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Future of Work

9 Ways to Engage Your Team in The Era of Quiet Quitting

2022-11-02 By Monica Bourgeau, MS Leave a Comment

9 ways to engage your team in the era of quiet quitting

Employees are becoming more and more disengaged, but it doesn’t have to be that way. As part of reimagining the workplace, employers must take employee engagement into account if they want to remain competitive. 

Employees are Disengaged 

A Gallup survey found that barely one third of employees are “fully engaged” in their work while 53% are not engaged and 13% are actively disengaged. They define engagement as the “involvement and enthusiasm of employees in their work and workplace.” It represents how your employees are feeling about their jobs.

53% are not engaged and 13% are actively disengaged.

Gallup Survey

One type of disengagement recently popularized in the media is quiet quitting. Quiet quitting is when an employee does only the bare minimum at work while they focus their energy on outside projects and interests or is looking for another job. 

As a leader, you may be missing out on the full potential of your team and your organization. Disengagement isn’t just a standard management issue —  it hurts the bottom line. According to Decisionwise, companies with disengaged employees earn 32.7% less than companies with highly engaged employees.

1. Measurement is the first step in improving engagement.

So, how do you know if your employees are disengaged? In my experience, companies have found well-designed employee surveys to be the best route. New Phase Partners provides our clients an easy-to-administer and proven engagement survey tool. This allows them to establish a baseline for the company and a straightforward way to monitor improvement in engagement scores over time. 

From there, leaders can begin to make adjustments that will more actively engage their teams over time. There are no quick fixes, and creating change requires a solid commitment from the leadership team. This is when the real work (and fun!) begins.

Here are 8 more ways you can improve engagement in your team:

2.  Make Employees Feel Valued

Show your employees that you value them as human beings, as well as valuing their work. This sounds like basic advice but it’s important. Fewer than one in four US employees feel strongly that their organization cares about their well being, according to a recent Gallup study. If your employees don’t feel like you care about them, it’s hard for them to care about your company. 

So how do you do this? Well, there are many ways, including paying a competitive wage, providing flexible and hybrid work options, creating an open and transparent environment, involving your employees in the decision-making process, and allowing them to help lead change efforts in their own departments. 

3.  Recognize Your Employees

Recognizing employees has also been shown to be fundamental for employee engagement. In fact, managers who are good at recognizing employees have 40% higher employee engagement rates. 

The best way to recognize your employees depends on the employee. For some, calling attention to their achievement in a meeting is confidence boosting. For others, this is embarrassing and they would prefer a quiet, personal expression of appreciation (think gift card with a personal note). A one-size-fits-all approach doesn’t work. You need to take the time to get to know the human being.

Regardless of how and when you recognize an employee, be specific. It takes more than just saying, “good job.” Take the time to mention the specific action and how it affected you, the team, or your customers. Also, make the recognition in a timely manner. The closer to the action or event, the better.

4. Reduce Bureaucracy and Employee Pain Points 

How do your employees feel about your workplace? What’s going well? What are their specific frustrations? 

Create an environment where people feel like they can have that conversation, even if you need to bring in a facilitator. Be open to their ideas and solutions and pay attention to their pain points. Identify specific ways you can work together to make things better, and then actually do it! Make reducing unnecessary bureaucracy, paperwork, and annoying tasks a top priority.

5. Create Meaningful Connections

Get to know your employees as human beings. Do they have a significant other? Do they have kids? Are they a caregiver for family members? What personal hardships are they facing? Have meaningful discussions and work to build authentic connections among your team.

The old paradigm of work taught us that we need to leave our personal lives at the door when we come to work. To create engaged employees, it’s important to recognize them as whole human beings with a life and challenges outside work. 

Employees will go through different seasons of their life while working for you. There may be times they are struggling with a sick family member, childcare issues, or caring for an elderly parent. If there are ways for you to provide additional compassion and flexibility during challenging times, employees will feel a greater connection to the organization.

