Talk ain’t cheap

Marcie Zlotnik co-founded StarTex Power in 2004, so she knows the company well, and stepping aside to give her growing employee base a say has been a struggle.

“It’s a lot easier for me to go up to them and say, ‘Well, why don’t we do this?’” Zlotnik says. “That’s not how you build a company.”

As the electricity provider that she founded with her husband, Robert, has grown to 82 employees and revenue of $136.7 million in fiscal 2008, Zlotnik has improved the company culture and delegated responsibilities simply by asking employees more questions. To empower employees, StarTex had a feedback program called Block and Tackle, in which employees could recommend ideas to save time and make money.

Zlotnik says empowerment starts with encouraging discussion, listening to employees’ ideas and making sure they understand what it is you’re trying to communicate. And that, she says, can be as simple as asking them, “Hey, what should we do this month?”

Smart Business spoke with Zlotnik about how to empower employees through conversation.

Encourage discussion. You have to listen and promote discussion and encourage dialogue to empower employees. You’ve got to listen to what they’re saying. If your answer is always no, you’ll never get any ideas brought to you or any suggestions.

I have a rule with people. Just because I said no to you the first time, if you really believe strongly in something, go back, regroup your thoughts, put something else together and bring it back to me.

Don’t come back to me with exactly the same thing, but if you think you could have presented it differently, then try again.

Be visible. Make yourself available. I don’t think it is at your desk. Who is going to walk into the chairman’s office and say, ‘Hey, I want to talk.’ It’s not going to happen.

But we’ve had bowling alley parties, we’ve had putt-putt tournaments. That’s where you develop the rapport with employees.

My office is right in the middle of the office, and I make sure whenever I leave the office, I go one way and I come back the other way so I have an opportunity to walk by everybody’s office and desk, and I try very hard to stop and say something to someone.

It’s amazing what they’ll tell you in their environment, not yours.

Meet them on their level in an environment that they’re comfortable in, which is at their desk. Any time I say to someone, ‘Can you come into my office?’ the red flags go up. That is never a good sign, even though many times it is.

Talk to somebody. Talk to them when you see them walking down the hall.

I want to go up and ask them something that is poignant to what they’re doing. For example, customer service: ‘What have you seen today in calls?’ It’s personal. It’s not just, ‘Have a great day.’