Dr Cary Cooper is professor of organisational psychology and health at Lancaster University Management School and author of more than 150 books on topics ranging from occupational stress and women at work to organisational psychology.
Q There is more and more blurring between work and home life, caused partly by technology enabling us to work remotely. What are the consequences of this shift on working practices?
A There are enormous consequences. Work is spilling over into home life, which means that people are not spending enough time with their spouses or children. And it’s not just the hours they work at the office – they check their emails and Skype at home.
We have become the workaholics of Europe. It is damaging family life, and technology is making it ten times worse and it was supposed to help us. I remember Harold Wilson in the 1960s talking about the ‘white heat’ of technology and how, in the year 2000, this would mean we would all be working just a 20-hour week.
A survey I did with the CMI on the quality of working life found that management work 52 to 55 hours a week, every week. It’s not good for family life. The irony is that technology could enable us to work more flexibly but, in my view, it doesn’t.
Q How true do you think the old cliche about ‘people join companies but leave managers’ really is? What can companies do to ensure that they have decent managers in place?
A Why do we have problems? My theory is that we don’t select managers with high social and interpersonal skills, we select on task competence. When you study for an MBA, do you learn how to manage people? No.
In tough times, you need people with great social skills. We need a two-pronged attack: select with social skills as a significant feature of recruitment and, if they are already in a job, then train them – there are some people who are trainable and there are some who are not.
Q Is the same true of leaders?
Q The phrase ‘employee engagement’ is a hot topic in HR, but a lot of employers think that they’ve got it covered with a yearly tick-box survey. How can you achieve true employee engagement?
A Everyone thinks employee engagement is a magic bullet for all our problems, but it’s not. HR will say ‘our employee engagement has gone up from 75 to 76’ but cynically say that they don’t see any improvement in morale.
Q Alongside employee engagement, employee well-being is something that many companies seem to be talking about. What exactly should this encompass and what practical steps can HR people take in this area?
A The government’s Foresight programme is trying to find out, from birth to death, what enhances our mental well-being and capital. A big section of that is work.
Q Why is well-being such a big issue right now?
The driver for well-being has been for organisations dealing with stress. Sickness numbers are dropping, but what we are dealing with instead is presenteeism. People are frightened of taking time off sick, but a good manager can see someone who’s not well.
Q What do you see as the role of HR in the workplace?
- Fight for flexibility for everyone, not just those people with kids
- Recruit people on their social skills
- Audit well-being/stress in companies and then bring employees together to solve the problem. You might get someone from outside to do the audit but it’s important to get employees to decide what to do. You wouldn’t want to walk into your GP’s surgery and find they’ve already written you a prescription before you open your mouth. So you need to find out what’s wrong and do it in an anonymous way
- The biggest thing we can do for the UK is get women in senior operational management jobs, not on the board, because you need to get senior and middle managers who are going to move into those jobs. Women have higher EQs generally so, in manager roles, have more natural social skills.
3 Responses
Do we need managers or coaches?
Prof Cooper says, the problem is, ‘We don’t select managers with high social and interpersonal skills, we select on task competence’. Should we be thinking more in terms of appointing team coaches, rather than team managers?
Prof Cary Cooper’s interview – and what was missed
I have long admired Prof Cary Cooper for his deep insight into OD issues and his practical common-sense. If I could start my career again, I’d love to do what he does, even half as ably!
However, I am not at all sure that his ideal model based on this interview would define the sort of organisation I want to be served by. Warm interpersonal skills are great, but as a customer I want to talk to somebody who knows their product, will go the last mile for me, understands my needs and has products/services I really want to buy, delivered reliably, and can make all this happen with mandated authority.
I have no issue with creating a vibrating enthusiastic organisation to deliver all his, stress-free, equality-sensitive and EQ-loaded, but could we not also focus on satisfying customers too as the first priority? I have never seen a ‘happy’ organisation short of work. And even in the public sector, which might never have to fight for ‘work’, I have never seen a fulfilled workforce with disatisfied users. (Ask around if you are not sure!)
I am certain that Cary Cooper might say that customer satisfaction comes from happy employees – and if he wouldn’t, I would. But the reverse is not necessarily true. And the sooner HR departments understand that, most especially in larger organisations who may be most distant from their employers’ clientele, I would suggest the more successful UK plc might be, in a very competitive international world that is eating our breakfast, right now…
But then, I am sure the wonderful Prof might have said all this if asked? HR can be great at Process, but what about Outcomes? |That’s what your Board most wants, by the way, and your customers and stakeholders too!)
The DNA of a Healthy Corporate Culture
Carole Spiers, Author of Show Stress Who’s Boss! http://www.showstresswhosboss.co.uk. Motivational Speaker and BBC Guest-Broadcaster. Contact her cs@carolespiersgroup.co.uk or + 44 (0) 20 8954 1593.
Businesses need to create healthy workplace cultures which will mean taking an entirely fresh view of the talents of everyone in the workplace and deploying them more effectively. Organisations have to move away from an over-reliance on systems and processes, and adopt attitudes that are more successful in actually engaging employees.