Archive for the ‘Employee Motivation’ Category

Do you need to move jobs to get a pay rise?

Thursday, February 21st, 2013

With employment figures in the UK at their highest since records began (in 1971), wage growth remains well below inflation.

The Office for National Statistics said average weekly earnings growth including bonuses slowed modestly to 1.4 percent in the three months through December, in line with forecasts.

Excluding bonuses, pay grew by 1.3 percent, slightly undershooting expectations. That was the weakest rise since three months through June 2010.

Wage growth remains well below inflation, which held at 2.7 percent in January for the fourth consecutive month.

Whilst companies have to remain competitive to win business and keep their costs low – keeping staff morale high can be a struggle if any increase in wages remains below inflation.

So with the job market so buoyant do workers need to move jobs to ensure they get a pay rise?

If you feel you’re underpaid then just walking is not always the best policy, particularly if you enjoy your work and are good at it. Think about approaching your boss to negotiate a pay rise but plan your strategy in advance and ensure you give your boss good reasons why you are worth more.

Bosses looking to keep good people on know that it is not only money that keeps people motivated, but a combination of security, pay, challenge, feeling valued and work enjoyment. Knowing that your company provide all of this will ensure a low turnover of staff and a happy workforce.

If you really believe that your company don’t tick all the boxes above, as an employee you need to assess what motivates you at work and how you can achieve that – but it’s a two way street. You have to provide the goods that the company employ you for – hard work, getting it right, achieving results – will you do this in a new company who will pay you more?

So a big question – do you stay or do you go?

If you decide to go and your current company then decide to give you the pay rise you wanted, what do you do? Well you could ask why this didn’t happen before, will the company still value you when they know you have been “disloyal”. You have now made your employer aware that you are unhappy, from this day on your commitment will always be in question. Accepting a counter offer rarely changes the factors that drove you to look for a new job in the first place.

Thoughts?

 

 

 

 

 

Jobs Market strongest for three years

Monday, January 7th, 2013

Figures released by Reed this week show the final quarter of 2012 was the best performing for new jobs since 2009.

UK jobseekers have the highest number of new employment opportunities at their disposal for three years and the jobs market is significantly more buoyant than a year ago.The final quarter of 2012 saw the highest number of new employment opportunities on offer for three years and a 10% year-on-year rise in new vacancies available during December.

As far as AV Jobs is concerned that would certainly be reflected in our Audio Visual vacancies, which are continuing to come in on a daily basis. Indeed in the first 3 working days  in 2013 we received multiple job vacancies from our clients showing an increase already of 30% against December’s high.

The largest monthly measure of conditions and trends in employment opportunities in the UK indicates that the market is over 10% stronger than it was this time last year and registered consistent quarterly growth over the course of 2012.

Commenting on the latest figures, Mark Rhodes, marketing director at reed.co.uk, said:
“2012 has been a year of consistent recovery for the jobs market. We have seen growth across the board in the majority of sectors and regions as employers become increasingly less cautious about their approach to taking on new personnel.

“While the wider economic climate makes it difficult to make predictions for the year ahead, the growing sense of optimism among employers is likely to persist and leading official indicators such as the latest ONS figures also continue to point towards an upward trend in jobs growth. There will undoubtedly continue to be bumps along the way but 2013 promises to be another year of continued recovery.”

Vacancies at AV Jobs are UK wide and cover sales, engineering, operations, hire and retail across Audio Visual channels. They include jobs from Manufacturers, Distributors and re-sellers and all jobs shown on the website are current vacancies.

If you are looking for a new challenge then do send your CV to us at cvs@avjobs.co.uk and if you are looking to fill a vacancy within your organisation, then please call or email pat@avjobs.co.uk or David@avjobs.co.uk at 0844 884 9150 for a confidential discussion.

