Tagged with Trendspotting

Gamification of the Enterprise

One of the blogs I love reading is The Future Of Work blog by Socialcast. It has great content about things I am passionate about – social media, organization development, employee engagement, collaboration tools etc. They also put up great infographics every now and then. I just couldn’t resist posting their infographic titled “Adding Play Into the Enterprise”. It does a crisp summary of employee engagement trends, the explosion of gaming and how they can be married together. My favorite bit is when they compare the ‘Gaming World’ with the ‘Job World’. So, your job title is the “level”, salary is “score”, promotions are “level up” and performance reviews are the “stat summary”. That’s a cool way to think about it!

Enjoy the infographic! And do share your best ideas on gamification.

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The Impact of A Flexible Benefits System on Employee Engagement

A couple of years back, I had written about “the market for employee benefits”. I was fully convinced that it will help foster a better understanding of the employee benefits plan and drive better satisfaction as a result of the ability to customize the plan to suit individual needs and lifestyles.

I was at a conference last week, where I was a part of a panel discussion. One of the questions posed to me was “How does having a flexible benefits system affect the engagement levels of employees?”

Typically, research shows that pay / benefits do not feature as a top driver of engagement – they affect engagement, but other factors assume higher priority when it comes to engagement. However, pay / benefits are critical drivers of talent attraction and retention. But, I do feel that a flexible benefits system, as opposed to a traditional benefits plan, would also affect engagement.

In a flexi-benefits programs, the role of employees evolves. From being passive recipients of a standardized, mundane plan, employees become active decision-makers in a flexi-benefits system. It helps to build that sense of autonomy, of empowerment, of ownership. And that does have a positive rub-off effect on engagement, attraction and retention. Overall, I feel that a flexi-benefits system is a great way to differentiate your employee value proposition and compete better in the marketplace for talent.

Have you implemented a flexi-benefits system? What has been your experience?

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Sell The “Change” That You Want To See

Indranil Roy of Korn/Ferry has written an insightful piece in The Forbes magazine “Asia Doesn’t Have the New Business Leaders It Needs”. He talks about two terms – Asia 1.0 and Asia 2.0:

Until now that growth was built largely on being a workshop to the world, providing cheaper products to seemingly insatiable Western consumers. But that was Asia 1.0–and that engine is losing steam. Now the demands of Asian consumers, with unique and increasingly sophisticated needs, are changing the way companies create, design and market products. They are bringing about a new growth model that we call Asia 2.0.

And, goes on to talk about the kind of leadership styles suitable for these two worlds:

We found that the leaders who best met the Asia 1.0 challenges were highly directive, task-driven and productive, or else logical, serious and data-driven, with strong attention to detail.

In Asia 2.0, leaders’ success will depend on their abilities to handle multiplicity, diversity and cultural differences across their workforces and markets. The leaders most likely to succeed in Asia 2.0 will be those who use openness, informality, humor and adaptability to lead, and who are inquisitive, collaborative, involving and patient in their leadership.

I have myself worked with several organisations in Asia and do agree with some of these points. As I read the article, I thought about the leadership’s role in the context of an evolving, changing Asia. Organisations here are re-inventing themselves, repositioning themselves and are in the middle of constant change. This definitely affects the workforce in these organisations. In such a scenario, communication becomes a very important part of the change management process.

More than simple communication, I believe “selling” of change is critical. Leaders need to be adept at creating dissatisfaction with the present, painting a compelling vision for the future and charting a clear path to move from one point to another. Leaders need to passionately articulate the journey and its impact on the organisation and the individual. And in the process, rally people around the cause. Leaders need to ensure that their people “buy” the change; are completely sold out on it.

But, this does not work out so well when the leadership style is directive or overly serious. Leaders need to reinvent themselves as they map out the great change journey for their organisations. And organisations need to think about how they select and develop leaders for Asia 2.0.

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Re-inventing Management at the Management Innovation Exchange

The Management Innovation Exchange or MIX is truly a great place for learning about innovative management practices and ideas for reinventing management. I highly recommend it if you have a passion for re-defining the ‘way things work’. In fact, I too contributed a “hack” to make people managers more accountable for their employees by building attrition costs into the managers’ P&L.

