The happiness of business owners
may be more dependent on how happy their employees are than they realize.
Employees’ workplace attitudes can have a profound effect on many aspects of
company performance, ranging from on-the-job benchmarks such as productivity and
customer satisfaction to profitability and even stock price.
Sirota Survey Intelligence has conducted thousands of employee,
customer and supplier attitude surveys around the world since 1972. We have
found that companies with truly enthusiastic workforces are very rare. Only 14
percent of the firms we have studied can be described as having enthusiastic
employees. More than half of the workplaces we have surveyed (56 percent) have
merely satisfied employees, while workers in 14 percent can be characterized as
indifferent, and the remaining 16 percent as downright angry.
Our research shows repeatedly that the relationship between
morale and performance is reciprocal—a "virtuous circle." High employee morale
yields high performance, which, in turn, magnifies employee morale. Strong
employee morale can pay off in spades for a company. In both 2004 and 2005, the
stock prices of companies with high morale—those in which at least 70 percent of
workers expressed overall satisfaction with their organizations—outperformed
similar companies in their same industries by a ratio of 2.5 to 1. Meanwhile,
the stock prices of companies with medium or low morale lagged behind their
industry peers by greater than 1.5 to 1.
Why is high employee morale so strongly related to stock
prices? Morale is a direct consequence of being treated well by a company, and
employees return the "gift" of good treatment with higher productivity and work
quality, lower turnover, a decrease in workers shirking their duties and a
superior pool of job applicants. These gains translate directly into higher
company profitability.
By their actions, management inadvertently destroys the enthusiasm almost
all new employees bring to their positions and companies. | There are three factors that fuel employee enthusiasm: fair
treatment, such as equitable wages and benefits or laying off people only when
other alternatives have been exhausted; a sense of achievement or pride in one’s
job performance and company; and camaraderie among coworkers. And these factors
seem to have a cumulative effect. Our research shows that employees are four
times more enthusiastic about their jobs when all three of these elements are
present in the workplace, rather than only two of these. Employees are 15 times
more enthusiastic when all three factors are present in the workplace than when
only one factor is present.
The Morale Morass Many leaders fail to recognize that enthusiasm is the natural
state of employees and, by their actions, management inadvertently destroys the
enthusiasm almost all new employees bring to their positions and companies. Our
research clearly shows a measurable decline in morale in employees after they
have been working for an organization for six months. This deterioration worsens
as workers gain additional experience.
At most workplaces, management unwittingly demotivates
employees by treating them as something disposable and nearly invisible, like
paper clips. Specific attitudes and behaviors that contribute to this negative
culture include considering employees expendable at the first sign of business
difficulty; treating the vast majority as lazy and unreasonable in their
demands; and failing to provide adequate recognition and reward for
contributions.
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