Once upon a time, employee evaluations focused on identifying employees’ weaknesses and coming up with plans to improve them. Today, however, the pendulum has swung the other way, and businesses are increasingly creating strengths-based cultures.
A strengths-based company culture takes a more positive approach. It focuses on recognizing each employee’s strengths and applying those strengths productively at work. Strengths typically come from our natural talents or ways of thinking and looking at the world. By cultivating those talents and combining them with training, you can enhance employees’ strengths.
Why use a strengths-based culture?
There are many reasons to value a strengths-based workplace culture. For one thing, when employees have jobs that use their strengths, they can be more productive right off the bat. That helps your small business get an edge on competitors.
In addition, research has shown that a strengths-based culture leads to greater employee satisfaction. According to Gallup, employees who report being able to use their strengths at work every day are 8% more productive and 15% less likely to quit their jobs. They’re also more likely to say they enjoy what they do each day.
Finally, a strengths-based approach to the workplace is extremely well suited for the team-based work that most companies do these days. Just like a football team, a workplace team with a mix of strengths is more effective than one that’s all quarterbacks.
How can you create a strengths-based culture?
To develop and enhance your employees’ strengths, you first need to know what their strengths are. You might learn about them by simply working with the employees for a period of time. For example, before I became an entrepreneur, I managed a group of employees who worked together for many years. Eventually, we got to know each other’s strengths so well that pretty much everyone on the team could identify who would do best at a specific task.
Of course, you may not want to wait to find out your employees’ strengths. If that’s the case, you can also identify strengths by conducting aptitude tests, getting 360-degree feedback from other employees about each person’s strengths, and asking employees to identify what they think are their own strengths. With input from all these sources, as well as the person’s previous work history, you should have a pretty good idea of an individual’s strengths.
Once you’re aware of your employees’ strengths, you can tap into them to assign tasks and projects at which employees are likely to excel. You should also use your employees’ strengths to help chart their career paths with your business. Don’t be too wedded to specific job descriptions or roles; be flexible and give employees opportunities to use their strengths at work outside their core job duties.
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Don’t let strengths become stereotypes
There are a couple things to be aware of when creating a strengths-based culture. First, don’t grab a hold of stereotypes and turn them into strengths. Not every millennial employee is a whiz with social media; not every female manager is inherently empathetic and collaborative.