Bring Out the Best, continued
While my short answer was “absolutely,” first I wanted to explore with him the important recognition that’s an essential step in successfully integrating NVC in the workplace -- recognizing both individual, human needs AND the needs of the organization.
Before I relayed specific data, I shared the larger context for the way our firm looks at this data. He had an “aha” moment when I talked about how when we bring NVC into organizations an additional dimension to the process presents itself. This additional consideration is invisible and yet omnipresent within the organization and its people. It holds tremendous influence over the thinking and actions of people in organizations.
This additional dimension is the universal needs of the organization. Like people with our universal human needs, I have come to recognize that all organizations have universal organizational needs. This recognition addresses the most common barrier I find with business people when introducing NVC - “NVC is great for my family life, but it isn’t appropriate for work.”
While NVC is a needs-based process for interpersonal connection, workplaces include both interpersonal and organizational realities. The organization is a living system in and of itself – related to, yet distinct from, the people in it. The concept of universal organizational needs bridges the interpersonal with the organizational. With this expanded awareness, the organization and its people share a needs-based reality.
For these reasons, Marshall Rosenberg has called these universal organizational needs “the missing link” to bringing NVC into the business world.
Combining my understanding of NVC with nearly 20 years experience as an organization and communication specialist, in 2004 I identified six universal organizational needs:
- Identity
- Life-Affirming Purpose
- Direction
- Structure
- Energy
- Expression
An in-depth overview of this framework of organizational needs and how they work in concert with human needs in workplaces was published in a chapter I co-authored with Marshall Rosenberg, entitled, “Integrated Clarity® (IC) - Energizing How We Talk and What We Talk About in Organizations,” in the 2007 2nd edition of The Change Handbook, a resource handbook “on today’s best methods for engaging whole systems.”[1]
After acknowledging universal organizational needs, the NVC trainer and I talked about the data our firm uses to better understand the needs of organizations and the needs of people in them.
We use our Organizational Needs AssessmentSM (ONA) as a way to gather information from our clients’ employees, managers and executives. The ONA measures about two-dozen factors which track human and organizational needs met or unmet, to determine an organization’s health score. [2]
In the surveys collected, we see a 100 percent correlation between morale and internal communication factors. If morale scores low, communication scores low and vice versa. Further, these two factors are leading indicators for the overall assessment scores. Surveys with lower communication and morale scores tend to score lower overall and surveys with higher communication and morale scores tend to score higher overall.
Simply put, communication and workplace morale appear inseparable and also have major influence on the total organizational health score.
In one of our case studies with a university research team, the pre-workshop survey showed communication score ranked last and morale 16th out of 20 factors. After engaging the same group in an NVC/IC strategic conversation workshop, the overall score rose 32 percent with communication moving up to sixth place and morale jumping to third place.
We also discussed industry data found in the books Leading Self-Directed Work Teams by Kimball Fisher and Good to Great by Jim Collins. These books document the needs for trust, passion and other values and principles embedded in NVC consciousness that when met in the workplace, lead to empowerment in work groups.
These authors have documented that compared to other companies where these needs were not met, emphasis on meeting these needs can yield results like: 45 percent lower costs, 250 percent productivity improvement, double the revenue and profits, 50 percent cut in on the job accidents, absenteeism, and sickness, and 3.42 to 18.50 times the general stock market value.
NVC (human needs) is the “how we talk” and IC (organizational needs) is the “what we talk about” in organizations. Bridging the human and organizational needs can lead to organizations that are more alive and in alignment with the universal life energy in all of us and the world around us. It can also lead to a larger community of practice for NVC around the world.
Marie Miyashiro-Collins, APR is president and chief facilitation officer for Elucity Network, Inc., an NVC-inspired business consulting and training firm based in the United States. Her book on Nonviolent Communication and its workplace application counterpart, Integrated Clarity® is scheduled to be published by PuddleDancer press in spring 2010. She can be reached at 520-777-7271, by email at info@elucity.com or on the web at www.elucity.com
Footnotes:
[1] Integrated Clarity® is the name of the six universal organizational needs concept and framework developed by Marie Miyashiro-Collins. is published by Berrett-Koehler Publishers with editors (organization consultants and academicians) Peggy Holman, Tom Devane and Steven Cady. Books are available through booksellers or info@elucity.com.
[2] Because the Integrated Clarity® Organizational Needs AssessmentSM (ONA) is an instrument I developed recently, in 2004-05, these results are based on a small sample of organizations conducting this survey. We are seeking a larger database for research purposes. We invite interested NVC trainers and practitioners to contact us at info@elucity.com if you would like to conduct this ONA among your own client base or within your own organization.
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