Friday, September 26, 2008

Making Work Life Meaningful For Your Employees

Business.

Trading perks for loyalty isn't work life balance - the majority of australian companies continue to treat the serious issue of balancing competing work pressures and employees' personal life needs with a' band - aid' effect by offering more benefits or' perks' to win their loyalty. These benefits may be generous and well regarded by some employees, but they similarly may alienate others with unaligned personal interests. Despite the rhetoric of work life policies and self - imposed badges of' employer of choice' , the actions of many Australian corporations translate to gym memberships, lunchtime massages and volunteering programs.


True work life balance is achieved when employees have a greater clarity around what is important to them and they are organisationally empowered to make decisions about work and life to fulfill these desires. - so offering short - term band aid perks to employees doesn' t work in many situations. "true work life balance is achieved when employees have. a greater clarity around what is important to them and. they are organisationally empowered to make decisions. about work and life to fulfill these desires" . The question this raises is this: Is corporate Australia committed to the so - called' work life balance' phenomena which promises to create more meaningful and productive workplaces or is this merely window dressing to keep the troops happy while business continues at an ever - increasing pace? Work life balance may be the hottest management' buzz phrase' at the moment, but the underlying social issue which created this concept remains valid: Australians are working harder and longer than at any other time in our industrial history. Our lifestyle expectations have escalated so rapidly in the past two decades that working harder and longer is seen as the only way to live the standard of life we desire. We are gripped in a generation of over - consumption and materialism which has fuelled the over - work epidemic. Yet research says that despite longer working hours and greater income levels, we are less happy than previous generations.


Making work life meaningful for your employees. - but the backlash against excess has started and the ground swell is expected to gather momentum as innovative companies are sponsoring work life balance education programs so that individuals can take responsibility and make the tough decisions around work life balance themselves, rather than look to employers to provide solutions. So how can work life balance be meaningful and contribute to deeper employee well being? Companies seeking to develop a work life balance culture into their organisation also need to invest in educational programs for employees to make better informed decisions about their working and lifestyle patterns. The core issue is to address is time: time spent at work and time allowed for non - work life obligations and opportunities by employees. While busy at work we seldom find time to stop and think about what is really important in our lives and whether striving for a higher pay packet is the ultimate objective.


Employees need a comprehensive and holistic program which allows them to assess and prioritise how they wish to spend their time in life. - employers will gain vastly increased employee commitment and loyalty by offering work life education programs to employees which help them clarify their work and life goals and strategies. This ranges from fulfilling work to social and community contributions to relationships and health. Once we know what' s important to us, we can plan a practical time budget and strategies to do justice to the many parts of our life competing for our attention. We all ultimately have limited time and resources.

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