Laura Stack: The Productivity Pro (R) Leave the Office Earlier
a news"E"letter from The Productivity Pro - Laura Stack
Number 135:: August 2010

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In This Issue:
Message from Laura
Feature Article: Engaged Employees are More Productive
Educational Resources
Time Tips and Traps
Ask the Expert
Laura's Blog
Hot Links
Piggyback Pricing
Words of Wisdom
Laura in the NEWS
Book Laura
Where in the World is Laura?
Subscription and Contact Information
Reprint Information

 


 

Buy The Exhaustion Cure at Amazon.comA holistic approach to increasing your get-up and go, from the productivity expert whose previous books showed people how to Find More Time and Leave the Office Earlier. If you want to be productive but are just too tired all the time, you need to read this book! Laura Stack combines invaluable insights and practical advice in this guide to becoming more energetic and more productive in every area of life. Stack describes the factors that contribute to low energy (the "energy bandits") and explains how to reduce their effects and build up or renew sources of positive force (with "energy boosters").

Available now from Amazon.com and at better bookstores everywhere.

 


 

Buy Find More Time at Amazon.comFind More TimeYou can't add more hours to the day, but Laura will help you make the most of the time you have and get things done. Available now from Amazon.com.

Leave the Office Earlier, Leave the Office EarlierLaura shows you how you CAN get more done than you ever thought possible and still get home to your real life sooner.Available now from Amazon.com.

More of The Productivity Pro's Resources

 


 

Featured Educational Resource from The Productivity Pro®
Book Club for Laura Stack’s book SuperCompetent: The Six Keys to Perform at Your Productive Best (Wiley, 2010)

Click here for more information.

Audience: This program is a low-cost, medium-impact developmental opportunity for high potentials in leadership development programs and those emerging leaders wanting to become high potentials.

Package A: $49 per person (sold in multiples of 10)

• One hardcover copy of SuperCompetent: The Six Keys to Perform at Your Productive Best (Wiley, 2010) per person
• One softcover discussion guide per person
• Leader guide, set-up instructions, and license to run the book club (delivered in PDF format)
• Six online videos by Laura Stack (to be viewed privately by each participant prior to each book club meeting or as a group in the meeting)

Package B: add $100 per person (further discounts available after 100 people)

All of Package A plus:
• One year of “live” monthly coaching webinars with Laura Stack just for program participants
• 24/7 access to the SuperCompetent Discussion Forum, where we collect participants’ questions and share Laura’s answers. Participants may ask and respond to questions from other high potentials around the globe
• Access to The Productivity University, our online LMS with 30+ hours of training in myriad personal productivity topics, such as Outlook, time management, concentration, handling timewasters, organization, discipline, life balance, stress management, dealing with interruptions, planning, scheduling, etc.
• Discounts for individual coaching with Laura Stack for those with personal productivity in their developmental plans

Click here for more information. 

 

 


 

Words of Wisdom
"Devising and maintaining an atmosphere in which others can put a dent in the universe is the leader's creative act." -- Warren Bennis, organizational consultant and scholar

"Unless someone like you cares a whole awful lot, nothing is going to get better. It's not." -- Dr. Seuss, The Lorax

"If you create an environment where people truly participate, you don't need control. They know what needs to be done and they do it." -- Herb Kelleher, CEO of Southwest Airlines.

"Are you in earnest? Seize this very minute!/Whatever you can do, or dream you can do, begin it./Boldness has genius, power, and magic in it./Only engage, and then the mind grows heated./Begin, and then the work will be completed." — Dr. John Anster, Irish scholar (attributed to Goethe)

"Employee engagement is first determined by the attitude of the leader, not the attitude of the employee." -- Ian Hutchison, author and CEO ("Chief Engagement Officer") of Life By Design

 


Where in the World
is Laura?

These are all private client engagements with Laura Stack. At this time, Laura does not offer open enrollment seminars to the general public. If you’re interested in bringing Laura to your organization to present a training seminar for your employees on the day prior or the day after one of these engagements below, please contact John Stack for special “piggyback” pricing.

