Employee satisfaction is closely tied to performance. When satisfaction levels rise, productivity, customer service, and profits tend to rise too. Employee turnover slows down and it becomes easier to recruit new talent. See how your team, leadership, and shareholders can benefit from a company culture that emphasizes employee satisfaction.
GUIDING PRINCIPLES: A MORAL COMPASS MAKES LIFE EASIER
articles
What too often happens:
Without guiding principles, you have no moral compass.
With no moral compass, all paths seem of near equal value. Since there are more wasteful paths than worthwhile ones, chances are you’ll wind up pursuing something wasteful. This is living reactively.
Because you have no guiding principles or moral compass, you have no means whereby to measure yourself.
When you fail to measure yourself, you fail to course correct.
When you fail to course correct, you end up spending an embarrassing, irretrievable amount of time on that path of no value.
Being so invested, you’ll be prone to defend your investment, thus further entrenching your commitment.
In the end and at a tremendous expense, you’ll find yourself nowhere meaningful and you’ll want to blame someone else, thus further enhancing the misery of the situation.
On the other hand…
If you have established some guiding principles, you have a fine-tuned moral compass.
Decisions are easy, guided, and your direction, deliberate.
Frequent measurement is automatic and course correcting because you’ll be so invested. Invested in what matters most, invested in your pre-chosen direction.
In the end, you’ll do remarkable things, and leave a legacy of greatness.
Happiness, engagement, and fulfillment will surround you.
The good news…
…is that you can create your moral compass at any time. Determine your guiding principles, catch a vision of where you want to go, and then use that compass to analyze your current trajectory.
If it doesn’t lead in the right direction, stop, change course, and spend the rest of your time investing in something of value.
It’s the only way to avoid the misery that so often accompanies those who lack clarity of purpose and have no sense of direction.
Those who accomplish greatness don’t do it by choosing the path of least resistance, nor the path of greatest temptation. They do it by staying true to the values, principles, morals, and direction they have pre-determined in a moment of clarity and insight.
-Rusty
Share this
with someone who might need it
keep reading
If you want your customers to be happy, you need to think about employee satisfaction. When employees like their workplaces, they are more effective at their jobs and provide better customer service. Learn more about the link between the employee and customer experience and how to measure employee satisfaction.
Company culture affects everything your company does. Research has shown that culture has a strong impact on employees, job seekers, customer service, and more. If your culture is lacking, your employee satisfaction and overall performance will suffer. Learn how to cultivate a strong company culture that motivates people to apply for jobs, stay, and give their best effort.
Employee Satisfaction and Quiet Quitting: How Is Your Organization Doing? articles Many leaders are panicking about the “quiet quitting” movement. For employers, …
If you’re disengaged at work, you may be cheering for “quiet quitters” who aim to focus more on other parts of life. But you still have this niggling sense that something is off. Is quiet quitting really the answer to your lingering unhappiness? What happened to achievement?
Most pianists understand the importance of "Middle C" in orienting themselves as they begin to play. In leadership “middle C” represents compassion – both the ability and the desire to feel for and with those you are called to lead.
Responses