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Organizations are finally creating cultures that
support a work and life balance for their employees. After years
of demanding high productivity and increasing on the job hours
and expectations and not achieving the hoped-for better results,
companies are finally embracing polices and procedures that support
employees in integrating their life and work experience. The results
are bringing higher productivity, better employee overall job
performance, and fewer employee absences, resulting in greater
profitability.
When companies first consider such programs,
their biggest concern is how programs supporting life and work
balance will help their bottom line vs. simply costing more money
that they don't want to spend. As more companies develop creative
methods for integration of life and work, they see that the bottom
line can't be impacted upon positively without recognizing employees'
needs for balance. Employees are, after all, only human.
At first, companies we've presented these concepts
to have resisted and felt that it was all simply added expense
for them. In addition, they've seen the need for balance as an
"employee" issue and not a company issue. In my experience coaching
and consulting with companies around the world, I think that avoiding
responsibility for integration of life and work is what is actually
COSTING companies money, and if they'd invest some money in programs
that support balance, they'd increase their bottom line through
improved morale and productivity.
Here are the reasons that organizations
are adopting life/work balance policies:
Employee hiring and retention: it is more difficult
to recruit and replace employees if there isn't a balance in their
job, as they leave faster when they feel imbalance and the cost
of constant retraining is money that could be better spent elsewhere.
Absenteeism decrease: when there is flextime,
flexible schedules, childcare, etc. offered, it is well documented
that absenteeism and tardiness go way down.
Stress is decreased: on the job tension often
comes from the feeling of being out of balance, and stress creates
illness, poor morale, and low productivity. People are not robots
that can be switched on and off at will. All work and no play
certainly does make Jack a dull boy, and companies now realize
this.
Attitude and morale: employees who have a integration
in life/work show higher job satisfaction, greater productivity,
feel more loyalty, and file fewer law suits.
Organizations will be successful when they realize
that without high quality workers who are loyal and who feel integration
between family and work, they won't have a dedicated workforce,
and they will actually lose money. People are worth keeping and
developing and are the most valuable asset that any company has,
and yet it is the one asset that is generally overlooked.
People make a business. not machines, not books
of accounts. In our world, nothing is free and people do have
to earn a living, but they do also have to live a meaningful and
productive life. When there is a fair balance between the two,
this results in a happy and constructive human being who is able
to give 100% because one aspect of their life is not demanding
more than the other and there is no unhealthy imbalance. Companies
who acknowledge this and incorporate strategies to allow for this,
reap the rewards described above. Result? Everyone gets what they
want and need. Everyone is happy.
Written by Terri Levine, MCC, PCC, MS, CCC-SLP,
the CEO of Coaching Instruction.com, popular Master Certified
personal and business Coach, sought after Public Speaker, and
Author of bestsellers, "Stop Managing, Start Coaching", "Work
Yourself Happy", "Coaching for an Extraordinary Life" and "Create
Your Ideal Body". She can be contacted via the web site http://www.terrilevine.com/ or by telephone: 215-699-4949.
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