Employee Engagement and CSR: TRANSACTIONAL‚ RELATIONAL‚ AND DEVELOPMENTAL APPROACHES Philip Mirvis This article looks at the relevance of corporate social responsibility (CSR) for engaging employees‚ including its impact on their motivation‚ identity‚ and sense of meaning and purpose. It explores three different ways that companies engage their employees through CSR: a transactional approach‚ where programs are undertaken to meet the needs of employees who want to take part in the CSR
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Table of Contents 1. INTRODUCTION .................................................................................................... 2 2. HERSEY’S AND BLANCHARD’S SITUATIONAL LEADERSHIP MODEL ........... 3 3. SITUATIONAL LEADERSHIP & HOFSTEDE’S CULTURAL DIMENSIONS ........ 4 A.I.M. A Cultural Contingency Approach to Situational Leadership 3.1. Power Distance...............................................................................................................4 3.2. Individualism ........
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Developing a Culture of Employee Engagement July 7-11‚ 2014 Professor Julie Felker Employee Engagement • What is it? • How does engagement ‘feel’ and look? • What is a culture of engagement and how can it be measured? • How can a culture of engagement be developed and sustained? • Is there a “dark side” to engagement? 2 Questions to ponder… • When you hear the term employee engagement‚ what do you think of? • What does it look like when people are engaged at work? • Why do you believe that
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Review of Leadership behaviour and employee voice Detert and Burris (2007) (henceforth referred to as authors) have carried out a quantitative research to investigate the relationship between two types of change-oriented leadership (managerial openness and transformational leadership) and the employee voice. Through their research they have also studied the effect of psychological safety and employee performance on the relationship between leadership style and voice behaviour. Theoretical framework
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MANTAINS EMPLOYEE ENGAGEMENT 1. How did the MGM Grand use employee surveys to enhance employee engagement? From the survey of 10‚000 employees‚ MGM Grand president Gamal Aziz realized that the hotel staff lacked of some very basic information such as: daily events in the hotel‚ what the hotel had to offer those particular guest or what conventions were at the hotel. This made employees feel lost and dissatisfied since management was distant and unresponsive. To enhance employee engagement‚ Aziz held
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REFLECTIONS ON SITUATIONAL LEADERSHIP AND HIGH PERFORMING ORGANISATIONS PART 1 1. HIGH PERFORMING ORGANISATIONS SCORE To excel in today’s competitive business environment‚ organisations must become an employer of choice‚ a provider of choice and an investment of choice. This triple bottom line can make the difference between mediocrity and greatness. Since 2007 this has been a continuing theme in RasGas’ Leadership and Management Development and continues to this day. With highly mobile‚ competent
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Engagement A. Engagement is the last phase in a boy and girl relationship before they get married. This is set as soon as the couple pledges to get married. It is a stage where a man and a woman have already decided greater involvement and deeper attachment to each other. In Cebu‚ Philippines‚ after the courtship stage and the girl decides that she also would like to take the suitor’s offer of love and commitment‚ then the girl will give her favorable answer to the suitor. At times it takes months
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The Concept of Follower Readiness As It Relates To Situational Leadership Model Developed by Paul Hersey and Kenneth H. Blanchard‚ situational leadership is a contingency model that focuses on the followers. The model suggests that successful leadership is accomplished by selecting the right leadership style‚ based on the level of followers readiness. Emphasis on the followers in leadership effectiveness reflects the reality that it is the followers who accept or reject the leader. Regardless of
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relevance of the ‘product life cycle’ to the notion of employee engagement. Employee engagement can be viewed through the four stages of the product life-cycle Step one is the introduction of the concept of employee engagement‚ its principles‚ strategy for enhancing engagement and involving employees‚ process of change to ensure engagement is fully embedded into the organisation. Step two is growth and growing the concept of engagement through a number of mechanisms: * Support from senior
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Opportunities Challenges for Employers A Case Study on Employee Engagement: Marriott International‚ Inc. Company Background Marriott International Inc.‚ is a leading lodging company with nearly 2‚900 lodging properties in the United States and 68 countries around the world. Its heritage can be traced to a root beer stand opened in Washington‚ DC in 1927. As a leader in the competitive hospitality industry‚ Marriott understands the importance of employee health and productivity. Marriott believes its associates
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