 

August 2010

20::Luke AFB, Phoenix, AZ

23::Denver, CO

24::Sterling, CO

25::Denver, CO

28::Albuquerque, NM

30::Sioux Falls, SD

 

September 2010

11::Cologne Germany

16::Atlanta, GA

18::Birmingham, AL

23::Denver, CO

24::Flint, MI

27::Denver, CO

29::Tampa, FL

30::Montgomery, AL

 

October 2010

7::Englewood, CO

9::Nashville, TN

19::Palm Desert, CA

23::Adelphia, MD

25::Denver, CO

28::Denver, CO

29::Malverne, PA

 

November 2010

11::Denver, CO

15::Denver, CO

18-21::Scottsdale, AZ

 

December 2010

2-4::Vail, CO

13::Denver, CO

 

January 2010

8::Kansas City, MO

12-13::Las Vegas, NV

15::Los Angeles, CA

19::Detroit, MI

21::Virginia Beach, VA

 


Visit Laura's Calendar On-line for her complete availability.

 

Feature Article:

Engaged Employees are More Productive

 

Imagine that you're the coach of a professional football team—and that on a really good day, maybe 10 of your 45 players are 100% committed to the team's success. About half are kind of committed (as long as you rev them up with a great pep talk first and keep pushing them, you can count on them to go out there and perform). The rest? Well, those players show up, suit up, and sit on the bench most of the time. They make the minimal amount of effort necessary to squeak by, collect their paychecks, and go home. Can you imagine such a thing?

Oh, wait. That's a typical NFL lineup, isn't it?

All joking aside, my point is this: with a team like that, how many games are you likely to win? I'm betting very few. Oh, you'll win some—against teams a lot like yours. But a dedicated team like the 2008 Steelers would wipe the floor with you, because too few people on your team actually care enough win.

Now, let's translate that analogy into the business environment. You're a manager instead of a coach. Your team is still a team, but they're a bunch of white-collar business professionals rather than athletes. So, given the breakdown I've outlined above in terms of commitment, how well do you expect your team to compete, either within the company or in the global business environment? The answer, of course, is "not very." If you're a manager worth your salt, this won't be acceptable to you. But you can't just fire all the underperformers, or sadly, you might not have much of a team left. A more effective solution is employee engagement.

You've probably heard this term before, and maybe you've dismissed it as just another corporate buzz phrase. In some cases it is, but when taken seriously, it becomes far more than that: studies have repeatedly demonstrated that employee engagement is a significant factor in the success of any company, large or small. Simply put, the higher the percentage of employee engagement, the higher the employee productivity and the greater the corporate success.

So what is employee engagement, exactly? While not everyone agrees on the precise terminology, the consensus is that an engaged employee is one who's enthusiastic and fully involved with his or her job and organization, and who makes a sincere effort to contribute to both team and company success. The engaged employee is proud of what they do for a living and proud of where they work.

As commonly articulated, employee engagement is a relatively new concept, dating only from the early 1990s. The field splits employees into three categories: the actively engaged, the unengaged, and the actively disengaged. Depending upon the study, somewhere between 17-29% of employees are actively engaged. (Returning to our football analogy, those are the players who are 100% committed to winning.) About half—literally the "mediocre middle," as my colleague Mark Sanborn calls them— are unengaged. They may like their jobs, and they may be good at them, but they don't really care much about the company's goals (often because they have no idea what they are). At the bottom of the heap are the remaining employees—again, 17-29%—who are actively disengaged. These are the people who go to work just so they can get their paychecks. They're not committed at all, and they couldn't give two hoots about the company's mission and vision, even if they knew what they were. They're just marking time until they can retire.

Fortunately, these numbers aren't set in stone. It's possible for you as a leader to change them, and it's crucial that you try. Indeed, it's the leader who really makes the difference here: time and again, researchers have found that the relationship between employee and manager is an excellent gauge of the employee's engagement level. As the saying goes, workers don't leave companies. They leave managers. If that sounds like it's all on your shoulders, well…to a large extent, it is. You're the leader of your team, and to most employees, you're the direct representative of the company—and possibly the only such representative they encounter regularly. Along with everything else required of you, it's also your responsibility to ensure that your employees are engaged to the highest possible extent.

Why should you bother? Because by all accounts, engaged employees are SuperCompetent employees: the type of people you build an organization around, and the ones you count on to help take your organization to the next level. According to a recent study by Gallup, world-class businesses (e.g., those that make money hand over fist, have great safety records, and exhibit low employee turnover, among other things) have engaged employee/disengaged employee ratios of about 9.57:1, as opposed to a disappointing 1.83:1 for average businesses. It's clear that, as the researchers put it, "The world's top-performing organizations understand that employee engagement is a force that drives performance outcomes." Gallup sets an engaged/disengaged benchmark of 8:1 for successful, world-class companies, giving us all a standard to shoot for.

