If knowledge is power, surely empowerment is the sharing of knowledge with employees to enable advancement and improvement.
The Collins Dictionary definition of empowerment states: “The empowerment of a person or group of people is the process of giving them power and status in a particular situation”.
Empowerment is a topic that is often misunderstood and raises debate around its use. Why may leaders be resistant to empowering individuals? It may be through a lack of trust, an aversion to risk (even controlled risk), the need to micro-manage at every step, the need to control others or the fear of losing control. It is also possible that the person being empowered may be resistant to it due to a lack of trust in motives and consequences. Other factors that stop empowerment include a bureaucratic structure that is resistant to change, conflict amongst teams in an organisation, or personal time constraints.
What is empowerment?
Empowerment is allowing employees the autonomy to grow with your guidance. It is more than just giving people accountability for a delegated task, it involves giving people knowledge, power, skills, opportunities, self-confidence, authority and resources to be able to be accountable for a task. It involves reducing or removing powerlessness by releasing power through the sharing of accurate information, creation of autonomy, improving individuals’ feelings of competence and allowing contribution through meaningful work. To be truly empowered, employees need to be involved in decision-making to know that they influenced direction and goals – to feel ownership of the goals and therefore understand the value in delivering the goal.
Establishing employees’ expectations and aligning these expectations with those of the leader must also extend to:
Empowerment will involve risk-taking, the risk that mistakes may be made. It is important to acknowledge any failures, analyse them, and treat them as learnings for the future.
Supporting employees is key to empowerment, including training and development so that people can acquire the skills required to perform well. It is worth noting that people cannot perform well if they are not given opportunities to do so, and the required resources (people, time, finances, equipment) and freedom to make decisions. It gives opportunities for growth and enhancement at a personal level. In the workplace, empowerment will help to move the team culture towards one of innovation, creativity, challenge of the status quo, and accountability. Empowerment will be more effective at increasing an employee’s creativity than routine task performance.
How will individuals feel empowered?
In his article, Trust the process: 13 tips to empower and encourage your staff, Chad Brookes states the following benefits of empowering your employees:
Building trust
Another important part of managing in this way is participative leadership. When individuals come to you to discuss an issue, establish what they need from you and don’t make any assumptions. Is it:
We’ve heard trust mentioned many times already and will look at how this important behaviour comes from a place of compassion and empathy. Kindness is not weakness. Empathy can be learned and monitored; it isn’t something that has to come naturally, and all can acquire this skill.
Building an environment of trust is the part of your company culture that, without it, the business may falter. Trust in the leadership, one another, and the path you’re all on together will determine how productive your teams will be. Simply put, if they don’t trust you, they most certainly won’t follow you – at least not wholeheartedly.
Empowerment requires the building of trust. Appropriate delegation can empower your team.
Next month in Business Bites, we will look at leadership.