One Month to a More Effective Compliance Program Through Culture: Day 7- To Improve Culture, Engage More

One thing I have learned in working with Carsten Tams is that one of the very top keys to a successful compliance program is employee engagement. Tams and I explored this topic in the popular podcast series Design Thinking in Compliance. It also appears that attention can lead to excellent business resiliency based upon an article entitled The Top 10 Findings on Resilience and Engagement, by Marcus Buckingham.

Not surprisingly, trust is the number 1 factor in engagement and resilience. Astoundingly, the author found that “employees who said they completely trust their team leader were 14 times more likely to be fully engaged.” Moreover, those employees who completely trusted their colleagues, team leader, and senior leaders “were 42 times more likely to be highly resilient.” The reason should seem obvious as it is undoubtedly “easier to engage in our best work when we don’t have to expend mental resources looking over our shoulders or protecting ourselves against dysfunctional workplace practices that erode trust, like bullying or micromanaging. When it comes to building engagement and resilience, trust is everything.”

Teamwork is also a key factor. Although this is not something I have experienced over the past 12 years of working alone, the author found, “Those who said they are on a team were 2.6 times more likely to be fully engaged and 2.7 times more likely to be highly resilient than those who didn’t identify as team members. For millennia, humans have experienced psychological well-being only when they feel connected to and supported by a small group of people around them.” When the pandemic hit, working from home was not new to me as I had been doing it since 2010, but even in the WFH or Hybrid Work era, most employees need to feel like they are part of a team.

Every CCO and compliance professional must work to lessen or dissolve the disconnect between senior leadership and front-line workers. Your front-line business folks will make or break your compliance program. Getting your senior management more engaged will create and establish the trust your employees will need to show resilience in the face of the following primary business location, whether a pandemic or military invasion.

 Three key takeaways:

  1. The concepts from Design Thinking can improve your culture.
  2. A key factor in culture is engagement.
  3. You can improve culture by dissolving the disconnect between senior leadership and front-line workers.

Do you want to improve your culture? How can you assess your culture and come up with a strategy to improve it going forward? Find out in this free webinar on the new tool, The Culture Audit with Tom Fox and Sam Silverstein on Tuesday, November 28, 12 CT. For more information and registration, click here.

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