Pt 2. What you need to know about the pro-human workplace.

Published: Mon, 06/13/16

Work: it's business and it's personal.

Easy things you can do today.
If you missed the first installment of this post, you can find it here.

What would it mean to have a "pro-human" organization? 
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I talk to my clients a lot about how they can work with others, and maintain their dignity at the same time. What I mean is maintaining the dignity of my client and those they are working with. I don’t suggest being insincere or giving away the store. There are ways to run an organization and humanize the workplace and corporate culture at the same time. Some examples:


  • Think before you speak. Anticipate the possible reaction when giving feedback or delivering a decision. The director who gave a talk on how well the business was doing completely blew past the fact that a downsizing had been announced to his audience 2 days prior. This left people hurt and hurt his credibility.

  • Think twice before thinking out loud or giving direction. Clients tell me repeatedly that priorities are changed radically, sometimes multiple times in one week. This depletes employees’ trust, and also diminishes how they view their contributions.

  • Read your email mindfully. Read through your inbox before you start shooting off a series of questions. You may get your question answered in a subsequent email. You’ll save time writing. Your colleagues will thank you for not flooding their inboxes.

  • Stretch your empathy muscle. For instance, don’t finish the workday without getting back to an employee about a concern. Even if it is near quitting time, reach out to that employee so she or he doesn’t lose another night’s sleep.

  • Make them right. When people have a very human reaction, determine what is right about it and tell them so. I once gave an employee performance feedback. He responded with, “I think you think I’m an idiot.” I told him I was glad he told me that. I went on to tell him I was having the discussion with him because I wanted him to be successful.

It's both a leadership thing and an individual thing. You can start today. 


Undoubtedly leaders at the top need to model this behavior. Engagement and incentive programs have their place. They provide structure and consistency for a pro-employee organization.


And simple gestures and thoughtfulness set the tone for a truly pro-human workplace. Ask yourself what you can do, today.


A version of this post was originally published at InPower Coaching, March 23, 2016.
My Best,






Your Chief Encouragement Officer.

P.S.  ​​​​​​​I also think it might be time to revisit the message in the video below.
About Mary Schaefer: Speaker, coach, trainer, consultant and Chief Encouragement Officer for everyone interested in their own professional development and advancement. My belief about the key to great performance at work is empowerment. I say: "Your success and the success of those around you depends on you empowering yourself first." Click here to find out more about what this can mean for you.

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