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Brenda Wilson
Business Leader
Human Capital
Hong Kong
Employee Engagement
What managers need to know?
Mercer 2
Overview
Section I: What is ‘Employee Engagement’?
– Employee Engagement Defined
– What Managers Can Do to Improve Engagement
Section II: How to improve employee engagement in your department?
– Key Drivers of Engagement
Section III: A case study in the public sector
– Experience Sharing with our Project with Singapore Government
Section IV: Key Takeaways
Section I
Employee Engagement
What is it?
Mercer 4
Let’s vote: what’s your view?
Q: What is the definition of employee
engagement?
Select one answer:
1. A new management technique to get your employees to do
what you tell them … the first time.
2. When two employees plan to get married.
3. An internal party for employees: “Hey Joe, are you going to
that employee engagement at 2:00 p.m.?”
4. All of the above (they all sound good)
Mercer 5
Engagement Defined
 What is employee engagement?
– A psychological state in which employees feel a
vested interest in the company’s success and are
both willing and motivated to perform to levels that
exceed the stated job requirements.
– Engagement fosters and drives discretionary
behavior, eliciting employees’ highest productivity,
their best ideas and their genuine commitment to the
success of the organization.
Mercer 6
Engagement Defined
EngagementCommitmentMotivationSatisfaction
Morale
1960 1980 2000
TIME
 Enjoys the job
 Is not
dissatisfied
with terms and
conditions
 Not
necessarily a
team player
 Strives to
achieve
personal goals
 Contributes
energetically
 Values
achieving
personal goals
more than team/
organizational
goals
 Proactively seeks
opportunities to serve
the mission of the
organization
 Willing to go the “extra
mile”
 Is willing to withhold
criticism and/or be
constructively critical
for the good of the
organization
 Loyal to
organization,
optimistic for the
future
 Collaborates to
achieve team
goals
 Has a sense of
belonging to
organization
Mercer 7
Engagement Defined: How’re you doing?
Check your level of engagement
 Getting satisfaction from the tasks required in their job?
 Feeling valued by management?
 Contributing energetically, not in isolation, but collaboratively?
 Positive about the work experience – your employer, its leaders, the work and the
environment?
 Ambitious for the organization?
 Speaking positively about the organization’s goods and services?
 Planning to continue to work for the organization?
 Going beyond the stated requirements of the job and contribute ‘discretionary
effort’?
Yes No
Are you…
Are you engaged?
Mercer 8
From Satisfaction to Engagement
Mercer’s Employee Engagement Model©
Engagement Model
Advocate
Motivated Satisfied
Satisfied employees perform
their jobs and are satisfied with
the terms and conditions of
employment. However, they
tend not to go “above and
beyond” in their efforts.
In addition to sharing some of
the attributes of satisfied
employees, motivated workers
contribute energetically and
are highly focused individual
contributors to the
organization.
Committed
Committed employees have
thoroughly internalized the
values and behaviors
represented by the earlier
stages of the engagement
model, but have also forged a
strong identification with the
organization.
They freely contribute
discretionary effort – a willingness
to go the extra distance in
executing projects and their
regular duties. They see a
mutuality of interest between his
or her values and aspirations and
those of the organization.
Mercer 9
Let’s vote: what’s your view?
Q: What can manager’s do to improve
employee engagement?
Select one answer:
1. Act like cupid: every one loves a good engagement.
2. Give more work, hard work, and lots of it!
3. Use fear to scare your employees into being very satisfied at
work.
4. None of the above – there is nothing a manager can do.
Mercer 10
From Satisfaction to Engagement
What can managers do?
Satisfied:
 Provide work tools, resources and equipment
 Enhance the work environment
 Reward (reward level and understanding of the
rationale for reward change)
 Recognize work efforts
Mercer 11
Motivated:
 Establish fair performance goals
 Communicate clear expectations
 Regularly clarify priorities and feedback
 Provide support by removing obstacles to
optimal performance
 Recognize and reward performance
 Delegate work to theses employees
 Support skill development
From Satisfaction to Engagement
What can managers do?
