of the
best international chains. Even the Dog bit is true, I am told by an ex-boss
who worked for Four Seasons for a long time.
Not just Indians and Asians, I have seen
people from all over the world gush over their families and enjoy sharing about
their significant others. Making an attempt to know the families has several
pluses. With the family getting to know the place of work, it infuses a happy
and healthy energy for the organization in the minds of both the team member
and his significant other. In the times of professional exigencies – in the
tough-scheduled, round the clock hotel jobs this is more a rule than an
exception – the family is much more understanding of the occupational pressure
and willing to support. The employee on the other hand is less stressed and
more mentally free to engage in the work at hand.
A French boss was so proud of his lively
wife and would talk about her with such glee. The rather nice lady had a bent
for interior designing and readily extended help to the F&B team when they
were doing up one of the restaurants for a food festival. Then there was this
French-Australian Executive Chef whose Australian wife would help us put up a
great show during Melbourne Cup celebrations or the Oak’s Day with her wide
network and first-hand knowledge.
Knowing the family of your people
provides you with so many more options to connect with them at different
levels. It helps you become that little bit more familiar, which comes in handy
when you wish to dissipate tensions, reinforce bonding and ensure the two-way
loyalty – the company’s towards its employee and vice versa.
Learn about their fears, inhibitions and reservations
We all have a big set of weak traits,
rational and irrational fears, cultural or personal inhibitions that come in
the way of our growth.
If I speak about myself, I have this
strange, dichotomous conflict of interest. My professional playing field is
Public Relations yet I feel I am quite the introvert in large gatherings. Once
you put the microphone before me, I end up speaking rather impressively but put
me in a moderate group and I become tongue-tied. For years I have had to battle
this strange situation that tears me into two different directions. It has not
been easy because my area of work pushes me into the feared zone on a multitude
of occasions that I simply cannot turn my back on. An encouraging boss and a
positive organizational climate have helped me steer smoothly without sinking
my ship of reputation.
A rarely occurring case of mental
paralysis is quite alright and something that one can get over. I was attending
the IXth Commonwealth Study Conference in Australia and was called out to write
a formal document on one occasion and participate in a team skit on another.
Inspite of having been a published writer for better part of my professional
life and being known at large for my gregariousness; unfortunately on those two
occasions I failed miserably. Neither did I manage to produce any coherent
literature, nor did I shine out in my parts so much so that the Team Lead ended
giving me monosyllabic words to utter all through the performance. Thinking
back about the episode still makes me feel terrible about myself. Yet, my
Australian Group remembers me for a lot of my other facets and not the two sore
thorns in my flesh; perhaps because they were one-off and not a common pattern.
A mature organization, wise HR people,
considerate colleagues and an understanding boss can play such a huge role in
ensuring that the employee gets the better of his weak spots. As a step
further, they can help him build a success story on the behavioural boulders by
the right intervention and assist him in winning his personal hurdle race by
turning the stumbling stones into building blocks.
It is the Supervisor and Company’s moral
obligation to combat those demons on a war footing along with the team members.
There are no perfect employees. Perfection is a sense of perpetual aspiration.
A good boss and a great organization can
always manage to harness the strengths, weed out the weaknesses to turn the
entire team into an envious group of people who deliver one tour de force after
another.
Build on their strengths
Every employee has a mixed bag of
strengths running through the direct – Writing skills, Business acumen,
financial proficiency, good in Sales, impressive academic record, technical
knowhow; and the indirect – great with people, attention to detail, pleasant
demeanour, good in crisis situations, multifariously talented.
I remember my first mentor with a lot of
fondness and gratitude. She nurtured us like cherished plants, watering our
desires to grow up, feeding us with excellent experiences that she would
squarely put on our table, support us only that much and then nudge us to
become more accountable, fertilize us with splendid ideation meetings
encouraging us to think out of the box, knowing well that we would bear rich
fruit.
An Assistant I taught everything from
scratch had this Buddha like disposition and she was great with people. She was
a wonderful team mate during crisis and was a perfect foil for my Type A
personality. It was such a wonderful outcome to help hone her professional
skills and fan her inherent facets. The Department fared better as we went
along aiding and equipping her; allowing her to blossom.
Whether it is team building or crisis
management or being good with numbers or great in handling difficult people;
find the mojo of the employee and turn it into a major strength; which the
employee, the team and the Company at large benefit from.
Get their family into the work place
I think this is the nicest and surest
way to seal bonds, earn loyalty, reinforce brand affiliation, cultivate trust
and leave an increasingly warm feeling for the Company in the employee. There
is also the bonus - that of turning the family members into extended brand
ambassadors.
