Pulse November / December 2019 | Page 48

2019 ISPA CONFERENCE & EXPO The Spa Wkfce Super Seion by JamIson stoIke THE THREE KEYS TO “STAY AND THRIVE” 1. Cultivate relationships. 2. Accept people as they are. 3. Make people feel significant. With more than 30,000 unFilled oPen Positions in the U.S. spa industry, spa leaders are looking for an edge in recruiting and retaining the talent they need. they found that edge during the Spa Workforce Super Session, an all- new pre-conference event that focused on tools, tips and methods for conquering staffing challenges. nearly 200 iSPa conference & expo attendees participated in the lively two-part session. for the first half of the event, leadership and talent expert Bryan Williams led a presentation on how to build a team that thrives. then, four spa industry leaders took the stage for an open Q&a moderated by Williams. Recruiting, Engaging, Retaining with Bryan Williams across all industries, levels of engagement at work are low and 46 PULSE ■ novEmbEr/dEcEmbEr 2019 many employees are actively disen- gaged. to Williams, the central question facing the spa industry is this: “how do we move our team members from quit and stay, to stay and thrive?” fix the issue with engagement, said Williams, and other workforce issues will solve themselves—engaged employees will stay at your spa longer and more actively recruit new team members. Williams identified three primary ways to build engagement: cultivate relationships, accept people’s strengths and weaknesses, and make people feel significant. he highlighted the impor- tance of attention, both deliberate and subliminal, on engagement and excel- lence by citing a study which found that students who were labeled as “gifted” performed better than other students, regardless of their actual test scores. the only difference was the amount of attention given to them by the teacher. Williams distilled it to three important questions: “Do you see me? Do you hear me? Do i matter to you?” Demonstrate that you see, hear and value your employees by giving them eye contact, seeking their input more frequently, acknowledging what they say and pushing on them when they deliver mediocre work. Worried about building too close of a relationship with particular employees? Don’t be. “People do not lose respect for you because you become friends with some people,” said Williams. “they lose respect when you don’t do your job as a manager.” Williams next turned to talent— how to find it and how to nurture it. to find it, think of how you label a person. are they cheerful? thoughtful? organized? these are natural