HR Disciplines

Money: It’s Not All Employees Want

HRKorea.us 2012.08.09 22:08 Views : 1181

Money: It’s Not All Employees Want 

 

By Rebecca R. Hastings, SPHR

 

 When employers act as though the 1959 song “Money (That’s What I Want)” represents employees’ top priorities in the workplace, they miss some of the most important drivers of satisfaction and engagement.

“It is well known that money is a short-term motivator,” Jayne Mattson, senior vice president, Keystone Associates, told SHRM Online. Ultimately, employees look for an organization and position where their values are met, core skills are utilized and work tasks align with interests, she said.

Pay does help attract and even retain employees, according to Towers Watson, a global professional services company, but “sustainable engagement” requires much more than money. According to Towers Watson, sustainable engagement is a combination of:

  • Traditional engagement—employees’ willingness to expend discretionary effort.
  • Enablement—the tools, resources and support employees need to do their jobs effectively.
  • Energy—a work environment that supports employee well-being.

The Towers Watson 2012 Global Workforce Study, released July 11, 2012, and reflecting the views of more than 32,000 employees around the world, found that although pay was the No. 1 way to attract and retain employees, the top five factors affecting sustainable engagement are:

  • Leadership.
  • Stress, balance and workload.
  • Goals and objectives.
  • Supervision.
  • Image.

“In every study that has ever been conducted, money is always fourth or fifth on the list of factors that drive employee loyalty and satisfaction,” Rick DeMarco, managing director of the West Coast Office of Inward Strategic Consulting told SHRM Online. “That’s not to say that a fair wage for the job is not important ... Employees expect to be fairly compensated … but that’s an expectation and not a driver of their long-term loyalty and commitment.”

Making Engagement Sustainable

“Sustainable engagement is an important evolution in the science of workforce behavior,” said Laura Sejen, global practice leader, rewards for Towers Watson, in a statement. “It recognizes that employees need support from their employer to continue to give discretionary effort on the job.”

Unfortunately, employees are not getting the level of support they need, she noted.

“Enablement and energy are critical factors in this equation,” added Julie Gebauer, managing director, talent and rewards, Towers Watson, in the same statement. “Engagement will only hold over time with these elements in place.”

Towers Watson found that just 37 percent of U.S. workers are sustainably engaged—meaning they scored high on engagement, enablement and energy. About a quarter (27 percent) are classified as “unsupported,” meaning they display characteristics of traditional engagement, but lack the enablement and/or energy required to sustain it. Thirteen percent are described as “detached,” meaning they feel enabled and/or energized but are not willing to expend discretionary effort for their employer. And almost one-quarter (23 percent) are completely disengaged, with less favorable scores in all three areas.

Understanding Engagement Gaps

Towers Watson found that the most significant factors for the 27 percent of the workforce defined as “unsupported” are supervisor support, stress levels and their workloads. More specifically:

  • 43 percent agreed their supervisors had adequately removed obstacles that could impact performance.
  • 26 percent agreed that management involved employees in decisions affecting them.
  • 48 percent felt the amount of work they had to do was reasonable.
  • 40 percent felt they had enough employees in their work group to get the job done correctly.

By comparison, those deemed “highly engaged” by Towers Watson responded favorably to those questions by a margin of a least 30 percentage points higher than unsupported workers.

As for the 13 percent deemed “detached,” company leadership is the focal point:

  • Just 25 percent said they had trust and confidence in the performance of their company’s senior team—a 52 percentage point disparity from the 77 percent of highly engaged workers who agreed with the statement.
  • Similarly, just 26 percent felt that senior leadership had a sincere interest in employees’ well-being—45 percentage points lower than highly engaged respondents.

“Everyone in an organization has a role to play in helping close gaps in employees’ feelings of enablement and energy—from executives, to supervisors, to human resources, to employees themselves,” Gebauer added in the statement.

The survey targeted employees working in large and midsize organizations across a range of industries in 29 markets around the world. It was fielded online during February and March 2012. The U.S. sample included 3,600 employees.

Money Matters Less Than Other Factors

Other studies and experts agree that money matters, but not as much as other aspects of the job and work environment.

In March 2012, PsychTests.com, an online personality, career and IQ assessment company, released research on the top motivators for employees. The data collected between August 2011 and February 2012 revealed that out of a list of 23 work motivators, “financial reward” was ranked 12th.

For men, financial reward was eighth on the list; for women, 15th.

Seventy percent of the 1,194 employees surveyed were from North America. Sixty-four percent of respondents were under the age of 30.

The top five motivators reported were:

  • Customer orientation—the desire to make customers happy.
  • Achievement—the desire to work in a goal-oriented and challenging work environment.
  • Inspiration—the desire to inspire others through one's work.
  • Identity and Purpose—the desire to work in a company/field that is in line with one's values and ethics.
  • Fun & Enjoyment—the desire to work in a position/corporate culture that is inherently entertaining.

“When managers think of motivation and incentives, many of them automatically assume it has to be a bonus or some other financial reward,” said Ilona Jerabek, Ph.D., president of PsychTests, in a statement. “This is clearly not what employees need … at least, not money alone,” she added.

That’s true even among those working in professions focused on financial rewards according to the nearly 2,800 financial advisors surveyed by J.D. Power and Associates for the 2012 U.S. Financial Advisor Satisfaction Study released in March 2012. Organizations that provide the right mix of technology and support to financial advisors, thus optimizing the time they spend with clients, generate more employee satisfaction than those focused on financial gain for employees.

Companies that struggle to deliver the support employees need to be effective pay the highest retention and signing bonuses to compensate for a poorer work experience, according to David Lo, director of investment services at J.D. Power and Associates.

What Employees Want

DeMarco said employees want to:

  • Be part of something bigger than themselves.
  • Know what’s going on in the company and feel included in the company’s plans.
  • Be recognized and rewarded for outstanding effort.

“All of these drivers require a concerted effort by a company to educate, inform and inspire employees around a common vision and culture, to provide them the tools and resources to deliver effectively on the brand promise and business strategy and to reward and recognize them,” he added.

“When employees’ values are met, using the skills they excel in the most and doing work they find interesting, they are career-satisfied and fully engaged,” Mattson said. “Money is an added bonus … However, it is not the driving factor for engagement.”

Rebecca R. Hastings, SPHR, is an online editor/manager for SHRM.

 

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