People and Management October 2018 | Page 8

[COVER STORY] RESEARCH INSIGHTS FROM GREAT PLACE TO WORK® A decade of building trust with employees Prasenjit Bhattacharya CEO Great Place to Work® Institute O ver the last decade, there have been numerous researches underlining not just the correlation between creating great employee experience and business results, but as the recent research by Edman indicates a causal effect — great workplaces lead to sustained business results. In this article, I would attempt to introduce some of our research fi ndings on great workplaces and some of our observations on what sets the best workplaces apart in their ability to sustain their culture. What is a Great Place to Work? Most of us can, without hesitation, answer the question, “Is your company a good place to work?”. We have an implicit idea about what is and what is not a good workplace. Ask yourself this question — what is it about a company that makes it a Great Place to Work? Many different answers would come to your mind. Let us say that your list looks some- thing like — A Great Place to Work is one where employees are treated well and looked after, where 8 employees are paid well, where employees do mean- ingful work or where people are friendly. No matter how big your list might be, there would be some characteristic peculiar to one company that you might want to add to make it more comprehensive. Since FedEx stands out in its training and leadership development initiatives, we could add employee development to our list. Similarly, one could add fun as Southwest Airlines has been extremely successful in creating a high- energy workplace with a conscious commitment to have fun at work. Therefore, no matter how comprehensive your list might be, it could just as well be the case that a great place to work displays characteristics not in your list. In fact, trying to make a great place to work by implementing a laundry list of ‘best practices’ is precisely the kind of piecemeal approach that misses the essence of the great workplaces. It then underlies the diffi culty we face in defi ning a ‘Great Place to Work’ and in explaining why one employer is better than another. | Vol. 9 Issue 6 • Sep-Oct 2018, Noida / Pre-Event Edition