Find ways to create a safe, trusting workplace environment with opportunities for people to work together, and over time build friendships. Employees with a “best friend” at work are more likely to be engaged, get more done in less time, innovate and share ideas, and have fun at work. As you can imagine, these results mean the employee is also less likely to leave the organization. Creating a culture of friendship starts at the top and is related to the behavior demonstrated by leaders.

6. Have a Greater Purpose

Employees want to feel like they’re part of something greater than themselves. More and more companies are being called on to have a purpose greater than just earning a profit. Ensure your company has a clear and compelling mission that, if fulfilled, helps make the world a better place, and live it. The mission needs to run through everything your company does.

Help employees understand the connection between their work and the organization’s overall mission.

7. Help Employees Identify and Use Their Own Strengths:

Every person in your company has unique strengths. Helping them identify and apply those strengths not only makes work more meaningful to the employee, it also helps them be more engaged. A Gallup study found that people who use their strengths every day are six times more likely to be engaged on the job! That’s huge.

It also helps your employee make a greater contribution to the organization and the overall mission, which makes the company stronger. If you need a partner for this, we provide Strengths-finder assessments, consultations, coaching, and training. 

8. Focus on Well Being

Create a culture that values well being. Make it okay to rest, take vacations, and unplug on nights and weekends.

One leader that I interviewed on my podcast recently (coming soon!) is Susan Hingle, MD. She puts this message at the bottom of every email:

“I apologize if this e-mail comes after hours. There is no need or expectation to respond on evenings or weekends, unless it makes your life easier.”

Susan Hingle, MD

I love this so much! Sometimes Dr. Hingle responds to email after hours because that works with her schedule. However, she gives permission to the recipient to wait until the next workday to respond. 

While this isn’t the norm at many organizations. It should be.

I once worked as an executive for a company that used email and slack at all hours of the day, every day, including weekends and holidays. There was often more email communication at 10:00 p.m. than during the day, due to all of the meetings we participated in. If we chose to “unplug” for a weekend or a vacation, we were often met with angry responses and an overflowing inbox upon our return.

The result was a high level of stress and burnout among the entire staff. I ended up leaving that job. That experience, as well as my time in other challenging corporate roles are part of why I’m so passionate about workplace wellbeing and creating a better way. (You can read more about my decision in this Medium article from 2018, “Am I crazy for wanting to leave my high-paying corporate job?”) 

9. Provide Opportunities for Growth and Development

Provide opportunities for your employees to grow and develop. That includes every employee. Let’s call for an end to “dead-end jobs” and instead focus on creating “get ahead jobs”. This concept comes from the must-read book, Humanocracy. It means that every employee should have the opportunity to further develop themselves, their skills, and their position within the organization. 

Growth and development opportunities should start with a conversation with the employee, understanding their strengths, interests, and long-term goals. Where does the employee see himself/herself/themself in five years? Is it possible for that to happen within your company? Are there opportunities you can help them imagine and train for? Make time for these critical conversations and schedule regular (weekly if possible) follow up. 

If you don’t think you have time for that, remember how long it takes to recruit, interview, hire, and train a new employee. Making investments in time and training budgets is well worth the investment over the long run and will result in happier, more engaged employees.

In Summary

A highly committed and engaged workforce will result in more revenue and success for your company, while also creating a better workplace for everyone. Every industry and every employer has the opportunity to create the workplace of the future. Do you have the leadership and commitment to seize the opportunity for your company?

If you’re looking for a partner to help you with this process, contact New Phase Partners today for a no-cost initial consultation.

Filed Under: Future of Work, Leadership Tagged With: culture, employees, engage, engagement, quiet quitting, team, workplace

Stop saying “Patients First” — What Healthcare Needs to do Instead

2022-10-18 By Monica Bourgeau, MS Leave a Comment

I was scrolling LinkedIn the other day and saw a post from a hospital CEO proudly touting the overused healthcare mantra that’s now the slogan for their marketing campaign: “We put patients first!”

While it’s well-intentioned, this tagline is destroying our healthcare system.