We also have a number of excellent middle & senior managers and directors looking for a new challenge in the Audio Visual marketplace – so if you are looking for someone to hit the ground running and make a positive contribution to your bottom line, then do call us asap.

 

 

 

 

New Year, New Job – apply now!

Monday, December 3rd, 2012

Well it has been said before but it is true that a lot of people decide to look for a new job at the start of the New Year, but why not now?

December is not as quiet in recruitment as people might think. Switched on employers have been recruiting for
new hires for 2013 since October, knowing that with interview times to be scheduled and notices to be given
they need to have job offered by now. Having said that scheduling and co-ordinating diaries is never that easy and
so interviews will still be going on this month.

Certainly at AV Jobs we have plenty of excellent jobs on offer this month throughout the UK and even Canada! If you are keen to find a new and challenging role in the New Year then don’t wait until then – apply now – you could be celebrating a new opportunity at Christmas!

Hints for applying for a job.

Recruiters often get a bad press for turning down applicants and for not communicating with them to follow up their
CV. Whilst none of us are perfect, we do contact all applicants within 5-7 days even if they are not successful or right for the job they have applied for.

However, (and I know I have said this before!) you can help avoid the dreaded rejection letter/email by NOT doing the following:

Don’t apply for a job just because it’s in your area (I promise it happens all the time – AV Engineer required in Nottingham – CVs from hospital porters, shop assistants, welders and car mechanics – they just happen to live in Nottingham.)
Don’t apply for a job that you “think” you can do but don’t have the relevant experience. Sorry but people with the relevant experience will beat you to it everytime.
Don’t
shoot the messenger! It’s in our interest to get you a job – that’s how we get paid – but if your CV is rejected it is because you don’t fit the spec our client is looking for and we are not in the business of punting out CVs to our hard won clients just to make the numbers up.

Before you apply for a role, read the job ad again and ask yourself why you would apply for it? Have you done that type of work before, are you good at it, is this the next step in your career (ie. you tick 80% of the boxes and have the potential to succeed at the other 20%), do you know the market (if it’s asked for), is it right for you geographically (easy to say you’ll move but have you really thought this through)?

I hope I’m not sounding patronising here – I really don’t mean to – but we want to get as many of our candidates into their ideal job as possible, so help yourself by getting the job profile right and we’ll help you get that dream job.

cvs@avjobs.co.uk

 

Is the AV Jobs Market a Buyers’ Market?

Wednesday, November 7th, 2012

Following the start of the recession in 2008 we have had two to three years of pay and headcount freezes and many AV professionals decided to stay under the radar and stay in their current jobs (if they could).

As a result many businesses have assessed the recruitment landscape as a buyers’ market – where they hold the balance of power. Consequently, many employers (understandably) have been far more demanding in their requirements and expectations when seeking to fill a new role.

However, we are now seeing a shift in this balance of power with many of the AV professionals – who stayed put in the recession – now looking for a new opportunity and challenge and being able to pick and choose their new employer.

So, at the moment there may well be a real disconnect between the perception of employers believing it is a buyers’ market and the reality out there. With many new jobs now being available (we have seen an increase of some 60% of new AV jobs in the second half of this year compared to last), competition for the most talented candidates is therefore increasing – some employers seeking to recruit may need to readjust their expectations.

Re-looking at your company’s benefits package to ensure you are really attracting the best candidates is one thing and increasing the speed of  decisions is massively important to ensure you get the candidate of your choice rather than lose them to one of your competitors.

It seems clear to us that the AV recruitment marketplace is rapidly becoming less of a buyers’ market as the balance of power shifts to the candidates with the most in-demand skills and experience.

Once you have a vacancy to fill then planning and speed are a must – any vacancy is costing you money the longer it takes to fill the job role. Discussing your requirements with one of our team, our search, selection and interviewing process, arranging dates in your diary for 1st and 2nd interviews and then job offering should take a minimum of two weeks to job offer – maximum of three to four. Any longer and you may well lose the candidate you really want as they will probably have several job offers on the table.

