Zoom Picks Zoom Picks
Search:    Home :> About Us :> Security & Privacy :> ToS :> Add Your Link :> Add Your Article   
 
 

Career Options in Information Technology ( Bio-Technology, Software Programming, Networking)

Career Options in Information Technology. The scope of career options in Information Technology is v ... - Vinay Rana
 

How To Find An Affordable Internet Business

If you are looking for a way to start your own business, you probably have a few reservations that a ... - Gaetane Ross
 

Franchise Opportunity - Questions To Ask The Franchisor - #46

There are great Franchise systems, good Franchise systems, and bad Franchise systems. The challenge ... - Dennis Schooley
 
 

Free Work at Home

So you want to find the perfect, legitimate, and free work at home job but don't know where to look? ... - Tony Newton
 

Do Organizations Serve Us Or Do We Serve Organizations

Organizations were originally conceived to help improve the lives of human beings. In recent years h ... - Nick Arrizza, M.D.
 
 

Home –› Careers & Employment –› Office & Workplace
 

Employee Communication Surveys: Seven Tips For Successful Design and Implementation

 

Organization Communication Problems?

So, your organization is suffering from poor communication practices. John complains that his boss never tells him anything. Sally is expected to come up with sales targets without being briefed on this years company strategy.

Where do you start in improving ineffective communication between people? A good first step in fixing communication problems in any organization is to survey employees. Even if there are no obvious problems, surveys can help get an organization to the next level of performance.

What are the benefits you would expect to see in conducting a communication survey and acting on the results? Well, you could experience some of the following:

*improved employee satisfaction
*lower turnover
*reduced absenteeism
*less political infighting
*greater levels of manager-worker trust
*reduced defect rates
*higher customer satisfaction

A well-run survey can give your organization these benefits. However, a poorly conducted survey can have the opposite effect. Surveys badly planned, rolled out and followed up can actually increase employee cynicism and resistance to change. It may also worsen employee turnover and absenteeism. And this impacts on customer satisfaction and your bottom line.

Communication Survey Tips

So, what do you need to consider before rolling out your survey? Here are seven useful tips to get you heading in the right direction.

Question types

Include in your survey questions requiring limited tick-the-box responses, such as Yes/No and Strongly Agree/Agree/Disagree/Strongly Disagree. Including these questions will allow you to perform quantitative analyses that you can use to compare results between different demographics and to use as a benchmark for future surveys.

However, just as importantly, allow provision for free form comments. Everything that people will want to say will not fit into your pre-packaged boxes. A good idea is to run Focus Groups with a random sample of survey respondents after the survey forms have been collected and analyzed. These discussion groups are invaluable in performing a sanity check on your results so far and in teasing out issues that have surfaced in the written survey.

Anonymity

Guarantee absolute anonymity for the people completing the survey and make this clear in the survey instructions. Some employees will either not complete the survey or give sanitized answers if they believe that their identity will be disclosed with their answers and comments.

Sample size

Should you survey the whole organization/department or a select group? Preferably, survey all employees as this gives everyone a sense of being listened to. If the organization/department is excessively large or budget is tight, draw a random sample from each of the demographic groups that you will be reporting on.

If your selection is not random, the survey results will not be representative and you will lose credibility with your client managers and employees. If a demographic group comprises 50 people or less, you will need to survey 100 percent of the people within that group.

Mode of delivery

If the people completing the survey are small in number and at the one location, then hardcopy distribution will not be a problem. As the number of respondents increase and the locations become more dispersed, give more consideration to the need for electronic distribution. Think about putting the survey on a local intranet or internet web server.

To make filling out the form easy for people, have it so that the form can be completed online. If this is not possible, either send the form by email or put it on an accessible server from which people can download it. If your survey respondents are not comfortable with technology, then be wary of online options and provide plenty of employee support if you decide to go down that road.