The Gallup researchers go on to note that actively disengaged workers cost American companies an estimated $300 billion annually in lost productivity alone. And here's another interesting statistic, this time from Serota Consulting's 2005 study of 28 multinational companies: companies with high employee engagement had share prices that rose an average of 16% over the course of the study, whereas the industry average was just 6%. In 2003, a study by ISR found that companies with high levels of engagement saw their operating profits rise by nearly 4% over three years, while those with low levels of engagement showed drops in net profits and operating margins on the order of 1.38% and 2.01%, respectively. (If you don't think those percentages sound significant, multiple them by a few million dollars and think again.) And consider the fact that in the long run, engaged companies outperform their less-engaged competitors by up to 28% (one of the key findings of the Conference Board study of 2006).

Clearly, engagement is a key driver in achieving and sustaining outstanding productivity in any organization, if only because it dramatically increases employee satisfaction and retention. Engaged employees are far more productive and more valuable than the mediocre middle unengaged employees, or of course the actively disengaged. Naturally, that affects the bottom line; so doing everything you can to increase employee engagement is simply good business. That being the case, you need to understand what factors drive engagement, and how you can put them into play to engage your employees.

Now admittedly, some level of engagement is based on an individual's personality; a bright, bubbly person is generally more easily engaged than a dour one. Otherwise, engagement is driven by a number of interrelated factors, including but not limited to:

• Employee confidence that they can do their job properly, and will be allowed to do so with minimal oversight
• The nature and quality of the job itself
• Access to training and career development
• Opportunities for growth
• Ongoing communication and feedback from management, especially in terms of conveying information and congratulating good work
• A clear understanding the company's goals, and why employee contributions matter
• Trust in the company and its integrity
• Pride in the company, and their place in it
• Opportunities to work in a team environment
• Relationships with team members and other co-workers
• Presence of a confident, competent, and (most importantly) supportive manager who can lead by example

According to recent surveys, only about half of American workers trust the people at the very top of their company org charts. But here's a factoid you might be gratified to learn: about three-quarters trust their immediate managers (including 44% of the disengaged ones). That's good, because again, it's a critical factor in creating and maintaining engagement. Another factor in your favor is that people want to be proud of what they do for a living and who they work for. This will help in your quest to engage your employees and thereby strengthen your corporate culture.

Gallup uses its Q12 measure to determine engagement; that is, twelve questions that it asks every employee when assessing the topic. Some of these questions may seem a bit odd, but together they identify what Gallup calls "strong feelings of employee engagement." You may have seen this before, but here's what they ask:

1. Do you know what is expected of you at work?
2. Do you have the materials and equipment you need to do your work right?
3. At work, do you have the opportunity to do what you do best every day?
4. In the last seven days, have you received recognition or praise for doing good work?
5. Does your supervisor, or someone at work, seem to care about you as a person?
6. Is there someone at work who encourages your development?
7. At work, do your opinions seem to count?
8. Does the mission/purpose of your company make you feel your job is important?
9. Are your associates (fellow employees) committed to doing quality work?
10. Do you have a best friend at work?
11. In the last six months, has someone at work talked to you about your progress?
12. In the last year, have you had opportunities at work to learn and grow?

It's easy to see how these questions apply to the engagement factors outlined previously—which should make it fairly easy to determine what you, as a manager, need to work on in order to maximize employee engagement within your organization.

Of course, you're never going to get everyone engaged; there will always be that occasional sourpuss or cheerful non-entity you'll never be able to reach. But if you can meet or exceed Gallup's 8:1 Engagement/Disengagement Benchmark, then your team will outshine nearly all of the competition.

So how do you do it? By fostering an environment of excellence, in which the cognitive and emotional issues that result in employee engagement are actively addressed at all stages of the game. Motivate your team members in positive ways: by walking the talk, leading by example, and making your personal integrity obvious and clear. Let them know what needs to be done, and let them know when they've done it right—and when they haven't. With few exceptions, your employees also want the opportunity to get ahead and develop their skills. Help them. You don't want to necessarily be their friend, but you do have to be a leader in every sense of the term, and you want them to realize that they have a chance to excel under your leadership. Remember: one of the strongest of drivers for employee engagement is the employee's relationship with their manager.

