Get the latest insights
delivered straight to your inbox
Apr 3, 2023
Brenda R. Smyth, Supervisor of Content Creation
Managers play a pivotal role in employee job satisfaction and engagement. In fact, they account for 70% of the variance in team engagement, according to Gallup. And there are no shortcuts when it comes to relationships. They take time and intentionality.
But for managers to meet workers’ evolving expectations and prioritize these interactions, they need preparation and support from their workplaces. The right management incentives, ongoing management education and clarity around employee promotions, raises and benefits will help managers focus on these vital relationships.
At its most basic, work is simply the exchange of a wage for a job completed. But most of us learn in our first jobs that there’s much more to it than that. For example, a lifeguarding job is straight forward: Watch the pool and keep swimmers safe. But your 20-year-old boss is new to the management game, adhering to an inflexible scheduling system, hasn’t said two words to you since day one, and vanishes when it’s time to clean.
This is where an employee first realizes the expectations they have for their managers.
It’s natural to compare one job to the next, one boss to the next – and our expectations evolve as we go. Most worker expectations fit into three buckets: Stability, clear communication and empathy. Breaking these categories down, you’ll find things like fair wages, competitive benefits, work-life balance, job security, growth, appreciation, autonomy, fairness, flexibility, and more.
Are these expectations realistic? Whether they are or not, they’re the reality of today’s competitive job market and directly correlated to how well a company performs. According to McKinsey & Company data, 39% of job satisfaction comes from our interpersonal relationships. And employee-management relationship drives 86% of that satisfaction.
Register now for Inspiring Loyalty: The Secrets of Employee Retention, a live, online course.
Organizations everywhere are tuning in to what employees expect from jobs and how to strengthen one key component – the employee-manager relationship. Consider how you’re supporting your managers’ efforts so they can lead teams to success.
Brenda R. Smyth
Supervisor of Content Creation
Brenda Smyth is supervisor of content creation at SkillPath. Drawing from 20-plus years of business and management experience, her writings have appeared on Forbes.com, Entrepreneur.com and Training Industry Magazine.
Latest Articles
Article Topics