Do you proactively keep in touch with how your team is doing in real time? At Value Capture, we do so on a weekly basis.
How?
We created a simple and effective tool called a “pulse survey” that provides us with insights on how people are feeling on a couple of dimensions.
Each week, that process lets us know how each person is doing and allows us to follow up individually to support them. Furthermore, the process makes it easy to track trends over time.
This pulse check is even more important in pandemic times, since our team is never in person together, being distributed across North America in every time zone.
We developed this tool as part of our people support and development strategy. It also connects into the tiered huddles as part of our management system. This is just one input that we review and take action on.
We have been doing these weekly surveys for a couple of years, and we keep learning and adjusting as we go. Our current survey is more comprehensive than the original version. A key point here is that purposeful learning and iterations are not only positive improvements, but important to get insight into how each team member is doing, every week.
Here’s a snapshot on how our pulse survey works:
Questions 7, 8, and 9 are the three questions that Paul O’Neill said everybody should be able to answer “yes” on a daily basis in habitually excellent organizations.
All questions have comment fields for details, if team members want to add comments.
Typically, the leader reaching out to the employee who has expressed concerns (or a non-ideal situation) will ask a few questions to gain more insight into the situation. Some of the issues highlighted may be small enough to be handled immediately, while others may be more systemic, requiring another process like an A3, personal development plan, or another method to resolve the issue to root cause.
This weekly survey is a small piece of our management system, which consists of meetings, huddles, one-on-ones, and other elements to keep us aligned, develop people and practice what we teach leaders in our advisory work.
Another key point is to be diligent about follow up. Employee feedback that is not acted upon is waste and, more importantly, is disrespectful to the person who provided the feedback.
I would encourage everyone to give this a try. It’s a small investment of time and it yields big results, including embedding a culture of valuing employees, employee engagement, and real-time problem solving.
You are welcome to use our pulse survey questions, and you can modify these for your own purposes or ask us for help in designing and implementing your own. All we ask is that you share your learnings with us by filling out this form.
You can download this blog post, including the questions, in an easy-to-share PDF by using the button below.