You also have to take into account individual needs based on age, position, experience, and other factors. Young people and those newer to the organization are most interested in challenges and career growth, for example; older and better established workers are more interested in stability, rewards, and recognition. Realize too that a need for stability isn't necessarily complacency; in the current economic situation, most people want all the stability they can get. It would be easy to take advantage of this for your short-term benefit, but I wouldn't if I were you. It won't do a thing to engage lackluster employees, and it might decouple some who are already engaged. Employee engagement should never be based on fear, even if it does seem to work for Darth Vader. When things turn around, how long do you think they’ll stay?

Increasing your ratio of engaged to disengaged employees can be a lot of hard work. It's a task that requires not just strength, but flexibility and empathy; not merely good communications, active coaching and counseling of employees, but also careful consideration of each employee's individual character. So be it. If you end up with SuperCompetent employees that make you and your organization shine, it'll be worth every single minute of effort.


Make it a productive day!
(TM)

(C) Copyright 2010 Laura Stack. All rights reserved.

 


 

Time Tips and Tricks
To be featured in this section of our newsletter and get a free eBook with our thanks, send your productivity tip or trick to [email protected] with “Tips and Tricks contribution” in the subject line.

Critical Tips for Successful Team Execution

Over time, individual teams and whole organizations tend to establish a standard pace. This pace can easily become unnecessarily lethargic. The trick is to regulate the pace, keeping it as high as possible without provoking burn-out. Executing at a brisk pace keeps your team energetic and fresh. Here are ten acceleration strategies that can help you and your team pick up the pace.

1. Identify an “enemy.”
2. Break the decision gridlock.
3. Develop contingency plans and workarounds.
4. Set the bar higher.
5. Establish momentum-building milestones.

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Executive Coaching

Coaching is a powerful way to achieve employee engagement. What I'm talking about here is face-to-face engagement between you, the manager, and the individuals who work on your team. As I see it, there are two forms of coaching possible: group coaching, and one-on-one coaching. Let's take a quick look at both.

Group coaching brings your entire group together. You can use group events, whether in-house or off site, to encourage a sense of teamwork and belonging, as well as to inform your people of changes in the company's mission and vision, or to outline and plan new initiatives within your organization. Even a standard meeting can be used as a coaching session, especially if you take the time to reward individuals in the presence of their colleagues or to otherwise recognize them for their contributions. Both forms of recognition are key drivers of engagement, especially among older, more established employees.

One-on-one coaching is an opportunity for you to have face time with individual employees. Praise the employee's strengths, and don't hesitate to let them know where they need to shore up their weaknesses. Offer the opportunity to undergo special training if necessary. Also, take the chance to listen closely to their issues and ambitions, so that you know what you need to do to better fit them to the team environment. Don't forget that you're in charge, but listen closely and do what you can to make your individual employees happy. A happy employee is much more likely to be an engaged employee, and engaged employees are disproportionately profitable.

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

The Paperless Office by Shoeboxed.com

Take a minute to look around your workspace right now. Are you surrounded by piles of paper documents? Perhaps you’re more organized than that and you have everything stored in large filing cabinets or on shelves. Now imagine your office without the paper clutter and cumbersome cabinets. Welcome to the paperless office.

The idea of the paperless office was first proposed back in 1975, when an article in BusinessWeek magazine announced: “By 1990, most record handling will be electronic.” Thirty years later, we have the technology to make the paperless dream a reality, but today’s businesses continue to use antiquated paper document management systems, and at huge costs.

I’ll admit that it’s sometimes easier to read a hard copy, but what businesses may not know is that relying on paper documents can be a major drain on productivity and revenue. According to PriceWaterhouseCoopers, businesses spend $20 in labor to file a paper document, $120 to find a misfiled document, and $220 to reproduce a document. They also found that 7.5% of all paper documents get lost.

While going paperless might seem like a huge undertaking, it’s actually very easy and affordable. Instead of throwing away money on paper, copiers, fax machines, envelopes, folders, filing cabinets, shelves and other paper paraphernalia, think about investing in paperless technology. Tablet PCs and iPads can greatly improve productivity and enhance collaboration by making it faster and easier to create, store, retrieve and exchange information.

For existing paper documents and things like receipts and business cards, there are many trustworthy and affordable services out there that can quickly turn paper clutter into a secure, searchable online database. Where it may take days to retrieve a paper document from an off-site storage facility, accessing a digital copy stored in the cloud only takes a few seconds. There are also scanners available on the market today to help you digitize documents, but outsourcing these tasks to a cloud services is more affordable and more efficient.

