Engagement

Abilities
Arousal
Attitude
Behavior
Beliefs
Competencies
Engagement
Environment
EI
Experience
Feelings
Intention
Motivation
Nature and genes
Organization
Performance
Performance Improvement
Performers
Process
Results
Skills
Social Pressure
Talent
Understanding
Values

Engagement is a part of a person's intention has to do with his or her's level of engagement. There are normally four levels when it comes to engagement:

- Physical energy - engaging the body
- Emotional energy - engaging the heart
- Mental energy - engaging the mind
- Spiritual energy - engaging the spirit

In emotional intelligence, task engagement normally represents a transactional theme of commitment to effort to a task or activity. "Engagement" is the construct while "commitment" is generally the variable. This commitment to effort is normally seen through two states, subjective and cognitive:

Subjective:
- Energetic arousal
- Task interest
- Success strivings
- Concentration

Cognitive:
- Challenge
- Task-focused coping
- Low avoidance coping

There are a number of engagement surveys on the market. However, there are only ten common themes that are found in these blanket-wide engagement surveys:

- Pride in employer
- Satisfaction with employer
- Job satisfaction
- Opportunity to perform well at challenging work
- Recognition and positive feedback for one's contributions
- Personal support from one's supervisor
- Effort above and beyond the minimum
- Understanding the link between one's job and the organization's mission
- Prospects for future growth with ones employer
- Intention to stay with one's employer

Few years ago, Gallup calculates the percentages within the total United States workforce for three categories of employees: 27% are engaged, or loyal, productive, and psychologically committed to their work; 56% are not engaged employees who aren't psychologically committed to their roles; and 17% are actively disengaged, or disenchanted with their work places.

However, a study from 2008 examined engagement data in the financial sector and colleges and concluded: there is little consistency in the specific elements that drive employee engagement across the different organizations examined, despite the fact that the organizations were for the analysis precisely because of their similarity to one another, (and further, within each of the four colleges, the Top 5 lists for teaching staff and non-teaching staff were quite different.)

While we know engagement exists in organizations, there are no easily defined factors or similarities that can be used across the board for measuring engagement levels. This should not be too surprising as we know that each organization has its own set of dynamics and culture that drives it. Thus, trying to measure engagement levels with a small set of factors will produce inaccurate results in most cases.

Copyright 2003-2010 by Liviu Marcoci Submit Your Site SmartNetBook.ro