Overcome Stubborns

Formalizing and Incentivizing a Culture of Recognition

In 2024, Gallup argued that employee recognition is the easiest–but most overlooked–strategy for attraction, retention, and productivity. Yet only one in three workers surveyed said they had been recognized for good work in the last week.Though some managers may be naturally inclined to praise their teams, a culture of recognition doesn’t appear on its own. Recognition is a habit that must be formed. At From Day One’s August virtual conference a group of leaders spoke about making recognition a standard part of company culture in an executive panel discussion.There are certain characteristics of companies with a culture of recognition, says Pam Rosslee, who is an HR director at PepsiCo. First, that recognition is leader-led. “Recognition and the culture of celebration takes on its own momentum. It’s being driven and owned by leaders across the organization to the extent that there’s no hard sell from the HR function.”Second, she says, a culture that excels in recognition recognizes its mistakes, and learns from them, as much as it celebrates success. And third, employees at those companies understand that good work is rewarded, and they know how to compete for those rewards.If you don’t already work this way, the good news is that managers and workers can be trained and incentivized to give recognition, panelists said. At workplace social connection platform Campfire, employees attend a session called “The Art of Recognition,” in which participants learn to give tailored feedback. “It’s really important, and really challenging, to know what people’s preferences are, and what matters to them in terms of recognition and engagement,” said Steve Arntz, the company’s co-founder and CEO.At cloud computing company Akamai, the “People Manager Essentials” training brings managers together to discuss current goings on. Michelle Bartlett, Akamai’s senior director for change management, says managers often bring up the challenges of recognition, especially after the company started working remotely. Because it’s talked about, it’s practiced regularly. “The more you make it part of your standard operating manual, that’s when it really takes on a life of its own,” she said.The panelists spoke about "Building Upon Workplace Culture Through Recognition and Engagement" (photo by From Day One)At PepsiCo, the company rewards managers for celebrating success. Rosslee said that reinforcing the behavior keeps recognition muscles strong. “It’s quite a nice, subtle way of building that culture of recognizing individuals and teams,” she said. “We also make sure that there is abundance. There are multiple awards on offer at different levels: at peer level, at departmental level, and at functional level, and there’s a rhythm to it so we know when they’re coming.”PepsiCo employs tens of thousands of workers around the world, but most companies don’t operate with that scale. How does recognition differ for those employers?Kristen McGill is the chief people officer at ZayZoon, an earned wage access platform. When she joined the company, she was the eighth employee. By the end of 2024, headcount will be 200. Recognition does look different along the way, she says, and the company has to be open to keeping practices and programs fresh. “As we were scaling up, we saw that the more that you can create consistency, the more will happen on its own,” McGill said. “How do you enlist your entire team so that praise is going upwards, downwards, and horizontally? At the end of the day, the ‘who’ giving feedback really matters. As you get bigger, it starts to be really meaningful when it’s not simply from your direct manager.”Jacqueline Silvestrov, who leads TD Bank’s formal recognition and workplace experience programs, says the far-reaching effects of a culture that celebrates achievements and contributions, so don’t hesitate to formalize it and measure it. “There’s a strong relationship between recognition, growth, development, and well-being,” she said. “When I first began leading colleague experiences at TD, I saw that there was an opportunity to build defined data points around our spirit and culture by implementing surveys and creating scorecards and reports that can tie each of our program metrics back to the health of our organization.”With this data, Silvestrov has developed a suite of programs, all of them linked, “from daily virtual recognition to team recognition to surprise and delight moments and formal annual award programs.”At Akamai, the company’s intranet provides ample opportunities for colleagues to recognize each other for good work, and managers often chime in to send congratulations. “It feels good to be recognized when they’re not standing in front of that leader,” Bartlett said.Even within formal recognition programs, there is room for creativity, and a need for personalization. Some may want public recognition while others will shrink from the attention. Some need specific praise while others are content with general congratulations. Some may prefer more responsibility and higher visibility to monetary rewards. Campfire’s CEO Arntz came up with a creative way to personalize the praise he gives.“If you want to use AI and assessments together, pull up ChatGPT or your favorite robot and create a conversation about each of the people on your team,” he said. “Then feed to each of those conversations all of the assessments that you have around that person to help the robot get to know them.” When you want to recognize that person, ask your generative AI tool to help you come up with a unique and personal way to do so.If formalizing, incentivizing, and scaling recognition seems intimidating, panelists reminded us that HR isn’t where the buck stops on recognition. It’s up to managers and their teams to carry it out. “HR is responsible for enabling the right training, enabling the managers, providing the right tools, and ensuring that they know how to use them,” McGill said. “But at the end of the day, the responsibility is the managers, and that’s where expectation-setting comes in.”Emily McCrary-Ruiz-Esparza is a freelance journalist and From Day One contributing editor who writes about work, the job market, and women’s experiences in the workplace. Her work has appeared in the Economist, the BBC, The Washington Post, Quartz, Fast Company, and Digiday’s Worklife.