If the productivity and money-saving benefits of going paperless do not have you convinced, how’s this for a reason: no more paper cuts.

For more information, visit www.shoeboxed.com.
 

Laura Stack: The Productivity Pro (r)

Laura Stack, MBA, CSP
Publisher

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SuperCompetent: The Six Keys to Perform at Your Productive Best (Wiley, 2010) IS NOW AVAILABLE! Thank you! Thank you! SUPERCOMPETENT was released on August 9 and is already officially a bestseller in the U.S., the U.K., and Canada! We hit #1 in the Business Skills and Business Motivation categories on Amazon.com and #40 overall. We were the #3 Mover and Shaker and were also listed in the Hot New Releases! We couldn’t have achieved this without all of our online partners and friends. Please visit www.SuperCompetentBook.com for a listing of all those who helped. We are so grateful.

To celebrate, we have extended our bonus offer! If you purchase SUPERCOMPETENT from any online or retail bookstore and forward your receipt to [email protected], you’ll receive free bonus gifts from me and several of my colleagues:

• Dianna Booher is providing a free eBook Write to the Point.
• Joe Calloway is providing the eBook Becoming a Category of One.
• Eric Chester is providing the eBook Employing Generation Why.
• Terri Sjodin is providing a free subscription to the Presenters post quarterly e-newsletter.
• Chris Widener is giving away his “Totally Motivated” eBook.
• Mark Sanborn (who also wrote the Foreword) is providing you with access to his in-depth Encore Assessment, a regular $25.95 value.
• Ford Saeks is giving away his “Keywords Secrets” MP3.
• I’m giving away an MP3 explaining the SUPERCOMPETENT culture and mindset.

Check out www.SuperCompetentBook.com and click the Bonus icon for more details. Purchase your copy in any of these online stores:

1. Amazon
2. Borders
3. Barnes & Noble
4. Booksamillion
5. CEORead

Lastly, email your receipt to [email protected]. Enjoy!


 

Monthly Microsoft Outlook webinar: August 23, 2010: ADVANCED OUTLOOK

AutoArchive Old Mail, Reduce the Size of Your Mailbox, Archive Messages Manually, Outlook Data Files, Importance, Sensitivity, Lock Your Email Text, Delivery Options, Expire Messages, Have Replies Sent to Someone Else, Delayed Send, Categorize Emails in Groups, Share Folders, Assign Delegates, Specify Permissions, Access Other’s Folders, Add to Public Folders, Use Outlook When Not Connected, Create Personalized Fields, Add Your New Fields to Forms, Change Default Forms, Deleting Forms, Writing Word Documents from Contacts, Printing Envelopes and Labels, Add RSS Feeds, Add Heightened Security.

Outlook version 2003: 9:00 pacific/12:00 eastern
Outlook version 2007: 11:00 pacific/2:00 eastern

Cost is $39 with workbook and recording. For more information and to register click here.

 


Monthly Productivity Webinar: August 23, 2010

 

Thirty Best Practices for Scheduling Your Day in Outlook: Maintaining Your Calendar Digitally. Using software to maintain your schedule can be extremely effective, but if you're not careful, it can turn into a real waste of time for both you and everyone else involved. Try to keep the following factors in mind when scheduling your day in Outlook, Lotus Notes, or GroupWise (demonstrated in Outlook).
• Using third-party software to find convenient day/time of meeting for people not at your company.
• Converting emails automatically into appointments (no copy/paste).
• Automatically find open meeting times without comparing calendars.
• Track meetings by projects, team, or committee.

 

Click here for more information.

 

Laura in the News!
Business Networking Advice

How to Leave the Office at 5:00

How to Break Time-Sapping Habits

Laura Stack on avoiding social-media addiction

 

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Laura's Blog

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Recent posts:

Business Productivity: SHRM Interview on Social Media with Laura Stack

Time Management: Productivity-Boosting Sites on the Web

Work Life Balance: Video: Make Your Health Your Number One Priority

Top 50 Productivity Blogs to Watch in 2010

Time Management Video: Eliminate the Later Fact

Business Productivity Video: Handling Your Paperwork

Business Productivity: Stop Procrastination in Its Tracks!


 

 

Laura's Demonstration VideoView Laura's Demonstration Video

 
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