I cringed and considered commenting on his post, then I stopped myself and continued scrolling. Is it even possible to change someone’s mind with a social media comment anyway? But I haven’t been able to get it out of my head.

I want to ask this CEO: What about your staff?

  • What’s the rate of employee and physician burnout?
  • Are you fully staffed?
  • How engaged are your team members?
  • Do your providers feel like they’re on a hamster wheel?
  • How many layers of administration and bureaucracy do you have between patients and decision-makers that affect their healthcare?

The “patients first” mantra amounts to no more than lip service in the healthcare industry.

A better term would be patient-centric which puts the patient at the center of the decision-making process but places an equal emphasis on employee well-being, profits, and operations, etc.

When you put patients first, by definition, other things have to come second, third, and so on. It’s a linear prioritization that isn’t helpful. It results in the well-being of employees getting neglected, falling somewhere behind profits for the healthcare organization and many other factors.

Healthcare systems are still primarily driven by the volume of patients and procedures they deliver, which is actually more of a “profit-first model of healthcare” and doesn’t consider the effects on patients or providers.

Patients can’t be “first” when our caregivers are in survival mode — burned out, short-staffed, disengaged, and squashed by the daily bureaucracy of the system.

We should focus on creating an environment where our employees and providers can thrive. From that place, patients will receive the best care.

If administrators really want to prioritize patient care and outcomes, they need to start by prioritizing their staff and providers.

It has moved beyond band-aid solutions. Healthcare organizations need a major redesign.

After 25 years working in healthcare, I’ve come to the conclusion that our system is not only broken — but cannot recover if left to its own devices. It’s time for a fundamental shift.

The current system is plagued by burnout, staffing shortages, growing bureaucracy, and employee disengagement as discussed below, along with questions for us to consider.

Burnout Has Become an Epidemic

The majority of doctors and healthcare providers went into medicine because they genuinely want to help people. They’re often willing to sacrifice their own well-being and work long hours to care for others. When they’re depleted enough times, there comes a point where there’s nothing left to give.

It’s estimated that 54.4% of doctors report some symptoms of burnout.(1) Burnout also affects other workers in the organization, whether it’s nurses, other practitioners, or administrators.

While healthcare systems try to respond to this burnout with minimal efforts such as mindfulness and wellness programs, very few are actually changing the system.

The average primary care visit with a doctor is still less than 20 minutes. Physicians and healthcare workers are on a treadmill driven solely by the number of visits and patients they can see in a day. They are often required to be “on-call” nights and weekends with very little actual downtime.

My family and I saw the effects of provider burnout firsthand. In 2020, my mom was diagnosed with stage 3 colon cancer. She was blessed with an amazing oncologist, Dr. Smith (not his real name), who made her feel important and gave her hope that she could overcome this disease. He supported our entire family through the process. After chemo, radiation, and surgery, my mom survived and is still cancer-free today.

Near the end of her treatment, Dr. Smith told us he was leaving medicine. He was burned out and exhausted. It was affecting his health and his family relationships. What a loss to the patients who would have benefitted from his knowledge and caring demeanor.

Lily Tomlin said it best: “The trouble with the rat race is that even if you win, you’re still a rat.”

There’s no winning today’s healthcare rat race. It’s time for change.

Question to consider: How can we design a system that prioritizes the well-being of our providers and team?

Healthcare Staffing Shortages Are a National Emergency

This is only made worse by extreme staffing shortages. In a letter sent in March to the House Energy and Commerce Committee, “the American Hospital Association called the workforce shortage hospitals were experiencing a ‘national emergency,’ projecting the overall shortage of nurses to reach 1.1 million by the end of the year. And it’s not just nurses: Professionals from medical lab workers to paramedics are in short supply.” (2)

“With fewer clinicians working in the field, practitioners are finding themselves responsible for a larger number of patients, fueling soaring burnout levels that experts say raise the risk of medical errors and, consequently, potential harm to Americans.” (4)

U.S. physicians are leaving the workforce in record numbers. According to the AMA, more than 3,272 physicians left the workforce between 2019 and 2021, even before the Omicron wave hit intensive care units. One in five physicians say it’s likely they will leave their current practice within two years.

