Where Have Our Employees Gone?
Recent events shown in the news media concerning state budgets and public sector union employees, coupled with my visits to several companies the past few weeks, has triggered a lot of thoughts about the relationship organizations have with their people. People who they rely on to carry out tasks important for growth and profit.
>Unions around the country are feeling a renewed burst of power, primarily through the news media and the most anti business president and administration in the history of our country. The news media has demonized big business, people who make money and reinforce it with stupid reality TV programs like "Undercover Boss" which depict out of touch CEO's. The events in WI, OH, TN, etc. will do more for unions than what they had hoped "card check" laws would have done for them. The re-established and vocal WE/THEY rhetoric will do a lot for the "business" of organized labor, but not for the business of creating jobs and growing the economy. Rather, it will contribute to organizations moving more jobs off shore out of the U.S.
> People want to identify with something bigger than themselves and they want to belong. We have lost loyalty for the good and have embraced "blind" loyalty to a ideology. Here are a few examples. People have abandoned common sense, kindness and sense of decency during demonstrations in State Capitol buildings. I have wonderful African-American friends who have forfeited their values and religious faith beliefs to support a president just because he's black. I know hard working family people who are willing to shut down the organization they are working for to make a point. Look at the NFL. Who will win in this deal?
As an executive and business coach, I pretty much tell it like I see it when dealing with my clients. I do that for several reasons.
1.) It's my value system and who I am, i.e. being a man of integrity and honesty.
2.) It's a waste of time not to.
3.) My clients don't pay me to play games.
4.) I work hard at building and maintaining healthy relationships.
5.) It's the quickest path to making improvements and solving problems.
We all should be doing the same thing. Stand on principle.
Lou Holtz told his teams there are 3 things you must do. #1.) Do what's right. #2.) Do the best you can. #3.) Treat others the way you want to be treated. He goes on to explain that these three actions will answer three questions every person has.
1.) Can I trust you?
2.) Do you care about me?
3.) Are you committed to excellence?
We must be able to answer those 3 questions for our employees if we want to get them back.
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