Overview
From a very serious corporate career in marketing to creating a business based on fun RedBalloon, this is my journey. In this blog I share what it takes to be an entrepreneur and what I have learned - warts and all. I am also the author of I want what she is having which chronicles the first five years of building of a fast growing business.
Very proud to be awarded National Telstra Business Womens Award for 2008 in the Nokia Innovation Catogory
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Watch this space for the recording of last week's Webinar 'Engage your people for the upturn' to be posted soon.
My presentations to company events are not listed because those engagements are not open to the public. Contact Kate on +61 2 8755 0034 for more details on speaking.
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- Each manager and leader in the organization must ask themselves - ‘How easy do I make it for you to do great work’ of each of their team about 1 day ago from web
- Work used to be somewhere we went now it is something that we have become about 1 day ago from web
- “The problem with communication.... is the illusion that it has been accomplished.” #quote George Bernard Shaw about 1 day ago from web
- Building a great employer brand I'm told is 1% inspiration and 99% authenticity.. there is no faking it about 1 day ago from web
- There is always someone younger, hungrier, harder, faster and smarter ... so near enough isn't good enough. Are you playing full out about 1 day ago from web
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Employee engagement in the time of pay freezes.
You can't pick up a paper or business publication without reading about job losses and pay freezes…
British Airways has asked it's employees to go without pay for a month… Telstra has frozen it's top execs' pay. 51% of privately held businesses have frozen salaries. 44% of Telco's have pay freezes and 33% of IT companies. And of course the finance industry is frozen.
If I were an employee in one of these organizations I'd be asking questions of the leadership team. I'd be wondering what implications such freezes have to my career. And how would I feel that I could get 'ahead'?
Many organizations are saying 'no jobs will go – but we've all got to tighten the belt'; a 'we're all in this together approach'. Some are leading by example and reducing management salaries and benefits. Many are using the opportunity to invest in infrastructure to enable future growth – which will lead to career opportunities.
What will this do to employee engagement? There are not many people who work just for the fun of it…. Because they love their job so much they don't need to be paid – except of course the millions of people who volunteer their labour- (but that is a whole other story and they are usually working for not for profits, charities or a cause.)
Is a commercial enterprise a 'cause'?
I remember when Steve Jobs returned to Apple after years in the wilderness after he was dismissed from the organization he founded. There had been a series of CEOs running Apple before his return – all famous for the massive remuneration packages. When he returned, he came back in an 'acting capacity' refusing a salary. When he was finally appointed to the role he took a salary of $1. You could argue that this unbelievable commitment to the purpose of the business – turned it into a 'cause'. Jobs then had the opportunity to completely re-energise and focus the business on what it was the best in the world at.
So if I was an employee in British Airways I would be asking the question – what fundamental restructures are going to be made to ensure that it is the worlds best at what it does. If it was truly world class then the career options available would blossom - for the investment of one months salary, long term I might end up with better career options. To give up a months salary is a massive investment to make, I'd really have to believe in the leadership of the organisation, that it was in a market that had great potential, and that I believed in not only what I was doing but that I respected my colleagues and wanted to be a part of something bigger than myself. I become a true stakeholder.
Apparently more than a third of employees are just waiting for the 'crisis' to pass before they begin to search for their next role. People will remember how they were treated during this 'blip' and it is why recognition programs are more important than ever.
There are signs of recovery, and some believe that Generation Y will be back in charge by the end of the year.
People will contribute to an organization and stay engaged if they believe in what they are doing and that they see a long term benefit to their own personal circumstances. If new career opportunities arise as a result of restructure then they are likely to not just hang around but also play full out. People want to contribute to something bigger than themselves and if they feel truly connected to the organization they will do a lot for the good of the whole.