Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Employee surveys: Reasons why Organisations invest in Them

By Alison Young

An employee survey is an important tool for any company or organisation, helping to measure levels of employee engagement, employee satisfaction, and general morale at work, as well as the reasons why the results or scores are as they are.

In today's competitive market it is harder than ever for businesses to survive. Despite the recession, many organisations have continued to conduct employee surveys since they see it as more critical than ever to understand and analyse the opinions and ideas of their employees. This understanding is increasingly critical for improved business performance and growth.

Before conducting any employee research, the manager responsible should consider and get agreement to the main objectives of the initiative, along with the best means for collecting the data - for example, should it be done via an online survey, printed/postal questionnaires, focus groups, workshops, interviews, or other means.

By demonstrating that management wants to hear what staff really think, employee surveys help maintain good relations between the company and its employees, thereby creating greater employee engagement with the business.

Employee surveys often cover topics such as: what drives employee engagement, how well internal communications work within the company, perceptions of company leadership, satisfaction with line management support and motivation, aspects of training and development, general working conditions and the relationships within and between teams.

Employee surveys are very useful for identifying underlying workplace problems and barriers to good customer service and productivity. However, another important reason to run a survey is to identify and measure what is working well currently. Too often, surveys are seen as a tool to find faults, when it can be even more useful in identifying the things a company is doing right. This information can be critical to attract and retain high quality staff - the very marketable individuals you dont want to lose!

The first employee survey conducted within a company is usually broadly based, enabling that company to put a stake in the ground and collect a range of benchmark measures, often on up to 50 subjects, but as time passes, or if there is a key topic to be addressed, organisations may choose to run a more focused survey, sometimes on a single topic, such as internal communications for example.

More specific types of employee survey include exit surveys (for those leaving the company), welcome surveys (to see what new employees think), training needs surveys (to help to develop company-wide training plans), and barometer or temperature check surveys (designed to test a few key questions on a more regular basis).

Whatever the objectives for a particular organisation, it is certainly true that modern organisations that wish to compete effectively, need the kind of measures and feedback that are provided by employee surveys. - 2364

About the Author:

1 comment:

Unknown said...

Online surveys are becoming an important research tool for a various research fields, including marketing, social and official statistics research......Thanks for this information you have post.
employee surveys

Blog Archive