When I was about eight, my Dad would
take me to his office on certain days of the year and fill my day at his place
of work with a set of unforgettable experiences – I could watch him work, have
a site visit when he was in meetings, get to draw exciting stuff with those
official red and blue pencils, walk the corridors with him and meet people who
handled different roles. At the end of the day, I was so proud of what my
father did, happy to see a wonderful place of work, learn about new things and
in the process have an ineffaceable impression from the first-hand experience
that would definitely stay with me for a long time.
Many years later, I was a visiting
fellow to the United States and was meeting with the head honchos at the World
Bank. On the day of our visit, guess what they were observing! A happy,
energized, exhilarating Daughter’s Day Out! The biggest conference room had
been done up for the special visit of the little VIPs. The Buntings and the
balloons had been put out to give a facelift to the dreary room, the activity
stations had been laid out and the elaborate menu planned for the lunch party.
But most of all, I am telling you, I saw all the executives – even the senior
most – strut their stuff about to impress their little wards in a fair attempt
to leave lasting impressions. The working Mom or Dad was showcasing their
company and their work to their impressionable children; in turn the kids would
have one of the finest and enduring lessons on the goings-on at the World Bank.
I truly believe that getting the family
into the work place through the various HR tactics – Kids’ activities,
rewarding meritorious children with certificates, gifts and scholarships,
get-togethers where spouses are invited, Christmas and New Year parties where
the employee’s family is the special guest – is one of the strongest ways to
keep the employees happy, proud and bonded with the brand, which they would
truly wish to promote from their heart.
Put thought
and feeling into your gifts to them
We all have been recipients of gifts
from our bosses and colleagues and givers of similar gesture to our teams. Even
though we are told to not look the gift horse in the mouth, just how many more
duty-free shop bought Toblerone packs can we eat, how many Pierre Cardin pens
will we stash away and how many more perfume miniatures that we will pass on as
a gift from that trip back. Gifts without thought are the number one reason for
that other bad habit – what comes around must go around.
Whether it is confectionery from your
trip back or Xmas gifts, let the gift speak volumes. Skip the standard
chocolate routine (for all you know, the recipient may not be a confection
lover) or the other cheap (by that I am not hinting at the price at all) or
common gifts. Gifts should be thoughtful; even when they are the inevitable
chocolates. Focus on suitability – do not try to shove square pegs of
inconsiderate and indifferent gift boxes into round holes of individualistic
personalities.
One of my sales colleagues once got me a
lovely crushed silk scarf from his trip from Hong Kong. Even after more than a
decade and a half, I love the little piece of cloth and enjoy wearing it. Did
it cost him a bomb? No. Do I still remember him, even after not having worked
with him for more than ten years? Absolutely yes! Well, gifts should have this
sort of effect on the recipient. That is why they are or should be given in the
first place.
Back in the early 90s, on one of my
first few business trips, I was travelling to Mumbai with my Australian Boss.
We were staying at the Taj, on the same floor, in suites facing each other’s.
Imagine my pleasant surprise when my boss dropped in, took one look at my room
and ordered me out of my mine and into hers. The reason – she had a sea-facing
room whereas mine had a view of the mesh of scaffolding that had been put up
and hid indiscreetly by the equally ugly tarpaulin. My generous boss wanted me
to have the nicest experience at one of my earliest hotel stays so much so that
she was happy to shift to the room with a crappy feel.
One of the nicest gifts I have received was
from the Hotel General Manager - my immediate boss at the luxury chain I worked
for. It was when he withdrew his name from his place at the prestigious Summer
University put together by the Hotel Chain’s Centre for Learning and
Development. He put my name instead knowing that it was one of the greatest
lifetime experiences for me and that I was very eager to be part of knowledge enhancement.
He said he had been a part of one too
many and felt that I would gain a lot from the interface; which I did, with
faculty from some of the finest international management schools. But the
greatest lesson I learned was to be thoughtful about my team, about being
genuine and kind, about nurturing the team and giving them positive growth
opportunities and yes being selfless.
The above two bosses have left such a
mark on me that I enjoyed the companies I worked for largely because of them.
The two have taught me some wonderful lessons that I imbibed into my own style
and that I often quote and refer back to when writing out case studies for
others to benefit from.
Like I said, companies are not concrete
and mortar. Companies are caring set of people who create outstanding
organizational climates for all those around them.
************
Picture courtesy - Google Images
No comments:
Post a Comment