Employees not recognising business values

-

New research by the Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development (CIPD) has suggested that workers whose behaviour consistently goes against the values of the organisations they work for are often left unpunished or are even rewarded or promoted.

The institute’s latest Employee Outlook survey found that this was the opinion of 40% of respondents, while 33% of those asked said that individuals were reprimanded for persistent rule breaking.

Of the 2,000 employees surveyed, 52% agreed that their organisations values positively influence behaviour at work.

However, of those that disagreed, the main reason cited among private sector workers was the emphasis of profit over organisational values. For public sector workers, one rule for senior managers and one rule for everyone else was their explanation.

HRreview Logo

Get our essential weekday HR news and updates.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Keep up with the latest in HR...
This field is hidden when viewing the form
This field is hidden when viewing the form
Optin_date
This field is hidden when viewing the form

 

According to the report, communication of values is also a problem with only 29% of employees stating that they are aware of the organisations values. It also suggested that the values of businesses do not match those of their workforce with only 58% of respondents admitting that their personal values match those of the companies they work for.

Even though these findings reveal a level of disconnection between the two parties, 73% of employees said that it is important to have defined values which govern employee behaviour.

Commenting on the report, Peter Cheese, CEO at the CIPD, said:

“In the wake of the banking crisis and other corporate scandals, now more than ever, organisational values should be at the forefront of business leaders’ minds. At the heart of an organisation’s culture has to be a set of agreed values that resonate with employees at all levels from the board to the front line in order to provide a template for the behaviours and standards expected.

“Employers must also demonstrate that failure to act in accordance with the organisation’s defined values has real consequences. Unless business leaders and HR are prepared to take a stand and ensure that their organisational values are seen to make a difference and are worth more than a passing reference in the company report or on the intranet, then they will lose the trust and confidence of staff.”

Claire McCartney, Research Adviser at the CIPD, added:

“The big challenge facing employers is how to embed values so they are meaningful. HR professionals have a key role to play in ensuring that values personally resonate with employees. Involving employees in the values creation process will certainly help to make them more meaningful and integrating values into people management processes and the way people do their jobs will also help to ensure values matter.

“Our evidence shows that there is currently a disconnect between business values and the personal values of employees. In view of this it is unsurprising that only half believe that organisations’ values positively influence people’s behaviour. This imbalance needs to be urgently addressed if we are to really see a new era of improved business culture.”

Other key findings from the Autumn Employee Outlook survey include:

  • Employee engagement levels have stayed stable at nearly two fifths (38%) but the substantial number of employees who are neutral – neither engaged nor unengaged has increased slightly to nearly three fifths (59%).
  • Overall, job satisfaction remains strongly positive at +47.
  • Employees continue to be generally positive in their attitudes towards their immediate line managers, 71% feel that their managers always/usually treat them fairly and 72% feel that they are committed to their organisations.
  • Perceptions of leaders have improved this quarter on indicators such as treating employees with respect (+16 from +12), trust in leaders (+7 from +1) and clarity of vision (+26 from +23). There has also been improvement around perceptions of consultation on important decisions, but this continues to remain negative (-20 from -26).

Pamela Flores is an events professional with experience at Symposium Events, a UK-based conference and events organization. She has worked in editorial and event coordination roles within the HR and expatriate management sector, contributing to the organization of major conferences including the Expatriate Management and Global Mobility conference. Her background spans online editorial work and events management within the professional conference industry.

Latest news

Amy Speake: Why a cooling job market is the worst time to hire a leader

A slowing labour market should be a hiring manager's dream. But anyone trying to recruit a leader capable of driving real commercial growth will tell you otherwise.

Bezos joins growing pushback against AI jobs apocalypse claims

Tech leaders are increasingly questioning predictions of mass workforce disruption, arguing new tools could expand opportunities and ease skills shortages.

Workers say staying in the wrong job is their biggest career mistake

Nearly four in five workers have career regrets, with staying too long in the wrong role and working excessive hours among the most common concerns.

Unemployment falls as private sector pay growth slows to 2.9%

Official figures show unemployment edged lower but vacancies, payroll employment and private sector wage growth continued to weaken.
- Advertisement -

Building trust through growth, change and uncertainty

An HR director reflects on culture, communication and leadership during a period of major business transformation and growth.

Performance reviews leave many workers feeling ‘less positive’

More than a third of employees say they felt less positive about their role after their last performance review, raising concerns about engagement and retention.

Must read

Kris Simpson: How can employers stay compliant with IR35?

Tax avoidance legislation is evolving at such a pace that workers face a challenge just to keep up with the latest rules!

Nicola Smith – Recruiting resolutions

I’m already groaning at the resolutions I’m programmed to...
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you