What do your employees want from
you?
4 ways to have happy staff.
by Dr
Cleve Stevens, a leadership consultant to CEOs in the Fortune 500, details four key things
employees need from leaders.
Writing on the HBR.org Blog Network Stevens expresses his belief that transformational leaders have the ability to challenge their people to grow professionally, personally, emotionally and intellectually.
He explains: "The traditional or transactional leader says, 'I'm the leader - you're the follower; I have something you need (money) and you have something I need (labour). So let's make an exchange.' Transformational leaders... understand that there is something bigger at stake."
Writing on the HBR.org Blog Network Stevens expresses his belief that transformational leaders have the ability to challenge their people to grow professionally, personally, emotionally and intellectually.
He explains: "The traditional or transactional leader says, 'I'm the leader - you're the follower; I have something you need (money) and you have something I need (labour). So let's make an exchange.' Transformational leaders... understand that there is something bigger at stake."
NON-NEGOTIABLE
Expanding on the role of the transformational leader, Stevens reveals the four "non-negotiable human needs" that must be met in a successful organisation...
1. The need for employees to love and be loved.
Defining 'love' in this context as "focused concern
and action directed at
another exclusively for that person's good",
Stevens insists that the
transformational leader "vividly understands that
tough-minded caring is
essential to leading and developing a powerful, fully
expressed workforce".
2. The need to grow.
2. The need to grow.
Stevens believes
that "by creating a culture that allows our people (and
ourselves) to
grow, we are expanding our capacities as leaders, as
employees, and as human
beings".
3. The need to contribute.
3. The need to contribute.
Stevens says: "To feel fulfilled and empowered, employees must know
they
are contributing to the whole."
4. The need for meaning.
4. The need for meaning.
If our lives lack a sense of meaning and we are not engaged in some
larger
purpose, Stevens maintains that we cannot be completely satisfied,
regardless
of whatever else we might have.
by Dr Cleve Stevens