25 ways to boost employee satisfaction levels and
staff retention
If you want to delight customers you need to
hire the right kind of people, as great products and competitive pricing will
only take a company so far. You need brilliant people too: people who care as
much about the brand as they do the customers.
Simply put, happy employees lead to happy
customers, and happy customers lead to more profit.
So then, what can you do to
improve employee satisfaction? Here are 25 ideas…
1.
Respect them
It goes without saying that employees must
feel respected by their managers and colleagues. A lack of respect in the
workplace is a poison for which there is no antidote.
2.
Listen, and then listen some more
Managers should maintain an open-door policy,
and encourage staff to approach them to ask questions, share ideas, and voice
concerns.
3.
Deal with their housekeeping / admin / tech hassles
Remember that ‘PC Load Error’ scene in Office
Space? Try to minimize the day-to-day hassles that can make working in a modern
office a real ball ache.
4. Accept mistakes (at least to begin with)
We all make errors from time to time. No big
deal. Smart people will learn from them.
5.
Be transparent
Few things are as important in modern
business as transparency. It’s harder than ever to paper pull the wool over
your customer’s eyes if your products or services aren’t up to scratch. This
also applies to your staff. They may not always like what they hear, but
they’ll respect you for being open and honest. It makes sense to tell it like
it is, when you’re able to do so.
6.
Make space for creativity
Are there ways of making mundane jobs a bit
more interesting?
7.
Encourage personality
For the most part, the days where a brand had
a single tone of voice are long gone. Parameters and guidelines are better than
scripts, both for your customers and your staff. I think it makes sense to
allow staff to communicate like humans via your service / content / social
channels. Your customers will love you for it. Robot’s suck.
8.
Training / skills development
The development of skills is good for
business and good for morale, if done in the right way. The more cynical
employees may say that you’re only doing this to make more money, but good
managers are big believers in career development, and making bright staff even
brighter.
9.
Beware of bureaucracy
The bigger a company gets, the more painful
its admin processes become. Do what you can to minimize red tape.
10.
Create a wonderful environment
Office slide installation firms are doing
rather well these days. Don’t underestimate the physical environment’s impact on
your company culture, and staff happiness levels.
11. Rewards
Pay, perks, benefits, bonuses. Be very
careful about taking away small perks.
12.
Promotions
Staff should be bumped up the ladder on
merit. It is also important to give them some visibility on their career
development options.
13.
Help staff to bond with one other
This is important for big and small companies
alike. It used to be so much easier, when there were just 10 of us! Pub
lunches, team days out, mentoring, messing about on boats… all of these things
can help employees forge the bonds that they need to enjoy work.
14.
Give recognition
If an employee has done something remarkable
/ innovative / valuable / useful / clever then be sure to thank them (in
person, via company emails, in all-staff meetings, etc). Credit were credit’s
due. And be warned: managers that steal the credit will cause ill feeling while
undermining themselves. And that never ends well.
15.
Be polite
I’m all for being to the point, but there’s
nothing wrong with ‘please’ and ‘thank you’ in a business environment.
16.
Embrace remote working
I think Marissa Mayer is doing a lot right at
Yahoo but I’m not a fan of her ‘no working from home’ policy
(which might be tactical, as opposed to one of her firmer beliefs). Remote
working minimizes commuting costs and hassles, and can actually help to
increase productivity.
17.
Banish stupid uniforms
Long ago, when I was paying some serious
dues, I worked in a call Centre. It was hands down the worst job I have ever
had, but it taught me a good deal about customer service (and how not to manage
a team). They made me wear a suit, despite the fact that my role wasn’t
customer-facing. Did it make me have “a more
business-like attitude”, as they said it would? Absolutely not! It
actually made me subversive.
18.
Be tolerant
Have you ever been stuck in traffic, or on a
train? Of course, you have. In the big city a manager’s understanding of the
hassles of commuting is as important as an employee’s commitment to being
punctual.
19.
Beware of micromanagement
Every job ad I write specifically states that
I hate micromanagement. Why not simply hire bright people, point them in the
right direction, and let them get on with things? Micromanagement is not the
same as…
20.
Mentoring and coaching
These are two different things, and both have
their merits. Mentoring is being able to chat to a senior manager (but not your
direct boss) about all kinds of things. Coaching is more specific, and targeted
to improving skills in various areas, rather than employee wellbeing. Consider
introducing both, in a formal way, for those who want it.
21.
Launch (and act on) in-company surveys
An annual, anonymous staff survey is a good
way of taking the pulse of your business, and will help you to measure employee
satisfaction.
22.
Never pay staff late
If there’s one thing, they’ll hate you for,
it’s this. Your employees are not an overdraft facility. It is appalling
business practice to pay staff late. Pay them early, dammit!
23.
Banish fear
Have you ever been in a meeting where
perfectly reasonable ideas are immediately and openly rubbished? Brainstorming
meetings where people are afraid to speak up and contribute are utterly
pointless. Bad ideas can help you get to the good stuff.
24.
Never undermine staff in public
If you need to have words then it’s best to
do it behind closed doors.
25.
Lack of vision
Solid leadership is absolutely essential if
you want to retain your key staff. Dissatisfaction can kick in if a bold,
strategic vision is AWOL. Employees need to get behind a clear vision in order
to achieve their personal objectives to meet a company’s goals.
Lake, C. (2013). 25 ways to boost employee satisfaction levels and staff retention. [online] Econsultancy. Available at: https://econsultancy.com/25-ways-to-boost-employee-satisfaction-levels-and-staff-retention/.

your writing style is clearly.
ReplyDeleteI highly appreciate your comment. thank you.
ReplyDeleteYou have clearly explained
ReplyDeleteEverything composed was very logical. Thanks for sharing
ReplyDeleteYou have clearly explained..
ReplyDeleteI highly appreciate your comment. thank you
DeleteYou have clearly explained about employee satisfaction.
ReplyDeleteAll the content is compromised by making a comfortable organizational culture.
ReplyDeleteBefore you can improve employee satisfaction and employee engagement, you need to know what to improve and you need to lean above key facts ASAP.
ReplyDeleteThis is such an amazing post. The information that you share in this post is really helpful for me. Everything composed was very logical. Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeletehappy employees lead to happy customers, and happy customers lead to more profit
ReplyDeleteComplex facts are presented very simply .. A very interesting and very important article. Thank you
ReplyDeleteWhen the people are happy to work with their employers it will lead to increase customer service and more productivity
ReplyDeleteCream is intence management.good elaboration
ReplyDelete