Boosting Productivity, Boosting Morale

The MSPB has six quick steps to improving your agency\'s productivity.

By Suzanne Kubota
Senior Internet Editor
FederalNewsRadio.com

How engaged are the employees at your agency and how is this affecting your department’s productivity?

The Merit Systems Protection Board surveyed 35,000 federal employees to find the answers to these questions.

Doug Nierle, project manager for the Power of Federal Employee Engagement Report, tells FederalNewsRadio, they found six dimensions that are important to engaging federal employees:

  1. Pride in their work or workplace,
  2. Satisfaction with leadership,
  3. Opportunity to perform well at work,
  4. Satisfied with the recognition received,
  5. Prospect for future personal and professional growth, and
  6. A positive work environment with some focus on teamwork.

While Nierle notes that while not everyone can be promoted to the top of the pay scale, getting to know the employee, what their career goals are, and how to improve their competencies can make all the difference, even in the middle of a transition.

“Try to keep the focus on the work and on those drivers,” says Nierle. “With more pressure on results, and lesser budgets, lesser staffs, these things can be forgotten.”

If for no other reason, the report finds that engaged employees have a much more positive view of their supervisors’ management skills than do employees who are not engaged. So engaging your employees may have a direct effect on your paycheck as well.

—–
On the Web:

MSPB – The Power of Federal Employee Engagement (Acrobat)

(Copyright 2008 by FederalNewsRadio.com. All Rights Reserved.)

Copyright © 2024 Federal News Network. All rights reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)FILE - In this Sept. 21, 2017, file photo, a sign on a door of the Environmental Protection Agency in Washington. Long-running research projects credited with pivotal discoveries about the harm that pesticides, air pollution and other hazards pose to children are in jeopardy or shutting down because the Environmental Protection Agency will not commit to their continued funding, researchers say.  (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais, File)

    EPA workforce ‘particularly susceptible’ to Trump’s Schedule F plans

    Read more
    Courtesy Anne AylwardAnne Aylward

    The Transportation Department says farewell to one of its most distinguished employee

    Read more