John Sylvester: Want me to go the extra mile? Give me purpose!

-

“A report by global brand consultancy Calling Brands has revealed a “dramatic shift” in employee attitudes towards work – with corporate ‘purpose’ emerging as a powerful new driver of attraction, retention and productivity that few businesses are leveraging.

As a result the consultancy has urged business leaders to rethink the conventional approach to employee engagement in response to a surge in demand for purpose at work.

After pay, purpose has been revealed as the second most important reason people are attracted to work for, and stay loyal to, an organisation.

According to Crunch Time: The Power of Purpose, working for an organisation with a clearly defined purpose – an underlying ethos that goes beyond commercial and operational goals – ranks ahead of other factors such as level of responsibility in a job and even career progression.

HRreview Logo

Get our essential weekday HR news and updates.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Keep up with the latest in HR...
This field is hidden when viewing the form
This field is hidden when viewing the form
Optin_date
This field is hidden when viewing the form

 

This reveals a fundamental shift in the relationship between employees and the businesses they work for…”

It isn’t at all surprising that purpose was ranked second in the Calling Brands survey, (HR Magazine – http://tinyurl.com/bqzdr7x).

This has simply measured and put it into perspective something that most businesses discovered many years ago. That was why the much derided “mission statement” arose; to define and give everyone the same clear vision of the organisation’s purpose.

“…Across the UK, US and Germany, an average of 52% respondents ranked pay and benefits as most important, purpose was ranked as next most important (18%) ahead of work culture (17%), responsibility (7%) and opportunity for promotion (6%)….

…The survey also revealed that, on average, 57% of respondents (64% Germany, 58% US, 48% UK) said they would favour joining an organisation that has a clearly defined purpose.”

What matters now is how organisations integrate this ‘new discovery’ with motivation schemes to maximise the benefit to the business.

I can now claim over 30 years experience in the incentive and motivation agency business! After five initial years at Grass Roots I joined p&mm in 1989 and, following a management buy-out, the business was floated on AiM in 2004 as Motivcom plc. I sat on the main board through to its fully supported acquisition by Sodexo in September 2014. I continue on the board of the company with an objective to drive its integration with Sodexo and help realise the strategic benefits of being part of a larger international group.

Latest news

Kevin Chan: Escaping the artificial AI talent crisis

The application of AI to traditional business processes has led to a massive shake-up of the employment market.

University no longer pays for everyone as employers back apprenticeships

Lifetime returns from higher education are becoming more uneven as employers place growing value on vocational routes into work.

CIPD Insight: October’s employment law reforms demand action now

October will bring new trade union access rights, tougher anti-harassment duties and fresh obligations for employers. Here’s how HR can prepare now.

Employers plan smaller pay rises for 2027 despite inflation uncertainty

Early forecasts suggest organisations are becoming more cautious on reward budgets as cost pressures persist and economic conditions remain uncertain.
- Advertisement -

Employees opting for home working ‘to escape noisy offices’

More employees are choosing to work from home to avoid noisy workplaces, with many saying office distractions are affecting concentration.

The org chart isn’t dying. It’s being demoted.

AI is changing how companies organise work, raising questions about middle managers, accountability and workplace governance.

Must read

Serena Palmer: Why it’s time to break the stigma around addiction at work

"I would never tell my boss what is really going on for me." This is a sentiment I heard from almost every single person I met in rehab.

Dr Alex Linley: Think differently how to embrace neurodiversity at work

Can neurodiversity be used as a strength instead of being viewed as a weakness?
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you