The study found engaged employees tended to feel empowered. Silvia Razgova / The National
The study found engaged employees tended to feel empowered. Silvia Razgova / The National

Workers' enthusiasm proves the key to customer loyalty



Few companies do well during financial storms, but those with involved and enthusiastic employees are more likely to weather them successfully, experts say.
Studies conducted in the UAE by the global management consulting firm Gallup from 2009 to last year, and involving more than 15,500 people, established a link between employee engagement and profitability.
"The special thing we found about engagement is that it's predictive," said Ehssan Abdallah, a senior practice consultant at Gallup Consulting Middle East and Africa. "What we were able to see was that, especially during a crisis, organisations that have higher levels of engagement are the ones that are financially going to be better off thereon in."
The study found engaged employees tended to feel empowered - that they had not only the freedom to make decisions, but also "the time, training, materials, equipment, support and 'voice' to do so", said Ghassan Khoury, a managing consultant at Gallup Consulting Middle East and Africa.
However, the research found just one in four employees in the Emirates felt fully empowered.
"One of the key areas where we see low empowerment having a major effect is the UAE consumer retail industry," Mr Khoury said.
In addition employees who are disengaged struggle to "emotionally connect" with customers.
"If they are not empowered then the minute they get asked something beyond a standard operating manual or procedure, [the employee] will be confused and that emotionally detaches the customer from the experience," Mr Abdallah said.
But if workers are engaged they will go the extra mile to please the customer and retain his or her loyalty.
"[Customers] will come back to you and they will get to a stage where by default if they need a certain product from you, by default they won't even think about going elsewhere," Mr Abdallah said.
gduncan@thenational.ae

Saturday's schedule at the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix

GP3 race, 12:30pm

Formula 1 final practice, 2pm

Formula 1 qualifying, 5pm

Formula 2 race, 6:40pm

Performance: Sam Smith

ABU DHABI ORDER OF PLAY

Starting at 10am:

Daria Kasatkina v Qiang Wang

Veronika Kudermetova v Annet Kontaveit (10)

Maria Sakkari (9) v Anastasia Potapova

Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova v Ons Jabeur (15)

Donna Vekic (16) v Bernarda Pera 

Ekaterina Alexandrova v Zarina Diyas

NO OTHER LAND

Director: Basel Adra, Yuval Abraham, Rachel Szor, Hamdan Ballal

Stars: Basel Adra, Yuval Abraham

Rating: 3.5/5

Dr Amal Khalid Alias revealed a recent case of a woman with daughters, who specifically wanted a boy.

A semen analysis of the father showed abnormal sperm so the couple required IVF.

Out of 21 eggs collected, six were unused leaving 15 suitable for IVF.

A specific procedure was used, called intracytoplasmic sperm injection where a single sperm cell is inserted into the egg.

On day three of the process, 14 embryos were biopsied for gender selection.

The next day, a pre-implantation genetic report revealed four normal male embryos, three female and seven abnormal samples.

Day five of the treatment saw two male embryos transferred to the patient.

The woman recorded a positive pregnancy test two weeks later. 

'Laal Kaptaan'

Director: Navdeep Singh

Stars: Saif Ali Khan, Manav Vij, Deepak Dobriyal, Zoya Hussain

Rating: 2/5