Why Employee Engagement is More Important Than Ever

Your employees are the foundation upon which your business is built. Without the right people in the right places, no company can hope to operate anywhere near potential.

Your employees are the foundation upon which your business is built. Without the right people in the right places, no company can hope to operate anywhere near potential.

Unfortunately, it’s becoming increasingly difficult to keep those people on board.

We live in a buoyant, growing, hyper-connected world economy where quality employees can easily find a new home. The workers of today are less likely than ever to remain with the same company for a significant length of time; mobile careers have become the new norm.

As the boomers continue to retire and the idea of a “job for life” fades into history, businesses can no longer rely upon the automatic loyalty of their employees. If they decide the grass may be greener elsewhere, they won’t hesitate to go and find out.

The Importance of Engagement

An engaged employee is one who feels a strong emotional and personal connection to their workplace. They’re enthusiastic and passionate about their work, throw themselves into tasks with maximum effort and always want to achieve the best possible results.

They’re the people who take pride in working where they do, doing their job properly and helping the business grow and prosper; the men and women who perform at the highest level, positively impact on productivity and who are entirely content working for you.

By contrast, non-engaged employees are more likely to simply do their job and nothing more, while actively disengaged staff could even be doing your business harm. Both groups are also far more likely to leave for greener pastures – and you can wave goodbye to the time and money you spent training them.

Put simply, engaged employees are worth their weight in gold, so it’s little surprise that the country’s top business people recognize their worth.

Harvard Business Review researchers found that 71% of businesses feel strong employee engagement is a key factor most likely to influence their future success; only excellent customer service and effective communication scored more highly.

Sales and marketing capabilities, efficient productivity and innovation matter too, of course, but these were all considered less important than employee engagement, especially by those higher up their respective organizations.

Sales and marketing capabilities, efficient productivity and innovation matter too, of course, but these were all considered less important than employee engagement, especially by those higher up their respective organizations.

Engagement doesn’t just happen on its own. Here’s how you can help engage your employees and boost their motivation.

Be a Good Boss

A large part of engagement is about making an employee feel at home within your company. No one wants to live with someone they don’t like, especially if that person is in charge

Disliking their manager is one main reason why an employee will leave their job, and even if they stay it’s unlikely they’ll put in maximum effort.

You don’t have to be every employee’s best friend, but take a moment to consider your style and think about any changes you could make to increase your popularity among those below you.

Make an effort to treat your staff as individual people rather than assets, and showing some interest in their lives outside the workplace. Small personal touches can make a huge difference to the way you are seen, and in turn increase the probability your staff will feel valued and at home.

Set Reasonable, Attainable Goals with Achievable Rewards

We all like to have something to work toward, in our business or personal lives. Having a goal focuses the mind, provides motivation and offers the opportunity to seize a reward once it is achieved.

Most businesses set goals or targets for their workers, either individually or based on the performance of a team. Unfortunately, a lot of these are little more than a simple challenge to meet an arbitrary figure.

That isn’t going to engage anyone; you need to set meaningful goals.

Instead of simply throwing out a target, set well-defined goals that give your employees a true sense of belonging in the company. Show how meeting their goals will benefit both them and the business, and how the target fits in with what the business as a whole is trying to achieve.

Make them relevant and personal, and schedule regular meetings to ensure progress is tracked and rewarded.

Focus on the Good, not the Bad

Each employee will have certain strengths. There’ll be some with a strong aptitude for communication, for example, while others may excel at analysing data or coming up with creative marketing ideas.

But no one is good at everything, and in an effort to raise overall standards, many managers end up focusing on whatever weaknesses an employee has.

Instead, those seeking to improve engagement should focus on the strengths of their staff, and on developing the areas where they are naturally strong. Where they are weak, other members of their team will be strong, and support can be given where needed.

This approach not only has a significant impact on engagement levels, it raises overall happiness too – who doesn’t like to play to their strengths?

Keep Everyone on the Same Page

If you’ve ever worked for someone else, as part of a team larger than one, you’ll almost certainly have encountered this: One employee doing one thing, while someone else is doing something entirely different, possibly at odds with what their colleague is working on.

Neither has a clue until, for example, a customer asks why they’ve been called twice and quoted two different prices. The result could be any number of unfortunate outcomes for the business.

Now consider the effects felt by workers. Everyone wants to feel like an essential cog in a well-oiled machine, but they’re not going to feel that way if they’re never quite sure what they should be doing, or whether what they’re working on will matter.

Keeping everyone in the loop and fully aware of what they should be working toward is crucial, and relatively easy.

Used correctly, good CRM (customer relationship management) software will eliminate issues such as duplicate working and mixed messages. Everyone will be on the same page, connected and able to see how what they’re doing affects the bigger picture.

