Donnerstag, 3. Mai 2018

Employee Morale: Measure. Talk. Improve. REPEAT! - Interview with Celpax' Rebecca Lundin

This year's HR Innovation Day is approaching. It is a good tradition to present the keynote speakers in interviews. My interviewee for today is Rebecca Lundin, Co-founder of Celpax from Stockholm.  I am very pleased that she will give a keynote on the topic. „Real Time Employee Morale: Why measure daily?“. I have known Rebecca virtually for a long time and blogged on the application of the Celpax device at Unilever in Kleve in the Leipzig HRM blog. Rebecca was also kind enough to answer my "(5 (+1) Question/s on expectations on Human Resource Management".

Rebecca Lundin
Peter: Rebecca, could you be so kind and introduce yourself as well as Celpax? How did the idea for Celpax, and especially the device come about?
Rebecca: Well, I'm one of the cofounders of Swedish Celpax. We interviewed more than 100 leaders to get to the product we have today. Leaders who had done remarkable things. And the product isn't finished, we keep learning together with our users! In 2012 we launched the Celpax, a device to measure employee morale. Staff answer the question "How was your day?" by pressing a green or a red smiley button as they go home. After they have pressed, they see the combined result from their colleagues. The online dashboard shows the result per day, week, month etc. You’ll see employee morale trends, the impact of a big management announcement, an All-Hands meeting, etc. Users tend to cross check with other Business KPI’s like productivity, safety, etc. It can also indicate signs of burnout among your people. So at Celpax we develop simple tech tools to get more people involved at work. And create a better society while at it! We’re a for-profit that want more people to wake up in the morning and feel GOOD about going to work.

Peter: What experiences have you had with the usage of your device so far? Many people wonder why the mood of employees should be measured in "real time" because they think of annual employee surveys?
Rebecca: With a survey you get a lot of in depth explanations, with the Celpax you get insights while you improve. You do something today and you see the result tomorrow. We are in the business of simplicity and DIY (do it yourself). The annual survey kind of complements what we do: A heart rate monitor might not be a medical checkup, but all athletes use one to improve. It tells you how your training went, if you’re getting fit, we kind of do the same… Both are related to health, but not really comparable. The Celpax data tells you if the actions you take improve the employee morale. Do more of what makes people press green, and try to fix what makes people press red. The Celpax might not explain everything that is going on, or asses like a survey would, but if you do something today, tomorrow you’ll see the result of your action. So you can improve the employee experience and base actions on numbers, and not just guts. The recipe we learnt from our users is to Measure. Talk. Improve. REPEAT! Continuous improvement with People Analytics.

Peter: What do you recommend to personnel managers who are planning to introduce your device? How should they prepare? How about resistance of employees?
Rebecca: To be honest we see more resistance from managers than from employees hehe. One of my favourite quotes is from a HR Director who said "Our employees got it instantly. It took 7 months for our management to get it". The reason the management team finally got past the resistance was because they had a major crisis with a lot of ‘red’ pulses, key people choosing to leave the organization, etc. HR showed them the correlation in the Celpax numbers. The crisis was easy to predict and the numbers also showed the positive result as they started addressing the problem. There's not much preparation needed. HR usually install themselves in under 10 minutes as it's so easy. Based on feedback from other users, we recommend to establish who will be responsible for talking with people about what makes them press green (do more!) and red (ask how employees think it can be fixed - and try to fix it together with them). Middle managers are key.
Our data shows that organizations where these conversations are happening, have higher employee morale, and take less time to recoup after a tough period. Some delegate to IT because it's HR tech. But is your IT Director responsible for employee engagement? They seem to forget that company culture is not a self-playing piano. You need to DO something after you have asked a question that your employees have responded. It can be really small things, but you need to follow up and be prepared to share the results :)

Peter: What can the listeners expect from your Keynote in general?
Rebecca: We are going to go through real cases of how real time employee engagement is being used. I'll be talking about how HR and operation leaders assess their activities as they’re being executed. I hope that people will feel they learnt something new Peter! That they see employee engagement from a different perspective – that simplicity will take you a long way. And feel a bit inspired to get more hands-on in the workplace.

Peter: Finally, a question I'd like to ask all the speakers. Why are you participating at the HR Innovation Day 2018?
Rebecca: We're in 60 countries and I do most sessions online. I'm looking forward to meet people "real life" and hear directly from HR practitioners what their biggest challenges are in the workplace. Do come up and say hello if you’re reading this and plan on joining the event! I was a speaker at a Talent Management event in Berlin a few years ago and had a great time, I’m sure this will be as fun! I’m also looking forward to listen to the other speakers.

Peter: Thank you very much today for your support of the HR Innovation Day. I look forward to listen to your keynote.

My Interviewee Rebecca Lundin studied Media & Communication and Political Science at the University of Lund, Sweden (1994-2000) and Economics at the IUI University in Uganda. She worked for Bombardier before moving on to tech companies like Zeemote and Southwing. Since 2011 she dedicates her time to improving workplaces with Celpax, a company designing and manufacturing simple tech tools to measure and boost morale at work.



2 Kommentare:

  1. "To be honest we see more resistance from managers than from employees"...this really makes me think. Why could it possibliy be like this? Is it lack of interest or a resistance on change in this area?

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  2. Some fear the unknown, others fear that the results might show that they are not as good leaders as they think.
    Some think it looks TOO simple to work.
    As a society we over-engineer a lot of things, we make stuff more complex than what it perhaps need to be.
    For some people it's a bit shocking, or they don't believe, that something so simple can spark so much.

    And yeah, some managers lack interest too.
    They prefer not to rock the boat, and leave things the way they are. (Employees too eh :)

    Thankfully, there are also a LOT of people with very positive energy at work out there!

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