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When we think of employee communication most organizations
focus on information tools. These include intranet sites, staff
magazines, CEO blog, Town Hall meetings and so on. Whilst all
these employee communication methods are to be applauded, they
inform employees about what is going on. To truly engage
employees in the process of change, for instance, a merger or
acquisition, a re-organization, financial results or corporate
social responsibility, employee communication methods need to be
designed to actively engage employees.
Employee engagement should always result in some positive
change of behaviour which will then lead to the achievement of
organizational goals. Just distributing information by any of
the above methods will not achieve the change in employee
behaviour and organizational outcomes you are looking for.
Here are 5 tips that will ensure that your employee
communication methods do achieve those outcomes.
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The first tip is to
establish
whether the tools and methods you are currently using to
communicate with employees are engagement strategies or
information tools. So gather all the tools used and identify
all the methods used, their frequency, intended audience,
whether they are one way or two way communication vehicles and
review the key messages.
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The second
tip is
important because your ultimate aim in employee communication
has to be to create the “Aha Moment”. The “Aha Moment” is
based on information that challenges the employee’s belief
about an aspect of the business.
The
information that suddenly helps employees say, “Now it makes
sense”, “Now I understand”, “Now I can do something about
it”. Once you know what the “Aha Moment” is this will form
your key message and the basis of your design of your employee
communication strategy.
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This third tip explains the best type of research to find out what
the “Aha Moment” is, and the best type for this purpose is
focus group research.
Focus group research allows you to ask employees about your
business and their thoughts on competitors, to identify the
largest gap between what customers think and what staff think
customers think, and to identify what would create a paradigm
shift in employee’s thinking. It also helps you identify
how you will measure the impact of the change in employees
thinking and to determine how significant it is to achieving
the business objectives.
Focus groups are a good format as they allow you to explore
issues further and sometimes you will discover issues or ideas
you hadn’t considered prior to the session. Focus groups
generally are held for one and a half hours duration and in
groups of 8 – 10 participants. As the facilitator, your role is
to lead the discussion but leave the actual dialogue to the
participants, bringing them back to the main issue if they have
gone off on a tangent or to ensure that all the topics that you
wanted to cover within the allocated timeframe are covered. A
well facilitated focus group will identify the key messages for
your employee communication strategies as they relate to a
particular business issue.
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The fourth tip is that
once you
have your focus group outcomes, you can then begin designing
employee communication strategies that engage employees. You
should have a clear understanding about what employees know
and what the facts are, and the gap between the business facts
and staff perceptions. This forms your key message to create
the “Aha Moment”.
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The fifth
tip is that you take the key information from the focus
groups, identify a business issue that you feel sure your
employee communication strategies can impact on. By using
that information and work together with that area of the
business you then implement an employee communication strategy
that can be measured by business outcomes.
Once you
have gathered all this information you then need to design
employee communication strategies that engage employees around
the one central message. Many of these employee communication
strategies will actively involve employees in some aspect of
change by designing communication methods that will require
employees to participate. These engagement strategies are then
supplemented by employee communication information tools.
Marcia
Xenitelis is a recognized authority on the subject on employee
communication and has spoken at conferences around the world.
For more information on the types of employee communication
strategies you can implement to engage employees visit her
website
www.employeecommunicationtips.com for a wealth of
informative articles and resources.
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