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Improve employee engagement: engage with social mediaNumerous research studies have shown that engaged employees are the basis of a company's success and drive tangible performance results. Their contribution is particularly essential during a lengthy period of economic recession: engaged employees have a genuine intellectual and emotional sense of ownership and are willing to do whatever is needed to support the organisation's success. They take pride in doing so, and thereby acquire individual job satisfaction. Social media is an intrinsic component of how we live and work, and more and more companies are recognising social media and social networks as valuable tools for refining employee engagement, communicating their business strategy across the board, and measuring impact. Between 2009 and 2010, social networks traffic increased by 43% (Nielsen study) - and today, social networks are the primary activity. The new way to handle communication and the global growth of social media and networksThe Towers Watson Change and Communication ROI Study late last year, discovered that:
The respondents that found social media tools cost effective were investing in social networks (63%) and leadership journals or blogs (58%). The global leader of Communication Consulting at Towers Watson, Kathryn Yates, says that change and communication professionals can no longer do things as they have always done them. She says there is a greater than ever need to deliver information to employees in a way that creates a sense of community and motivates change. Yates opined that new social and networking media provided a valuable opportunity for companies to increase engagement with employees for dialogue, and swiftly integrate employees into the culture and create a sense of community. She said that companies hesitant to try social media could end up limiting their ability to attract, retain and motivate certain key groups of employees. The TW/ROI study also included research to identify the best communication and change management practices at top-performing companies. Responses were forthcoming from 604 global organisations:
Among other findings, the study found that companies highly effective at both communication and change management were 2.5 times as likely to outperform peer companies not highly effective in either area. (Acknowledgement: Nielsen/TW-ROI study) For more, go to www.talk2us.co.za. About Charles NightingaleCharles Nightingale is a Director at Talk2Us. View my profile and articles... |