And on the subject of the bigger picture – the company’s overall goals – effectively communicating with your team on a regular basis will ensure they know exactly what it is, and exactly where they fit in.

And it’s a Big Target

Less than a third of employees in the United States self-identify as being engaged at work, so the opportunity exists for every business, big and small, to make some serious progress.

Put yourself in your workers’ shoes and consider what would engage you. As Virgin Group founder Richard Branson once said, “If you look after your staff, they’ll look after your customers. It’s that simple.”

It really is.


 

At Insightly, we offer a CRM used by small and mid-sized businesses from a variety of verticals. Learn about all of Insightly’s features and plans on our pricing page or sign up for a free trial.

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6 Great Tools to Track Customer Engagement

 

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Customer engagement is always a top marketing goal, but not all customer engagement is created equally. There’s a difference between reading a blog post, and taking the time to comment on it or share it on social media. Fortunately, there are a number of tools available to help you track customer engagement, getting a better sense for the overall picture and active engagement, too.

  1. Google Analytics

Google Analytics gives you a wealth of information, including what pages people are spending time on, and how long they’re staying on the content. The longer someone spends on your page, the better, right? You can also use Google Analytics to track the number of downloads on a file, so you can see who’s taking action.

But, because there’s a difference between someone just leaving your page open in their browser (passive engagement) and active reading through the content, you’ll want to turn to other tools to help you compare the active and passive engagement.

  1. Heatmaps

Heatmaps allow you see where users are spending most of their time on a page. Not only can this help you see where the activity is, it can also help you in web usability testing. Some heatmap tools are more advanced than others – Ptengine offers a free basic solution with built-in analytics, whereas Clicktale, for instance, is a premium solution with additional features such as scroll reach, link analytics, and even session replays that allow you to see exactly what users do while browsing your site.

  1. Your CRM

Your CRM keeps track of all customer interactions, so you can easily see who your most active and engaged customers are. At the same time, you can see who your least engaged and least active customers are. This allows you to dig deep into issues on a customer-by-customer basis so you can thank them for their loyalty, or reach out to find out why they’ve stopped doing business with you. You can use the information to adjust marketing campaigns for each segment accordingly.

  1. Your Blog’s Comment Section

It’s a basic measure of customer engagement, but looking at the comment section of your blog posts can help you get an idea of what’s resonating with your readers. The posts that have more comments are getting more engagement, but see if you can identify patterns. Are the posts on a certain topic getting more engagement? Is the day of the week or the time of the post that seems to effect engagement? Test various scenarios to see what you can do to increase blog commenting as a measure of engagement.

And if people are taking time to comment on your blog posts, be kind enough to reply, even if it’s just to acknowledge the comment. This lets your visitors know you pay attention, and you care, which can also encourage other readers who’ve remained silent to start commenting. If people don’t think you’re listening, what motivation do they have to speak?

  1. Social Analytics

Each social media network has its own analytics platform, which allows you to see how well you’re performing in terms of comments, likes, shares, and more. Social visibility will affect your engagement rates – if people aren’t seeing your posts, they’re not going to engage. But, engagement affects visibility, at least where Facebook is concerned, so it’s a bit of a catch-22. Vary your post types and timing. Post multiple times per day. Avoid being self-promotional all the time by following the 80/20 rule.

  1. Email Marketing

Your email marketing platform will have built-in analytics to help you see who’s opening your emails, who is clicking through the links in the emails, who’s deleting the emails, and who is unsubscribing. Opens are an indication of engagement, and clickthroughs are better.

Like with the blog and social posts, watch for patterns in topics, subject lines, date and time the message was sent, to see what works well with your audience to get the highest levels of engagement.

The tools you use to track customer engagement may vary from day to day, as each source provides a bit of insight into the bigger picture. Engagement may peak around a certain marketing campaign or season, depending on your industry, and with the data from various tracking tools, you’ll be able to make adjustments to your strategy to increase the quality and quantity of engagement.

 


 

At Insightly, we offer a CRM used by small and mid-sized businesses from a variety of verticals. Learn about Insightly’s features and plans on our pricing page or sign up for a free trial.

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8 Reasons You’re Driving Customers Away

 

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Ah, the company newsletter—carefully honed and sculpted. Each line contains thoughtful relevant prose. Each week you send it out to your customers who’re waiting with baited breath to read your latest breaking headlines…

Or not.

For most of us, we’re lucky if our company newsletter hits a 25% open rate (which by the way, is above average), let alone clickthroughs and a low rate of unsubscribes. Most of us try to eke out an acceptable newsletter to remind customers and clients we’re alive and relevant, and hope for a little engagement. Knowing that only a quarter or fewer of our recipients are even bothering to look at our newsletters can be a little deflating—why even bother?

