How to Make Engagement Work for You

A version of this post appeared first on TNMcoaching.com

What is engagement?

In business literature today you’ll find a lot about engagement: community engagement, employee engagement, customer engagement, and more. Articles range from working in “green” buildings to the latest press releases from the CSR department, the notion that using Twitter as a broadcast medium does NOT create engagement (True, that.), to levels of job dissatisfaction (i.e, lack of engagement). Engagement seems to be the business buzzword du jour.

As with most buzzwords, what’s important to keep in mind is: What does engagement mean? What will make the term useful? If we don’t know what engagement is, it’ll be difficult to discuss, measure or nurture.

en·gage·ment n. [en-geyj-muhnt]

1. the act of engaging or the state of being engaged.

Engagement is related to participation.

par·tic·i·pa·tion n. [pär-ˌti-sə-ˈpā-shən, pər-\]

1. the act of participating
2. the state of being related to a larger whole

What we almost never talk about is:

Engagement and participation are specific acts.

They’re things we and the people around us actually do.
That’s good news, because they’re observable. You can request and reward certain actions.

What’s more difficult is that engagement and participation are also states of being.

This is what normally gets left out because it’s more difficult to discuss. We each need to ask ourselves:

  • Who should people in our organization Be?
  • What should they Do?
  • Who do Leaders need to be to call forth, allow for these ways of being and acting?

As a leader, then, whether you have direct-line authority over anyone or you act as a Leader for your colleagues & customers, ask yourself:

  • What are the rituals in that kind of workplace?
  • What will you reward?
  • What should be celebrated?
  • What will entice this type of people and behavior?
  • What will you expect?

People exist in networks of conversation.

What conversations are happening around you, in your workplace?  Really listen. Are people talking about not having enough time? Are they complaining a lot?  Or are the conversations around you creative and inspired. Are people coming from “have to” and “should” or “wouldn’t it be cool if…?”  What conversations will you fuel?

Draw boundaries if necessary so people know what kinds of conversations to have around you.

Breakthrough Ideas happen in collaboration.

How will you support collaboration?  Exactly what actions & behaviors do you want to induce, reward, and normalize in your corporate cultures?

The answers to these questions serve as your blueprint. You’ll want to write them down.

It’s Not About Us & Them. It’s About You & Me.

Usually when we speak of engagement we break down into Us/Them dichotomies. The conversations sound like this:

“How do we get THEM to re-engage?”

“If our leaders acted differently or made better decisions, maybe we’d be engaged.”

“Maybe the space or environment gets and keeps people engaged.”

Have a look at those sentences again. Who’s the active participant? None of that is not our most powerful thinking.

It really comes down to you and me. Who will you Be? What will you Do?

I’ll never forget the moment I realized TNM’s culture called for different actions from most work teams: I’d just started. On a small group training call, we were scheduling our next meeting. One date/time was thrown out and I said, thinking out loud, “I’ll be in Italy and don’t know about Internet access… I’m sure I could come into the lobby and call in via Skype.” Zoran, who was running the meeting, said, “No, no… don’t do anything that doesn’t work. We’ll find a time that works.”

That simple exchange set the tone of much of our interaction, and I started to understand the rules of engagement at TNM.

  • What are the rules of engagement in your workplace?
  • How does your organization define, cultivate and measure engagement?
  • How do you reward the acts or actions you’d like to see?

Here are some resources to guide your way.

Dan Pink studies the science of human motivation. He asserts that there’s a mismatch between what we know about motivation and what we implement in business environments. It’s not about bonuses, incentives, and other commonplace extrinsic motivators. Instead:

Rewards narrow our focus and work only for narrowly focused, simple tasks, taks with clear sets of rules and single solutions. If you want people to think strategically or creatively and think way out of the box, Start with Why, as Simon Sinek explains in this Tedx talk:

You might want to also write down:

  • This is what we Believe:
  • This is Who You Can Count on Us to Be:
  • These are Things We Do:

Finally, Steven Johnson studies environments in which ideas take flight. What can you use in your environment?

There’s another thing: Conversations Disappear.

The breath moves over our lips and before you know it, everybody’s busy doing something else. This isn’t something you set up once. You’ll need to create times, space, and continuous reinforcement. Have fun with it: Leaders Lunches, Idea Breakfasts, online spaces for collaboration, maybe even a Leave Your Complaints & Concerns Here box by the door – so people can literally leave those at the door.

Go forth and engage. It’s up to you and me!

Is this a Lost Generation?: Making the Most of Working with Millennials

What Dan Pink Knows Can Help You

Wondering how to best encourage motivation, creativity? Incentives?  Rewards?

Science knows what we should do; most businesses aren’t yet doing it.
In the 21rst century we need new ways to do this.

