How Companies Can Tap Sustainability to Motivate Staff
Employee motivation
or engagement is a holy grail of people management – and often nearly as
elusive. Engaged employees are happier and more productive, of course,
but how can companies make it happen? In this opinion piece, CB Bhattacharya (@CBsuite),
the Pietro Ferrero chair in sustainability and director of the Center for
Sustainable Business at the European School of Management and Technology in
Berlin, explains how leading companies are successfully boosting engagement
through involvement in sustainability issues. That appears to give employees a
sense of larger purpose. He also spells out what all companies could do to reap
some of the available benefits.
Employee
engagement, the psychological engine that drives corporate performance, is at
an all-time low. A recent worldwide Gallup poll shows that employee engagement
– broadly defined as a state where employees are inclined to feel and speak
positively about their workplace is an abysmal 13%. In fact, roughly double
that number are actively disengaged at work and have little
problem badmouthing their employers. Contrast this with the case of a company
such as Unilever with a workforce of 170,000+ that has an employee engagement
score around 80%.
How do they do it?
Well,
for one, Unilever and few other companies have successfully implemented a sustainable
business model that puts environmental and societal considerations
front and center along with growth and profits – and such a model taps into the
higher sense of purpose that we humans have, and that currently many employees
yearn for, as noted author Daniel Pink writes in his book Drive.
Over
the last two years, I have visited several large global companies (e.g.,
Allianz, BASF, Enel, IBM, Marks and Spencer, Nestle, Unilever, others) to
better understand how sustainability moves from being a buzzword, fed by
anecdotes coming out of “do-gooding” companies, to being embedded in the way
business is done. In other words, when does sustainability become sustainable?
I have spoken with CEO’s, middle management, shop floor employees and gone from
glitzy headquarters to retail stores to factories in the middle of nowhere to
seek insight.
In a
recent article on
this subject, Unilever CEO Paul Polman and I examine the varying strategies of
international companies as they work to make sustainability a part of the DNA
of their respective business. Along the way, we discovered many individual and
company success stories that illustrate best practices but not a
one-size-fits-all or cookie-cutter solution for every organization. Ultimately,
it boils down to bringing the personal goals and values of individual employees
together with the values and goals of the organization to create a sustainable
business. It’s as easy or as hard as that. The following eight steps show how
to engage all employees in the company’s sustainability mission and thereby
boost their engagement.
·
Define the company’s long-term purpose. Why
does the company do what it does? Leaders should ask this question and share
the answers with employees. For Unilever, the purpose is to simply make
“sustainable living commonplace.” The company has implemented this purpose via
the Unilever Sustainable
Living Plan that incorporates aggressive environmental and societal
goals, all while growing the business. Purpose also comes into play via
Unilever’s brands, many of which already have a social purpose built into them
– e.g., for the antibacterial soap Lifebuoy it is to “help a child reach the
age of five.” Thinking about the social purpose that a company serves enables
employees to latch onto that higher purpose and use the company as a means to
express their values, which in turn, creates meaning in and at work.
·
Spell out the economic case for
sustainability. Research has shown that truly sustainable business is
profitable business and it helps the cause to share this knowledge with
employees. Take the case of IBM’s pursuit of energy
efficiency. Through its decades-long energy conservation program, IBM has
demonstrated that smart energy management is good for the environment and good
for business, because each kilowatt of electricity not consumed avoids greenhouse
gas emissions and improves IBM’s bottom line. In 2014 alone, IBM implemented
energy conservation projects at 341 locations globally, cutting usage to the
tune of $37.4 million in savings – 6.7% of IBM’s total energy use. Leaders
should make their respective cases to their employees.
·
Create sustainable knowledge and competence. To
bolster the “can do” belief among employees, it is important to invest in
educating employees about sustainability as well as to create systems and
processes that make it easier for them to integrate sustainability into their
business decisions. Many sustainability initiatives require specialized
knowledge and expertise — such as talking to suppliers about sustainable
sourcing or using an eco-efficiency tool to evaluate a new product. No wonder,
then, companies as diverse as BASF, IBM, Marks & Spencer, and Nestlé have
invested heavily in training and development, as well as systems and processes
that enable sustainability decisions to be made at a large scale.
·
Make every employee a sustainability champion. Leadership
is key to embedding the sustainable business model and the process typically
starts with the CEO getting his/her leadership team on board the ship. However,
it is not enough to have sustainability champions at the top — they must be
cultivated at all levels and geographies of the organization. Marks and Spencer
has sustainability “champions” in every store and Unilever has sustainability
“ambassadors” throughout the organization. As a result, 76% of Unilever’s 170,000
employees feel their role at work enables them to contribute to delivering to
the sustainability agenda, and about half of all new employees entering the
company from university cite Unilever’s ethical and sustainability policies as
the primary reason for wanting to join the company.
·
Co-create sustainable practices with
employees. Another important way of embedding sustainability in a company
is to engage employees in the co-creation of sustainable practices. And a great
way to do this is to act on employee initiatives. Companies get more and better
ideas when they bubble up from the bottom. A good example of this is Marks
& Spencer, which now has clothes-recycling boxes in its stores that provide
income for the international nonprofit Oxfam. The boxes were an employee’s idea
that received support from the board and achieved great success. Once company
employees begin to see the positive impact and economic returns on social and
environmental investments that they helped create, they start believing that they
do have a role to play, and the ideas start to flow.
·
Encourage healthy competition among
employees. An effective way for an organization to embrace a new set of
goals and foster an “I should do it” spirit throughout the company is to create
a culture of healthy competition among employees. Connected
to Care, an initiative launched by BASF in 2015, is
an example of healthy competition. The chemicals company provides every
employee with an opportunity to join a team, develop a corporate volunteering
project in one of three core BASF areas — food, smart energy, and urban living
— and submit the project to Connected to Care. In 2015, more than 500 project
ideas were received from about 35,000 employees across all BASF regions
worldwide. All employees worldwide are able to vote for their favorite projects
and the top 150 were funded.
·
Make sustainability visible inside and outside
the company. Measuring and communicating progress on key sustainability
indicators always attracts people’s focus as we typically want to succeed in
the dimensions we are measured on. No wonder, then, leading companies develop
indicators to track the progress of their sustainability agenda, which they
share via scorecards, dashboards and webcasts with employees. To keep visibility
high and reinforce the idea that achievements in sustainability are meaningful
for the company, it is also important to celebrate success when goals are
reached or awards won (such as category leadership in the Dow Jones
Sustainability Index).
·
Showcase the higher purpose by creating
transformational change.No company can go it alone and beat the
tragedy of the commons. We need to learn to collaborate with traditional
competitors to solve thorny environmental and social issues. Doing this fosters
a sense of unity among employees because they see that achieving sustainability
is not just about themselves, or even their own company, but rather a societal
issue with global implications, all of which inspires them to join in. To help
tackle deforestation, for example, Unilever and Tesco led the global Consumer Goods Forum— an
industry network of about 400 retailers, manufacturers and service providers
with a combined turnover of 2.5 trillion euros — to announce a moratorium on
deforestation.
Every
person wants his or her working life to have a higher purpose that goes beyond
doing a job and earning an income. Yet too many people spend most of their
waking hours in workplaces that fall short of providing this. Companies that
can resolve the tension people feel between their personal values and the best
interests of the business will benefit by having a highly engaged and
productive workforce — proud to play a part in bringing positive change to communities
around the world
KNOWLEDGE@WHARTON
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