Busy Doing Nothing

Children’s Hospital
Florida Hospital is now known as Advent Health.

Busy Doing Nothing

Being good at doing things well is often seen as success.

Really?

Think about it.

Yes, we are good at things.

But are we good at the right things?

Who’s coaching us about employee engagement priorities?

Who’s holding us accountable?

And what if our boss is the same boat as us?

What if our boss has employee engagement priorities that we are good at delivering on, but what if all of us are focused on lower level priorities?

What if we are the boss? What if we’re passing this on down to our direct reports?

The employee engagement mission critical stuff, often the soft stuff, is left alone because it’s too hard to see and measure improvement.

It’s analogous to trying to lose weight instead of trying to lower our resting heart rate, our cholesterol, BMI, and triglycerides.

There are a lot of fake employee engagement problems in business. Fake problems are issues we spend time managing that have disproportionate value to more important priorities.

Fake problems are convenient for medicating our lack of a clear, concise, and compelling vision.

Organizational health (and personal health) is priority one.

Never get bored with the basics.

Spend time doing nothing.

Quiet time, void of distractions, void of deadlines, meetings, initiatives.

Spend time there and you’ll be astonished, if you really open your heart, at what you can accomplish when you’re busy doing nothing.

•  •  •  •  •

This website is about our BODY. To read today’s post about our SPIRIT, click here.

Employee Engagement time out, Disney-Style

Company ID office
Where my lifetime ID was turned into a retiree ID.

Employee Engagement time out, Disney-Style

Four world-class employee engagement basics i learned from 30 years at Disney.

Do the basics brilliantly.

Never get bored with the engagement basics.

Hire, train, inspire, care.

Bonus: History, customs, icons, values.

•  •  •  •  •

This website is about our BODY. To read today’s post about our SPIRIT, click here.

Cultural Employee Engagement Blueprints Implementation Plan

Disney author Jeff Noel writing at wilderness Lodge
An early writing start before the World awakes.

Employees

Let’s review the suggested cultural blueprints implementation plan.

The Building owner is the CEO.

Deliverables from Leader Champions are shell, walls, roof.

Critical note: History, customs, icons, and values are deeply integrated into the primary Human Resources processes: Hire, Train (orientation, On-The-Job, On-Going), Inspire Daily Communications to every employee), Value (Support and Recognition).

History: Founder’s Story. History, milestones, highs and lows, acquisitions.

Customs: Behaviors, traditions. The cultural behaviors that you are proud of and maybe even famous for. The traditions that continue to this day; how they came to be and why, and what they mean to today’s workforce.

Icons: Images, words, phrases, acronyms, quotes. Harvest and harness the power of language and symbols, from the founder(s) to today.

Values: Internal. Core, foundational values for how employees treat each other. This is invisible to the customers.

All collaborative efforts by executive leaders and the cross-functional teams should revolve around simple, focused, energetic, creative, visionary, and scalable outcomes – blueprints for an organizationally vibrant culture.

•  •  •  •  •

This website is about our BODY. To read today’s post about our SPIRIT, click here.

How to execute next steps to convert theory into reality

Mickey Mose head from three hula hoops
A front line Cast Member came up with this idea. The other option is to lean them up against a pole or picnic table.

How to execute next steps to convert theory into reality

Big picture involvement:

Five foundational ownership tracts; 19 total blueprints.

One owner of everything, the CEO.

Up to ten Champions selected from CEO Cabinet; two Champions for each of the five ownership tracts (Leaders, Employees, Customers, Reputation, Improve). Some Cabinet members may be responsible for two ownership tracts.

Ten assistant champions selected from your best, most passionate leaders in Human Resources, Labor Relations, Employee Relations, Compliance, Employment, Marketing, Public Relations, Communications. Assistant Champions should only focus on one ownership tract.

From 15-30 advocate teams selected from every employee, at every level, in every department. This is three to five team advocates per ownership tract.

•  •  •  •  •

Owner

  • CEO

Champions

  • C-Level Executive (always have two, to solve for unexpected absences)
  • Provides vision, inspiration, commitment

Assistant Champions

  • Cross-functional pair from Human Resources, Labor Relations, Employee Relations, Compliance, Employment, Marketing, Public Relations, Communications.
  • Always have two, to solve for unexpected absences
  • Provides involvement, accountability, commitment
  • For unexpected absences, always be grooming the replacement from the Advocate Team.

Advocate Teams

  • Created from any employee, at any level, in every department
  • 3-6 total per team recommended
  • Cross-functional
  • Provides energy, enthusiasm, effort, commitment

Final blueprint

  • Create action steps
  • Review, organize notes
  • Create plan
  • Discuss
  • Summarize
  • Create final blueprint
  • Present to CEO and Cabinet

Develop and deliver campaign

  • Goals/deliverables
  • Assign roles
  • Timeline
  • Accountability

Misc

  • Manage project scope creep
  • Prepare contingency plans for project disruptions
  • Always be grooming replacement/succession

Continuous Improvement

  • Manage health of all teams
  • Grow team bench
  • Measure
  • Celebrate
  • Share
  • Historian documents growth, change, transformation

•  •  •  •  •

This website is about our BODY. To read today’s post about our SPIRIT, click here.

Cultural Transformation Next Steps after Executive engagement (2-days with 19 cultural blueprints)

Hidden Mickey
See the Hidden Mickey?

Cultural Transformation Next Steps after Executive engagement (2-days with 19 cultural blueprints)

Traditional blueprint assignments:

Leaders: CEO, Human Resources, Labor Relations, Employee Relations; one of these four owns total responsibility.

Employees: HR & Marketing (Employment, Training & Development, Communications, Recognition)

Customers: CCO (Chief Customer Officer), HR (Orientation, OJT, Ongoing Training)

Reputation: HR (Training) Marketing & PR (Communications)

Improve: CEO, HR, Marketing

Notes:
We started with senior leadership because you are the most connected and experienced with the organization’s strategy. You know things no other levels know.

Recommend creating a corporate Historian (including video/photo library) to work with and assist all other areas to make key links and connections to the founder’s story, heritage & traditions, traits and behaviors, language and symbols, and shared values.

The most natural things to feel about uncharted territory: doubt, fear, anxiety, confusion, excitement, joy, relief, hope, motivation.

•  •  •  •  •

This website is about our BODY. To read today’s post about our SPIRIT, click here.