The Employee Experience

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Making work an experience

Goosebumps on the x-factor

An experience which gives one person goosebumps will not necessarily give someone else goosebumps.

Take a look at Yuli Minguel’s performance on the x factor (UK).

Both Simon and Lewey enjoy the performance but Nicole obviously loves it!

When the judges gave their verdict on Yuli’s performance Nicole Scherzinger said, “There’s something about you, it gives me goosebumps.”

What was it about the experience that gave her goosebumps?

Has Yuli made a personal connection with Nicole? Does Yuli take Nicole’s emotions on a roller coaster ride with each sudden surge in her vocal range?

Or does the performance evoke a personal memory within Nicole and heighten her emotive awareness?

Every experience is a personal moment that we can share with others.

One thing is certain - ’emotion’ plays a key role in connecting people with other people and with brands.

So, if we evoke goosebumps in our brand communication with employees will it lead to higher levels of engagement with the brand?

I believe it will.

Watch this space as I explore this idea over the weeks and months to come…

 

Filed under: Employee Experience,

The Employee Engagement Secret (it’s in a song!)

I couldn’t wait any longer.

It was school summer holidays and I had to do it.

I sat my son on the sofa, quickly closed the curtains, carefully took the DVD out of the case, placed it into the player, pressed play and together we watched, Bugsy Malone.

Yeah – the perfect moment (for who I’m not too sure)

The pedal cars and ice cream guns prompted many questions (as well dad knowing the words to every song – that surprised me too!)

Still, we made it to the end of the film and that’s when I found it.

I found the secret to employee engagement….

As I joyfully joined in with the finale chorus I heard the magic words;

“You give a little love and it all comes back to you. You’re gonna be remembered for the things that you say and do”

That was it!

The secret to engaging people at work was in the song;

“If you treat people well at work, they’ll be motivated to do the right thing by you and customers will remember the great brand experience you deliver.”

I’d heard these words so many times before but I was never truly listening.

I am now.

Since I found the Engagement Secret I’ve heard it again in a song by the New Radicals, “You get what you give

The secret’s out there and if you hear it, please share it.

Filed under: Brand Experience, Employee Experience, Uncategorized, , , ,

The Employee Experience Revolution

Almost everyday I read a report or story about how important it is to have an engaged workforce for an organisation to succeed.

It’s a well know fact that engaged employees are more productive and motivated to deliver a great customer experience and organisations with more engaged employees tend to be more profitable.

And let’s not forget that employees are also consumers who want to build a genuine and authentic relationship with brands they love – and leading brands work hard to create a great experience for customers so they’re engaged, loyal and hopefully advocate to friends and family.

So it seems natural for organisations to spend just as much time thinking about the experience they create for their employees as they do for their customers but I wonder how much of ‘ life at work’ is considered an opportunity to create ‘a brand experience’ and how much is pure transactional communication?

Does being ‘at work’ give us a license to do things in a very rational way without the need to pay too much attention to the experience?

Is work such a serious business that has very little room for emotional connections and memorable, sensory moments?

People are at their best when they’re motivated, inspired and engaged and I believe it’s crucial to spend time considering the experience employees have at work – the path to employee engagement starts with the employee experience.

So if the groundswell is calling for an increase in employee engagement I expect we’ll see a renewed focus on the experience people have at work.

That’s a great thing.

Filed under: Brand Experience, Employee Experience, , , ,

Bake in the brand

I’m writing this post on my wordpress iphone app while travelling home on the train….and my battery has just told me it’s on its way out so I’ll be quick!

It’s so important to bake the brand into the everyday employee experience if employees are expected to bring the brand to life for customers. I know this makes sense but success is all in the execution.

The brand has to build a solid bond with the employee if the employee is to identify with the brand and feel genuine about adopting brand behaviours as their own.

I think brands need to show more care towards the experience they give their own people, as it’s their own people who will care for the brand and bring it to life…

Short and to the point… :-)

Filed under: Employee Experience, , ,

Create employee experiences that engage

I create experiences for employees.

I help others create experiences for employees.

As an employee, I have experiences created for me.

There is enormous value in creating employee experiences to drive engagement.

