Where Do Your Employees Fit On the Engagement Resistance Curve?


Employee engagement begins with the individual employee.
If the organization — corporation, not-for-profit, university, sports team, what-have-you — is the entire organism, then each employee is like a single cell. Change may appear on the scale of an entire organism, but change begins at the level of the single cell.
Let’s look at the process of growing a more deeply engaged organization by looking at the role that you, the employee, play in your own engagement.
At this point, your position and title are irrelevant. Even if you occupy a glass-walled office in the C-Suite, you are first and foremost an individual, working for the benefit of a wide range of stakeholders: Your colleagues, shareholders, customers, and family members, to name but a few.
Even if you are at the managerial or executive level and have the power to shape and set organizational policy, your greatest impact on the level of employee engagement within your organization will be how engaged you are personally — how strongly you find MAGIC, meaning, autonomy, growth, impact, and connection in where you work and whom you work with.
To that end, it’s worth reiterating a critical point about employee engagement: Being engaged is a choice.
Even if you are the policymaker, engagement doesn’t just happen.
Remember, the organization’s job is to create the conditions optimal for its members to engage with their work, their mission, and each other. Once that fertile soil has been laid down, it is each individual’s responsibility to say, “Yes. I will trust, I will commit emotionally, and I will embrace opportunities to flourish in my organization.”
It’s important to remember that engagement involves hearts, spirits, minds, and hands. This means that you must choose to both feel and act.
While some of the keys to engagement are based on innate qualities that are not always under your conscious control — you probably don’t have complete control of what you will find meaningful—how you choose to act on those stimuli is very much a conscious choice.
That’s why, in any organization, all employees fall somewhere along what we call the, Engagement Resistance Curve.
Some individuals engage more easily and eagerly than others due to both innate personality characteristics (autotelic personality, high self-esteem) and learned behaviors (high levels of trust, past positive workplace experiences). Others engage grudgingly, if at all, due to the same factors, from poor self-esteem and cynicism to issues like undiagnosed anxiety disorders.
Simply put, some people are wired for engagement, while others aren’t. Most of us, however, fit somewhere between these two extremes. We choose to be engaged (or disengaged) based on the environment we are in and where we find the MAGIC —meaning, autonomy, growth, impact, and connection — in that environment.
It’s a 50-50 proposition. The organization builds the ballfield, and we choose to bring our hearts, spirits, minds, and hands to the game.
Most of us approach employee engagement with varying degrees of resistance. The engagement resistance curve doesn’t rank people’s current levels of engagement, but their propensity for becoming engaged. It looks like this:
Sometimes, if the conditions aren’t right for an individual to engage, that also means speaking up and saying, “This is what I need if I’m going to engage.”
So where do you fit on the Engagement Resistance Curve? Remember, you are responsible for your ability or inability to engage, regardless of your position within your organization or your organization’s efforts to “get employees engaged.”
Engagement may be a 50-50 proposition between employer and employee, but the individual has as much power to drive employer engagement initiatives as the top decision makers do. Don’t wait for your employer to come to you, because doing so pres-upposes that your employer …
Do you simply knock on your superior’s door, complain that you’re not feeling engaged, and demand (whether implicitly or directly) that he do something about it? Of course not. The process begins with YOU, not your employer. So where is your current engagement level?
To find out, try taking this online Engagement MAGIC Self-Assessment. It’s completely free and you will surely gain insight into how engaged you are, you’ll also have a much clearer idea of how engaged you wish to become and what to do about it.
This was originally published on the DecisionWise blog.