Healthee’s VP of People, Debbie Sharvit, gives step-by-step instructions for how to write a company culture book that will engage your employees. Here’s a sneak peek:
1. How to position your company culture book for the modern workforce.
2. The 12 steps to writing a company culture book that’s thorough and readable.
3. Suggested reading and inspiration from other organizations.
For an HR leader, employee engagement is likely one of the outcomes one cares most deeply about. Not only is employee motivation and job satisfaction a reflection of how happy one’s workforce is, but it is also directly correlated with employee retention and productivity.
But there’s one catch: job satisfaction and motivation are super difficult to move the needle on. Both are challenging to define and notoriously difficult to measure.
However, with the right tools, any workplace is on the right track to becoming a conducive working environment, one that keeps numbers up, meets every goal, and, more importantly, keeps workers happy. Therefore, we are going to explore exactly what employee satisfaction is, along with best practices to measure and improve levels of employee motivation within your own organization.
Job satisfaction refers to the extent to which a worker feels fulfilled in their role. There are many factors how to improve employee satisfaction levels, including (but not limited to):
If all of this comes off as very conceptual, you’re not wrong! When so much of employee engagement is rooted in emotion and perception, how exactly are you supposed to measure it? That’s what we’ll address in the next section.
Just as you would with any other outcome, you have to measure satisfaction levels over time. To do this, identify which employee satisfaction metrics you want to focus on. Here are a few we recommend:
The ESI is a number between one and 100 that indicates the satisfaction levels of your employees. The index is based on three questions:
How satisfied are you with your current workplace?
How well does your current workplace meet your expectations?
How close is your current workplace to the ideal one?
Employees rate each question on a scale from one to 10. You can start with this formula to calculate the actual score:
ESI= sum of all employees’ scores divided by (/) maximum possible score multiplied by (*) 100
This is an indicator of how many employees have left your company during a specific period of time. To calculate turnover rate, divide the number of employees who voluntarily left your company within a specific period by the number of employees at the beginning of that period.
For instance, if you start the year with 100 employees and lose ten, your turnover rate is 10/100 = 0.1, or 10%. For reference, the 2021 Bureau of Labor Statics report found that the average voluntary turnover rate is 25%.
Not all metrics have to be purely quantitative. In fact, we encourage companies to weigh qualitative data just as heavily. Feedback gives more nuanced responses that provide context and can help identify broader themes when it comes to the state of employee motivation within your organization.
Now you might be wondering: how exactly do I get this information from my employees? When it comes to data collection, there are three methods we recommend:
a. Employee survey. One of the best ways to collect both quantitative and qualitative feedback from employees is through an anonymous survey. If you’d like to use our template to work off of, check out the employee satisfaction survey we created.
b. Insights from existing HR tools. If you’re using HR software—whether as a recruiting or survey tool—use it to your advantage! Most high-quality platforms will have an analytics dashboard that allows you to pull out data from specific periods.
c. 1:1 conversations. Finally, having conversations with employees can motivate them to speak out, making it a powerful way to collect feedback. Some people may feel uncomfortable sharing constructive, honest feedback with you, so we wouldn’t rely on this as your primary or sole source of information. But even a few 1:1 sessions can add more color to your existing data – especially if you can assure employees that their feedback is confidential.
Every employer will have a slightly different approach to improving how employees feel about their jobs. But there are six best practices that apply almost everywhere:
Fair pay gives employees a feeling of appreciation and motivation. Unfortunately, 46% of professionals feel they’re underpaid at their jobs, which means nearly half of those in the workforce wish their pay would better reflect their efforts.
The problem is more pronounced for certain demographics, including women who in 2020, earned only 84% of what men earned (comparing median hourly earnings). The gap is even wider for women of color. Hispanic women earn 57 cents while Black women earn 64 cents for every dollar a man earns, according to 2020 numbers.
If you’re committed to having fair pay practices, you can conduct a pay-gap analysis to identify and address existing compensation imbalances and use Radford data to match the top 10% to 15% of salaries in your industry.
After salary, employee benefits likely serve as an organizational motivator—specifically healthcare benefits.
Glassdoor analyzed the correlations between 54 benefits and overall job satisfaction rate with benefits packages. The result? Health insurance leads the way—significantly ahead of popular perks like flexible hours, professional development opportunities, or performance bonuses.
