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Employee Listening Strategies: Employee Resource Groups & Committees

 Employee Listening Strategies: Employee Resource Groups & Committees

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At many companies, there’s a huge disconnect between how management sees the culture and how employees experience and talk about it. To eliminate that gap, smart companies create and implement employee listening strategies that give them a clear picture of employee engagement and their overall workplace culture.

How employee listening strategies improve engagement

To create a better workplace culture, you need to start with a clear picture of the employee experience at your company.

If you don’t know what problems employees are having at work, or what areas of your culture they like and dislike, any changes you make will essentially be wild guesses based on your own assumptions rather than concrete data.

Every company implements listening employee strategies differently, but when we look at how Great Place To Work Certified companies do it, a few practices repeatedly appear:

  1. Leverage Employee Resource Groups and committees 
  2. Ensure authentic follow-up on employee feedback
  3. Create engagement through multiple channels 
  4. Periodic employee engagement surveys

Leverage employee groups and committees

One way to create effective communication opportunities for employees across the organization is to use groups or committees.

There are numerous ways to engage committees, but the most effective ones create avenues for employees’ voices to reach leadership on a regular basis.

Kimpton Hotels: People and Culture Team

Photo: Employees at Kimpton Jane Q Restaurant. 

At Kimpton Hotels, a boutique hotel and restaurant chain based in San Francisco, each region has a People and Culture Team made up of selected cross-functional employees.

This team’s duties include:

  • Working with HR to ensure that organizational culture and the employee voice remain strong across the entire organization
  • Keeping their regions informed about internal job openings
  • Helping determine culture fit for those who are looking to move around in or enter the organization.

Their work supports and promotes the development of both the over-arching organizational culture and the unique regional sub-cultures across the company.

Alston & Bird LLP: Firm committees

Photo: Employees at Alston & Bird LLP.

At Alston & Bird LLP, the largest law firm in Atlanta, staff and attorneys can make decisions and effect change at the firm by participating on a firm committee.

The firm's 29 official committees and 10 task forces range from proactive to inactive and from essential to light-hearted. The "Diversity Steering Committee", "Women's Initiative" and "Connecting Through Diversity" are just a few examples. Over 500 employees participate in at least one committee; many serve on multiple committees.

Leaders at Alston & Bird LLP take advice and direction from each committee.

"The Women's Initiative serves as a sounding board and resource toward maintaining, updating and evolving firm policies, such as Alston & Bird's Alternative Career Path and parental leave policies," the firm explains on their website.

These groups give everyone a chance to be heard. They also break down boundaries that might exist between departments or roles, helping achieve the greater goals of the group.

Bright Horizons: Better Together Groups

Photo: A wall of thank you hearts from employees at Bright Horizons during Employee Appreciation Month - one way the company shares the employee voice.

Bright Horizons gives employees a voice through their "Better Together" groups.

These communities of employees work together to create a great work environment. Here are just a few things they do:

  • Welcome and orient new employees
  • Solicit input on challenges and solutions
  • Roll out initiatives
  • Host charity events
  • Develop morale- and team-building activities, professional development and training opportunities and awards celebrations
  • Participate in accreditation and communication efforts
  • Manage community involvement programs.

Representatives from each division of the company also form the National Better Together group, which meets with leaders to share employee ideas and concerns.

Four Seasons Hotels: Direct Line Committee

Photo: Four Seasons Oahu team.

At Four Seasons Hotels each hotel has a "Direct Line Committee" made up of employees from each department.

The Committee meets personally with the General Manager on a monthly basis. No other managers are present, which facilitates an open and honest exchange.

Kimpton encourages Direct Line Representatives to prepare for these meetings by asking colleagues what issues they think should be discussed.

At these meetings, the General Manager also updates the attendees on issues that have been previously brought forth. This shows the employees that their input does make a difference.

Want more listening techniques and ideas? Come back to our blog tomorrow when we will cover the second strategy. For an employee listening tool built on 30 years of research, learn more about our employee engagement survey. 


Claire Hastwell