Mercer 12
Committed:
 Help employees build meaningful long-term
careers
 Ensure recognition and reward for long term
commitment
 Listen to employees, share insights and
experience
 Ensure fairness, consistency and transparency
 Develop understanding of long-term vision and
business plans
 Promote organization values and reinforce them
through management behaviors
From Satisfaction to Engagement
What can managers do?
Mercer 13
Advocate:
 Communicate the organization's progress and
challenges
 Relate business results to team and individual
roles
 Endorse strong customer focus
 Share understanding of customer needs with
team
 Challenge and grow through delegation
 Establish comprehensive career development
plans
 Encourage upward communication
 Encourage innovation
 Recognize and reward
From Satisfaction to Engagement
What can managers do?
Mercer 14
We’ve always had a policy of trying to put our staff first.
The staff should come first, the customers (the public) second and
your shareholders (stakeholders/ tax payers) third.
If you take that approach you’ll find that everyone wins.
Happy staff result in happy customers, lots of happy
customers result in happy shareholders.
Richard Branson, CEO Virgin Group
“
”
Section II
Key Drivers of Employee Engagement
Mercer 16
National Differences in Engagement Drivers
 Over the last several years, the Mercer’s What’s WorkingTM studies have
been tracking the drivers of engagement across countries
United Kingdom
Engagement
Sense of personal accomplishment
Confidence in senior management
Opportunities for training
Paid fairly, given performance
Good reputation
for customer service
Regular performance feedback
Comparable benefits to industry
Cooperation between groups
China
Sense of personal accomplishment
Paid fairly, given performance
Comparable benefits to industry
Confidence in senior management
IT systems support business needs
Opportunities for training
Regular performance feedback
What’s
working in
Hong Kong?
Mercer 17
Let’s Vote: What’s your view?
Q: Apart from pay, which ONE element
do you think is the most important
driver of employee engagement?
Select one answer:
1. Sense of personal accomplishment
2. Benefits
3. Career opportunity
4. Sufficient channels for communication
5. Confidence in senior management
6. Training and development opportunities
Mercer 18
Key Drivers of Employee Engagement
 Although there are some country-specific drivers, a consistent set of
engagement drivers is emerging globally
2007
 The work itself,
including opportunities
to develop
 Confidence and trust in
leadership
 Rewards & recognition
 Communication
Employee
Engagement
Mercer 19
Key Drivers of Engagement
Organizational Context
 Growth
 Privatisation
 Restructuring/downsizing
 Merger and integration
 Employee demographics
Drivers of engagement vary by …
Industry
 High technology
 Retail
 Financial services
 Professional services
 Civil Service
Country
Section III
Case Study – Singapore Civil Service
Mercer 21
The economic landscape is changing…
 Strong year-on-year growth in GDP in
Singapore
The implications on the employment market…
 Increased growth across sectors
 Competition for talent intensifying
 Increasingly becoming an employee’s market
Singapore Civil Service
Why Engagement is so Critical…
How do we continue to retain
employees in the Public
Sector?
 Compensation is critical, but it’s not
everything
 Needed to understand the drivers of
employee engagement in the public
sector for talent retention
?