But simply offering health insurance isn’t enough. 73% of employees don’t have a solid understanding of their healthcare benefits and as a result, 59% of employees delay or avoid treatment because they’re not sure if they’re covered by their insurance. Is healthcare really a benefit if your people avoid using it?
That’s where Healthee comes in. Healthee offers personalized healthcare benefits guidance to employees—whether that’s helping them discover what’s covered by their insurance, choosing the right plan during Open Enrollment, identifying an in-network provider for their specific needs, or how to save money on care.
We also give HR teams an easy way to measure employee experience. Through our dashboard, you can see employees’ real-time usage and ratings of their interactions with Healthee. This will help you understand how well our product is working and how your employees feel about their healthcare benefits. To learn more, feel free to schedule a call with our team.
An important factor in keeping employees highly motivated is having meaningful relationships with colleagues.
A recent report found that only 38% of employees say their company is effective at enabling them to build authentic relationships with coworkers and managers. Thankfully, there are ways to encourage more connection-building:
Host team-building activities to bring people together (virtually or in-person).
Encourage employees to take moments away from their desk, whether by taking a walk with their manager or grabbing a virtual coffee with colleagues.
Introduce interest groups, such as a book club, to help teammates connect through shared interests.
We try to put these recommendations into practice with our own team at Healthee. Using a tool called Donut, we facilitate virtual 1:1 coffee chats across the company every two weeks. We also host team lunches in the office and have company-wide happy hours every week to create opportunities for connection.
Being promoted from an individual contributor to a manager is essentially like starting a new job, given the number of additional skills, responsibilities, and knowledge one needs to acquire.
76% of managers say that they want more training and development opportunities from their companies. Despite this, people are often not given the resources or support they need to succeed in their roles.
When your managers don’t feel supported, it will have a negative impact on job satisfaction. There’s a reason why 57% of employees have left at least one company because of their boss. To support your managers, invest in training that helps them succeed and
Navigate tough conversations with empathy
Improve their communication skills
Have more productive performance reviews
You can also create shared spaces for managers to learn from one another. For instance, at Healthee, we have a Managers Forum that meets every six weeks. During these sessions, our managers discuss everything from leadership tactics to their current struggles, giving them the opportunity to learn and grow in their roles.
Your employees want to be acknowledged for their hard work. Otherwise, they’re more likely to get burned out, look for another job, and generally feel dissatisfied with their jobs.
To prevent this from happening, introduce a recognition program to acknowledge the contributions of your workforce. For recognition to be highly motivational, make sure it’s
Regular. Demonstrating employee gratitude once a year doesn’t cut it. For employee recognition to be effective, it needs to be given consistently—whether that’s on a monthly or quarterly basis, depending on their performance.
Immediate. Waiting too long between the positive action and the employee recognition causes it to lose meaning.
Specific. When recognition is specific, it comes across as more genuine.
For employees to feel high job satisfaction and perform their best, they have to feel a sense of psychological safety. A study from Google furthered the importance of psychological safety, naming it the most important motivation in the workplace.
Psychological safety is the belief that your voice will be heard when speaking up with new ideas, questions, concerns, or mistakes. Cultivating a culture of psychological safety doesn’t happen overnight, but there are steps leaders need to take to move in that direction. According to a report by McKinsey:
“Our research finds that a positive team climate—in which team members value one another’s contributions, care about one another’s well-being, and have input into how the team carries out its work—is the most important driver of a team’s psychological safety. By setting the tone for the team climate through their own actions, team leaders have the strongest influence on a team’s psychological safety.”
Psychological safety isn’t just key to high job satisfaction—it’s also great for business. Happy employees who work in a positive environment are 12% more productive and, when employees feel like they’re being listened to, they’re 4.6 times more likely to be empowered to perform to the best of their abilities.
Employee job satisfaction is a hard issue to tackle, but there are tried-and-true ways to increase employee engagement levels at your organization. If you want to use your healthcare benefits as a way to create a happier and highly motivated workforce, consider introducing Healthee to help your employees get the most out of them.
Request a demo to learn more.
Managing healthcare benefits across multiple regions is a complex challenge for U.S. enterprises. While businesses aim for consistency, the reality is that healthcare laws, costs, and provider networks vary widely.
Point solution fatigue occurs when employees feel overwhelmed by an abundance of separate health programs, making it difficult to understand what they have access to, how to use it, and where to start.
The key questions to find that special health benefits broker who will tailor plans to your needs, save you money, and keep your team happy.