Don’t base your talent development decisions on a 20th century model. Instead, look for intrinsic motivation: Autonomy, Mastery & Purpose.

“If you want engagement self-direction works…”

Al Gore’s former speech writer, Dan Pink, delivers a good TED talk on voluntary collaboration:

Pink argues that FedEx Days & 20% Time encourage creativity and job satisfaction. Take incentives and rewards out of the mix and let people do what they want… they thrive.

5 Ways Coaching and New Media Connect

Sometimes people ask us, “What are you?  A coaching company? A training company? A company that specializes in new media?”  Our answer is, “Yes, yes and yes, as long as media technologies support the coaching, training and transformational programs our clients undertake.”

Coaching is and will always be what unites TNM affiliates; it’s our core competency.  As social networking and other technologies make new kinds of communication possible, we’ve built upon the ways coaching and new media technologies connect.  Here are some of them:

TNM started as a group of executive coaches.  We’re engaged in conversation with executives across industries and around the world.  ”Start where you are” is an adage in every coaching school of thought.  Whether our clients are dealing with rapid growth, drastic cutbacks, cultural challenges… we start from their concerns, perspectives, and needs.  In some ways, our clients led us to the connection between coaching and new media as they asked, “How do we best utilize new media technologies?”  ”How do I harness the power of group-think and collaboration?”  ”How do we go from strict hierarchical lines of communication to more modern, open, egalitarian community?” We’ve brought media experts onboard to address precisely these types of questions.

New media technologies and platforms are tools for long-distance coaching relationships, for cost-effective training and for community-building online.  Many of the business drivers and HR directives executives are faced with today can be facilitated using new media as tools.  As coaching is incorporated into training initiatives, mentoring relationships between leaders and an everyday part of organizational cultures, Ning groups, podcasting, video tips, and online interaction facilitate new kinds of communication within organizations.

As organizations around the world go from 20th century, top-down, hierarchical bureaucracies to flatter, more nimble, open and inclusive ways of doing business, they use coaching not just as individual sessions or for particular projects, but as cornerstones of the corporate culture, a routine part of the way individuals relate to one another and the organization as a whole – as a place where they can grow, develop and be creative together.  It’s one of the ways the Net generation is being recruited and included.  New media technologies, like coaching, have gone from being an extra or novelty to a routine part of the business landscape.  Cultures are evolving to include wikis, Second Life, online forums and gaming-as-training.

One of our largest clients here at TNM is on a mission to create a global Feedback Culture, a corporate environment in which transparency and feedback are regular and honest.  Coaching and new media technologies are both tools for two-way communication.  The way coaching may be overused these days.  When we refer to coaching, we mean communication in which the coach stands for the coachee’s success by asking powerful questions, actively listening, creating the space for the generation ideas, supporting him or her in the face of challenges.  This questions-answer-create-support communication requires participation.  Likewise, the success of online communication and new media technologies takes new ways of engagement, responsibility for participation.

Combine the two – coaching communication style and effective new media deployment through Ning, podcasting, wikis (whichever combination of new media is right for your demographic, culture and needs) – and at best you create and maintain an environment where individuals can develop to their full potential and express themselves freely.   Add the power of the group and mass collaboration through media technologies and truly we see organizations unleashed – producing results with an unprecedented level of ease and grace.  Call it kismet; some say magic.  Whatever you call it, a systematic approach to coaching and new media can create it. That’s what we are at TNM: keepers of the kismet, makers of magic.

Fiskars Fuels a Movement

This post appeared first on TNMcoaching’s blog.

Three business trends have converged for us here at TNM, and it’s making for interesting conversations:

- the rise of executive coaching,
- the shift across industries toward more inclusive and responsive communication, and
- the massive increase in the use of new media technologies as tools for both.

One element of executive coaching is meeting clients where they are, dealing with whatever they bring to the table.  That might include questions like, “How do we best motivate people?”  “How do we make the most effective use of new media technologies?” or similar to the Fiskars case I heard recently at BlogHer Business in Chicago, “How do we create a deep, emotional connection with our customers?” Here’s how Fiskars did it.

Fiskars is a 360 year old company.  They make scissors.  Their assumption in 2006 when they asked this question was that scissors are something people want nearby when they need them and don’t think about when they don’t.

The thing is: creating a deep, emotional connection isn’t about products.  Deep, emotional connections with corporations, that kind of loyalty and love, stem from social interaction and existing (or at least traditional) emotional bonds with family, friends, significant others, etc.  How can you create opportunities for that kind of interaction – then honor it, value it and let it flourish?  Disney did that in the 1950s, ’60s and ’70s – brought families together to watch The Wonderful World of Disney on tv, its films in theaters, and visit the theme parks together.* Fiskars created a deep lasting emotional connection with its customers quickly by nurturing existing interests and connections.  They created a corps of brand ambassadors, the woman call themselves Fiskateers.