I am putting together a small list of hacks and stories which I found most interesting on the forum:

  • Julian Birkinshaw of the London Business School writes a thought-provoking piece on “What is Your Management Model?” We have all talked about business models, but not much about the management model. How are we going to make choices about people, effort coordination, objectives etc.? How will we balance a traditional vs. a new-age management practice? Ultimately, what’s more important – the business model or the management model? Must Read.
  • Matt Sholsberg asks us to reinvent the wheel. And for a reason – the wheel itself is over 5000 years old!

What are your ideas? Or if you like, “hacks” to re-invent management?

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Breaking The Information Barrier In Companies

There are various areas in which organizations need to reinvent the way of doing things. But, to me, one of the most worrisome issues is the issue of rigid hierarchies, control mechanisms and collaboration. I believe these are critical barriers to maximizing enterprise performance.

Often I find that “information” is the key. It is one of the most powerful sources of individual competitive advantages in an organizational context. In most cases, we find that the higher  you are in the hierarchy, the more information you have. Authority is the mirror image of the information one has. In a way, how much should you know is dependent on where you sit across a range of job grades! And, we are not just talking about sensitive information like detailed financials or diversity reports (though I don’t feel these are sensitive!). We are talking the essentials – information about product / services, procedures, systems, repository of innovative ideas, best practices, customer insights or even people – as to who specializes in what or who is the “go-to” person for a particular issue. And, all this information is usually sitting pretty somewhere “up” there! Far away from people, who might need it the most!

If this issue is unchecked, often I see cases of “information hoarding”. As humans, we like to “own” things – put a seal on them – “mine”! It appears we sometimes do the same with information. Especially, when organization structures / practices / culture does not place enough emphasis (I am not talking about mere lip service) on sharing. Worst of all, the whole system sometimes ends up rewarding the ones who hoard information. After all, information is power and one can succeed with the right information. So, that becomes the norm. The message is out. “Hold on to the information. You are better off keeping it to yourself, rather than sharing it with everyone. You can get things done. Win that big bonus. Become a star. And you can outpace others in office.”

What does this lead to? Sooner, rather than later – poor enterprise performance. Let me give some examples, which you might be able to relate to:

  • You call your bank’s phone-banking line because you have a wrong transaction in your account – nothing very major. The phone-banking rep puts you on hold to look into the manual on how to address the problem. Doesn’t find the right information and transfers your call to the “relevant” department. Again, no resolution. Looks like something is missing in the manual. Or maybe, some one sat there up in the corner office and designed it without knowing the ground realities. Finally, the call is transferred to the “manager”, who is able to reverse the transaction and closes out the issue. You look at your watch and realize that was 20 minutes of your time for a $10 transaction!
  • You are attending an exhibition where companies are demonstrating some fancy manufacturing machinery. It’s a big event. You set your eyes on a piece of work, and you reckon it can improve your plant’s productivity by 10-15%. But, you are worried about energy consumption and ask the company’s reps “I know this machinery can be customized to a customer’s needs. Which specific components are most customizable from the point of reducing energy consumption, while maintaining productivity?” The rep looks at you, looks at his colleagues. Smiles. “I will have to get back to you.” Wonders to himself “Boss knows!”. And, you move on to talk to some of the other stalls at the exhibition.
  • A customer calls you and asks you to come over to make a sales pitch on a specific subject, say business continuity services. Given the customer’s industry, you know that your colleague in another team had made a similar pitch a few years back. You go to her, ask for some materials that you can re-use. She says, “I am a bit busy. Getting on a plane soon. Will try to send something in the next 1 week”. Oh! The customer wanted the presentation tomorrow. And you get back to your desk and spend the rest of the day (and part of the night) in re-inventing something that already exists in a fine form. Talk about putting in productive hours at work!

The list is endless. And, the potential for productivity gains by addressing this area is endless too. I feel very passionately for this issue, since I have seen hundreds of people, including myself, being affected by this. And even more so, because now we really seem to have enabling technology to support information sharing like never before. And that is a very important development. But, technology in itself can never ever be the ultimate solution. It’s a tool, not an outcome. More importantly, it will have to be about imbibing the value of sharing, building a culture which supports and disproportionately rewards “information disseminators”.

We need to free up information. What has been your experience? How can we hack companies’ management practices and liberate the information to reach where it truly belongs – the people? How can we bust these islands of information? How can we build this component of “the ideal enterprise”. How can we do that? Tell me now!

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