Question to consider: how can we make healthcare a more desirable place to work and retain more of our caregivers?

Growing Bureaucracy in Healthcare

Our healthcare system is bloated and buckling under the bureaucracy. The ratio of doctors to other healthcare workers is now 1:16.

“Of those 16 workers, only 6 are involved in caring for patients, such as nurses and home health aids. The other 10 are purely administrative roles.”

Caregivers are being pushed farther away from the tables where decisions are made while the bureaucratic burden of preauthorization and electronic medical record system data entry and other control and management measures are rising.

How can we design a system that better engages our providers and frontline caregivers in the decision-making process?

Question to consider: Are there ways to create opportunities for remote work and leadership and management duties for those that have an interest and to reduce the top-heavy bloat in our organizations?

Employees Are Disengaged

Employee disengagement in the workplace is on the rise. This trend appeared before the pandemic and is only getting worse.

In a 2018 survey, Gallup found that:

  • Barely 1/3 of employees were “fully engaged” in their work
  • 53% were not engaged
  • 13% were actively disengaged

In recent months, the term “quiet quitting” has become the buzzword for disengagement after the concept went viral on TikTok. Quiet quitting is when an employee only does the bare minimum at work to avoid getting fired, saving energy and focusing on outside interests and personal time. It goes beyond boundary setting and represents an emotional detachment from the job and the outcome. They may also be looking for another job.

According to Gallup in a September 2022 article, “quiet quitters” now makeup at least 50% of the U.S. workforce — probably more. Disengagement has become more common among managers, as well as remote Gen Z and younger millennials.

Question to consider: How can we more fully engage our existing staff? Are there ways to give them more “ownership” of the process and their impact?

Stop Saying “Patients First”

What can that CEO do instead of touting a flawed “patient-first model”?

Make Employee and Caregiver well-being a top priority. While this seems like a small change, it’s actually a major shift in culture and mindset. It’s asking difficult questions like, “how do we create an environment where our staff can thrive?” It adopts the underlying belief that a thriving staff will be able to provide better care to their patients.

In a recent Gallup poll, fewer than one in four U.S. employees feel strongly that their organization cares about their well-being!

Begin to have those discussions with your staff and caregivers to see where changes would make the biggest impact, then take action!

While this may seem radical to some, there are organizations already making this shift, including home healthcare leader, Buurtzorg, which is based in The Netherlands and has designed a highly-effective care delivery model.

Take a systems approach to improving organizational culture, reducing workload, and creating supportive environments for staff. Small tweaks aren’t enough. We need to look at the whole system and how we can improve it.

Identify and remove bureaucracy that hinders provider care, causes unnecessary caregiver stress, and doesn’t provide value to the employees or patients.

How many times per day are your caregivers pulling their hair out due to some cumbersome policy or workflow? It doesn’t have to be this way.

Begin to experiment and test new ways of working for your team. Do employees really have to work five days per week? Are there ways to give providers more flexibility? More input in the system?

Get curious and discuss possibilities with your team. Small-scale and time-bound experiments are a great way to try new things without too much disruption.

Begin to measure burnout, well-being, and employee engagement, create accountability for the leadership team, and take action to improve: There are many great tools out there. Find one that will work best for your organization, create a baseline, and actively work to improve your workplace culture. If your organization is already measuring some or all of these things, it’s time to set aims, take action, and create accountability for improving conditions.

It’s time to change how we work and create systems where people can share their talents and thrive.

Not sure where to start? Contact us for a free 30-minute consultation.

Sources:

  1. Fierce Healthcare
  2. AHA Letter
  3. AMA: What We’ve Learned
  4. The Great Healthcare Bloat

This article also appeared on Medium.com.

