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Welcome to the Josty Mini Blog where we will provide summary posts from our main blog on www.josty.nz, all of the information with a fraction of the reading.

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Showing posts with label employee engagement. Show all posts
Showing posts with label employee engagement. Show all posts

Friday, September 12, 2025

Your Business is Your People

Diverse business team stands united in a modern office.

Your business doesn’t grow because of systems, processes, or products alone it grows because of people. High-performing teams are built by leaders who prioritise wellbeing, set clear direction, and foster positive culture. Attitude spreads from the top, and staff who feel valued give more of themselves in return. Too many businesses let performance slide by failing to support staff under pressure, or worse, by replacing people instead of helping them thrive again. By looking after your team, you look after your business.


Introduction: Why People Are the Heart of Your Business

Every business leader dreams of growth, resilience, and consistent performance. We talk about strategy documents, efficiency systems, and bold goals. But behind all of that lies the one truth often overlooked: your business is your people.

It doesn’t matter if you’re building a tech start-up, running a manufacturing plant, or scaling a professional services firm your success ultimately depends on the mindset, energy, and ability of the people in your team. You can have the best plan on paper, but if your team isn’t aligned, motivated, or supported, it won’t translate into results.

The most effective leaders know that their role goes far beyond managing tasks or hitting numbers. Their real responsibility lies in shaping an environment where people feel valued, cared for, and proud of their contribution. When you get this right, performance follows naturally.


Leadership Shapes Performance

A team’s attitude doesn’t come out of thin air. It reflects the leadership they see every day. If leaders are positive, clear, and consistent, the team will adopt those qualities. If leaders are inconsistent, disengaged, or dismissive, performance and morale will quickly unravel.

  • Clarity matters. People perform best when they know what’s expected of them and why it matters.

  • Consistency builds trust. When leadership behaviour is predictable and fair, people feel safe and engaged.

  • Positivity spreads. The way leaders talk about challenges influences how teams respond to them.

In short: leadership is the mirror in which team culture is reflected.


Wellbeing and Performance Go Hand in Hand

Performance isn’t just about skills or effort; it’s deeply tied to wellbeing. A stressed, unsupported, or unwell team member cannot perform at their best no matter how capable they are.

Too often, businesses see underperformance and jump straight to disciplinary measures or even dismissal. But here’s the reality: many times, the problem isn’t the person’s ability it’s their state of wellbeing.

I’ve seen too many businesses let go of talented people simply because they were going through a tough patch with health or stress. Instead of supporting them, businesses cut ties. The irony? With the right care and support, many of those employees could have been back to their best within months thereby saving the business recruitment costs and retaining valuable knowledge and skills.

Supporting wellbeing isn’t charity; it’s smart business. People who feel looked after come back stronger, more loyal, and more committed.


Building a High-Performing Culture

High-performing teams are not built by chance, they’re built intentionally. Leaders need to consciously design and reinforce a culture where people thrive.

Key elements include:

  1. Recognition and Appreciation – A simple “thank you” or public acknowledgement goes further than many leaders realise. Recognition fuels motivation.

  2. Growth Opportunities – Training, mentoring, and career progression show staff they’re valued long-term.

  3. Flexibility and Balance – Where possible, give people room to balance work with life. Flexibility is often repaid with greater effort and loyalty.

  4. Shared Purpose – People perform at their best when they understand how their work contributes to the bigger picture.

Culture isn’t posters on the wall or values in a handbook. It’s what people feel every day at work.


The Ripple Effect of Attitude

One of the most overlooked truths about performance is that attitude is contagious.

A negative, cynical team member can quickly bring down the energy of those around them. Conversely, one motivated, positive individual can lift the entire group. This ripple effect is why leadership behaviour is so critical because leaders set the tone.

When leaders bring energy, resilience, and focus, their teams mirror it. When leaders demonstrate care and respect, those values flow through the team. The result? Better collaboration, more innovation, and stronger outcomes for the business.


Final Thoughts: People First, Always

At the end of the day, businesses don’t succeed because of spreadsheets, systems, or slogans. They succeed because of people who believe in the mission and are supported to do their best work.

If you’re a business owner or leader, ask yourself:

  • Am I creating an environment where my team can thrive?

  • Do I support my people through tough times, or replace them when challenges arise?

  • Is my leadership setting the tone for the culture I want?

When you put people first, performance follows. Not only will your business see stronger results, but you’ll also build a workplace where people are proud to belong.

