Employee Involvement and Empowerment Print E-mail

Source: ASQ

Empowerment is based on the belief that employees have the ability to take on more responsibility and authority than traditionally has been given to them, and that heightened productivity and a better quality of work life will result.

Different words and phrases are used to define empowerment, but most are variations on a theme: to provide employees with the means for making influential decisions.

Empowerment means different things in different organizations, based on culture and work design. However, empowerment is based on the concepts of job enlargement and job enrichment.

  • Job enlargement: Changing the scope of the job to include a greater portion of the horizontal process.
    Example: A bank teller not only handles deposits and disbursement, but also distributes traveler's checks and sells certificates of deposit.
  • Job enrichment: Increasing the depth of the job to include responsibilities that have traditionally been carried out at higher levels of the organization.
    Example: The teller also has the authority to help a client fill out a loan application, and to determine whether or not to approve the loan.

As these examples show, empowerment of employees will require:

  • Training in the skills necessary to carry out the additional responsibilities.
  • Access to information on which decisions can be made.
  • Initiative and confidence on the part of the employee to take on greater responsibility.

Empowerment also means giving up some of the power traditionally held by management, which means managers also must take on new roles, knowledge and responsibilities.

It does not mean that management relinquishes all authority, totally delegates decision-making and allows operations to run without accountability. It requires a significant investment of time and effort to develop mutual trust, assess and add to individuals' capabilities and develop clear agreements about roles, responsibilities, risk taking and boundaries.

What does an empowered organizational structure look like?

Empowerment often also calls for restructuring the organization to reduce levels of the hierarchy or to provide a more customer- and process-focused organization.

Empowerment is often viewed as an inverted triangle of organizational power. In the traditional view, management is at the top while customers are on the bottom; in an empowered environment, customers are at the top while management is in a support role at the bottom.

Excerpted from Duke Okes and Russell T. Westcott’s Certified Quality Manager Handbook: Second Edition, ASQ Quality Press, 2001, pages 29-30.

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Last Updated ( Saturday, 27 October 2007 )
 
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