The Importance of Employee Autonomy
The case for giving employees autonomy in how to carry out their work has been backed up by psychological and management research for more than half a century. It may surprise you just how strong the case isâuntil you look in the mirror and think about what you would require to do great work face to face with customers every day.
First off, people need a reason to wake up in the morningâand ââthey pay meââ is hardly the ideal alarm clock. Think about it this way: Letâs assume an employer pays approximately the same wage as competing employers do. But the employer also prescribes exactly how the job should be done, when it should be done, and where it should be done. Does this employerâs approximately-the-same-as-everyone-elseâs wage really carry the day in this situation?
Unlikely. An employee with half a brain (and, by and large, thatâs the minimum cranial content to look for in an employee) will sprint to any employer offering more freedom, freedom that includes:
- Flexibility in when the job gets done (donât tell me that parents who need to work an unconventional schedule are lesser workers; it just ainât true)
- Even more important, flexibility in how the job gets done: both on a day-to-day basis and in having a part in designing the overall structure of the work activities. This is an ethical imperative. If you donât involve people in designing the jobs to which they devote their waking hours, youâre using employees as mere tools, for their labor. Even though youâre paying them, this kind of using of people is unconscionable.
A company needs the ability to respond to the unpredictable, ever changing, intensely individual, nuanced desires of customers. Consider this statistic from Cornellâs Center for Hospitality Research: There are an estimated five thousand customer/employee touch points every day in a moderate-sized hotel. There may be fewer touch points in your business, or, heaven help you, there may be more. To handle each of those touch points correctly requires an exceeding amount of psychological and intellectual flexibility, which will be hindered when employees know that management puts primary value on conformity.
Iâm not, by the way, talking about lip service and window dressing hereâposters on the wall and so forth. In fact, itâs counterproductive to even bother talking about empowerment if youâre going to continue to reward conformity. Which is, unfortunately, exactly what happens at many companies; they talk a good talk about employee empowerment, but compensate and allocate pats on the back differently:
- Did an employee make the numbers this month (even if he had to finesse the books by pushing bad events to next month)?
- Did he get everythingâsortaâshipped on time (even if it means he didnât take that extra minute to verify a shipping address and save the customer a lot of grief )?
- Did the employee get customers off the phone in the call center ââon timeââ (even though lingering longer could have led to a greater potential bond with the company)?
You want customer relations to be on the shoulders of your employees. But as long as youâre defining every little thing, and rewarding/punishing based on seemingly arbitrary and thus, inevitably, gamed criteria, you wonât get them to carry that responsibility.
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