Biblical Foundations of Flourishing Leadership: Exploring the 8 FLOURISH Drivers
Before coming to Best Christian Workplaces, I worked with missionaries around the world training them as leaders to spread the Gospel. When talking...
3 min read
Al Lopus : September, 01 2020
Author and presidential speechwriter James Humes says, “The art of communication is the language of leadership.” Could there be any better illustration of this than what’s happening at Olivet Nazarene University? Here, their leadership shares six communication strategies you can implement today to ensure your employees know how valued they are.
I marvel at leaders who know what real communication is all about—and then generously share the best practices that can better the workplace culture with ministry organizations, everywhere. David Pickering, director of business and human resources at Olivet Nazarene University in Bourbonnais, IL, is one such leader.
David has helped oversee 11 consecutive annual Employee Engagement Surveys with Best Christian Workplaces Institute. I listened to David describe one of the biggest takeaways of the survey.
We like to think of ourselves as personable. Building relationships—whether it involves our 5,000 students or 600 faculty and staff—is huge. In a tight-knit community like ours, communication is key.”
Because everyone’s so invested in the mission of the school—to honor Christ in all that we learn, say and do—everyone wants to stay informed. The understandable need to stay informed, combined with the prevalence of email, social media, and cell phones, creates numerous communication challenges:
David would be the first to say he didn’t create the ONU culture. What he’s really done—within a robust, supportive community that transcends job titles, seniority, and pay grades—is to help create and call out thriving examples of how clear, creative communication is bettering the university.
Here are six intentional ways ONU is tackling its communication challenges:
Healthy communication—one of our eight essentials of a flourishing workplace—has been a hallmark of ONU’s healthy workplace culture. ONU is a perfect example of how a flourishing culture leads to:
Says David, “We find that creating and sustaining a flourishing culture actually trains people to be accountable to one another.
When I see my colleague demonstrate trust, compassion, patience or another Christian virtue, I become more accountable to myself, to others and the Lord. It’s all about creating a culture of generosity with each other and being for each other.”
How are you creating a culture of healthy communication in your organization? What specific strategies do you use to make sure each employee knows just how valued he or she is?
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