Title: Employee Engagement Survey
1Employee Engagement Survey
2Survey
- Surveys were emailed on June 4, 2012 (some paper
surveys were used for those who have no computer
access) - Closed on June 28, 2012
- 1,053 surveys were completed
- Response rate 40.5
3Survey demographics
4Things to know about the survey
- Gallup examined more than one million employee
interviews. - Data were analyzed to find the questions that
were most meaningful in explaining motivations on
the job. - The 12 questions are what emerged from these
findings. - For more detail, you can refer to the book The
Elements of Great Managing.
5Q12 Engagement Questions Strongly agree and
agree responses (4 5)
Percentage of respondents
6Things to know about the survey
- This is a baseline for us.
- Based on years of study, Gallup says company
leaders dont have as much influence on workers
as do front-line managers. - Its about the experience your team is having.
7I know what is expected of me at work.
8I know what is expected of me at work.
- Gallups research shows that many great
workplaces have defined the right outcomes they
set goals for their team members or work with
them to set their own goals. - They do not just define the job but define
success on the job. - For team members to be aware of their
expectations, they should have a way to rank,
rate, or count as many of the desired outcomes as
possible. - Also, these measures of performance should fit
with what the rest of the organization is saying
and doing.
9I have the materials and equipment I need to do
my work.
1 strongly disagree 5 strongly agree
10I have the materials and equipment I need to do
my work.
- Based on Gallups extensive research, great
managers find out what people need in the way of
materials and equipment. The responsibility for
this is on the team members and make sure team
members know how to get the right to certain
materials and equipment. - A great way for team members to increase their
responsiveness to this question is to determine
what materials and equipment means to them.
Sometimes they are referring to accessibility of
information, rather than specifically to
materials and equipment.
11I have the opportunity to do what I do best.
12I have the opportunity to do what I do best.
- For this item, it is important to keep each team
members talents in mind, to build relationships,
and to help others identify their unique talents.
- It is vital that every individual understand his
or her strengths and weaknesses. - A good way of promoting this is to discuss what
each person believes are his or her knowledge and
innate talents. Writing strengths down often
helps.
13My supervisor, or someone at work, seems to care.
1 strongly disagree 5 strongly agree
14My supervisor, or someone at work, seems to care.
- Remember, people leave managers, not companies.
- A productive workplace is one in which people
feel safe safe enough to experiment, to
challenge, to share information, to support each
other and where the team members are prepared to
give the manager and the organization the
benefit of the doubt. - None of this can happen if team members do not
feel cared about. Relationships are the glue that
holds great workplaces together.
15In the last seven days, I have received
recognition.
1 strongly disagree 5 strongly agree
16In the last seven days, I have received
recognition.
- Workplaces that excelled in this question relied
on forms of recognition that are specific,
predictable, frequent and instantaneous. They are
known to promote a recognition-rich environment,
with praise coming from every direction, and with
everyone knowing how others like to be
recognized. - Many wonder how often people should be praised,
but a good rule of thumb is about once a week. If
this seems too often, consider why frequent
praise is so important. Whenever a person does
something, there are consequences. Those
consequences will affect whether team members
engage in that behavior again. - We know that to get the results or consequences
we want frequent praise can encourage the
behavior that produces it.
17I have someone at work who encourages my
development.
1 strongly disagree 5 strongly agree
18I have someone at work who encourages my
development.
- In this case, development does not mean getting
people promoted. It does not mean each team
member gets what he or she wants. It means
helping individuals find roles that fit their
natural strengths their unique combinations of
skills, knowledge and talent. - Previous Gallup findings have concluded that
workgroups that receive high scores on this
particular item do not try to put in what was
left out, but rather, try to draw out what was
left in they provide constant feedback and they
find creative developmental opportunities for
each other.
19At work, my opinions seem to count.
1 strongly disagree 5 strongly agree
20At work, my opinions seem to count.
- Team members who give high scores on this item
feel they have access to channels of
communication across different levels or
divisions of the organization, and their managers
work to maintain those channels. - Groups do not function very well when the team
members in them feel insignificant or irrelevant.
- Managers ask team members for their opinions and
include their ideas in the decision-making
process whenever possible. This means everyone
should have a chance to express his or her ideas.
