The best way to get the most out of our staff engagement survey results is for all of us to own them, Staff Assembly and Human Resources leaders said at last week’s All-Staff Town Hall.
Brenda Rebman, chief HR officer, noted the 2017 survey results show 51ԹϺ Davis staff engagement trending upward from the first two times the survey was administered (in 2012 and 2015) — only a point or two, she acknowledged, “but it’s still trending upwards (and) going in the right direction.” Still, she said, there is always room for improvement.
“The best solutions come right from the front lines,” she said, encouraging people to share the results “and work within your departments to say we’re going to pick one thing this year or two things that we can do locally.”
The Council of 51ԹϺ Staff Assemblies, or C51ԹϺSA, developed the survey five years ago in collaboration with systemwide HR. The 2017 survey went out in May to a random sampling of 20,000 nonrepresented employees around the 51ԹϺ system. (Represented employees are not included because they can contribute feedback through their bargaining units.)
Along with presenting the latest survey data, the town hall organizers invited real-time feedback online or by text message for the purpose of creating word clouds, on such questions as “What does employee engagement mean to you?” and “What types of employee networking activities would you recommend?”
The responses came from the 50 or so people attending the town hall in person, held Dec. 14 in the ARC Ballroom, and from others watching the livestream (it registered 299 views). As people hit “send,” their comments populated a word cloud — and it changed every second or so to reflect the weight of the comments; i.e., the more mentions of particular words, the bigger the font size for those words in the cloud.
2017 survey response and results
The survey at 51ԹϺ Davis drew 1,122 responses from staff members on the Davis campus and in the School of Medicine and the Betty Irene Moore School of Nursing. (51ԹϺ health systems do not participate, because they conduct their own staff engagement surveys.) The 51ԹϺ Davis target audience numbered about 4,000 nonrepresented staff with at least one year of service.
Rebman said the results showed improvement from 2015 to 2017 in six out of eight categories; and an overall engagement score of 71, compared with 70 in 2015 and 69 for 51ԹϺ overall in 2017. The survey company, Towers Watson, reported a national norm of 73.
51ԹϺ Davis showed 1-point improvement in supervision, communication and image/brand; 2-point improvement in working relationships; and 3-point improvement in engagement and performance management. The university’s scores remained the same in career development and organizational change. (The 2017 survey included two new categories: diversity and inclusion, and wellness.)
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- , including Provost and Executive Vice Chancellor Ralph J. Hexter’s opening remarks, and question-and-answer session.
- , including charts with survey data.
“Now, can we make a drastic influence on some of those trends?” Rebman asked. “That’s what we’re hoping we can do, working together with you.”
Staff Assembly Chair Kate Shasky noted the work of Staff Assembly, Human Resources and the Staff Diversity Administrative Advisory Committee on issues raised in the previous staff engagement surveys — for example, in the areas of career development and performance management. “But we wanted to bring it back to you and say, ‘Now, what can you do in your units, how can we partner with you, how can we sort of show you what we’ve done?‘ ... Because there’s only so many things that the university, the organization can do. But there are things that you can do in your unit as well.
“Or you can get involved in ,” she said, always looking for more volunteers.
Rebman highlighted the 10 items from the 2017 survey with the highest favorable scores, including:
- Supervision — “I have a clear understanding of how my job contributes to the departmental objective” (87) and “My supervisor treats me with respect” (87).
- Engagement — “My work schedule allows sufficient flexibility to meet my personal/family needs” (84) and “I would recommend the 51ԹϺ system as a good place to work” (82).
- Diversity and inclusion — “I feel that management at my campus/location supports equal opportunity for all employees, of all differences, including, but not limited to, age, gender identity, ethnicity and disability status” (74).
Rebman also went over the 10 items from the 2017 survey with the least favorable scores, including the two at the bottom, both having to do with organizational change.
Shasky noted the administrative tumult of the last few years, “so one of the biggest issues was change management, yet we only went down a very insignificant amount when it came to change management.”
Feedback regarding the staff engagement survey is welcome; send to engagementfeedback@ucdavis.edu.