Employee experience: essential to compete
A growing number of
organizations suddenly are into employee experience. They’re
discarding the stiff, outdated term human resources and many
have even replaced chief human resources officer with chief employee experience
officer.
So, what is employee
experience? Is it a fad? The new buzzword? A fresh approach to competing in
today’s war for talent? Or a fancy way to make engagement sound better to
millennials?
Millennials are
certainly a factor. They comprise 30 percent of the population and by 2025 will
represent 75 percent of the global workforce. What they seek most from their jobs is meaningful work, flexibility and
autonomy, and connection and mentoring.
This shift to EX, as we
refer to employee experience, parallels the changing nature of work. With
today’s technology, 45 percent of activities people are paid to do could be automated, and 60 percent of jobs could have
30 percent or more of their activities automated.
How people show up and
interact with companies will differ fundamentally because employers are
recognizing they must reimagine every aspect of work – from recruitment and job
evaluations to collaboration, perks, and the workplace itself. For them, the
war for talent will be won or lost based on EX.
McKinsey believes EX is
essential for companies to compete effectively. It ranks among our top people initiatives
and we’re dedicating significant resources to it. We’re not alone. EX even
influences where companies locate their business, including a giant online
retailer’s criteria for deciding where to situate its second headquarters. Its
selection criteria included community, quality of life, cultural community fit
and access to mass transit – all factors that help enhance EX.
We define EX as companies and their people working together
to create personalized, authentic experiences that ignite passion and tap into
purpose to strengthen individual, team, and company performance.
It requires a
human-centric approach to grasp an employee’s needs and desires to create those
moments that truly matter in their day, year, and career. We borrow from great
customer experience to consider how these moments provide unexpected delight to
inspire employee loyalty and retention.
Consider a story that a
healthcare client recently related about a family member in a medical crisis
being connected by colleagues and co-workers to a network of healthcare
professionals, support systems, and exceptional products. That experience
transformed that employee’s attitudes toward the company. Another company
tackled barriers getting in the way of accomplishing work. It made a difference
with employees spending more time on things that matter. Gone are the
three-hour meetings late on a Friday afternoon that lead nowhere. Now that’s a
good experience.
Imagine what companies
can achieve if they create extraordinary moments – both big and small – for and
with their employees each day.
by Naina Dhingra and
Jonathan Emmett
https://www.mckinsey.com/business-functions/organization/our-insights/the-organization-blog/employee-experience-essential-to-compete?cid=other-eml-alt-mip-mck-oth-1804&hlkid=61293b0ebefc407cb9225f3fac92a943&hctky=1627601&hdpid=38769ec6-3e9a-48e0-ae08-e1f18e7e2ede
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