No one likes to be lectured in the workplace.
As a leader, you need to communicate with your employees to deliver
strategic direction, reinforce corporate culture and rally the troops to
achieve company goals and objectives. To be effective, you need to
deliver these messages in a way that creates energy and enthusiasm,
rather than deflating your team.
Here are four tips for talking to employees in a way that energizes them rather than depleting them:
1. Use humor. No matter how big or small your
operation may be, there is often tension and emotional distance between
the boss and employees. To diffuse that, I regularly use humor, a tactic
that makes me more approachable. In my experience, the best kind is
self-deprecating humor. When I showed up to meet new employees for the
first time at a Midwest location, I started the conversations by poking
fun at my pronounced "New Yawk" accent. It got a laugh and made me seem
more accessible.
2. Ask open-ended questions. And then be quiet. My
favorite question to ask is “Tell me about [insert topic here].” When
you ask a new employee about his ideas or a technologist about a new
device, you are asking them to do more than give you a pat sentence or
two in response. You have the opportunity to access that person’s deep
knowledge and passion. Ask a question that opens the conversation wide
and then hold still and listen.
3. Bring others into the conversation. A
boss-employee conversation may seem casual to the boss but can feel like
an interrogation to the employee. To diffuse this situation, I like to
bring others into the conversation to even out the experience. I may
turn a one-on-one discussion into a larger conversation by inviting
people to join us and share their thoughts and experiences. It benefits
me, because I get to hear more voices, and it helps put everyone else at
ease.
4. Let the little stuff slide. If you are the kind
of hands-on person who helped build the business from the ground up, you
probably have insight or advice on everything from the capital budget
to color of the carpet. But you don’t have to communicate every thought
to the staff. If it’s not an important critique, let it go. I visited a
flower shop in my company once and noticed the manager was not lining
the trashcans with plastic bags. I know from experience that liners make
the job easier, but I also know that I don’t need to communicate every
idea that comes into my head. It just creates a climate of nitpicking.
Conversations that take place up and down the food chain – between
supervisor and staff, people of different departments and the boss and
the new employee – are often the source of great new ideas.
As the boss, it’s your job to get those conversations started and
keep them going. You have a chance to make that happen (or achieve the
opposite) every time you open your mouth.
No comments:
Post a Comment