The subtlety here is that, as we saw above, the feeling of enthusiasm about a companyâs mission, and confidence in its future, still vary team to team. In other words, our experience of our company is significantly mediated by our experience of our team.
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We see similar patterns on all eight of the questionsâwe see, in other words, that when we zero in on the critical aspects of our experience at work, they vary more team-to-team than they do company-to-company. Any ideasâlike the idea of cultureâthat rest on the assumption that our experience of a company is uniform, no matter where we sit, donât hold up. Any ideasâagain, like the idea of cultureâthat rest on the assumption that our experience will vary company to company are incomplete, because our experience will vary more within a company than between companies.
When people choose not to work somewhere, the somewhere isnât a company, itâs a team. If we put you in a good team at a bad company, youâll tend to hang around, but if we put you in a bad team at a good company, you wonât be there for long. The team is the sun, the moon, and the stars of your experience at work. As Edmund Burke, the Anglo-Irish writer and philosopher put it as far back as 1790, âTo love the little platoon we belong to in society is the first principle (the germ, as it were) of public affections.â
When we push on the data, and examine closely its patterns and variations, we arrive at this conclusion: while people might care which company they join, they donât care which company they work for. The truth is that, once there, people care which team theyâre on.
The same is true for you. Thereâs a little bit of you that your organization can never touch, never know, never see, and certainly never feel. And yet itâs this part of youâthe loving, feeling part of youâthat makes you feel alive at work, able to do things that surprise and delight you, things that are ridiculously good, unexpectedly made, astonishing to your team, and that light you up from the inside.
Two questions in the survey showed the strongest relationship to a workerâs feeling of trust in his team leader:
- Do I know clearly what is expected of me at work?
- Do I have the chance to use my strengths every day?
This data suggests that these two conditionsâknowing what is expected, and being able to play to oneâs strengthsâare the foundations of trust. When a team leader, despite the ambiguities and the fluid and fast pace of the world of work, can help team members feel clarity about expectations and a sense that their best is recognized and utilized frequently, then trust is built, and a Fully Engaged team becomes more likely.
One way to think of these results is to imagine a team leader having three distinct jobs. Her first is to ensure her team members feel connected to the purpose and future of the company, even though she may not directly define those. Her second is to ensure that her team members, as a group, understand and support one another. And her third is to ensure that her team members, individually, understand whatâs expected of them and how they can do their best work now and in the future, all while feeling recognized for who they are.