Five Ways to Help Employees Reach Their Full Potential

by Energage

Potential is a huge motivator for most employees. It also ranks high in importance as a culture driver. Our analytics show it’s also more closely tied to engagement than the other Energage Survey statements. That’s why it’s important to pay attention – because when your people are able to realize their full potential, so will your organization.

What culture research says about employee potential

A Gallup poll of Millennials found that almost 90% of employees valued opportunities to grow and develop their careers. Yet, fewer than 40% of the same population believed they had “learned something new” in the past 30 days.

Similarly, Energage research revealed a significant difference in perception among employees at average organizations versus Top Workplaces.

Energage Survey statement

“This company enables me to work at my full potential.”

When asked to respond to a survey statement about realizing potential, only 56% of employees at average organizations responded positively. But it seems employees at Top Workplaces feel more empowered to reach their potential. At these award-winning companies, the number jumped to 77%. And in the top decile of Top Workplaces, scores reached as high as 90%.

Realizing employee potential

Enable employees to reach their full potential

  1. Encourage managers to engage in one-on-one conversations around potential and how to help team members reach theirs.
  2. Allow employees to stretch their wings with challenging work assignments.
  3. Show employees career paths that help them to find future opportunities and then work toward them.
  4. Support continuous learning and individual development plans.
  5. Get rid of red tape that prevents employees from being effective.

What Potential sounds like

“I feel empowered to try new ways and even to fail in the process. Our leadership team believes in letting people show and exercise their full potential. The rest is up to me.”

How to overcome barriers to employee engagement

It is important to learn how to overcome barriers to employee engagement. Barriers can get in the way of employees realizing their potential. When they can’t work at their full potential, employees may feel stuck or unrecognized. And that makes employees more likely to start a job search.

  • Employees who don’t have opportunities to work outside of their typical day-to-day roles, which can make them feel stifled.
  • Placing a narrow focus on employees who’ve been identified as “high potentials.” This can limit the organization as a whole.
  • Employees who have given up trying to “fight the system” and now fall back into accepting poor policies and processes.