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Employee Involvment

Why is it important to capture ideas and suggestions? For starters, the process improves individual motivation and morale. Involvement programs help capture the creativity, energy, and ideas many people have. They also allow departments and individuals to work cross-functionally, and create an environment of learning and constant renewal. As a result they will improve work methods and processes continually, reduce the costs of doing business, improve safety, and reduce accidents. Exchanging ideas always improves communication and the knowledge that top management is open and willing to act on the ideas improves trust.
One example on how to achieve employee involvement is to offer a white board where workers easily can write their ideas. Instead of passing untested ideas up the chain of command, the employee who originates an idea should have a responsibility for its achievement. The philosophy should always be “study it, pilot it and adopt it.” A quality coach could help each department and its employees with the process. Once an idea is piloted and found worthwhile, it is adopted. Each month the department then can forward the best idea to the division and then on for special recognition. The department should not forget to award cash for the best idea of the month.

Other examples

Many Japanese companies use Kaizen, which means continuous improvement. Kaizen processes are found mostly in manufacturing environments, but a Mini-Kaizen, the smaller brother, is appropriate for all organizations seeking ways to engage employees and their ideas. A Mini-Kaizen is tightly managed and operates on a compressed schedule. The goal is to finish in one day or less. An MK can be used to map out an administrative process, design a retention plan, or create a customer service strategy. An outside facilitator who is familiar with the MK process is the key to success. To prevent the meeting from becoming laborious or contentious, members are not allowed to talk during some parts of the brainstorming sessions. Members stand up and move around a lot, which minimizes boredom. At the conclusion, the organization has an implementation plan and everyone owns the design, which speeds up the implementation process.
Many bigger and often multinational companies is well known for its ability to create and manufacture new and innovative products. In order to foster the exchange of ideas within departments, the companies often sponsor an annual Idea Exposition. Scientists and engineers display projects and ideas they are working on. Open only to the company employees, the exposition lets individuals share ideas otherwise protected by departmental walls.

Idea Campaigns

Most suggestion programs fail. Suggestion boxes sit and collect dust and approved suggestions are few and far between. An effective variation to the suggestion program is the Idea Campaign. Over and done with in three weeks, this steroid-enriched campaign generates hundreds of ideas.
The goal is to get at least one idea from everyone in the organization. For the first idea, each person receives a small token of appreciation such as a coffee cup. A second idea is acknowledged with another form of appreciation. At the end of each week, a special award ceremony recognizes everyone who turned in ideas or suggestions. Names drawn from a basket receive other prizes and gifts. Because the program only lasts three weeks, the program generates a tremendous amount of focused energy and motivation. No one wants to be left out of the program - everyone participates. All ideas have to be considered and all suggestors receive instantaneous recognition. For participants, the most powerful force is not the awards, but the feeling that management is listening to their ideas.

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