Create a Culture of Involvement and
Ownership Mentality
Some employees will act
as if the company is their own even if they
have no ownership interest. If they have
work on their desk at the end of the day
they routinely stay late and finish it
without being asked. They go the extra mile
because they want to; something inside is
driving them. You can develop a corporate
culture to motivate employees to act and
think like owners even if they have no
ownership interest. Companies with a
culture of employee involvement and
ownership mentality outperform the
competition because the employees contribute
ideas and information and move the company
forward to success.
It is critical that the
company’s leadership be committed to the
belief that employees are a strategic
advantage in attaining the goals of the
business.
The first step in
creating a culture of employee involvement
and ownership is to identify the actual
barriers to participation. Some effective
tools are employee surveys, focus groups,
interviews with managers and outside
consultants who evaluate work processes.
You can simply ask your employees two
questions:
- Are you familiar
with the company's strategy?
- Do you know what you
need to do in your position to move the
company forward?
The next step is to
begin treating the employees as owners with
regular and continuous communication.
Educate your employees about the company’s
direction and goals and the progress toward
those goals. Teach them what is important
for success, how to identify problems and,
most importantly, how to fix problems.
Listen to their suggestions for achieving
the goals and act on their suggestions; give
them what they need to achieve the goals.
Provide regular feedback and corrective
actions to keep the company on course for
success. Keep communications positive and
respectful – act like you are having a
discussion with an owner of the business.
You can ask questions such as:
- What are we doing
that moves the company forward?
- Is there anything we
are not doing that we should be doing?
- Is there anything
that needs more emphasis?
- Is there anything
that we should stop doing?
- What is required
from us from other departments in order
for them accomplish what they need to do
to move the company forward?
- How can we enlist
the support from other departments to help
us achieve our goals and objectives?
When all you do is present the strategy
to the rest of the company, you do not ask
the employees to think about the strategy
from their perspective — what does it mean
to their job? What does it mean to their
department on a day-to-day basis? By asking
each department to present what they had to
contribute to move the company forward, each
department and each individual has the
opportunity to think about the company
strategy in the terms of what they do on
a regular basis. By allowing the departments
to think on a more strategic level each
department will become focused on the key
activities of the organization and will
streamline their activities as a result of
this process.
Asking each department to make a
presentation will force each group to think
through clear objectives that could be
presented so that others in the company
would understand. This allows other
department's to better understand each
other's role in the company's success and
allows for more coordination.
Companies that provide
employee’s access to relevant operational
information leverage the knowledge and
ability of their employees. Many managers
still feel that information is power and
that sharing it compromises that power.
Sharing information
is critical to fully leverage the corporate resources.
In addition, employee
rewards must be aligned with business
strategy and goals. Equity ownership plans
are long-term incentives. Actual ownership
is achieved through long term equity
vehicles such as stock options, employee
stock ownership plans (ESOPs) and stock
matches to retirement plans. Phantom equity
plans or private stock exchanges can be
established to provide the same ownership
effect for private companies.
A company must have
short-term incentive programs that align the
employee’s interest to immediate operating
goals. It is critical to establish goals
for corporate success and reward only when
results are achieved. The compensation
system must support the company’s business
plan, strategy and goals. It must reinforce
the culture of employee involvement and
ownership mentality and it must reward
employees when they contribute to the
company’s success. For example, teamwork,
open communication, progress toward goals
and overall commitment should be rewarded.
The involvement and
ownership culture creates an environment
that includes employee awareness of
corporate value, improved performance,
improved communication, employee development
and employee contributions to corporate
objectives and goals. Do you think it is
worth it?