Mercer 22
Approach
 In 2005, Mercer established an employee engagement survey, The Singapore
Public Sector Employee Engagement Survey (PS EES) for 20+ agencies
 The survey yielded 3,743 data points, sampled from 46 individual public sector
agencies
 Regression analysis was conducted to identify key drivers to engagement
 Overall engagement was measured by the following four questions:
– I am proud to work for my organization
– I would recommend my organization to others
– Given a choice, how much longer will I be working for my organization
– How satisfied am I with my organization at the present time
Leadership / Climate Supervisory Practices Career Advancement Job Growth
Job Motivation Learning & Development Teamwork Workload
Engagement Rewards Performance Management & Feedback
11 engagement categories
Mercer 23
Employee
Engagement
2007 Key Drivers 2005 Key Drivers
R²=.67 R²=.64
pr = partial correlation, a measure of statistical relationship
R² = coefficient of determination, denotes variation of dependent variable explained by independent variables
Results
Leadership/ Climate
pr = .44
Career Advancement
pr = .38
Job Motivation
pr = .25
Job Motivation
pr = .34
Leadership/ Climate
pr = .27
Career Advancement
pr = .26
Workload
pr = .08
Rewards
pr = .06
 Compensation almost never rated in top three drivers at over 20 agencies for
senior and mid-level staff but was within the top three drivers for junior staff
Mercer 24
Statistically significant drivers of
engagement – by category
pr = .38
pr = .44
pr =.25
Employee
Engagement
• The strength of leadership
in the organization
• Opportunities for growth,
development and long-
term career potential
• Being intrinsically
motivated by the work
you do
These items accounted for 67% of the variance in Employee Engagement (R²=.67)
A total of three items were uncovered as statistically significant
key drivers employee engagement at the category level
Leadership/ Climate
Career Advancement
Job Motivation
Mercer 25
R²=.61
Employee
Engagement
• I am proud to work for
my organization
• I would recommend my
organization to others
• Given a choice, how
much longer will I be
working for my
organization
• How satisfied am I with
my organization at the
present time
Statistically significant drivers of
engagement – by item
Item Level Drivers
 A total of five items were uncovered as
statistically significant key drivers of Employee
Engagement at the overall level
 The key drivers of Employee Engagement
center around:
- The work itself giving them a feeling
of personal accomplishment
- Employees’ belief that they have
opportunities for growth and
development in their organizations
- Employee perceptions that senior
management proactively confronts
issues before they become major problems
- Employee perceptions that the values of
their organisation are evident in people’s
actions
- Employee perceptions that their
organisation has established a good
reputation for customer service
Leadership/ Climate
Q. Org values are demonstrated
by employees
Leadership/ Climate
Q. Snr Mgmt does a good job of
confronting issues
Job Motivation
Q. Feeling of personal
accomplishment
Career Advancement
Q. Opportunity for growth
& development
Leadership/ Climate
Q. Org has established a good reputation
for customer service
pr = .24
pr = .33
pr =.16
pr = .36
pr = .18
pr = partial correlation, a measure of statistical relationship
R² = coefficient of determination, denotes variation of dependent variable explained by independent variables
Section IV
Closing remarks
Mercer 27
Key takeaways
 Compensation is important, but it isn’t everything and for the
Singapore Civil Service it didn’t factor significantly in the results for most
levels of the workforce.
 In order to increase levels of engagement, managers need to
understand the drivers of engagement.
– Are your employees satisfied, motivated, committed or an advocate for
the Hong Kong Civil Service?
– What can you do to help improve your employee’s engagement?
 Key drivers of engagement may vary from industries, organization
contexts, and from country to country: do you know what is driving or
eroding your employee engagement?
 Managers can take an active role in engaging the workforce through
various non-financial means leading to better performance and happier
employees who advocate for the government and the public.
Contact
Brenda Wilson
Human Capital, Hong Kong
Tel +852 2115 3312
Brenda.Wilson@mercer.com
Mercer 29
Employee engagement categories
 Leadership / Climate – refers to the senior management team as a whole and perceived clarity in communicating organizational
strategy, ability in confronting issues, demonstrating organizational values and concern for employees as well as management of the
organization as a whole
 Supervisory Practices – refers to respondents’ immediate supervisor in terms of perceived competence, availability for consultation,
honest communication and frequency of feedback
 Career Advancement - refers to perceived opportunities in career development as well as long-term career prospects in the
organization and the public sector in general
 Job Growth – refers to staff perceived value of activities outside their scope of work contributing to their personal development of
organizational excellence
 Job Motivation – refers to perceived levels of personal satisfaction, adequate autonomy, interesting challenges and relevant use of
their skills and abilities
 Learning & Development – refers to staff perceived value of activities outside their scope of work contributing to their personal
development of organizational excellence
 Teamwork – refers to respondents’ attitude towards people in the organization and perceived levels of cooperation within the work
group and across divisions/ institutions
 Workload – refers to perceived reasonable levels of work, adequate manpower and ability in maintaining balance between work and
personal life
 Performance Management & Feedback – refers to employee level of understanding, perceived equity and flexibility of the PM system,
ability to recognize and reward deserving staff and the level of feedback and communication
 Rewards - refers to perceived fairness of compensation and other issues of external competitiveness and internal equity
 Engagement – refers to staff level of satisfaction and pride for the organization as well as intent to stay and recommendation of the
organization as a good place of employment

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Employee_engagement-what_managers_need_to_know

  • 1. Brenda Wilson Business Leader Human Capital Hong Kong Employee Engagement What managers need to know?
