The Keys to
Building a Great Team: What to Consider Before You Hire
By Rhonda
Savage
Sarah is the manager of a
busy department store. In her time as manager, she’s worked hard to
develop strategies to properly train employees on the store policies
and standards, but lately she’s found that she is unhappy with her
team members. Despite proper training and a complete understanding
of their job descriptions, her employees aren’t working well
together and she is finding it difficult to manage them properly,
resulting in low morale and ultimately affecting performance.
Where did Sarah go wrong?
How can she ensure that she not only hires good employees, but also
employees who work well together? The important thing to keep in
mind about building a team is that you don’t hire a team as a whole,
you hire the individual.
The next time you are
looking to hire new staff members, consider these techniques to
ensure you not only build a team, but also that you build a great
team:
Assess your strengths and weaknesses.
Build and increase teamwork by hiring others whose strengths shore
up your weaknesses. For example, if your strength is that you are
direct, decisive and goal-oriented, but your weakness is that you
don’t always pay attention to detail, surround yourself with
detail-oriented people.
Recognize the needs of your team.
What team members need to feel good about their work place is
typically four things. These four areas of concern are critical to
staff retention. In a survey of more than a thousand businesses,
these four areas are ranked by level of importance with number one
being the most important to your team member.
1) Praise and Appreciation: This should be timely, specific,
and sincere praise, not artificial flattery or insincerity. Praise
publically; correct privately. The U.S. Gallop poll cited 71 percent
of American workers were clock punchers. The most common reason
noted as to why the employee felt that way: Lack of praise or
appreciation for a job done well! Do be careful, however, of the
perception of favoritism. Favoritism, whether real or imagined, will
drive the morale of the business down. When morale goes down,
production drops! Look for the good in everyone rather than singling
out one person.
2) Belonging to a close-knit team:
Facilitate great communication and involvement of the team through
regular meetings. Make certain all employees hear about important
information through various methods: Email, meetings, posted
information and through the chain of command.
3) Responsibility and feeling like their voice matters: Ask
for their help! Give them increasing levels of responsibility and
training. Involve them in the decision-making process.
4) Money and Benefits: Money and benefits are important, but
workers today also want fast-paced, energetic, interesting work and
to feel that their efforts matter! If you’re slow, use your down
time wisely for training, working on the facility or marketing. It’s
interesting: if the work place is slow, the workers and boss work
slower! If we have more time, we take more time. Unfortunately, when
you’re slow, gossip goes up and morale goes down. Be clear about
duties during “downtimes.” There should never be a reason to stand
around and gossip.
Ask for honest feedback
from your current employees to help you identify the roles new staff
members should fill. Consider asking the following questions:
·
If this were your company, what would you do to increase our
productivity and decrease our overhead?
-
What skills, ability, or training can I give you to better
enable you to do your job?
-
If this were your business, what kind of person (skills and
strengths) do you think we might hire that would help us grow
the business?
-
If you could improve one thing about the communication within
our team, what would it be?
-
What do I do, or what does your supervisor do, that wastes your
time or the time of the customer?
-
What do you like the best about your job?
-
What do you like the least about your job?
Hiring well is one of the
most difficult jobs of a leader and hiring decisions have a huge
impact on employee morale, performance and the overall work
environment. Identifying and understanding the needs of your
employees will help you build a productive and motivated team.
Read other articles and learn more about
Rhonda Savage.
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