While the business model of products and services providing
value to consumers exists as the backbone of any company, employees
serve as the hands and feet of a firm. Employers expect their employees
to not only fulfil the functional duties of their job description, but
also be kind and help one another when needed, go the extra mile for the
organisation, speak up to give useful moneymaking or money-saving
suggestions, and raise the alarm when dangerous or unethical events
could cause grave harm.
Sometimes, despite an
employer’s earnest desires, the staff fail to speak up at work yet in
their own personal lives those same individuals talk freely with others
and share meaningful ideas.
In a social setting, ever
seen a friend behave one way in front of one person but then act an
entirely different way in front of a second person? Such duplicitous
behaviour can prove frustrating for friendships. Among our social
circles, humans crave authenticity.
In the workplace,
employees unable or unwilling to behave consistently across differing
groups people might suffer from organisation silence. The term describes
situations whereby otherwise communicative employees keep silent on
helpful or harmful firm practices instead of speaking up. When the
plurality of staff in a firm decide not to share opinions and concerns,
then the entity suffers from collective organisation silence and no one
practices the important behaviour of telling truth to power.
Some
employees thrive under some bosses but whither under others. Creative
more assertive workers, as an example, get demoralised and reduce work
output and outcomes when they feel forced into organisational silence.
Akram
Akbarian, Mohammad Esmail Ansari, Ali Shaemi, and Narges Keshtiaray
looked at dozens of research studies on why employees in varying firms
display organisation silence behaviour. The social scientists found the
following five primary causes of organisational silence.
First,
a toxic organisational culture could give rise to organisational
silence by not celebrating divergent thinking or looking down on new
ideas.
Second, employee fear about what might happen to
them if their innovative suggestion fails to yield fruit or fear about
blaming the bearer of bad news.
Third, when workers do not trust their superiors or their coworkers, they tend to go quiet and become less helpful.
Fourth, bad previous experiences from irrational or overtly punitive managers correlates strongly with organisational silence.
Fifth, a history of condescending, unappreciative, false, or negative feedback by management can push workers into reticence.
As
an executive, if you face a quieter or quieting workforce, sit and
ponder which of the five causes might underpin your organisation silence
dilemma.
On the other hand, if as an employee you
currently do not speak up and give your contributions in the workplace,
then identify the source of your fear, firm’s culture, distrust, or poor
human resources mitigation.
Then, either work to
change your response to the negative stimuli or commence a job search
for a new position where you can thrive and contribute happily.
No comments :
Post a Comment