  • 2. Mercer 2 Overview Section I: What is ‘Employee Engagement’? – Employee Engagement Defined – What Managers Can Do to Improve Engagement Section II: How to improve employee engagement in your department? – Key Drivers of Engagement Section III: A case study in the public sector – Experience Sharing with our Project with Singapore Government Section IV: Key Takeaways
  • 4. Mercer 4 Let’s vote: what’s your view? Q: What is the definition of employee engagement? Select one answer: 1. A new management technique to get your employees to do what you tell them … the first time. 2. When two employees plan to get married. 3. An internal party for employees: “Hey Joe, are you going to that employee engagement at 2:00 p.m.?” 4. All of the above (they all sound good)
  • 5. Mercer 5 Engagement Defined  What is employee engagement? – A psychological state in which employees feel a vested interest in the company’s success and are both willing and motivated to perform to levels that exceed the stated job requirements. – Engagement fosters and drives discretionary behavior, eliciting employees’ highest productivity, their best ideas and their genuine commitment to the success of the organization.
  • 6. Mercer 6 Engagement Defined EngagementCommitmentMotivationSatisfaction Morale 1960 1980 2000 TIME  Enjoys the job  Is not dissatisfied with terms and conditions  Not necessarily a team player  Strives to achieve personal goals  Contributes energetically  Values achieving personal goals more than team/ organizational goals  Proactively seeks opportunities to serve the mission of the organization  Willing to go the “extra mile”  Is willing to withhold criticism and/or be constructively critical for the good of the organization  Loyal to organization, optimistic for the future  Collaborates to achieve team goals  Has a sense of belonging to organization
  • 7. Mercer 7 Engagement Defined: How’re you doing? Check your level of engagement  Getting satisfaction from the tasks required in their job?  Feeling valued by management?  Contributing energetically, not in isolation, but collaboratively?  Positive about the work experience – your employer, its leaders, the work and the environment?  Ambitious for the organization?  Speaking positively about the organization’s goods and services?  Planning to continue to work for the organization?  Going beyond the stated requirements of the job and contribute ‘discretionary effort’? Yes No Are you… Are you engaged?
  • 8. Mercer 8 From Satisfaction to Engagement Mercer’s Employee Engagement Model© Engagement Model Advocate Motivated Satisfied Satisfied employees perform their jobs and are satisfied with the terms and conditions of employment. However, they tend not to go “above and beyond” in their efforts. In addition to sharing some of the attributes of satisfied employees, motivated workers contribute energetically and are highly focused individual contributors to the organization. Committed Committed employees have thoroughly internalized the values and behaviors represented by the earlier stages of the engagement model, but have also forged a strong identification with the organization. They freely contribute discretionary effort – a willingness to go the extra distance in executing projects and their regular duties. They see a mutuality of interest between his or her values and aspirations and those of the organization.
  • 9. Mercer 9 Let’s vote: what’s your view? Q: What can manager’s do to improve employee engagement? Select one answer: 1. Act like cupid: every one loves a good engagement. 2. Give more work, hard work, and lots of it! 3. Use fear to scare your employees into being very satisfied at work. 4. None of the above – there is nothing a manager can do.
  • 10. Mercer 10 From Satisfaction to Engagement What can managers do? Satisfied:  Provide work tools, resources and equipment  Enhance the work environment  Reward (reward level and understanding of the rationale for reward change)  Recognize work efforts
  • 11. Mercer 11 Motivated:  Establish fair performance goals  Communicate clear expectations  Regularly clarify priorities and feedback  Provide support by removing obstacles to optimal performance  Recognize and reward performance  Delegate work to theses employees  Support skill development From Satisfaction to Engagement What can managers do?
