Posts Tagged ‘productive employees’

Engaging the “Activist Employee”

Thursday, February 2nd, 2012

New trends in employee engagement and the democratic climate suggest that effective employee engagement may soon include supporting causes and social issues that their employees do. Keeping an open dialogue with employees about which causes to support and how to spend philanthropic dollars keep them engaged in the company. This type of dialogue also allows the employer to get to know employees better, and understand who they are outside of the office.

Allowing employees to express their opinions and communicate with upper management and key decision makes can take a number of forms. Some companies use online platforms such as surveys or anonymous feedback forms. These tools are often effective for communicating ideas, but do not contain the interpersonal aspect that a company-wide town hall meeting, or lunch hour fresh air forum.

Engaging employees increases productivity and employees’ sense of purpose. Consider engaging your “activist employees” this year. For more information check out the GreenBiz.com article.

The author:

Rachel Merkin is a recent college graduate, beginning a career in marketing and public relations. She has been exploring the worlds of social media and B2B gift cards since 2006. When she is not blogging, tweeting, or finding ways to leverage Facebook as a marketing tool, she spends as much time IN or ON the ocean as possible, beaching and boating.

Remote Employees Becoming All the Rage

Thursday, January 26th, 2012

Does your company work in the cloud? According to a new Elance Report the number of businesses seeking to hire online contractors doubled in 2011. 83% of the small businesses surveyed by Elance said they plan to hire up to half of their workforce as virtual in the next 12 months. GiftCard Partners was built on a virtual model and has been recognized for its ability to function in alternative ways, free of the constraints of a 9-5 office atmosphere. Here are Elance’s predictions for the 10 most popular online jobs going forward

  1. Software Developer
  2. Visual Designer
  3. User Experience Designer
  4. Digital Marketer
  5. Technical Writer
  6. Web Researcher
  7. Data Analyst
  8. Content Moderator
  9. Accountant
  10. Distributed Workforce Manager
Does your company use flexible online consultants or employees as part of their business strategy? How do you think it could benefit employee flexibility?
For more information on online employees and virtual business practices check out this Huffington Post article.
The author:

Rachel Merkin is a recent college graduate, beginning a career in marketing and public relations. She has been exploring the worlds of social media and B2B gift cards since 2006. When she is not blogging, tweeting, or finding ways to leverage Facebook as a marketing tool, she spends as much time IN or ON the ocean as possible, beaching and boating.

Employee engagement is down…what does this mean for your business?

Thursday, December 15th, 2011

It is widely known and accepted that employee engagement is critical to productivity and improving your company’s bottom line.  As 2011 draws to a close and we look to 2012, and a (hopefully) improving job market, employment agency Randstad released some concerning numbers this week. In their annual “Employee Attachment Index” survey, which measures employee-employer attachment, it appears that employee engagement is decreasing and that many employees are looking to move on, as soon as the market is more stable.

  • 56 percent of those surveyed believe they would not be able to find a job they would accept
  • nearly half expect the job market to improve next year
  • 47 percent plan to explore other opportunities as soon as the job market picks up
Some of this may be due to recent market research that suggest that employees do not feel as engaged at work, and are simply going through the motions out of necessity. It is important to involve your employees in the company, and ensure they feel appreciated especially during the holiday season. Small tokens of appreciation such as a small gift card or flexible holiday hours can really improve their outlook. The promising news is that 74% of those surveyed feel optmistic about their organization’s future, so ensure that they see themselves as a part of that future, and not just a cog in the wheel.
To learn more about the Randstad “Employee Attachment Index click here.
The author:

Rachel Merkin is a recent college graduate, beginning a career in marketing and public relations. She has been exploring the worlds of social media and B2B gift cards since 2006. When she is not blogging, tweeting, or finding ways to leverage Facebook as a marketing tool, she spends as much time IN or ON the ocean as possible, beaching and boating.

Working Remotely and Choice: The Latest Incentives for Generation Y?

Friday, December 9th, 2011

Internet and social media immersion is without a doubt second nature to Gen-Yers, AKA, Millennials. As a Generation X-er and an early technology adopter; I can clearly see how our most recent generation of college grads were born 1 step from where I was.  We’ve seen some recent research around shopping habits, customer loyalty, and working tendencies of Generation Y; I’ll bring these findings together here to offer insight in the realm of employee motivation, incentives and loyalty.