 

It started with just four women Fiskars found online.  They were outstanding craft bloggers; it’s a whole subculture now… blogs about quilting and crafting and scrapbooking.  Even as they connected, Fiskars didn’t understand the magnitude of the existing online community. The four women chosen already used Fiskars and had a following through their blogs.  They are passionate about crafting and scrapbooking.  Fiskateers are numbered as they join, so there’s Fiskateer #1, #2, #3 and so on.  The lower the number the higher the status in the community.  The original program goal was 200 Fiskateers in six months; that was exceeded within 48 hours!  Fiskateers now number over 5000 strong.

Online chatter about the Fiskars brand increased 600% within 2 years.  Fiskateers in 70 countries meet with crafters and srapbookers for virtual, online events and in home and stores face-to-face.  They share new ways to use Fiskars products and gain valuable insight into how consumers are using them and what they’d like to see next from the company.  They’re a test market and the long tail made manifest all at once.  Only the first five lead Fiskateers are paid.  The rest participate out of pure passion. This is Crowdsourcing and The Long Tail at work.

Surf sites associated with Fiskateers and you’ll see love for the brand expressed outright over and over again.  You’ll also see that Fiskars made its products and the program completely accessible to the Fiskateers.  Transparency has been crucial.  It’s created a movement.  Fiskars is beloved.

COACHING LESSON:

How can you tap into existing passions and social connections?

This kind of inclusion is not limited to B2C consumer interaction.  How can your B2B and internal communications benefit? How can you include people, honor what they’re up to and how they use your products or services? Where can you create space for connection?

Coming soon… how to use social networking for internal communication

For more information:

On Fiskars and the Fiskateers, read their blog.

Here’s one Fiskateer’s personal blog – with info on online events.

Brains on Fire helped create the Fiskateers. Here are posts and video from them about the program, featuring Fiskateers.

Here’s one 20 months into the program.

And a few analyses and case studies:

Branding blogger on Fiskars

History of Fiskateers.

A couple of good analyses.

 

* I say this with conviction because my Ph.D. Dissertation was a study of how 53 American families created their relationships with the Walt Disney Company.

 

5 Top Tools for Collaboration

This post was published first at TNMcoaching.com

TNM’s day-to-day operations wouldn’t be possible without our own Global Coordination Angel, Nicola Mansell, and the cool, collaborative tools she finds, implements and keeps organized for us.

We’re spread out across 19 countries on four continents and work virtually.  Infrastructure is crucial.  Nicola is a Master at finding the right tools for the work we do.  Here are five of our favorite online collaborative tools and how we use them:

1. Backpack

Nicola’s job is like herding a wild bunch of travelling cats.  She schedules everything with Backpack.  We each have personal pages with training schedules. All the detaills for each trip are there.  We upload our receipts, important course-related documents and invoices in the same place.

Backpack has a great calendar function, too, with automated reminders.  It’s great for keeping things straight. We use the newsroom function to communicate with each other and upload a variety of materials to share on pages we create at will.  Nicola manages the chaos we create with myriad pages.

2. Doodle

Doodle is a polling tool Nicola uses to schedule meetings.  She sends a link, we click, enter our names and indicate which times work. She can see at a glance who’s available and who’s not.  I find Doodle perversely fun… because I know how many emails and how much time it saves!

3. PBWiki

We’ve recently switched to PBWiki for creative collaboration like designing new programs.  We were using Backpack for that, too, and find the creative process flows more smoothly on a wiki.  See this post for some basic tips on effective use of wikis.  The way we use it, PBWiki’s free.

4. Rypple

Our clients often tell us they want to create a Feedback Culture — here’s your chance! Rypple is a free tool for gathering anonymous feedback.  Just ran a project and want to gather impressions on how work flow was handled? Be sure you’re ready to hear whatever they have to say! Another fabulous free tool.

5. Skype

In our facebook discussion on this topic, Damien Churton suggested the radical notion that conversation is a tried and tested tool for collaboration.  At TNM we do a lot of talking! Free tools like Skype and freeconference.com mean we can talk all day no matter where we work! (We also record those calls for podcasts.  Free! This one is a Skype call.)

Let us know what tools you use and happy collaborating!

P.S. Here are a few of my personal favorites. I use them almost every day and wouldn’t want to leave them out:

  • At SlideShare you can see PowerPoint presentations on nearly any topic.  Many creators share their design work and copy freely.
  • Find me and TNM Coaching on facebook.
  • Follow us on Twitter: Rebecca’s at XpatAdventures. Find TNM at TNM Coaching.