How to successfully
manage your Employees
You've just been in a serious car
accident. You've got massive internal injuries and a broken jaw. You're
going to be in the hospital at least a month. Your jaw is wired shut so
you can't use the phone. Will your business run easily and well while
you recover? Will your customers be served while you are gone? If you've
just experienced heart failure over this prospect, the following list is
for you. The information below, if put into practice, will reduce your
stress, increase your business' productivity, and give you the vacation
you so richly deserve. Here's the top ten things you can do to make your
business run as smoothly as possible.
1. Hire wisely.
Most businesses hire bodies for
particular jobs rather than people to help build a future. Your business
is only as good as each individual employee's contribution to its
functioning. Therefore, look for the three i's when you hire:
intelligence, initiative, and integrity. For every position, from
receptionist to packing clerk, hire only the best you can find.
Conversely, if you have current employees who are not performing well,
consider whether they are a wise investment of your money.
2. Build a team, not your
ego.
Many employers let their egos dominate
their interactions with their employees. Stop the pattern. Instead,
trust your employees to do their jobs. Make each employee feel that they
are an invaluable member of the company team. Let each employee know
they are an integral part of the company's end product. Set the example
for positive interaction at all times between members of the team even
when ideas or performance must be corrected.
3. Reward well.
When you get good employees, reward
them financially and emotionally. Be sure their pay is at least at
market rate. Take time often to acknowledge each employee's
contribution. The two biggest loyalty builders are two simple words --
thank you.
4. Be hands on.
Know each employee's job and how to do
it. This not only gives you an automatic reserve employee and trainer
(yourself), but has an added bonus. If you show an employee that you are
willing to learn or have learned his/her job, you are communicating that
you believe their work has value. Every employee needs to know that
whether they are emptying trash cans, setting the presses, or selling
the large accounts, their work is worthwhile and valuable.
5. Make your employees
versatile.
In a small company, every employee
should know how to do at least two jobs, particularly on the technical
and service sides. For critical tasks, at least three employees should
know how to do each job. Thus, you always have an on-the-premises
reserve who can step in when needed.
6. Give away tasks, but
not ultimate leadership.
What is it you do best? Are you the
idea man, the best salesman in your company, the organizer? Find your
best talent and then delegate all other tasks to your employees. Train
them appropriately to do their job, let them know you have confidence in
their ability to perform well, and then let them do their jobs. Adding
responsibility with confidence will increase your employee's willingness
to work and their pride in the company's end result. At the same time,
you must maintain ultimate leadership. In any well run ship, the captain
makes final decisions and you are still the captain, albeit a benign
one.
7. Communicate,
communicate, communicate.
You must talk with your employees,
solicit their suggestions, and positively correct their mistakes.
Conversely, you must create an atmosphere where employees are willing
and able to talk with you. The two best sources of information on how
your business is doing and how to improve it are your employees and your
customers. Pay attention to both.
8. Give your best and
always and encourage the same in your employees.
Pride in the company and its product or
service always begins at the top. If you give a half effort or let a
sloppily produced product go out the door to a client, you are sending a
message to your employees that you do not respect your clients or your
work. Your employees will adopt that view as well. If you set the
example of giving the extra effort, pitching in when needed, caring
about your fellow team members, working as a unit to be the best in your
particular business, and taking care of the bottom line, your employees
worth having and keeping will follow suit.
9. Encourage innovation
and creation.
Give your employees a stake in the
future. Once a month, have a meeting where the employees make
suggestions on how to improve your product, service, efficiency, or
bottom line. Give monetary rewards when the ideas produce increases to
the bottom line. Give positive encouragement for the process.
10. Have a second in
command.
No general goes into battle without a
major who can take over if he is felled by a bullet. You are your
business' general and must act accordingly. Find someone you trust
within your company who has the same goals, ideals, and a similar
business style. Train him/her appropriately. Let others know he/she has
your confidence and authority when you are gone. When that is done,
leave on vacation and test the theory out. If you have completed steps
1-9 above, your business will run easily and well and you will have
regained a healthy balance in your life.
Food For Thought
The biggest obstacle standing between
you and anything you want, is your lack of belief that you can have
it. Once you truly believe it is possible, once you can see yourself
doing it or being it or having it, the rest is just details. With
belief, plus the commitment to follow through and do whatever it
takes, anything can be yours.
Everything you need to get there is available to you, when you believe
and when you commit to getting there. Know that you can do it. Nothing
can hold you back once you have belief and commitment. You will find a
way. You can. Do it.
Pleasure is a matter of conditioning. A teenager
smoking her first cigarette doesn't enjoy it at all. She's almost
certainly doing it to "fit in" and it probably even makes her a little
sick. After a while, though, she likes it so much she finds it hard to
quit.
Strategy for achieving your success: Choose the pleasures that move
you toward your goals.
For example, there is just as much potential for pleasure in jogging 2
miles as there is in eating a bag of potato chips. The person who is
trying to get in top physical shape would be well advised to find his
pleasure in the jogging rather than the chips. Just like everything
else in your world, your pleasures are under your control. Use them to
your advantage.
What is it that you truly want to do? You can do it. Realize that you
are as capable as any person. See yourself doing it. Touch it. Hear
it. Taste it. Walk inside of it. Drive around in it. Believe in it and
believe that it is yours. |
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