Filed Under: Communication, Future of Work, Healthcare Tagged With: burnout, change, culture, employee engagement, experiment, healthcare, leadership, medicine, patients, physician, work, workplace

Rural Health Leadership Radio: A Conversation with Monica Bourgeau

2022-10-17 By Monica Bourgeau, MS Leave a Comment

Listen Now

Thank you to Bill Auxier and Sydney for having me on The Rural Health Leadership Radio show. Learn more and listen at www.RHLRadio.com.

***

Can a four-day work week work in rural healthcare? This week, we are having a conversation with Monica Bourgeau, a futurist and CEO of New Phase Partners. Monica shares her experiences as a futurist and the changes that rural health leaders should expect.

“When I look at leadership, the most important thing to me is being able to create a vision for the future and then being able to share that vision”

-Monica Bourgeau

Monica Bourgeau, MS is a futurist, award-winning author, and CEO of New Phase Partners, a consulting firm specializing in Future of Work strategies, planning, leadership coaching, and training. Monica has nearly twenty-five years of experience in healthcare leadership positions, including nearly ten years leading national rural healthcare transformation programs, business development, and strategy. 

Filed Under: Future of Work, Healthcare, The New Future of Work Podcast Tagged With: future of work, futurist, leadership, Monica Bourgeau, podcast, Rural Health, vision

8 Signs Your Employees are Disengaged and What It’s Costing You

2022-10-13 By Monica Bourgeau, MS Leave a Comment

Disengaged employees
Are your employees disengaged?

Employee disengagement in the workplace is on the rise. This trend appeared before the pandemic and is only getting worse.

In a 2018 survey, Gallup found that:

  • Barely 1/3 of employees were “fully engaged” in their work
  • 53% were not engaged
  • 13% were actively disengaged

In recent months, the term “quiet quitting” has become the buzzword for disengagement after the concept went viral on TikTok. Quiet quitting is when an employee only does the bare minimum at work to avoid getting fired to save energy and focus for outside interests and personal time. It goes beyond boundary setting and represents an emotional detachment from the job and the outcome. They may also be looking for another job.

According to Gallup in a September 2022 article, “quiet quitters” now makeup at least 50% of the U.S. workforce — probably more. Disengagement has become more common among managers, as well as remote Gen Z and younger millennials. No wonder it’s hard to get good service when you eat out – you’ve only got a 50% chance of getting a server who cares!

So what does employee disengagement or quiet quitting look like? And, why should you care?

Here are some common signs of disengagement:

  • Increased absenteeism and/or leaving work early/arriving late,
  • More negativity or cynicism,
  • Withdrawal or apathy about work or assignments,
  • Missed deadlines 
  • Declining productivity or quality,
  • Poor communication or silence,
  • Lack of connection with other colleagues, 
  • Low levels of motivation,
  • Showing signs of burnout,
  • Expressed dissatisfaction (although dissatisfaction and engagement are not the same thing).

An example of a disengaged employee shared by one of our clients is Claire. Claire was with Company A for almost five years. When she started, she was highly responsive, detail-oriented, and a team player. She was someone you could count on to complete a project on time and under budget.

In the past year, however, she’s become slower to respond to requests. Sometimes it takes a few reminders from her manager. She has stopped volunteering for new projects and has been heard complaining about her boss and the company several times. She’s still considered a “good employee” though, so she hasn’t been written up or fired, but her co-workers try to avoid working with her. You can tell that her commitment to the job has declined but aren’t sure why or what to do about it.

The High Cost of Disengagement

According to McLean & Company, employee disengagement costs an organization approximately $3,400 for every $10,000 in salary. 

Disengagement also results in higher rates of turnover and lower productivity. According to MacLeod & Clark, companies with low engagement scores earn an operating income that is 32.7% lower than companies with higher rates of engagement!

Not to mention the effect on your company culture and the drag on your engaged employees. 

Employee engagement is critical for your company’s long-term success and profitability.

If you’re wondering if your employees are engaged, contact us today for a free consultation to learn more about our engagement surveys and solutions.

Filed Under: Future of Work, Leadership Tagged With: absenteeism, culture, employee, engage, engagement, negativity, productivity, profitability, quiet quitting, signs, success, work, workplace

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