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Jim Haudan
Chief Executive Officer
Root Learning, Inc. |
Employees as Customers: Discovering What’s Relevant |
For the first time in history,
companies are experiencing four generations of people
working side by side, where the age difference may be
50 years or more. You might find an employee who
played a direct part in World War II on a team with one
who knows nothing about the significance of the Berlin
Wall to his teammate.
Just as customer markets are segmented, employee
generations must be segmented if we are to truly
understand their needs, wants, and motivations. For
starters, we need to understand how all four generations
– World War II, Boomers, Gen Xers, and Millennials –
access, receive, and interpret information. We simply
can’t approach them all in the same way.
Employees as Markets of One
Mass marketers know that mass communication misses
its mark because it’s aimed at a target that no longer
exists. The same is true for mass communication to
employees. However, the best marketers believe in
the “segment of one,” where each customer receives
products that they believe are designed specifically
for them. This thinking is needed more than ever in
organizations trying to tap into the discretionary talent
of their people – especially in a down economy where
fear and doubt abound.
Consider how you interest customers: You find out
what’s meaningful to them. This is your responsibility
because relevance is always defined by the customer, not
the provider. The only way to assure relevance is to see
the business from the view of the “customer” and use
that view to continually engage them. Relevance is at the
heart of seeing employees as customers to maximize
their engagement and ensure that strategy is translated
into a meaningful language.
Leader as Translator
The first step in establishing relevance is communicating
in a way people can understand. “People who work at a
company should want to do a good job because they’re
getting paid” is flawed thinking. Think of a leader as a
translator of the strategic stories of the business.
In working with hundreds of companies, the two most
frequent lines we’ve heard at the manager and frontline
levels are “I don’t understand what I should do
differently” and “I don’t know what I need to do to
contribute.” In cases like these, a leader has failed to
translate the strategy into appropriate future actions.
No employees can execute a strategy that they don’t
understand and that has no connection to them.
Bringing Relevance to Engagement
I once asked a teacher about her curriculum. “How do
you decide what to teach?” I asked. After avoiding a
straight answer, she admitted, “I teach what I like.” My
follow-up questions were, “What if what you like isn’t
what your students like? If you teach what you like,
whose role is it to bring the relevance of learning to the
students?” The teacher was unfazed by my belief that it
was her role to uncover relevance rather than to expect
the students to bring it. In the same way, the leader
needs to focus on what is meaningful to employees.
So I put this to the test the next day with my son Blake,
then in fifth grade.
“What did you learn in school today?” I asked.
“Nothing,” he replied. “The teacher showed us a movie.”
“So, Blake,” I said, “what are you curious about?”
He thought a moment and then said, “How does Caller
ID know who’s calling?”
I said, “I’ll get back to you on that. What else?”
“Well, where does the color come from in bubble bath?”
“I don’t know. What else are you curious about?”
His next question blew me away. He said, “Well, Dad,
as you go higher, there’s less oxygen, right? And when
you make a fire, you need oxygen for the fire to burn.
So if the sun is so high and there’s no oxygen up there,
how come it burns so brightly?”
As I pondered this question, I couldn’t imagine a more
engaging and enticing way to design a curriculum for
any age than by starting with what students are curious
about.
What does a story about a fifth-grader have to do with
employees as customers? We need to ask people what
they’re curious about, and what strategic questions they
want answered. When leaders can capture people’s
imagination, they engage employees in an entirely new,
exciting way. But when leaders don’t uncover what
people want to know, a huge opportunity to help them
“get it” is lost – just as the opportunity is missed when
what we create for our customers isn’t relevant to their
needs and their questions.
Jim Haudan’s book, The Art of Engagement: Bridging the Gap Between People and Possibilities, is on USA Today’s Money
Bookshelf bestseller list. It’s now available at www.rootsofengagement.com
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