What is the importance of knowing and getting along well with your employees?

Most leaders seek to build and manage strong, highly functioning teams.

One of the most effective strategies to ensure that you are able to reap the benefits of employing more fully engaged employees is to work actively and consistently to understand who your team members really are.

Getting to know them as individuals will be incredibly valuable but will take time. You can begin by understanding some behavioral basics—communication styles, motivation, as well as traits that can often be attributed to generational differences.

You also want to work to understand that the individuals that make up your teams possess varying perspectives based on culture, background, life experiences, as well as varying strengths and challenges. The more information you have, the better equipped you are to lead them. This includes matching their skills with specific roles within the workplace, leading them to greater fulfillment and higher engagement.

Below are just a few of the many benefits of getting to know your team members that will lead them to that greater sense of fulfillment and those higher levels of engagement.

If you know who your team members are, you can tailor your coaching style to be more effective. Ideally, you are offering a more individualized approach to each team member.

Such an approach will provide you with more frequent occasions to gather important information, receive regular feedback, and provide you with opportunities for reinforcement.

Knowing your team members will allow you to be able to tell sooner rather than later if a team member is happy and a good fit. Knowing that will prevent resentments from building up and creating toxicity in your work environment. It may even alert you to any possible safety concerns.

Being plugged into who your team members are also will give you the opportunity to coach and work to help them develop their careers more successfully by working within their strengths. When you know your team members, you are able to be proactive in moving them around or possibly out.

Beyond one-to-one engagement, self and peer evaluations, and team building activities, there are personality profiles and other assessment tools available that can help you gain the insight you need to understand fully the strengths and challenges of your team members.

There are several assessment tools available to assist you in getting to know your team.

The Meyers-Briggs Type Indicator is probably the personality assessment you’re most familiar with. This quiz is based on the psychology of Carl Jung, and it divides everyone into 16 different personality types based on how they perceive and judge the world around them.

“Perception involves all the ways of becoming aware of things, people, happenings, or ideas. Judgment involves all the ways of coming to conclusions about what has been perceived,” Myers-Briggs explains on its website. “If people differ systematically in what they perceive and in how they reach conclusions, then it is only reasonable for them to differ correspondingly in their interests, reactions, values, motivations, and skills.”

The Enneagram test divides everyone into nine personality types, and it’s based on the notion that your type emerges in early childhood, though the belief is that everyone is born with a dominant type.

“By the time children are 4 or 5 years old, their consciousness has developed sufficiently to have a separate sense of self,” the Enneagram Institute explains on its website. “Although their identity is still very fluid, at this age children begin to establish themselves and find ways of fitting into the world on their own.”

The Enneagram’s nine types are: the reformer, the helper, the individualist, the achiever, the investigator, the loyalist, the enthusiast, the challenger, and the peacemaker.

StrengthsFinder 2.0 is another one that’s used a lot at work because it’s designed to reveal participants’ talents so you can set yourself up for success. In its most basic form, this test highlights your strengths at work, which can empower you to pursue your passions and stop beating yourself up because you’re not good at putting things into spreadsheets.

The DiSC personality test is designed to help employers better understand their employees. It evaluates behavior based on the ideas of William Martson and Walter Clark by focusing on the traits of dominance, inducement, submission, and compliance.

By giving each employee a common understanding of different personality traits, the test helps employees work more productively, communicate with others, and cooperate as a team.

Some companies rely on it to hire staff, while others use it to gauge an employee’s suitability for a job.

Kolbe measures your instinctive way of doing things and the result is called your method of operation. This assessment measures a person’s conative strengths. It gives you greater understanding of your own human nature and allows you to begin the process of maximizing potential—both personally and professionally.

Tools like those will provide you with a great deal of information about your team members. You will want to research thoroughly any assessment tool to discover if it will provide you with what you believe is most important for you to learn about your team.

Keep in mind that a single assessment tool isn’t the be-all and end-all of getting to know your team. They aren’t suggested as a substitute for simply paying attention and being present. Ideally, participation in an assessment not only allows leaders to learn more about their team members, uncover valuable information, and begin a conversation, but also allows team members to learn about themselves and promote increased self-awareness. Another benefit is that it promotes understanding among team members.

Assessments, like any instrument, must be used properly. Be sure that you use your human resources department to vet your selection fully and learn how to deliver the assessment appropriately.

It probably should go without saying that strategies for getting to know your team are intended to be used within professional boundaries.

Many leaders and coaches worry about blurring those lines. Knowing who your team members are and investing time to understand their strengths and challenges doesn’t mean you have to become friends. It simply means you are investing in useful resources, actively paying attention and establishing yourself as an engaged, accessible leader. In the workplace, most team members are looking for a role model and a strong leader more than another pal to “hang out” with.

Getting to know team members is an investment of time and resources. But when you invest in these resources, it ultimately will make your job as a coach and a leader easier. If you know them, you will know how best to engage them and keep them engaged. Fully engaged team members are more productive, satisfied, and are much more likely to be long-term employees.

With days and weeks crammed with scheduled meetings, impromptu meetings, and a never-ending inbox, it can be tempting to spend that time some other way. But as the 80/20 rule suggests, that small effort can have a huge ripple effect for the manager to, the employee, and the team as a whole. The importance of engaging with your co-workers has its benefits.

There is an opportunity in every encounter. With time as valuable as it is, looking for opportunities in a crazy schedule helps add a new perspective. It can simple for all of us to get into the “zone” and miss what’s going on with each other, so grabbing coffee or lunch and connecting with another human being to get away from the computer screen can be a welcome break from the daily grind.

What is the importance of knowing and getting along well with your employees?

Work becomes more efficient. A manager may already know an employee’s strengths, but learning what their passions are and what inspires them can add new meaning and drive and take that relationship to the next level. There’s a real purpose when someones strengths and passion are combined and pursued.

Greater level of awareness. Spending time together creates a bond… it creates a sense of trust. When you get to know each other on a personal level, mutual respect grows. Knowing someone’s triggers as well as their strengths can also improve communication and help with growing a successful and motivated team. Things and events that take place outside of work can help give you a better understanding of what goes on at work.

Your coaching skills increase. When you take the time to get to know your employees, you will understand how each individual receives feedback and praise. This will allow you to become a more effective coach and manager that will be respected and appreciated by the team.

Builds trust with your “boss”. Breaking down that natural division of the manager/employee relationship helps build trust between you and your team member. When your employees can get to know the real you, they’ll feel more comfortable with you. By being yourself, you set the tone and encourage others to do the same. .

Finding ways to connect with employees can be as simple as grabbing lunch with them or taking a 15-minute walk together. Some companies promote this and encourage it more than others.

It’s important to find your own ways that you are comfortable with in order to engage with your co-workers.

Doing so removes some of that ‘boss wall’ and deference that can come with it.