“45 percent of Millennials would accept a lower-paying job with more flexibility towards social media access, remote work and technology choice than a higher-paying job with less flexibility.1” This is a pretty big number, but should not cause much surprise. As an entirely remotely operating company, GCP expects people to work this way, it’s in our company DNA. But we did not expect that almost 50% of a generation would prefer it. (YAY for us/GCP). Are you an employer who will rise to this challenge, knowing that embracing a remote working situation is a core motivator and a recruiting competitive advantage?

In a recent national poll conducted by the No. Carolina firm of Public Policy2; It was found that generations precluding Gen-Y, are skeptical about younger workers’ work ethics, motivation and engagement in their workplace. Gen-Yer’s said this about their own generation:

  • 55% acknowledged that workers of their generation are generally less motivated to take on more responsibility (even with  a pay increase)
  • More than 1/3 (34%) reported that millennial workers are less engaged than older workers

It’s clear that employers have their work cut out for them in order to motivate and engage with this generation. The tech-savviest generation yet has choice in the palm of their hands and they are fiercely loyal to the brands they love, follow and get daily deals on social media networks. Employers will need to embrace this rooted need for choice and offer flexible brand name incentives such as gift cards. Employers could buy several brands in bulk to give their employees a choice and then the recipients have yet another choice, what they want to buy.

They buy online and the internet is their buying oyster…they are entirely plugged-in and prepared to work remotely, but additional incentives will need to be equally as flexible.

1. TLNT – The Business of HR: Are We Asking the Right Questions About Millennials?
2. The national survey was conducted by the North Carolina firm of Public Policy Polling, September 8-11. 

The author:

Stacey Sicurella is a 15 year marketing veteran, working in the Boston area for GiftCard Partners. Recent accomplishments include blogging with abandon, acquiring work-life balance and building amazing sand-castles with her children.

Employee Engagement at a Low

Thursday, November 10th, 2011

According to a new Gallup poll 71% of employees indicated they do not feel engaged, or feel actively disengaged at their jobs.  Employees that do not feel engaged are often far less productive than employees who feel engaged and connected to their position within their company. This staggering statistic is indicative of employers needing to make more of an effort to engage their employees at work, and recognizing their hard work.

Tom Agnew author of “The Enemy of Engagement: Put an End to Workplace Frustration–and Get the Most from Your Employees” identifies three causes of disengaged employees: poor communication about goals and performance, resource constraints that make it more difficult for employees to do their jobs, and employees who feel that they do not have the authority to do their jobs effectively. In order to engage employees it is important to keep open communication lines, and ensure that employees know when they are doing their jobs well. Giving small spot rewards such as a small denomination gift card to useful retail outlets such as CVS/pharmacy lets employees know that an employer is noticing their work, and empowering them to do their jobs to the best of their ability.

Do you think your employees feel engaged? How do you think you can engage your employees better?

For more information on employees engagement from Business Finance magazine click here.

The author:

Rachel Merkin is a recent college graduate, beginning a career in marketing and public relations. She has been exploring the worlds of social media and B2B gift cards since 2006. When she is not blogging, tweeting, or finding ways to leverage Facebook as a marketing tool, she spends as much time IN or ON the ocean as possible, beaching and boating.

Using Holiday Employee Recognition to Motivate for the New Year

Tuesday, November 8th, 2011

All employers use the upcoming holiday season as an opportunity to recognize their employees. Whether it is a holiday party, bonuses, or rewards such as gift cards, holidays are the time to say “thank you” to your employees.  But more and more companies are using the recovering economic climate as a tool to recognize employees and energize them for the year ahead.  Instead of just saying “thank you” retroactively employers are now using holiday recognition to renew employee commitment and drive, and catapult the momentum into the year ahead.

Boosting employee morale at the end of the year is a way to boost morale and confidence in the year ahead. “If business is moderate or down, there’s an attitude that develops and you are not in a good place when you look toward the next 12 months.” says  Robert Preziosi, professor and chair of management at Nova Southern University. Confident employees who feel valued reduce fear and increase productivity.

Does your company try to close with a boost in revenue? Do you make an effort to recognize employees to increase confidence and productivity? Let us know what your company is doing for its employees this holiday season.

 

For more about holiday rewards as motivation for the new year click here.

The author:

Rachel Merkin is a recent college graduate, beginning a career in marketing and public relations. She has been exploring the worlds of social media and B2B gift cards since 2006. When she is not blogging, tweeting, or finding ways to leverage Facebook as a marketing tool, she spends as much time IN or ON the ocean as possible, beaching and boating.

