More than 9 in 10 employees are disengaged when organizations don’t implement change well

Ninety-four percent of employees who report that change was not handled well in their organizations are disengaged, according to a global study by Right Management. The research identifies the factors critical to change implementation effectiveness and the correlation with employee engagement. For employees who said leadership managed change effectively, only 40 percent were disengaged. Right Management is the talent and career management expert within Manpower.

Right Management’s white paper summarizing the key findings, titled Ready, Get Set…Change! The Impact of Change on Workforce Productivity and Engagement, draws from research of 28,000 employees in 15 countries. The paper serves to demystify the change process and highlight key engagement drivers that senior leaders can use to effectively improve change management initiatives and results.

Employee engagement is a key driver of organizational effectiveness and directly impacts productivity and profitability, said Deborah Schroeder-Saulnier, senior vice president for Global Solutions at Right Management. It’s a critical measure of person-organization alignment, expressed as employee satisfaction, commitment, pride and advocacy. Disengaged employees negatively impact productivity, customer retention, morale and satisfaction on the job.

Schroeder-Saulnier notes that change is necessary for companies to evolve and respond to dynamic market conditions. Given the constant need to navigate rapid change, such as organization restructurings, revamped product lines or the appointment of a new leader, it is imperative that organizations introduce systems to help their entire workforce to participate in and adapt to change, she said. Leaders need to involve their workforce in change, not just impose it. They can be more effective in implementing changes by understanding behaviors that create obstacles. Agile organizations can be trained to embrace change, not only as a one-time event, but on an ongoing basis.

Key findings from the global study include:

  • Best performing organizations manage change nearly four times more effectively. In top-performing companies (defined as those achieving higher revenue and above-average customer loyalty profit results), 60 percent of employees responded that change is handled effectively in my organization, compared to 16 percent of employees in below-average performing organizations.
  • Less than half (43 percent) of employees are confident in their organization’s change process. One in three employees believes their organization does not handle change effectively.
  • The biggest downfall for senior leaders is the perception that they do not follow through on what they say they will do. Less than half (47 percent) agreed that senior leaders communicated change effectively; 54 percent of employees doubted senior leaders’ ability to respond appropriately to changing external conditions.
  • Organizations that do not manage change well are four times more likely to lose talent. Twenty percent of employees who perceived change was not handled effectively indicated they planned to leave within one year versus only 5 percent of employees who held a favorable view. The latter planned to stay for at least five years.
  • Ineffective change management can lead to lower levels of job confidence. Of the employees who reported that change management was not handled well, 45 percent expressed favorable feelings about not losing their job within 12 months, while 32 percent did not. This is in stark contrast to organizations with effective change management, where 80 percent of respondents had positive feelings about keeping their job versus only 7 percent who did not.
  • Ineffective change management negatively impacts an organization’s ability to attract talent. When employees reported that change was managed poorly in their organizations, 75 percent of respondents had concerns with their company’s ability to attract talent.

Schroeder-Saulnier notes that employees are not always prepared to successfully embrace change, thwarting the organization’s ability to meet objectives. Change is often perceived as threatening and can be distracting and disruptive to your organization’s ability to operate efficiently,she said. Employees need to be treated as more than passive recipients of change.

Source: Right Management; www.right.com.

Reprinted with permission. © CCH

 

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