At Josty, we help businesses strengthen leadership and culture to unlock the full potential of their teams. If you’d like to explore how to build a high-performing, people-first business, get in touch.

Because at the end of the day, your business is your people.

Post written by Jason Jost

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Tuesday, August 19, 2025

Business Culture as a Performance Driver

Professionals collaborating on strategic planning.

 A thriving business culture isn't a happy accident; it’s a powerful engine for performance and organisational success. For any business in New Zealand, the workplace environment is not just a place to work; it is the very force that drives productivity, innovation, and profitability. The genuine culture of a company, the shared values, beliefs, and behaviours, is the invisible hand that can either propel a business forward or hold it back.

As a business consultant, I've seen countless examples where a disconnect between a company’s intended culture and its lived reality has led to significant pain points. A classic case is when owners and management believe they have a collaborative, team-oriented culture, while the staff feel micromanaged and undervalued. This strategic mismatch creates friction, erodes trust, and hampers productivity. At Josty, our philosophy is that a business's culture should be a natural extension of its people and goals, unique to its specific context. We don't believe in a one-size-fits-all approach because every team and every business is different.


The DNA of a High-Performing Culture

A business's culture is its operating system. When this system is healthy, it can drive extraordinary results. We've seen two distinct yet successful cultural archetypes: the family/team culture and the corporate/revenue culture. Each, when nurtured correctly, can be a powerful performance driver.

The family/team culture thrives on a sense of belonging and mutual support. In this environment, people are more than just employees; they are colleagues who genuinely care for each other's success. This fosters a deep-seated loyalty where people willingly do the "bit extra" because they are working for a common purpose. This sense of collaboration and collective responsibility can lead to remarkable productivity. Employee engagement is naturally high because individuals feel valued, respected, and heard. The result is a highly motivated workforce where talent retention becomes a natural by-product.

Conversely, the corporate/revenue-based culture is often characterised by a focus on individual achievement and tangible rewards. In this setting, people are driven by clearly defined goals, performance metrics, and the pursuit of career progression and higher earnings. This can be a highly effective model, particularly in fast-paced, competitive industries. It fuels a culture of ambition, but leadership must balance individual aspirations with the need for communication and teamwork, ensuring the pursuit of revenue doesn't come at the expense of employee well-being or ethical conduct.


Leadership as the Catalyst for Change

The most common and most damaging pain point we encounter is a fundamental disconnect between the cultural aspirations of management and the lived reality of the staff. This is where Josty's strategic thinking and leadership development expertise come into play. We believe that leadership is the primary driver of culture. Leaders set the tone, model the behaviour, and define the values.

Therefore, any cultural transformation must begin at the top. This is not about forcing a new set of rules; it’s about guiding leaders to understand and strategically influence their own behaviour. We work with business owners and leadership teams to honestly assess their existing culture and define the desired state that aligns with their business goals. Through our leadership development programmes, we coach leaders to embody the new culture, helping them with change management by ensuring consistency from the top. A cultural shift can fundamentally change the whole business from morale to staff engagement, from profit to customers.


The Enduring Impact of a High-Performing Culture

A business’s culture is its most valuable, and often most underutilised, asset. It is the intangible force that dictates everything from employee engagement to overall organisational success. The journey to a high-performing culture is not a quick fix; it is a continuous, guided process that requires genuine strategic thinking and a commitment to change management.

At Josty, our role is to act as your trusted business consultant, helping you navigate this journey. We’ve seen firsthand how addressing the disconnect between leadership and staff views on culture can revitalise a business, boosting morale, improving profits, and creating a workplace environment where everyone is aligned and motivated. It’s the most crucial investment you can make in your business's future, ensuring sustained business growth and a legacy of organisational success.

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Friday, August 1, 2025

How do you finish the week with your team?

 

Connecting remote team members for a positive end to the week.

For many workplaces, the Friday after-work drinks are a distant memory. With hybrid teams, remote setups, and shifting priorities, those informal wind-downs have faded but that doesn’t mean we should lose the opportunity to end the week well.

When I was a Sales Manager, I made sure we finished the week together online, every Friday afternoon.

It was our weekly roundup.

Everyone had to share:

  • The worst or funniest thing that happened that week

  • Their personal highlight

  • And what they were planning for the weekend

The purpose?

