Sports events can engage your employees

Published on
Written by
No items found.
Share

A huge focus of my work is talking to people about engaging employees and what that looks like. There is no one simple solution as to what engages employees best - we are all different and therefore motivated by different things. What engages and motivates one employee is not necessarily going to have the same motivational impact on someone else and part of the answer is therefore to talk more frequently to your employees about what makes them tick.

That being said, it comes as no surprise that recent research indicates that corporate sports event (such as a sponsored 10k run) has a positive impact on employee engagement and well-being. The research points to the fact that a shared experience, which is outside of normal day-to-day duties, increases rapport between colleagues and introduces a strong sense of purpose, as well as the positive side-effects of exercise! Often corporate sporting events have been seen as part of an organisation's corporate social responsibility policy but now it appears there is good reason to consider it as part of your engagement and well-being strategy. So perhaps planning that sponsored 10k run should be moved up the agenda?

It argued that, while a third of firms said they planned to introduce a wellbeing strategy this year, their primary motivation for making this investment and commitment was not health and wellbeing at all. Improving health and wellbeing was certainly a factor, but it was the desire to improve employee engagement, organisational culture and staff retention that were considered the greater catalysts.

Related Articles

A different fork in the road at Twitter

On International Men’s Day I thought I might send a note to a man who I think is giving us a bit of a bad rep.

Parents, careers and gender equality : where we are, where we will be, how to get where we want to be

When it comes to work, employers need to do much more to help achieve gender equality at this crucial time when a couple starts a family.

Email best practice – a case study starring Suella Braverman

When work emails end up in the wrong place, Ajit Moorthy considers what questions should be posed before rushing to judgment.

Forbes: Tackling loneliness in remote working

Our expert Amanda Okill tells Forbes what actions organisations and individuals can take.