Jun 15, 2022
Written by: Mark Hirschfeld, VP, Consulting Services and Strategic Partnerships; Maryam Tajmirriyahi, Ph.D., Research Manager
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When employees have access to great learning experiences paired with meaningful and motivational rewards, they're more engaged and more productive. This is especially meaningful for frontline workers who do their work in the field, in the warehouse and on the sales floor. Learn more about how to engage the deskless employees in your organization.
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— Bruce Springsteen
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As employers strive to engage deskless employees in retail, production, distribution and hospitality settings, the goal is to inspire them in ways that help them view the organization as a place where they can find meaningful, worthwhile employment. But “starting the fire,” although important, is not being delivered in ways that truly engages these important work groups.
For the last ten years, BI WORLDWIDE has been researching the factors that predict an engaging and inspiring workplace. We call this model the “New World, New Rules of Engagement.”
Our research clearly shows that when employees feel like they are receiving the learning and development that is of value to them, they are more likely to report being engaged, committed and happy at work:
Research from Axonify confirms this – nearly 92% of employees suggest their engagement levels rise with access to well-planned employee training programs.1
If this is an important link to engagement, how are companies doing in delivering learning to their deskless employees?
In short, not great.
In our most recent New Rules study, we learned some sobering facts regarding deskless employees. In comparison to employees who worked in locations such as offices, deskless employees were more likely to report lower scores on the following survey items:
These important work groups are not feeling like they have access to learning that not only helps them in their current role but that will help them as they strive toward future career goals and opportunities.
As Mr. Springsteen sings, no spark means no fire.
Here are a few comments from employees which are representative of the broader patterns we see in our research:
What this tells us is we need to provide learning to these employees in ways that are easily available and consumable. The learning should also use the latest in gamification techniques to give learners confidence they are doing well and can feel a sense of progress. When employees have access to great learning experiences paired with meaningful and motivational rewards, they’ll be more likely to report higher levels of engagement because they’ll feel supported in the continued development of their skills.
Let’s deliver that spark and, in doing so, create more engaging, productive, workplaces.