✅ To stop the team carrying frustrations into the weekend

✅ To celebrate wins, big and small

✅ And most importantly, to shift our mindset from work to life

It didn’t take long, but it made a huge difference.

  • It built trust.
  • It lightened the mood.
  • And it reminded us that behind every role, there’s a person with a life outside of work.

We laughed. We vented. We connected. And we left the call lighter more human.

We often underestimate the power of small rituals in business. A 15-minute catch-up might not seem like much on paper but in practice, it helps your team disconnect from work with purpose, rather than dragging the week’s stress into the weekend.

These weekly roundups often revealed things I wouldn’t have known otherwise. A team member who had a tough week with a client. Someone dealing with something challenging at home. Or a surprising win that hadn’t made it into the CRM yet. By creating space for both honesty and humour, we became more than just colleagues we became a team that had each other’s backs.

And here's the thing: you don’t need a title like Sales Manager to introduce something like this. Anyone can take the lead. Anyone can decide to create connection. Whether you're running a business or contributing to one, fostering a rhythm of reflection and recognition helps everyone feel more grounded and more motivated.

In today’s work environment, where messaging never sleeps and emails roll in on Sundays, it’s easy to feel like there’s no real off switch. But if we don’t create clear transitions between work and personal time, burnout creeps in and culture starts to fray.

Ending the week with intention is a small investment with a big return.

It doesn’t have to be drinks, or even a formal Zoom. It could be a group chat voice note, a quick check-in thread, or a shared GIF of the week. It’s about building habits that remind us we’re more than our KPIs and deadlines.

So, how do you wrap up the week with your team?
What little traditions help your people feel seen, heard, and ready to recharge?

👇 I’d love to hear your ideas. Let’s learn from each other. Leave a comment below or head over to our contact us page for other ways to connect. 

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Friday, July 25, 2025

Cultivating Talent: The Power of Internal Promotion

 

A diverse team celebrates an internal promotion in a modern office, with a "Promoted" plaque and growth chart.


Unlocking Potential: The Strategic Power of Internal Promotion

For businesses aiming for sustainable growth and a truly resilient future, internal promotion isn't just a nice-to-have it's a strategic imperative. As an expert business consultant, I've seen firsthand how nurturing talent from within can transform organisations, boosting employee engagement, strengthening talent retention, and building a robust leadership pipeline. At Josty, we champion this approach, understanding that empowering your existing team is key to unlocking their full potential and securing your long-term success.

Promoting from within offers a wealth of advantages. Firstly, it significantly enhances employee morale and motivation. When staff see clear career pathways and colleagues being recognised, it sends a powerful message that their efforts are valued, fostering loyalty and commitment. This directly translates to reduced employee turnover, saving considerable recruitment costs and preserving invaluable institutional knowledge. Internally promoted individuals already understand your company culture and processes, leading to smoother transitions and faster productivity gains. This inherent familiarity is a significant competitive advantage for any business.

Furthermore, internal promotion is the cornerstone of effective succession planning. By identifying high-potential employees and providing them with targeted professional development and mentorship, you build a ready supply of future leaders, safeguarding against leadership gaps and ensuring business continuity. This strategic foresight, which Josty frequently advises on, helps maintain momentum and stability.

However, it's crucial to navigate potential pitfalls. A purely internal focus risks stagnation and "groupthink," highlighting the need for a balanced approach that can strategically incorporate external talent when necessary. Managing disappointment among those not promoted requires a transparent and objective process, clear communication, and constructive feedback. There's also the "Peter Principle" to consider promoting someone based solely on current performance without assessing their readiness for new responsibilities. This underscores the need for comprehensive talent assessments and targeted leadership development programmes.

To successfully implement internal promotion, businesses must establish a clear talent development framework. This includes identifying high-potential employees, creating visible career pathways, investing in training and upskilling, and establishing robust mentorship programmes. Fostering a culture of continuous learning and regular, constructive feedback is also vital. Critically, the promotion process must be driven by transparency and fairness, with clear criteria and consistent communication. Finally, empowering managers to actively develop their teams through coaching and identifying growth opportunities is paramount.

In essence, prioritising internal promotion means investing in your most valuable asset: your people. It’s a strategic move that not only optimises resources but also builds a resilient, adaptive, and forward-thinking organisation ready to thrive in a dynamic market. It directly supports business growth, strengthens sales performance, and mitigates risk. Read the full blog and let's chat about how Josty can help you unlock this powerful potential within your own team.

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