The truth is, email marketing still offers a significant ROI and is a proven effective method for engaging and reaching your customers. Using a consistent, relevant message, marketing across platforms (email, social media, even direct mail) and targeting segmented customer groups with messages relative and specific to them can all help boost your engagement to hit your ultimate goal: happy customers who love your brand.

So if you notice your customer engagement sliding, your newsletter getting ignored or your unsubscribe rate steadily climbing, it might be time to revamp your approach. There are a few reasons you might be losing customer engagement and interest.

1. You’re Coming On Too Strong

When it comes to your newsletter, there are a few factors to consider—first, not every customer is going to read every newsletter, and that’s perfectly okay. If they stay subscribed, and open every few communications, you’re staying ahead of the curve. Your goal should be to keep newsletters relevant, focused on customer engagement, consistent and not overwhelming. In fact, one of the main reasons customers unsubscribe has nothing to do with relevance, but is because the correspondence is too frequent.

When it comes to relevant content, it’s about quality, not quantity. If you send out a newsletter every week and you find you aren’t hitting your engagement target, try scaling back to every other week. It may sound counter-intuitive but it’s far better to leave customers wanting a little more than making the cardinal mistake of leaving them wanting less.

2. Your Subject Lines are Blah

“Standard Company Connect Newsletter: Jan 1, 2017” will almost always get ignored. Why? Because very few people are awaiting the next issue of your newsletter. Instead, try to make your subject lines as riveting and interesting as possible. Subject lines should create a sense of urgency; they should match your content but pique the curiosity of your readers.

“Why we’re breaking up with boring emails today!” will make readers much more intrigued and get them clicking faster than simply telling them “here’s our newsletter”. Ask a question in your subject line, hit on a relevant current event or topic, or give customers an incentive to find out more.

3. Your Format is Snooze-Worthy

Most mail clients like MailChimp offer formatting options. Just because you’re limited to the body of an email, doesn’t mean you have to keep things text heavy and black & white. While a header with your logo is important, offering a nice mix of text and imagery keeps your newsletter interesting, visually stimulating and mobile friendly.

Always include links to read more, and simply offer a teaser rather than a full article in the body of the newsletter. This keeps customers clicking to read further, and it also keeps them from running away from a bunch of text that looks overwhelming. Teasers should follow the rule of thumb with your subject lines—leave them wanting more, asking questions and dying to click to find out the whole story.

4. Your Delivery is Inconsistent

If your customers receive your newsletter irregularly (or as we said before too frequently) it can be frustrating and cause them to unsubscribe. There are many great newsletters out there that fall onto one talented employee’s to do list. When that employee leaves, or has a shift in priorities, the newsletter becomes inconsistent.

A/B test your newsletters, and follow your analytics to see which customers are clicking and opening your emails and how you can leverage your email list to boost your sales. B2B emails might differ from customer reads, so know your industry and your audience. Look at which headlines and content pieces are getting the most clicks, as well as the time, day of the week and other delivery factors. Maybe you should send emails out overnight, or first thing in the morning? Maybe your customers like to catch up with your newsletter during their lunch or afternoon break.

Consider letting your customers know what they can expect when they sign up for your newsletter. Tell them how often they can expect to hear from you, and constantly assess the frequency and relevancy to make sure it’s meeting your customer’s expectations.

5. You’re too Internally Focused

Another email mistake? Making your newsletter too internally-focused, using industry jargon, inside jokes or stories that aren’t relevant to your customers. While it might be interesting that your CEO was honored at a banquet, your customers probably don’t want to read more than a caption on a photo or a small blurb about it. Don’t make internal news the focus of your newsletter or you will lose your audience. So often the newsletter writer ends up creating the newsletter they would want to read, not what their customer cares about.

One of the easy fixes to this problem is to get some extra eyes on your newsletter. Ask a coworker in a different department to read your newsletter, send it out to a customer/friend first to ask them their feedback, or better yet? Ask for your customers to tell you what they would like to see, and then follow it! Most people prefer newsletters and cool emails that apply to them directly. Segment your customer list, and keep notes on their preferences. Use a CRM to target the needs of your customers and make sure the content you’re presenting is something THEY would want to read.

Keep your newsletters fun, engaging and interesting. Share tips and tricks, news and pieces of information. Give your customers pointers on how they can use your products or services. Share video—make it funny, emotional or informative. Tell a story and talk about how your company is changing lives, helping or making the world a better place.

Your newsletters should be newsworthy. Keep the information interesting and engaging. Reach your customers with pieces they want to read and news they need.

 


 

At Insightly, we offer a CRM used by small and mid-sized businesses from a variety of verticals. Learn about Insightly’s features and plans on our pricing page or sign up for a free trial.

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