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Coaching for Leaders

646: The Questions to Help Figure Out Hybrid and Remote Work, with Jim Harter

Coaching for Leaders

Dave Stachowiak

Education, Business, Management, Self-improvement, Careers

4.8 • 1.6K Ratings

🗓️ 18 September 2023

⏱️ 40 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Jim Harter: Culture Shock
Jim Harter is Chief Scientist for the Workplace at Gallup. He has led more than 1,000 studies of workplace effectiveness, including the largest ongoing meta-analysis of human potential and business unit performance. He's the bestselling author of 12: The Elements of Great Managing, Wellbeing: The Five Essential Elements, Wellbeing at Work and the #1 Wall Street Journal bestseller It’s the Manager.

Jim has also published articles in many prominent business and academic journals. He's also the author now of Gallup's book with Jim Clifton titled Culture Shock: An unstoppable force is changing how we work and live. Gallup’s solution to the biggest leadership issue of our time*.

Virtually every professional team is navigating some aspect to return to office and how that works best for their organization. In this episode, Jim and I highlight the key findings from Gallup that have emerged in the data since the pandemic started. Plus, we explore the questions that managers can ask in order help this transition work better for everyone.
Key Points
Managers should consider these key questions to help employees and teams move towards smart autonomy:

Which parts of your job can you do best at home?
Which parts of your job can you do best at the office?
When have you created exceptional value for our customers?
When do you feel most connected to our organization’s culture?

In addition:

Less than 5% of people in the United States worked from home in 2019. Today the number is six times larger and nearly seven in 10 full-time employees in the United States prefer some type of remote work arrangement.
Number of days in the office is important, but matters less than other factors. Most associated with high levels of employee engagement is the practice of a work team deciding together (the option companies used the least).
Splitters and blenders represent two different ways of approaching work and the populate tends to divide equally on this preference (even across generations). Knowing where people land will help engage them better in the workplace.
Managers account for 70% of the variance in team engagement. A key habit for a manager is one meaningful conversation per week with each employee.
Less important is the time of interaction and more important it the quality. Smaller amounts of time discussion recognition, goals, and strengths can be more impactful than more time that doesn’t do this.

Resources Mentioned

Culture Shock: An unstoppable force is changing how we work and live. Gallup’s solution to the biggest leadership issue of our time* by Jim Clifton and Jim Harter

Interview Notes
Download my interview notes in PDF format (free membership required).
Related Episodes

Gallup Findings on the Changing Nature of Work, with Jim Harter (episode 409)
How to Engage Remote Teams, with Tsedal Neeley (episode 537)
Effective Hybrid Team Management, with Hassan Osman (episode 570)

Discover More
Activate your free membership for full access to the entire library of interviews since 2011, searchable by topic. To accelerate your learning, uncover more inside Coaching for Leaders Plus.

Transcript

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0:00.0

In 2019, only 5% of Americans worked from home.

0:04.4

Today, many organizations are navigating what hybrid, remote, and in-person work looks like.

0:11.0

In this episode, we look at the data that's now emerging from Gallup, and perhaps more importantly,

0:17.5

the questions managers should be asking to help frame what's next.

0:22.5

This is Coaching for Leaders, episode 646.

0:27.5

Produced by Innovate Learning, Maximizing Human Potential.

0:35.5

Greetings to you from Orange County, California.

0:38.5

This is Coaching for Leaders, and I'm your host, Dave Stahofiak.

0:43.0

Leaders aren't born. They're made.

0:46.0

And this weekly show helps you discover leadership wisdom through insightful conversations.

0:52.0

One of the pieces of wisdom we are all looking for right now is perspective on this new way of working.

0:58.5

We have some distance now from the start of the pandemic and the massive change it made in the ways we all work.

1:06.5

Not only how we show up in our work mentally, but also how we show up physically in so many ways.

1:13.5

Today, I'm so glad to welcome an expert back to the show from Gallup,

1:18.0

who's going to help us look now at what the data is starting to show in the surveys and the research about how organizations managers are answering this question of how we've changed and perhaps more importantly,

1:33.0

what do we do next now that we know what that data looks like?

1:36.5

I'm so glad to welcome back Jim Harder.

1:39.0

He is chief scientist for the workplace at Gallup.

1:42.0

He's led more than a thousand studies of workplace effectiveness, including the largest ongoing meta-analysis of human potential and business unit performance.

1:51.0

He's the best-selling author of 12, the elements of great managing, well-being, the five essential elements, well-being at work, and the number one Wall Street Journal bestseller, it's the manager.

2:03.0

He has also published articles in many prominent business and academic journals.

2:07.0

He's the author now of Gallup's newest book with Jim Clifton, Culture Shock, an unstoppable force is changing how we work and live,

...

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