Communication Smoothes the
Path of Change
Productivity almost always suffers in times of great change, because employee stress dramatically
increases due to the universal fear of the unknown. In these times, communication becomes more important than
ever.
Often senior executives genuinely believe they are communicating with employees when it comes to matters
that affect them. Unfortunately, they often underestimate the number of matters that includes, for the fact is that
most high level decisions will affect employees in one way or another. (That's why a law recently went
into effect in Britain forcing employers to answer employees' questions on any changes or decisions that affect
them.)
So how do you know what is important to employees and what to tell them? Well, you need to put yourself in
the position, the mind, the heart of employees—one employee at a time. If you were that person, what would you be
worried about right now in the current situation? What would be important for you to know? What is the worst thing
that could happen, and would you want to know about it in advance? How would you want to be told?
You can't answer those questions yourself—no, don't kid yourself, you really can't. You need input from
the very people you are trying to understand. Depending on how much you can discuss or how much is already known,
you might ask a few individuals what the grapevine is saying, and what people are worrying and wondering
about.
Now, armed with this information, draft the answers to the questions. Of course they must be truthful
answers, for insincerity is easily recognized and will deal a death blow to your communication efforts. Then they
must be couched in terms that are clear and uncompromising, but also considerate and compassionate. It's worth
spending some time on this part—lack of commitment to your message is also easily read and will automatically raise
the cynicism level among employees.
Next comes dissemination of the information. There is, as we all know, no shortage of communication
technology in the business world. However, the way a person receives news can dramatically affect how he or she
feels about it, so you need to choose the medium very carefully. Email can be perceived as cold and unfeeling in
many cases, although it is useful for routine updates that don't have emotional overtones. Some messages are better
spoken, either by managers to their groups or by the CEO to the whole organization.
If the messengers don't have highly developed communication skills, it's worth engaging the services of
professional speech writers or presentation coaches to help them, but be sure the message remains honest, clear and
compassionate.
And above all, follow through on your commitments and promises. Nothing turns employees off more than
empty words, but sincere, caring, ongoing communication can form the basis for building employee engagement when
the present time of turmoil ends.
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