17
Mar 2011

5 Reasons Public Employees Great Hires

I found it difficult to break this one down into a concise post. Cara presents these very well.

Amplify’d from www.carakeithley.com

Five Reasons Public Sector Employees Are Great Hires

I heard recently about a local private sector leader who is very skeptical of hiring public sector folks.  Many public sector employees are looking for work right now nationwide due to the recent election and various changes of administration.  This prejudice seems so unfounded to me, as I know many public sector employees who are exactly the kind of people I’d want to hire.  I hope that this person and others like her will reconsider their misconceptions and interview some of these potential candidates.

Here’s five reasons why public sector employees are great hires:

  1. Loyalty - Public sector employees are trained to protect their agency or organization.  Especially at the senior staff level, you will find employees who know how to give 100% support to leadership regardless of their personal opinions.

  1. Management Skills - Many public sector employees have the opportunity to manage people.  This often means they have extensive experience with hiring and firing, disciplining staff, working with unions, and keeping up on HR rules and laws.  These employees are not scared of managing and generally know how to work with levels above and below them to keep the peace and move things forward.

  1. Crisis Control - Whether it’s handling a crisis communications situation or preparing a pandemic flu plan, public sector employees are experienced in preparedness.  These employees can help you navigate through unexpected challenges, keeping your business running smoothly and your reputation intact.  I’ve never met a group of communications professionals who were more adept at handling investigative reporters than those in the public sector.  Any normal business would be astounded by the number of media calls and records requests we receive monthly (hundreds.)

  1. Big Picture Perspective - Public sector employees know that they are employed to serve their constituency, whether that means a nation, state, city, etc.  We are constantly reminded of the true purpose of our work.  These employees also have to regularly balance the wants and needs of stakeholders, legislators, and partners in with those of citizens.  Public sector employees will understand that you have multiple reporting lines, a board, stakeholders, lawyers, employees, and customers all in the mix and it won’t faze them.

  1. Commitment - Employees in the public sector generally don’t job hop every year.  They look for stable job opportunities where they can do good work and be treated fairly for a competitive wage.  They value good benefits and reasonable work hours.  This is not to say they won’t work more than a 40 hour work week—public sector employees have the same challenges as private sector.  We have outreach events, projects, or crises that keep us late into the evening.  All we generally want is recognition for our commitment and praise for a job well done.  Not so much to ask to gain a stable, loyal, committed employee.

These five reasons are based on my personal experience.  What else would you add?  I know there are even more reasons why public sector employees can be tremendous assets in other sectors.

Read more at www.carakeithley.com

Filed under  //   employees   hires   hiring   public sector  
08
Jan 2010

Shel Holtz: Open access is smart business, not an employee entitlement

I find that the negative comments from company execs often come without much research. They are often off-the-cuff remarks to a negative news story or to a misplaced perception that people inherently need to be "baby-sat." It is sometimes very offensive to me the way I hear some of them talk about their work-force. Here's a great article from Shel Holtz.

Open access is smart business, not an employee entitlement

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At first, I shrugged off the semi-literate comment left to one of my posts over on Stop Blocking, the site I started to advocate for reasonable employee access to the Net, and particularly to social media sites.

The post to which “reason,” as he called himself left a comment reported on a study that showed 54% of companies were blocking access. Here’s his response:

isnt it funny in todays world how everyone thinks they deserve better than what they are getting without haveing to really work for it no job owes you facebook time so feel your rights are being taken for granted grow up you big baby work time is not your fun time so if you block your workers from facebook @ work dont feel that blocking reduces productivity and engagement, limits recruiting capabilities, and denies networking that ultimately benefits the organization. thats a bunch of crap do your job facebook dont pay your bills you lucky to even have a job.

I blew off the comment initially, relegating it to the “just doesn’t get it” dustbin. But I found the comment kept coming back to me, not because reason’s reasoning is right but because he seems to think that I’m advocating for employee rights in my efforts to get companies to stop blocking.

barred gateI’m not an employee rights advocate. If I were, very few of my clients would be interested in my services. My goal is to help organizations succeed. I’ve achieved my goals if companies are more profitable, more competitive, more nimble, more productive. I’m campaigning to get companies to open employee access to social sites because increasingly the networked connectivity of workers is driving competitiveness, productivity and other indicators of improved performance.

The fact is, through all my years working in employee communications, I’ve never been concerned with whether employees are happy. It’s not a company’s job to ensure employee happiness. Employee job satisfaction is another story. It’s tangible, it’s measurable and it has a direct bearing on employee engagement, which is a predictor of organizational growth.

But even job satisfaction is just one return a company gets from networked employees. Zappos encourages its employees to network on the job, resulting in a reputation for stellar customer service. Employees engaged in their social networks can also reduce the cost and improve the quality of recruiting. It can surface issues the company needs to address. It can generate ideas for new products and services. It improves employee productivity.

On that last note, productivity, I came across an item today on TMCnet sporting the provocative headline, “Workplace Productivity at an All-Time Low.” The press release touted the products of a company called Pandora—not the music streaming site, blocked by a number of companies—but rather one that “allows managers to analyze activities performed by employees and the time spent on different work items. It also affords the ability to track computer usage at a group and/or an individual level, cross-reference activities reported by an employee, and access an employee’s desktop in real-time.”

The all-time low productivity claim is based on this calculation:

On average, workers with an Internet connection spend 21 hours per week online while in the office, a little more than four hours per day. And on average, 26% of that time is spent on personal-interest websites. That amounts to roughly an hour per day, or 22 hours per month.

Pandora is just one of many companies that profit from the fear they produce with such outlandish claims. As I’ve repeatedly noted, these calculations don’t account for the benefits such networking brings to the organization, the improved productivity highlighted in a University of Melbourne study, or the amount of work these employees perform outside the 9-to-5 office hours because they’re networked. In fact, another story that crossed my desk today points out that companies in the UK were able to maintain productivity even as snowbound workers were unable to get to the office because their ability to connect with each other and the office let them get their work done from home.

And, as I’ve also noted before, these lost-productivity assertions don’t stand up to statistical scrutiny. According to the U.S. Department of Labor, nonfarm business sector labor productivity increased in the third quarter of 2009 by 8.1%. That’s a far more credible number than the back-of-the-envelope calculations Pandora, Websense and other monitoring-and-blocking companies use in their scare campaigns. In fact, it reveals the productivity claims by these companies as an outright lie.

Yet these tactics continue to influence managers, as evidenced by the fact that most companies block access despite the fact that blocking is contrary to their own self interests.

Leaders need to realize that organizations that encourage their employees to network during work—guided by clear policies and improved business literacy—will experience success that eclipses that of organizations that block access.

It’s not a question of employee entitlements. It’s a question of smart business practices.

Posted by Shel on 01/08 at 10:51 AM
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Thanks, Shel. Great writing.

Filed under  //   employees   evangelism   public relations   social media   technology   workplace