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Volume 3, issue 19
Do your employees have multiple
communications paths from the top or is their manager their only source
of information? If so, you risk being blindsided...John
Management idea
A client of ours had a large
immigrant workforce that didn't understand English. The company relied
on a single bilingual supervisor to communicate its message to the
workers.
They shared
financial performance with the Supervisor in an effort to provide a
broader context for his work and recognize his management position.
Unfortunately the Supervisor confused gross margin with pretax margin
and concluded that his team of immigrant workers were grossly underpaid.
(In fact they were earning above market wages as skilled machine
operators.) He got his group together and explained his plan - he would
present an ultimatum to the owner - dramatically increase wages
immediately and retroactively or every operator would immediately walk,
crippling the company.
The owner said no way - the
operators walked. After waiting in the parking lot for a half day they
gave up and returned to their jobs, albeit without their Supervisor who
the owner fired on the spot. The company brought in a bilingual HR
Director to translate and set the record straight. From that day forward
they made sure that no department or group heard from the company
exclusively though one person. You
can not afford to allow any manager to be the only channel to
your employees. In our strategic planning meetings we have encountered
similar employee misunderstandings in groups lead by a variety of
managers who aggressively isolate their people - IT departments, sales
teams, branch offices, etc.