Do you want to ensure that your teams and employees are extremely productive? Well, employee productivity has a direct correlation to how they are treated. And in this post, we’re going to share simple yet effective tips that will contribute to boosting employee productivity in your workplace.
Delegate the Right Way
It all starts with you, the manager. If you think that your team can do everything in anything, you might want to think again. As far as human employees are concerned, this is definitely not the case. You really want to ensure you know your employee. Any ‘know’ we mean the ability to understand their skill sets and delegate accordingly. Have you ever had the situation where you yourself were delegated to do a certain task which was outside of your level of competence? Not the best feeling, you agree? The key here is to keep in mind that not everybody is created equal. So, the onus is on you to find out who has strengths and weaknesses, delegate accordingly, and watch the overall workplace productivity grow.
Provide the Right Technology Tools
Being productive isn’t only knowing your responsibility area and completing the tasks in a timely manner. It’s also knowing whether you have the right tech tool at your fingertips and being able to utilize them if need be. So many times, managers actually don’t do this. All they have are tools that prove to be non-operational and thus useless in lots of situations. So, your responsibility is to put your hands on the right instruments, those that will be well-suited to your company and staff’s needs. You might consider having some share-point sites that people can go to for one document to update, not multiple ones, which might confuse workers. It also would be a wise choice to have dedicated productivity monitoring software in place to be able to gauge what you’re striving for. Make sure all printers, copiers, and other equipment work properly. Even some minor equipment failure or system glitch may negatively affect your workplace productivity by causing downtimes and unwanted halts.
Provide Meaningful Feedback
Having regularly scheduled interval feedback sessions is crucial for your employee performance. Feedback is not only about giving all the praise but also the ability to use constructive criticism and pointing to your team’s weaknesses without offending or discouraging them. ‘Hey, here’s what we can improve upon’ would sound much better and more motivating than ‘Now, let’s review your failures.’ Also, make sure to ask for your employees’ opinions and assessment of the situations you’re trying to improve on. Don’t go with the hidden agenda since you’re not going to trap anybody but provide meaningful assessment and help people get better on what they are doing. As a manager, that is your job to guide your team in the right direction, single out the areas where they excel, and show what requires their special attention.
Cross-Train
Cross-train your employees! Not at a gym but at work, of course. The worst thing about not being productive is when one person, who knows the answers, finds themselves unable to do the work of other team members who have the same job functions. So, with cross-training, you want to get your employees the same job functions and duties to get a feel for what their colleagues are doing. So, if they have a specialty where they focus a lot on a particular task, you should make sure that other people on the team know how to cope with it, too. You should always remember that there are vacations and sick days when managers need to mobilize their reserves and assign staff to other departments and reassign multiple tasks. And for this process to be as smooth as possible, you want to devote due attention to cross-training your employees.
Be a Great Leader
People will always follow what the tone from the top is doing. So, you really need to lead by example. Be a great leader and set the right tone for those who report to you. If you want people to develop certain qualities, pick up certain skills, or have certain values, you don’t have to frame it but demonstrate it instead. Remember, you can’t just talk the talk, you need to walk the talk!