21The mission and purpose of my company makes me
feel my job is important.
1 strongly disagree 5 strongly agree
22The mission and purpose of my company makes me
feel my job is important.
- This question measures a key source of motivation
for team members the idea that their
organization represents values that they
themselves share. - Effective workplaces cultivate that feeling,
including providing constant clarification of the
overall mission of the organization, as well as
the ways in which each individual team member
contributes to the achievement of the mission. - As human beings, we like to feel as though we
belong. Individual achievement is great, but we
are likely to stay committed longer if we feel we
are part of something bigger than ourselves.
23My associates or fellow employees are committed
to quality work.
1 strongly disagree 5 strongly agree
24My associates or fellow employees are committed
to quality work.
- Workgroups that score well on this question tend
to be good at providing clear quality standards
and keeping those standards at the forefront of
team members minds. Thus, team members are
capable of accurately evaluating their own
performance, as well as that of their teammates. - Clear communication of standards enhances
accountability and builds trust among coworkers. - We also know that not everyone will see quality
in the same way if everyones concept of the word
is different. To remedy this, having a clear
definition helps. The best place to start is with
customers, both internal and external.
25I have a best friend at work.
1 strongly disagree 5 strongly agree
26I have a best friend at work.
- I have a best friend at work is really a proxy
for trust. We are interested only in whether
there is a person at work whom you would consider
a best friend at work. - Think about people whom you would consider best
friends. People with whom you share values, you
can trust and who are watching out for you. - You are going to feel more confident in making
decisions, taking risks and being more productive
because you dont have to spend a lot of time
watching your back. - Chances are, you are going to feel like there is
more open communication within your team.
27In the last six months, someone at work talked to
me about my progress.
1 strongly disagree 5 strongly agree
28In the last six months, someone at work talked to
me about my progress.
- One of Gallups most consistent research findings
has been that feedback improves performance. - High-scoring groups establish structured feedback
processes for their team members, which include
clearly defined goals and achievement levels, and
then meeting regularly with each team member to
track his or her progress toward those goals. - We realize that we all need feedback to know how
far we have come. We need signs to track our
progress.
29This last year, I had opportunities at work to
learn and grow.
1 strongly disagree 5 strongly agree
30This last year, I had opportunities at work to
learn and grow.
- Engaged team members need to feel that their job
contributes in some way to their professional or
personal development. Great workplaces are those
in which team members are provided with
educational opportunities that address their
development. This may include formal classes or
simply finding new experiences for them to take
on. - Each team member will define opportunities
differently. For some team members, this may mean
training classes and seminars for others, this
means promotions and increased responsibilities
and for others, this might mean working on
special projects or assignments.
31Practice of Adaptive Leadership Tools and
Tactics for Changing Your Organization and the
World
- What makes some organizations more adaptive than
others the authors have identified five key
characteristics and created a simple survey tool
to capture employee ratings. - These characteristics were referenced by Terry
Orr as well as Ronald A. Heifetz, Marty Linsky
Alexander Grashow. - Nassau BOCES used the information with the
cabinet and leadership institute and through the
employee survey.
32Elephants in the room
1 very low 10 very high
33Shared responsibility
To what extent do people in your organization,
especially those in senior management, act from
the perspective of and for the betterment of the
whole organization, as opposed to worrying about
and protecting their individual groups or silos?
34Independent judgment
1 very low 10 very high
To what extent are people in your organization
valued for their own judgment rather than their
capacity to divine the boss's preferences? And
when someone takes a reasonable risk in service
of the mission and it doesn't work out, to what
extent is that seen as a learning opportunity
rather than a personal failure?
35Leadership
To what extent do people know where they stand in
the organization and their potential for growth
and advancement? Do they have an agreed upon
plan for how they are going to reach their
potential? And to what extent are senior
managers expected to identify and mentor their
successors?
36Institutionalized reflection
1 very low 10 very high
Does the organization carve out time for
individual and collective reflection and learning
from experience? To what extent does the
organization allocate time, space and other
resources to get diverse perspectives on how work
could be done better?
37How Adaptive is Your Organization?
38Years worked at Nassau BOCES
39What Department?
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