Imagine Getting Paid to Reward your employees

Thursday, November 3rd, 2011

Google Wallet, the much anticipated mobile wallet system is now paying people to shop. After an initial slow adoption to the new service, and consumers still being slow to use mobile technology for financial reasons, Google Wallet is now offering shoppers $10 to use their service in select stores in 5 cities throughout the United States before the holidays.   Google employees will also travel to major metropolitan areas throughout the nation to help consumers use the new mobile application. In today’s economy that could mean a lot.  For employers among us, it could mean hundreds, if not thousands of dollars saved on bonuses, or delivery of holiday gift cards. It could mean saving even more on postage, and credit card processing fees. It could mean all of your employees experiencing the ease of mobile commerce and appreciating their employer even more for delivering their holiday gift directly to their mobile phone.

For consumers, it could mean one less day packing your lunch one week, or being able to grab coffee on your way to work instead of dealing with whatever caffeine is available at the office. Or for the more responsible among us it could mean ten more dollars spent on holiday gifts.

As we head into the holiday season, imagine getting paid to fight the lines at the mall, or your employer doing so.

The author:

Rachel Merkin is a recent college graduate, beginning a career in marketing and public relations. She has been exploring the worlds of social media and B2B gift cards since 2006. When she is not blogging, tweeting, or finding ways to leverage Facebook as a marketing tool, she spends as much time IN or ON the ocean as possible, beaching and boating.

You may not have to break the bank to reward your employees this year

Tuesday, October 18th, 2011

A new MarketWatch survey release this week indicates that employees don’t need much to feel rewarded during this holiday season.

  • 84% of employees indicated that a reward that cost under $100 would be sufficient
  • 55% said that it would only take $25 to make them feel as though their employer rewarded them

So what does this mean? Are employees empathizing with employers during tough times? or does it just not take much to make people happy right now? Usually holiday gifts are an important part of an employee’s compensation package, and now employees say it is not as crucial a part of their holiday observations.  Perhaps the fact that 69% of people don’t expect their employer to give any sort of end-of-year reward. Employers have set expectations low since the initial recession that employees do not expect any recognition of their hard work.

So as an employer what will you do this holiday season? Will you surprise your employees with rewards and recognition, or will you play into this trend? As an employee what are your expectations this holiday season?

 

For more on the MarketWatch survey click here.

Punishing Employees for Bad Behavior

Tuesday, September 20th, 2011

Employers are now finding ways to punish employees for unhealthy behavior.  Increasingly, employers are holding their employees responsible.  Instead of blindly providing health insurance to all employees on the same level, regardless of their health, employers are giving one kind of insurance to healthy employees, and a less desirable package to less healthy employees.  Deductibles are higher for employees who are over weight, who smoke, or who have other conditions that result from unhealthy behavior.  Employees can avoid this cost by participating in wellness programs, provided by the employer, but if they choose not to, they face the insurance increase.

Some workers rights groups find these practices coercive, and unfair.  Opposition to these kinds of insurance programs stem from the fact that often, it cannot be proven exactly how much more a less healthy person costs a company, than someone who is healthy and in good shape.  At GiftCard Partners we believe that a Carrot Vs. the Stick approach, which offers rewards and incentives for good behavior, is far better than outcasting and punishing employees.  Although these practices promote a healthy lifestyle, is it fair to essentially reduce an employees paycheck when the company cannot tell exactly how much more that person is costing them?

 

For more information read the full Chicago Sun-Times article

If you have an opinion on these programs, or your company runs a program similar to this, leave us a comment.

A Raise is No Longer a Sufficient Reward

Tuesday, August 23rd, 2011

Employees’ satisfaction with their recognition is not truly measured by the company, but by the employee.  And, although it is easy for companies to simply give employees recognition by giving a raise, employees are not satisfied with this outcome.  Employees want more; they want to feel as though their employer cares about what they want for their efforts, not what the company is willing to give.  The top five reward satisfaction points based on a recent poll were:

  1. Career development opportunities
  2. Merit increases
  3. Base pay amounts
  4. Non-financial recognition
  5. Employee development/training

This goes to show that money is not always the answer.  Further development and training is valuable because it appears to be an investment in that employee’s future with that company.  Non-financial recognition is favorable because it allows the employee to splurge with their reward.  Gift cards make a non-financial reward.  For instance, a restaurant gift card to places such as Maggiano’s Little Italy or Chili’s allows an employee to appreciate their reward by treating themselves, as well as loved ones.  A reward like this allows the employee to experience something special and different from their routine.  How do you reward your employees? based on these findings do you think it is time to adjust your employee reward program?

 

For more information on the latest in employee rewards click here.