  • 12. Mercer 12 Committed:  Help employees build meaningful long-term careers  Ensure recognition and reward for long term commitment  Listen to employees, share insights and experience  Ensure fairness, consistency and transparency  Develop understanding of long-term vision and business plans  Promote organization values and reinforce them through management behaviors From Satisfaction to Engagement What can managers do?
  • 13. Mercer 13 Advocate:  Communicate the organization's progress and challenges  Relate business results to team and individual roles  Endorse strong customer focus  Share understanding of customer needs with team  Challenge and grow through delegation  Establish comprehensive career development plans  Encourage upward communication  Encourage innovation  Recognize and reward From Satisfaction to Engagement What can managers do?
  • 14. Mercer 14 We’ve always had a policy of trying to put our staff first. The staff should come first, the customers (the public) second and your shareholders (stakeholders/ tax payers) third. If you take that approach you’ll find that everyone wins. Happy staff result in happy customers, lots of happy customers result in happy shareholders. Richard Branson, CEO Virgin Group “ ”
  • 15. Section II Key Drivers of Employee Engagement
  • 16. Mercer 16 National Differences in Engagement Drivers  Over the last several years, the Mercer’s What’s WorkingTM studies have been tracking the drivers of engagement across countries United Kingdom Engagement Sense of personal accomplishment Confidence in senior management Opportunities for training Paid fairly, given performance Good reputation for customer service Regular performance feedback Comparable benefits to industry Cooperation between groups China Sense of personal accomplishment Paid fairly, given performance Comparable benefits to industry Confidence in senior management IT systems support business needs Opportunities for training Regular performance feedback What’s working in Hong Kong?
  • 17. Mercer 17 Let’s Vote: What’s your view? Q: Apart from pay, which ONE element do you think is the most important driver of employee engagement? Select one answer: 1. Sense of personal accomplishment 2. Benefits 3. Career opportunity 4. Sufficient channels for communication 5. Confidence in senior management 6. Training and development opportunities
  • 18. Mercer 18 Key Drivers of Employee Engagement  Although there are some country-specific drivers, a consistent set of engagement drivers is emerging globally 2007  The work itself, including opportunities to develop  Confidence and trust in leadership  Rewards & recognition  Communication Employee Engagement
  • 19. Mercer 19 Key Drivers of Engagement Organizational Context  Growth  Privatisation  Restructuring/downsizing  Merger and integration  Employee demographics Drivers of engagement vary by … Industry  High technology  Retail  Financial services  Professional services  Civil Service Country
  • 20. Section III Case Study – Singapore Civil Service
  • 21. Mercer 21 The economic landscape is changing…  Strong year-on-year growth in GDP in Singapore The implications on the employment market…  Increased growth across sectors  Competition for talent intensifying  Increasingly becoming an employee’s market Singapore Civil Service Why Engagement is so Critical… How do we continue to retain employees in the Public Sector?  Compensation is critical, but it’s not everything  Needed to understand the drivers of employee engagement in the public sector for talent retention ?