BY Emily McCrary-Ruiz-Esparza | September 10, 2024

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The From Day One Newsletter is a monthly roundup of articles, features, and editorials on innovative ways for companies to forge stronger relationships with their employees, customers, and communities.

Overcome Stubborns
By Stephanie Reed | September 10, 2024

Power Practices to Understand Employee Needs Actively and Equitably

Investing in the employee experience is a sustainable business strategy to boost retention, engagement, and productivity. Authentic feedback from employees is essential to address their needs and ambitions. “People don't just want to be heard, they want impact,” said Shawn Overcast, the chief insights officer at Explorance during a thought leadership spotlight at From Day One’s August virtual conference. “And through transparent action planning and follow through, employees learn that they can speak their minds freely without repercussions,” she said.Evolving technologies and AI are tools that can help amplify the employee voice. They provide engaging methods of gathering personal and organizational feedback from workers without bias or breaching data privacy. The shift from workers just taking surveys to having opportunities to discuss their experiences in survey comments, feedback channels, and social websites generates valuable insight into organizational transformation.Overcast spoke about People Insight solutions, showing how Explorance’s AI voice of employee solution, called MLY, helps their clients compile and organize diverse and unstructured employee feedback.With the summarization and alerting of frequent and in-depth feedback and perspectives, MLY is a tool for managers and employers to reassess their HR strategies, identify the role of leadership, pinpoint retention risks, and create action plans.Shawn Overcast of Explorance led the thought leadership spotlight (company photo)Explorance helps organizations measure employee needs and expectations through scalable automation tools and a continuous feedback-gathering process, revving the insight-to-action cycle. By supporting the employee journey, organizations improve recruitment, engagement, and overall performance.To actively understand employee needs and drive action, Overcast suggests defining a clear strategy and purpose for employee listening, initiating a focused and structured action-planning process, and empowering employees. Actively understanding employee needs involves deliberate engagement and effort to take action.With more opportunities to provide qualitative feedback through discussion forums, survey comments, and social websites, employees can become empowered knowing that their feedback drives organizational change.To fairly understand employees, ensure objectivity using clear and predetermined criteria to make decisions, leverage several listening tools and channels, leverage AI solutions to remove bias, and become more aware of cognitive bias in your listening strategy.“Cognitive biases can lead to unintentional decision-making, and biases can be really tricky,” Overcast said. “They often sit beneath the surface. They’re beyond our conscious thought, and this can impact our ability to analyze data fairly and to take fair and equitable action.”For example, a people analyst in the retail hospitality industry used MLY to go through 10,000 comments sorted into different departments by sending automated relevant insights to managers. Included in the comments were employees’ recommendations to solve specific issues. The people analyst forwarded these to managers.“So often we task the analyst with identifying best practices for responding to the feedback, but the people who know best how to improve employee engagement in your organization are your employees since they’re the ones experiencing it,” Overcast said.Engagement and exit surveys are beneficial for benchmarking, tracking trends over time, and identifying areas of opportunity, Overcast says. However, multiple qualitative insight channels highlight distinct perspectives: respondents express themselves more frequently and constructively across multi-channel listening tools and platforms.The incorporation of AI is a quick solution to the often time-consuming process of HR personnel reading through thousands of comments on any online channel. AI quickly organizes and contextualizes unstructured online feedback into sources of specific and relevant employee experience data without bias. The feedback can guide action to close skill gaps, support upward mobility, and develop managers and people leaders.Using technology and an empathetic approach to surveying employee well-being, Explorance utilizes the employee voice to help clients create solutions that authentically address concerns, says Overcast. The opportunity to influence change is the underlying role of the employee voice: “It’s about the belief that if I have something to share, it will be listened to and it will result in change.”Editor's note: From Day One thanks our partner, Explorance, for sponsoring this thought leadership spotlight. Stephanie Reed is a freelance news, marketing, and content writer. Much of her work features small business owners throughout diverse industries. She is passionate about promoting small, ethical, and eco-conscious businesses.

