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Who's Lee?

  • Lee Smith is a UK-based employee comms specialist. He is Chair of CIPR Inside and a director of Gatehouse, a consultancy which helps organisations improve their internal communications, engage employees and drive through change. Lee is a visiting lecturer at a number of UK universities, is a Fellow of the Chartered Institute of Public Relations and holds an MSc in Corporate Communication and Reputation Management.

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August 30, 2007

Copacabana call centres?

According to new research, it might just be time to move our call centres to Brazil...

Dr Garry Gelade of Cass Business School has recently undertaken research which suggests that employee commitment is higher in 'happier' countries. Dr Gelade studied national differences in organisational commitment across 49 countries and looked at the impact of the economy, national personality, and cultural values. 

Brazil, Israel and Cyprus were ranked as the countries with the most committed employees, and at the other end of the scale, Russia, Japan and Hong Kong had the lowest.  The UK was ranked 34th, preceded by Estonia and followed by Taiwan.  Australia, the Netherlands and Switzerland were ranked as the happiest, while Latvia, Bulgaria the Russian Federation were the least happy.

Dr Gelade found that commitment is higher in countries where the population is ‘extrovert’, and lower in countries where the population is ‘neurotic’, that is, more prone to negative tendencies, such as anxiety.   As a result, commitment is also high in countries where the population is happy. 

With the exception of the most global of corporations, I'm not sure what we can do with this new found wisdom, but it's nevertheless a fascinating piece of research.  Who knows, perhaps this could spark a new trend in exotic off shoring? 

Thanks to Suzanne Peck, CiB chair, for spotting the research - I read about it in her 'Chairman's blog' this month. 

August 16, 2006

Poor cross-team communication blamed for UK productivity gap

Poor cross-team communication is the primary cause of poor productivity in the UK and elsewhere, according to the results of a survey of more than 800 executives in 19 countries.

The 2006 Proudfoot Productivity Report, a piece of research commissioned by Proudfoot Consulting and the Conference Board in the US, is a robust study combining a wealth of proprietary performance data with the results of a detailed executive opinion survey.

The results make interesting reading and point towards some of the performance drivers and barriers that exist inside organisations. If you click on the link above you'll be able to access the report itself, together with detailed results, press releases, etc.

Two points jump out for me:

  1. Over a three year period the UK is amongst the worst performing nations, 'losing' an equivalent to 36 days per worker, per year.  It seems that, despite making great strides in employee communication and engagement in recent years, we're still pants when it comes to workforce productivity. This is no surprise (various engagement studies show the UK to be near the bottom of the pile too) but it's still quite sobering.   
  2. The survey suggests that poor internal communication is to blame but appears to have only asked respondents about cross-team communication (the question asked was "How do communications problems (internal between departments) contribute to the inefficiency of your organisation?")  It's a real shame Proudfoot didn't ask more questions about other aspects of internal communication - communication of strategy, effectiveness of line managers, visibility of leaders, etc.  Now that would have made a really interesting read...

One question this does prompt is how much time and effort do we internal communicators put into improving inter-team communication?  In my experience it's very little. Most teams concentrate on communication across the whole organisation and between various hierarchical levels (leader to troops, line manager to subordinate, supervisor to front line employee, and so on). I don't know of many that are focused on improving communication between teams, business units, divisions or subsidiaries. 

Given it's obvious importance to productivity, and the fact that many communicators I talk to still complain about employees having a 'silo mentality',  it's probably an area we should all concentrate on in the future.

July 20, 2006

Engagement in the UK - mixed signals

The Work Foundation published an interesting little study today.

The organisation surveyed 1000 workers across the UK and found that the majority (around two thirds) said they gained a sense of personal fulfilment from their jobs. Better still, 78% said they found their work "stimulating and challenging" and a whopping 86% diagreed with the statement "I regard my work as meaningless". The bad news? Just over half all respondents (51%) described their work as "a means to an end".

This is a stark reminder that, although work plays a huge part in people's lives, it remains for many a necessary evil - simply a way to make a living and earn a crust.

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