“If you want eggs, take care of the hen,” Inamori said in an interview on Oct. 23. “If you bully or kill the hen, it’s not going to work.”

That was a statement from Kazuo Inamori, founder and chairman emeritus of Kyocera Corp, as he related this analogy to the employees of his company. I found it just amazing and reassuring that an older CEO could have this mindset.

The title of the article? The Buddhist Priest Who Became a Billionaire Snubbing Investors

Engagement starts from the top

We have all heard the term trickle-down theory. In Economics, this was supposed to work by making policy geared to the top earners on the pretense that it would trick down to the masses. In real life, however, it did not work.

In engagement, it is a given that if your senior team is engaged, the workforce, for the most part, is engaged. It also works the opposite way. Disengaged leaders produce disengaged employees.

The secret, as Inamori tells it, was to change employees’ mentality. After taking the CEO role without pay, he printed a small book for each staff member on his philosophy, which declared that the company was devoted to their growth.

There are not to many companies that will boast that they are committed to their employees’ growth. We all hear the standard anthem of “people are our greatest asset,” and we all know that for the most part, it’s just a bunch of words that are hauled out from time to time. There should be warning that flashes at the bottom of the screen that says “the words you are about to hear have no meaning, we just trot it out when needed.”

You have the keys to drive it

Leaders today are in the driver’s seat whether it is about financial results, or more importantly, creating an innovative culture. There are many businesses that want to be innovative but are not because they lack the culture, environment, and people that provide a foundation for innovation to occur.

However, if you look at any top organization you will find common threads, and for the most part, most are not run by innovative leaders who are highly engaged. That level of intensity is like a cancer that envelops the organization and reaches all the way to the bottom of the organizational chart.

This are no real secrets in the he world of work. That is why I struggle to understand when I talk with leaders and they just do not get it or really do not give a hoot. I said that one day I will catalogue all the outrageous statements that I have heard coming from leaders as it relates to engagement discussion.

I’m talking about saying things like “I do not really care — let them all leave” to “Let them quit; I will hire replacements at half the cost.” I get pretty wide-eyed when I hear that kind of stuff because with that level of intensity, there is simply no rational thinking going on.

The numbers do not connect

Your employees don’t focus on things like market share, percentage of growth, margin share, etc. They just do not excite most of us. Numbers are abstract and they do not get people going. Hearing those numbers won’t motivate you to get out of bed in the morning, or work late into the night and possibly on weekends.

Motivation must be on a more emotional level, something that is engaging, exciting and provides a compelling reason for your people to get involved.

Having a CEO that walks the talk is very reassuring. Think of Virgin’s Richard Branson, who decided that new parents in hi s companies take a year “to get to know their babies.”

Folks, this is not brain surgery. There are no short cuts to building this kind of organization. These simple meaningful gestures will resonate more with your people and give them a real sense of purpose.

Purpose, post-mortem

If you are ever committed wholeheartedly to a cause or an organization, take a minute to do a post-mortem. What you will realize is that it is about a level of connectivity that a paycheck, benefits, or perks for that matter, could never achieve.

So Mr. or Ms. Leader, think of your organization’s purpose and create your own strategy and organizational life-blood around it. Once that is ingrained, you will see a different organization, but if you keep you head in the sand, you will gradually began a slide downward.

“You take care of me and I will take care of you.” Yes, it is that simple.