The Business Book

(Joyce) #1

86


L E A D E R S A L L O W


G R E A T P E O P L E T O


D O T H E W O R K T H E Y


W E R E B O R N T O D O


MAKE THE MOST OF YOUR TALENT


S


taff in many organizations
reports feeling undervalued,
overstretched, and forced to
work in areas beyond its competence.
Because of this they feel ineffective
—they want to work better, but feel
that the organization is constraining
them. The best companies allow
staff to build careers around what
they excel at—in leadership expert
Warren Bennis’s words “to do the
work they were born to do.”
Contemporary organizations,
faced with dynamic, fast-moving
markets, favor employees who are
flexible and multiskilled. Yet in a

2012 Global Work force Study only
35 percent of employees reported
engagement with their jobs,
revealing a disconnect with what
employers want and what employees
are willing to give. Studies have
found engaged employees—those
devoted to their jobs and committed
to the company’s values—are
significantly more productive,
provide better customer service,
and outperform those who are less
engaged. But many companies treat
staff as little more than pieces on
an organizational chessboard that
can be moved around at will.

Effective people create effective organizations.

Great leaders allow great people
to excel at what they do well.

They value the factory floor as much as the shareholders.

IN CONTEXT


FOCUS
Work-force effectiveness

KEY DATES
1959 US psychologist
Frederick Herzberg defines
factors in job satisfaction in his
study The Motivation to Work.

1960 In his book The Human
Side of Enterprise, US
academic Douglas McGregor
proposes Theory Y, urging
companies to adopt a
participatory management
style that motivates workers to
strive to achieve their potential.

1989 US management guru
Rosabeth Moss Kanter’s
When Giants Learn to Dance
suggests that employees are
most productive when
empowered to make their
own decisions.
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