  • 22. Mercer 22 Approach  In 2005, Mercer established an employee engagement survey, The Singapore Public Sector Employee Engagement Survey (PS EES) for 20+ agencies  The survey yielded 3,743 data points, sampled from 46 individual public sector agencies  Regression analysis was conducted to identify key drivers to engagement  Overall engagement was measured by the following four questions: – I am proud to work for my organization – I would recommend my organization to others – Given a choice, how much longer will I be working for my organization – How satisfied am I with my organization at the present time Leadership / Climate Supervisory Practices Career Advancement Job Growth Job Motivation Learning & Development Teamwork Workload Engagement Rewards Performance Management & Feedback 11 engagement categories
  • 23. Mercer 23 Employee Engagement 2007 Key Drivers 2005 Key Drivers R²=.67 R²=.64 pr = partial correlation, a measure of statistical relationship R² = coefficient of determination, denotes variation of dependent variable explained by independent variables Results Leadership/ Climate pr = .44 Career Advancement pr = .38 Job Motivation pr = .25 Job Motivation pr = .34 Leadership/ Climate pr = .27 Career Advancement pr = .26 Workload pr = .08 Rewards pr = .06  Compensation almost never rated in top three drivers at over 20 agencies for senior and mid-level staff but was within the top three drivers for junior staff
  • 24. Mercer 24 Statistically significant drivers of engagement – by category pr = .38 pr = .44 pr =.25 Employee Engagement • The strength of leadership in the organization • Opportunities for growth, development and long- term career potential • Being intrinsically motivated by the work you do These items accounted for 67% of the variance in Employee Engagement (R²=.67) A total of three items were uncovered as statistically significant key drivers employee engagement at the category level Leadership/ Climate Career Advancement Job Motivation
  • 25. Mercer 25 R²=.61 Employee Engagement • I am proud to work for my organization • I would recommend my organization to others • Given a choice, how much longer will I be working for my organization • How satisfied am I with my organization at the present time Statistically significant drivers of engagement – by item Item Level Drivers  A total of five items were uncovered as statistically significant key drivers of Employee Engagement at the overall level  The key drivers of Employee Engagement center around: - The work itself giving them a feeling of personal accomplishment - Employees’ belief that they have opportunities for growth and development in their organizations - Employee perceptions that senior management proactively confronts issues before they become major problems - Employee perceptions that the values of their organisation are evident in people’s actions - Employee perceptions that their organisation has established a good reputation for customer service Leadership/ Climate Q. Org values are demonstrated by employees Leadership/ Climate Q. Snr Mgmt does a good job of confronting issues Job Motivation Q. Feeling of personal accomplishment Career Advancement Q. Opportunity for growth & development Leadership/ Climate Q. Org has established a good reputation for customer service pr = .24 pr = .33 pr =.16 pr = .36 pr = .18 pr = partial correlation, a measure of statistical relationship R² = coefficient of determination, denotes variation of dependent variable explained by independent variables
  • 27. Mercer 27 Key takeaways  Compensation is important, but it isn’t everything and for the Singapore Civil Service it didn’t factor significantly in the results for most levels of the workforce.  In order to increase levels of engagement, managers need to understand the drivers of engagement. – Are your employees satisfied, motivated, committed or an advocate for the Hong Kong Civil Service? – What can you do to help improve your employee’s engagement?  Key drivers of engagement may vary from industries, organization contexts, and from country to country: do you know what is driving or eroding your employee engagement?  Managers can take an active role in engaging the workforce through various non-financial means leading to better performance and happier employees who advocate for the government and the public.
  • 28. Contact Brenda Wilson Human Capital, Hong Kong Tel +852 2115 3312 Brenda.Wilson@mercer.com
  • 29. Mercer 29 Employee engagement categories  Leadership / Climate – refers to the senior management team as a whole and perceived clarity in communicating organizational strategy, ability in confronting issues, demonstrating organizational values and concern for employees as well as management of the organization as a whole  Supervisory Practices – refers to respondents’ immediate supervisor in terms of perceived competence, availability for consultation, honest communication and frequency of feedback  Career Advancement - refers to perceived opportunities in career development as well as long-term career prospects in the organization and the public sector in general  Job Growth – refers to staff perceived value of activities outside their scope of work contributing to their personal development of organizational excellence  Job Motivation – refers to perceived levels of personal satisfaction, adequate autonomy, interesting challenges and relevant use of their skills and abilities  Learning & Development – refers to staff perceived value of activities outside their scope of work contributing to their personal development of organizational excellence  Teamwork – refers to respondents’ attitude towards people in the organization and perceived levels of cooperation within the work group and across divisions/ institutions  Workload – refers to perceived reasonable levels of work, adequate manpower and ability in maintaining balance between work and personal life  Performance Management & Feedback – refers to employee level of understanding, perceived equity and flexibility of the PM system, ability to recognize and reward deserving staff and the level of feedback and communication  Rewards - refers to perceived fairness of compensation and other issues of external competitiveness and internal equity  Engagement – refers to staff level of satisfaction and pride for the organization as well as intent to stay and recommendation of the organization as a good place of employment