What do you think?

 

 

Why should the best candidates work for you?

Thursday, July 12th, 2012

A lot of companies believe that – in today’s economic climate – good candidates are all over the place just waiting for a job vacancy so they can apply. Not the case I’m afraid -the best candidates are staying put if they have all of the things they need at the company they currently work for and if they are looking, then you’ll be in strong competition with other companies who want their skills and experience too.

So how can your company attract and keep the best? What motivates employees?

Show me the money!

Everyone has different motivations for working. Reasons for working are as individual as the person, but, we all work because we obtain something that we need from work. The something we obtain from work impacts our morale, motivation & the quality of our lives.

Some people work for love, others work for personal fulfillment. Some like to achieve goals and feel that they are contributing to something. Others have personal missions they accomplish through meaningful work, whilst some truly love what they do or the clients they serve. Many like the camaraderie and interaction with customers and colleagues and others like to fill their time with activity. Some employees like change, challenge, and problems to solve -  Motivation is clearly individual and diverse.

Whatever your personal reasons for working, the bottom line, however, is that almost everyone works for money.

Compensation, salary, bonuses, benefits, remuneration, money pays the bills! Money provides housing, gives children clothing and food,  pays for holidays and leisure time and eventually, retirement. To ignore the importance of money and benefits as motivation for people who work is a mistake.

Fair benefits and pay are the key to a successful company that recruits and retains committed workers. If you provide a good wage for your employees, you can then work on additional motivation issues. Without the fair, living wage, however, you risk losing your best people to a better-paying employer.

In fact, recent research from Watson Wyatt Worldwide in The Human Capital Edge: 21 People Management Practices Your Company Must Implement (or Avoid) to Maximize Shareholder Value, (Compare Prices) recommends, that to attract the best employees, you need to pay more than your average-paying counterparts in the marketplace. Money provides basic motivation.

Ok you pay the Money? What’s Next for Motivation?

People want:

Control of their own work inspires motivation: including  the ability to impact decisions; setting clear and measurable goals; clear responsibility for a complete or defined task; job enrichment; tasks performed in the work itself; and recognition for achievement.

To belong to the in-crowd creates motivation; receiving timely information and communication; understanding management’s formulas for decision making; team and meeting participation opportunities & visual documention and posting of work progress and accomplishments.

The opportunity for growth & development is motivational and includes education and training, a clearly defined career path, team participation, succession planning – all these things make a difference in motivating your employees.

Leadership is key to motivation – employees want clear expectations that provide a picture of the outcomes desired, with goal setting, feedback and an appropriate structure or framework.

Recognition for Performance Creates Motivation

In The Human Capital Edge, authors Bruce Pfau and Ira Kay say that people want recognition for their individual performance with pay tied to their performance. Employees want people who don’t perform fired, in fact, failure to discipline and fire non-performers is one of the most demotivating actions a company can take – or fail to take. It ranks on the top of the list next to paying poor performers the same wage as non-performers in deflating motivation.

Additionally, the authors found that a disconnect continues to exist between what employers think people want at work and what people say they want for motivation. “Employers far underrate the importance to employees of such things as flexible work schedules or opportunities for advancement in their decision to join or leave a company.

“That means that many companies are working very hard (and using scarce resources) on the wrong tools,” say Pfau and Kay. (p. 32) People want employers to pay them above market rates. They seek flexible work schedules. They want stock options, a chance to learn, and the increased sharing of rationale behind management decisions and direction.

So What You Can Do to increase Motivation and boost Morale?

The key to creating a work environment that fosters motivation are the wants and needs of the individual. Why not ask your employees what they want from work and whether they are getting it? With this information you may well be surprised at how many simple and inexpensive opportunities you have to create a motivational, desirable work environment. Pay attention to what is important to the people you employ for high motivation and positive morale. You’ll achieve awesome business success.