Who doesn’t want to feel the brand come alive?

Who doesn’t want to feel that the organisation cares about them?

Everyone wants a deep connection with the organisation they belong to.

The question then is; why aren’t experiences always created for employees?

Surely every organisation has a genuine intention to create positive experiences for their employees and drive greater engagement to result in improved performance? Maybe there are genuine barriers such as lack of time, money or leadership buy in? Aren’t these percieved barriers?

Here are a few (low-cost) ideas I find useful to create employees experiences that engage;

1. Map the employee journey and find opportunities to design moments of brand expression that will create a buzz! Unexpected surprises are memorable and appreciated.

2. Keep emotion front of mind. With such high pressure on the time teams have to create employee experiences, the delivery of tasks often take priority and the result – missed emotional opportunities.

3. Genuinely care about the experience employees will have at the ‘ moment of truth’. Is this the brand at its best? What can I do to make the experience even better? How will employees feel at the end of the experience?

I believe every organisation has the ingredients it needs to create employee experiences that engage, regardless of the perceived lack resources available!

You just need the desire to engage employees through well thought through experiences – you can do seemingly impossible things, if you really care.

Filed under: Employee Experience, , ,

Is brand transparency too risky?

I admire organisations that give their people the opportunity to experience the products they produce for their customers.

Taste it. Think about it. Share it.

Of course this isn’t anything new.

My wife once told me a story about a job she had as a student peeling potatoes in a chip factory. At lunchtime the canteen would serve free chips to all employees but she simply couldn’t bring herself to eat them. After peeling potatoes for hours on end, the last thing she wanted to see was another potato. Needless to say, she left the factory after her twelve hour shift never to return and to this day she still can’t understand how the ‘old timers’ were able to sit down and merrily eat their plate of chips?

Did they become immune to the smell of potatoes and chip oil or had they genuinely fallen in love with the product and would tell the world about it given half a chance?

Imagine if they did get the chance?

But really, would I want to hear about my chip from an employee while they were peeling the potatoes or eating them in the canteen? Things like; how they choose the best quality potatoes and their opinion on how potatoes should be grown to produce a more rounded shape that would be easier and faster to peel.

On first thought I think I’d prefer my relationship with the chip to be formed by an inspiring brand promise on TV and fresh looking packaging in a fresh feeling store.

Oh no, it looks like I’m a product of true ‘consumerism’!

I wonder if there’s a new ‘…ism’ on the horizon, something like, ‘transparencism?’

Take the employee advocacy programme from General Motors called The Company Vehicle Ambassador Program which lets employees take a loan car home – a great idea.

I’m sure the initiative has a robust feedback process in place to direct employee observations and ideas to the relevant team(s) within the organisation driving continuous improvement. But that would still keep the employee experience inside the walls of the organisation and it would only be friends and family of the employee that would get the benefit of his truthful opinion.

Imagine if…

The employee was able to share his experience online while driving the car home (safely of course) and give his genuine opinion of the vehicle – imagine the larger audience that could be reached!

It’s not sales. It’s not marketing. It’s just the opinion from a guy who helped make it.

He’ll  talk from his gut and we’d believe him (this is when you’re really glad you made the investment to create a branded employee experience!)

I wonder if this human and authentic, real life insight into the vehicle’s performance would shatter the image in my mind formed through millions of dollars of marketing budget.

Would I still want to buy the vehicle if the real employee didn’t fit the well researched segmentation customer image I’d come to expect?

Have I fallen in love with a promise that‘s fake but one that I’ve come to like?

Does that mean I’m fake?

In theory the true experience should be in harmony with the brand promise and I think brands might be willing to become more transparent, but I’m not sure if I could handle the transition to truth?

Maybe I’ve become so accustomed to believing in an unattainable brand promise and satisfied it it’s only partly met?

Maybe the truth of the real brand ‘inside’ will be too much for me to take – so should be hidden?

Maybe not.

As we search for more authenticity in everything we do and in everything we are, it won’t be long when the truth from ‘inside’ is what we’ll expect from the brands we love.

Only the brands that do as they say will do, will succeed when the veil final falls away.

Filed under: Employee Experience, , , , ,

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