Engagement at Work
Video

Engagement at Work

Seven Dimensions
Updated Apr 16, 2020

Kylie Bell discusses engagement as being when people have the opportunity to do what they’re best at doing. Leaders can allocate staff roles that suit their strengths. Noticing strengths increases self-efficacy.

Kylie Bell describes engagement (the “E” in Seligman’s PERMA) at work as being when people have the opportunity to do what they’re best at doing. Leaders can increase staff engagement by noticing people’s various strengths and ensuring they are allocated the roles that suit their strengths, or by demonstrating how they are using their strengths in their current role. This increases people’s sense of autonomy: doing what they do best, and what they like to do, increases self-efficacy (belief in own ability) and produces a huge jump (according to Gallup) in overall staff engagement.

This program is one of the Insights and Strategies Series, featuring psychologist Eve Ash interviewing a range of experts and business leaders who share their experiences and practical strategies for achieving best practice.

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Business Outcomes

This program is designed to help everyone focus on health and physical and psychological wellbeing as part of the everyday workplace. This can be done through personal commitment to stretching and exercises, healthy eating and also team and workplace strategies to encourage everyone to be healthy and achieve a good work/life balance.

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