Communication
The feeling of disconnection from the rest of the company is prevalent for frontline workers, and communication is one of the primary reasons.
Given that organizations often don’t inform frontline workers about the latest company updates, or enable them to provide feedback, it’s no wonder why 42% of frontline workers believe their company leadership isn’t good at communicating with them. Perhaps worse, 48% don’t believe the company communications they are privy to are relevant to them.
Shift schedules for a frontline worker are typically non-traditional and less flexible compared to an office worker. Without the ability to receive communication or provide feedback in the flow of their work, the frontline disconnect can become worse.
Three Frontline Solutions
Recognizing these cracks in the foundation of the frontline employee experiences at work is the first step in addressing them.
These datapoints tell a story of opportunity that can inspire positive change for frontline workers, organizational success, and HR professionals as a strategic business partner. By enhancing existing programs and introducing some low-lift new ones, you’ll be that much closer to addressing challenges and reaping the results of a purpose-filled frontline workforce.
Removing Company Culture Barriers
Company culture can be a vital tool in creating a connected workforce, and it’s the very foundation that your employees rely on to find meaning in their work.
By leveraging new technology and tools that can remove the barriers of separation, your workforce will be more united and less likely to fill in the culture gaps themselves. HR leaders can extend company culture to the farthest frontiers of an organization with workforce engagement platforms like employee survey pulsing, and in-the-moment communication channels like Slack. These tools can help build connection points across your entire workforce, wherever they are.
Expanding Recognition
Recognition is one of the top mechanisms for frontline workers to feel more valued at work, and it has huge impacts on an organization's bottom line: 39% of frontline respondents reportedly feel more valued when they’re praised in front of peers than when they receive a bonus. Lack of recognition is the No. 1 factor negatively affecting frontline workers' sense of belonging at work. But luckily, this is a straightforward challenge to address.
Recognition platforms are a fantastic way to combat this issue and provide an easy way for your frontline workers to praise each other, recognize cross-team achievements, or celebrate all sizes of wins.
By training managers to lead recognition conversations and praise employees, and tying the recognition that their team members get to their own manager performance, you’re ensuring a team member always has a supporter in their corner.
Unmuting Your Frontline
While communication is a sticking point right now for the frontline, there is hope: 69% of respondents want to better understand their company’s decision-making. This is an exciting opportunity and call to action for internal employee communication teams.
Your frontline doesn’t work out of an office, but that doesn’t mean they don’t care about what happens in the office. By increasing communication with frontline workers, and opening the lines up for them as well, you’ll be creating trust and rapport, leading to more informed and frontline-connected decisions.