Overcome Stubborns
By Carrie Snider | September 11, 2024

How Beacon Health System Launched a Dedicated Substance-Use Management Program for Their Employees

In a typical 10,000-person organization, around 4,000 employees are affected by substance use disorder, yet only 120 receive treatment. This gap is why Yusuf Sherwani founded Pelago, the world’s first technology-enabled digital clinic for substance use management.At a recent From Day One Webinar, Sherwani discussed his new approach to substance abuse treatment that’s been gaining traction among organizations. Eric Long from Beacon Health System, which offers Pelago to its employees, shared how they’ve implemented the program at their organization.Pelago is a single provider offering complete treatment for substance use disorders for adults and teens, from prevention through treatment. Each member receives care from a multidisciplinary team via telehealth, providing counseling, prescriptions, and tools for recovery. “We cover over four and a half million lives across hundreds of large employers,” Sherwani said. “We’re still at the tip of the impact we hope to have.” With 40 million Americans affected by untreated substance use disorder, Pelago aims to break down barriers, starting with stigma and hopefully ending with a patient who is healthier and has an improved quality of life because of treatment.Beating the Stigma of Substance AbuseYusuf Sherwani is the CEO and Co-Founder of Pelago (company photo)Back in medical school, Sherwani witnessed the devastating impact of substance abuse both personally and professionally. “It was completely out of the blue,” he said. At the same time, during an internship at a psychiatric ward, he saw how reactive and limited frontline support was. “We often reach out to people only when the going gets incredibly tough.”Stigma surrounding substance abuse often causes people to stay quiet, especially in the medical industry. As an ambulatory pharmacist at Beacon Health, Long’s patient population includes healthcare providers, a group particularly affected by this stigma. “People say, ‘You know better,’” Long said. “It makes it very difficult to treat properly.”The high stress of healthcare jobs and easier access to substances can lead to disaster. Healthcare workers are 10-15% more likely to misuse substances, Long says, with 14-20% of registered nurses and 10% of physicians affected by substance abuse at some point in their careers. “It’s very difficult to come forward and say that you have a substance use disorder when you’re in healthcare,” Long said. Pelago’s anonymous services make it easier for employees to seek help early, which supports better outcomes.“When I refer Pelago to a patient, I don’t know if they follow through. I just know they have the resource,” Long said. He often gives them a card with a QR code for Pelago as a possible solution for themselves or a loved one. Pelago also sends emails, and word-of-mouth from those in the program has been very effective. Because Pelago is digital, patients can tailor treatment to fit their schedules, a game-changer for healthcare workers who can’t always see a provider during regular hours.Multiple addictions are common among those with substance use disorders, says Long. For example, 70% of workers with alcohol use disorder also struggle with tobacco addiction, and 35% of workers with opioid use disorder are also addicted to alcohol.“Tobacco cessation is the least stigmatized addiction,” Long said, “and often the easiest way to start a conversation.” By addressing tobacco use, healthcare providers can often uncover other addictions and help patients seek broader treatment.Healthcare Costs and SavingsSubstance abuse disorder can lead to increased ER visits, liver issues, safety hazards, and cancer. Early treatment is key to preventing the long-term complications of substance use disorder, and quick intervention means healthier employees and cost savings for the organization.When it’s all said and done, Pelago pays for itself by helping patients get treatment for substance abuse, resulting in better overall health and wellness, says Sherwani. Beyond the numbers, patients have shared testimonials about Pelago’s impact. Helping employees with substance use disorders also improves their overall health. Many people with substance use disorders also have other chronic conditions, such as diabetes, hypertension, or osteoarthritis. Once substance abuse enters the picture, these chronic conditions often go unchecked, leading to worsening health outcomes over time.“There’s enormous overlap between mental health, particularly serious mental illness, and substance use disorders,” Sherwani said. Untreated substance use disorders double the number of workdays missed compared to those in treatment. Getting someone into treatment can reverse many negative consequences.Sherwani says that around 95% of Pelago members are seeing a provider for their substance use disorder for the first time. This speaks to the stigma and access problem–people who aren’t seeking care on their own are responding effectively when treatment is made available to them. “They weren’t going to rehab, they weren’t going to help patient care, this wasn’t something that their primary care physician was really treating,” Sherwani said. Once they could get access to treatment through Pelago, they responded well.Pelago also coordinates with Employee Assistance Programs (EAPs) and mental health programs already in place, addressing the comorbidities often present with substance use disorders. This collaboration revolutionizes access to treatment for the 97% of people with substance use disorders who are not seeking care on their own.As a physician-led organization, Pelago has invested in peer-reviewed studies showing that the outcomes of their digital clinic are at least as good as face-to-face support and more than two and a half times better than traditional addiction treatment. For example, Pelago has achieved a 52% success rate at four weeks for tobacco cessation, with a 44% success rate at 12 months. For opioid use disorder, Pelago has seen a 67% success rate for complete abstinence within 90 days.That’s hopefully just the beginning, Sherwani says. With more organizations working with Pelago, the future looks hopeful—not just for those struggling with substance use disorder, but for the companies that support them. By continuing to break down barriers, tackle stigma, and provide accessible, effective care, Pelago is poised to make a lasting difference in the lives of millions.Editor's note: From Day One thanks our partner, Pelago, for sponsoring this webinar.Carrie Snider is a Phoenix-based journalist and marketing copywriter.




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