When Inderjeet joined her new organisation as a virtual employee on a project team, she assumed it would be similar to jobs she had worked on. It surprised her how long it took to get to know her teammates and how long it took to feel like she was truly part of the team’s processes. A young woman, she was unique in her employer’s primarily male, more experienced culture, and this seemed to complicate how the existing team members worked with her.
She is not alone. Onboarding new employees in a virtual workplace can take longer and be more complex than getting up to speed in a traditional workplace.
Before the COVID-19 pandemic, many organisations were focused on creating inclusive workplaces. Enhancing the geographic, gender, ability and other forms of diversity was an important but (for many) not necessarily urgent, goal. Many of these efforts stalled in the early days of working from home. Now, as they continue running business in new ways and planning for the future, there are unprecedented opportunities to create a more inclusive, welcoming workplace if organisations choose to do so.
The business, social, and political cases for widening their hiring practices are familiar to most readers. Some of the reasons are obvious: being able to recruit from a wider pool of employees, achieving internal goals for diversity, and becoming an employer of choice top the list, along with meeting legal requirements from various jurisdictions.
Many companies put efforts into recruiting and hiring from a larger pool of candidates. As great as it sounds, bringing people onboard is not the same as creating a high-functioning, productive work team, and certainly not the same as making it inclusive.
Denne historien er fra March 2021-utgaven av Indian Management.
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Denne historien er fra March 2021-utgaven av Indian Management.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
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Trust is a must
Trust a belief in the abilities, integrity, values, and character of any organisation is one of the most important management principles.
Listen To Your Customers
A good customer experience management strategy will not just help retain existing customers but also attract new ones.
The hand that feeds
Providing free meals to employees is an effective way to increase engagement and boost productivity.
Survival secrets
Thrive at the workplace with these simple adaptations.
Plan backwards
Pioneer in the venture capital and private equity fields and co-founder of four transformational private equity firms, Bryan C Cressey opines that we have been taught backwards in many important ways, people can work an entire career without seeing these roadblocks to their achievements, and if you recognise and bust these five myths, you will become far more successful.
For a sweet deal
Negotiation is a discovery process for both sides; better interactions will lead all parties to what they want.
Humanise. Optimise. Digitise
Engaging employees in critical to the survival of an organisation, since the future of business is (still) people.
Beyond the call of duty
A servant leadership model can serve the purpose best when dealing with a distributed workforce.
Workplace courage
Leaders need to build courage in order to enhance their self-reliance and contribution to the team.
Focused on reality
Are you a sales manager or a true sales leader? The difference, David Mattson, CEO, Sandler® and author, Scaling Sales Success: 16 Key Principles For Sales Leaders, maintains, comes down to whether you can see beyond five classic myths that we often tell ourselves about selling.