Inducements and Reminders

Survey participation rates are typically ten percent or less. You can dramatically improve on this completion rate by conducting some simple follow up. As you get closer to the survey cut-off date (of course, you will have publicized that date with your survey), send out an email reminder or have someone call the respondents personally. Advertising a prize to go to the first to complete the surveys will also increase the participation rate.

Distribute results

Once the results are in and analyzed, distribute your findings first to your client managers and then to employees. Withholding results from employees will only breed cynicism and distrust and make your next survey all that more difficult to get a satisfactory response rate.

Break down your results into meaningful groups, such as by department or by region. The reporting groupings need to be small enough that people can identify with the group enough for a meaningful action plan to be developed.

Be prepared for some kickback from defensive managers. Frank employee feedback is both confronting and jarring, especially for those managers not used to it. Use your best facilitation skills to deliver the key messages. If you are in a politically charged environment, use a professional facilitator to perform this sensitive task.

Follow up and Rewards

A survey conducted with no plan for action is not only a waste of resources but will leave employees asking why they bothered to feedback to managers how they felt. Work with each manager to construct an action plan that they agree with. Remember, it is the manager that will be implementing the plan, not you. Get back with each manager three or six months later to review how they are progressing with their plan and report the results to the organization. As you see communication practices improve across the organization, make sure that managers get rewarded.

By following the above tips, youre sure to get the most benefit from your employee communication survey. The key is to leave room for free form comments on the survey form whilst guaranteeing that participants will not be identified in the results. Make the survey accessible and follow up to ensure that a sufficient number of people respond. You can maximize your response rate by offering rewards. After analyzing the results, distribute to all employees. A survey report ignored is a survey wasted, so develop an action plan and follow up with managers.

2006 Business Performance Pty Ltd. All rights reserved.

Vicki Heath is the Director of Business Performance Pty Ltd, a company providing practical online information and resources in a range of business areas, including employee surveys. Her company's guides, tools and templates assist organizations engage and develop people, manage organizational change and improve project delivery.

Available tools include a ready-to-go Organization Communication Assessment Survey. This survey in the familiar Microsoft Word format is customizable and is packaged with a comprehensive Consultant Guide. Investigate this and other useful tools and free downloads at http://www.businessperform.com.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Vicki_Heath

Author: Vicki Heath
 
Author Bio:

Vicki Heath

Vicki Heath is the Director of Business Performance Pty Ltd, a company providing practical online information and resources in a range of business areas. Her company?s guides, tools and templates assist organizations engage and develop people, manage organizational change and improve project delivery.

This article can be searched using: diversity in the workplace, workplace safety, office workplace ergonomics, workplace diversity
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Is Telecommuting Right For You?
 
The Ever Changing Workplace : Preperation for Your Career in this Rapidly Changing World
 
The Lunch Buddy Solution
 
How To Detect Liars In Your Business & Personal Life
 
Communication Dynamics--Send a Congruent Message
 
Web Sites that Help You Doing Business in China
 
Patents, Trademarks, Copyrights, Trade Secrets Protect Your Invention!
 
Discount Nursing Uniforms: Golden Rules to Rope in the BEST Dealer
 
Choosing The Right Resume Format
 
Business Rituals ? Why Bother?
 
 
 
Get 3 way links
 
 

Business & Services

 

Careers & Employment

 

Automobile & Automotive

 

Recreation & Entertainment

 

Society & Communities

 

Computers & Networking

 

Sports & Adventure

 

Home & Garden

 

Lifestyle & Fashion

 

Art & Culture

 

Events & News

 

Games & Play

 

Shopping & Auction

 

Self Help

 

Teens & Kids

 

Fitness & Health

 

Policies & Law

 

Finance & Banking

 

Cooking & Drinking

 

Travel & Accommodation

 

Technology & Science

 

Academics & Education

 

Property & Agents

 

Healthcare & Medicine

 
Home :> Security & Privacy :> ToS  
Copyright © 2006-2008 www.zoompicks.com - All Rights Reserved.