Recognize This! – Even if burnt-out employees aren’t ready to quit, they certainly are not delivering top-level performance any more.
Since the recession began in earnest, employers first took actions to preserve the company – layoffs, salary freezes and the like. For the most part, employees understood and survivors put aside their guilt to take on multiple roles and additional duties for no additional compensation.
Three years later, the economy is improving and employees are at the end of their ropes. They are burned out, stressed out and fed up. According to a recent Forbes article:
It’s true. Employees are at the breaking point and who can be surprised after all the work they have taken on with no relief in sight. I’ve written regularly that employers have taken advantage of employee “survivors” willingness to do the extra work, labeling it “increased productivity.” But that’s a false metric that is simply not sustainable over time.
As I wrote in Compensation Café, this and other news clearly point to employee frustration levels reaching the breaking point for three reasons:
1. Employees sense more barriers to getting the work done, even as they are asked to do more with less.
2. Companies sitting on loads of cash and not reinvesting that back into the workforce.
3. Executive compensation and bonus structures that make no sense – not even to investors.
Be sure to read the Compensation Café post for more on these frustrations and what to do about them:
1. Knock down the barriers.
2. Spend the cash and hire people already.
3. Eliminate ridiculous bonus structures and bring compensation (at all levels) into alignment.
Commentors seemed to think such common sense could never work, sadly. What do you think? Can we bring common sense back to recognition and reward practices?