It wasn’t all that long ago
that managers had no int
erest in a team memb
er’s home life. Now, a good leader will give time off to the father with an ill child o
r the woman
whose husband is h
aving surgery. While the company may lose a worker for a couple days, there are long-term g
ains to be had in exchange.
“Empathy has become a contemporary idea of the way leaders ought to be
have,” said Peter Gahan, professor and co-director of the Department of Management and Marketing at the University of Melbourne. “We know now from a whole range of studies, where employers facilitate e
mployee needs, it allows those companies to see great gains in productivity and loyalty.”
Big corporations of the 19th and 20th cen
turies didn’t see it that way. Workers were
treated more akin to cogs and expected to perform in-step, regardless of outs
ide pressures or concerns.
Research detailed in papers such as a 2007 report from the Center for Creative Leadership linking kindness to productivity has helped upe
nd that concept. That’s right — workers across a wide range of professions performed better when bosses treated them nicely. Even in countries wh
ere bosses are held in higher esteem, in Southeast Asia, for example, empathy is given a hi
gh value. In the region, bosses ar
e often expect
ed to care for workers in an almost parent-child rel
ationship.
Not always easy
For managers who were brought up in the ‘take-no-prisoners’ business era, becoming softer isn’t always easy. It begins, Gahan said, wit
h companies hiring and val
uing managers with good interpersonal skills
, people who will show
empathy to their colleagues.
That’s been proven
at Barry-Wehmiller Companies in Missouri, which makes equipment for assembly lines and owns other businesses. The 7,000-employee firm puts great emphasis on creating a caring environm
ent, something that’s not an easy concept to deliver considering many of its staff work on assembly lines.
Chief
Executive Office Bob Chapman found himself inspired at a wedding, as he watched a friend walk his daughter down the aisle. “It occurred to me that every
one of my employees is someone’s child,” Chapman said. He made a commitment to treat employees better. He would no longer expect people to just work through personal problems but instead would “inspire them to do truly extraordinary things.”