High Performance Workplace Experts Sue Bingham and Bob Dusin: 8 Elements of a Workplace Where People Love to Come to Work

By: Jul. 03, 2018
Enter Your Email to Unlock This Article

Plus, get the best of BroadwayWorld delivered to your inbox, and unlimited access to our editorial content across the globe.




Existing user? Just click login.

High Performance Workplace Experts Sue Bingham and Bob Dusin: 8 Elements of a Workplace Where People Love to Come to Work

ROME, Ga., July 3, 2018 /PRNewswire/  If a leader believes that people are an organization's competitive edge, then they need to create a high-performance culture that takes full advantage of committed employees who love to come to work.

So say Sue Bingham and Bob Dusin, authors of the book "Creating the High Performance Workplace; It's Not Complicated to Develop a Culture of Commitment" (2018, Indie Books International.)

Bingham is a founder of HPWP Group, which has been at the forefront of the positive business movement for 35 years. She has personally conducted hundreds of leadership workshops transforming the lives of over 3,000 leaders.

"Approximately 95% of employees are good people, so why have policies that focus on the marginal 5%?" asks Dusin, who has worked as a construction manager, human resources and training director, and business owner.

Here are the authors' eight elements of a workplace where people love to come to work:

  • Positive Assumptions: Eliminate the blame game and CYA by assuming people want to do the right thing.
  • Identify and Eliminate Negatives: Just get rid of those subtle status differences which cause one group of people to feel less important and less valued than others. Anything that makes a small group feel elite and a large group feel less important is a bad idea.
  • Mutual Trust and Respect: Hire only people you would trust to watch your home, then unlock doors and supply cabinets or give everyone a key.
  • Open, Two-Way, Adult-to-Adult Communication: Most employees raise children, own homes and support their community. Interact with people at work the same way you would with a neighbor you like.
  • Employee Involvement and Engagement: Don't just ask for input to give the illusion of engagement. Don't let people get involved - expect that they want to get involved. Get rid of programs. People doing the job everyday know how to do it best - turn them loose to improve and innovate. Otherwise, you're paying for an expensive system and only using a small part of its capabilities.
  • Training: Training is an indispensable investment in your culture and should have a quantifiable ROI for performance improvement. What does stellar training look like? People are on a wait-list to attend your training.
  • Competitive Wages and Benefits: Research confirms that people don't quit for money; they leave when they feel unfairly treated. Make wages and benefits competitive and be open about the structure and data. People usually don't leave for more money if they feel they are being treated fairly.
  • High Expectations: If your job profiles end with "other duties as assigned" and you regularly tell people "do the best you can," you've just set a low bar for performance. Set expectations in terms of maximums and then reward progress.

"Living these eight elements is the mosaic for creating the workplace where people love to come to work," says Bingham. "The secret, however, is in the application of the elements - not the words."

About Indie Books International

Indie Books International (www.indiebooksintl.com) was founded in 2014 in Oceanside, California by two best-selling business authors. Since then the company has published more than 100 titles.  Similar to indie film companies and indie music labels, the mission of Indie Books International is to serve as an independent publishing alternative for business thought leaders.

Contact
Henry DeVries
197976@email4pr.com
619-540-3031



Comments

To post a comment, you must register and login.

Vote Sponsor


Videos