By:
Dave Worman, Dr. Motivation
It is a costly
mistake to get lost in the false theory that more money equals happy employees.
Believing this
is costing you valuable time, revenue, employees...and even threatening your
own job. Cash will always be a major factor in motivating people and a solid
compensation plan is critical to attracting and keeping key personnel. But the
key is that additional cash is not always the only answer and in many cases not
even the best answer.
Too many bonus
or commission checks get cashed, spent and forgotten just that quickly. Grocery
stores and gasoline stations are among the necessary stops that
seem to get in the way of using your extra cash on something special for you.
seem to get in the way of using your extra cash on something special for you.
One alternative
to giving commissions or bonus dollars is to give gifts through a catalog point
system.
The company you
choose will provide you with catalogs, price sheets and point checks at no
charge. The structure for your bonus plan can remain the same but instead of
awarding cash to your employees you award equivalent points. Those points may
then be used to purchase an enormous variety of gifts or travel plans from the
catalog.
The stimulation
involved is long-lasting. It begins with the employee being able to browse the
catalog choosing what they will strive to earn. The catalog acts as a tangible
reminder of their goal. The gift itself will last as evidence of their
achievements.
Whenever I have
implemented this program, the employees are overwhelmingly in favor of the
point system as opposed to cash. This type of program is very popular with
employees because they purchase things they would never normally have the
"money" to afford.
With solid
compensation in place, let's look at non-monetary motivation...20 steps to
success.
1. Recognition/Attention.
When your
employees accomplish something they have achieved something. Your recognition
is appreciation for that achievement. I believe that most managers don't give
enough recognition because they don't get enough. Therefore, it doesn't come
natural to do it. If this applies to you, you need to drop this excuse like a
bad habit! Become a giver! Look at the price. Recognition is free!
2. Applause.
A form of
recognition yes, but a very specific form. Physically applaud your people by
giving them a round of applause for specific achievements. Where? When? The
answer is wherever and whenever. At meetings or company-sponsored social
gatherings, a luncheon, or in the office. At the end of a shift, before a
shift, and whenever possible in the middle of a shift.
Using plaques
or trophies is another effective way of applauding your people. Although
"wooden applause" is often successfully used in the form of Employee
of the Month plaques, more creative ideas are sorely underutilized. Take the
time to be creative, matching special accomplishments with unique awards.
3. One-on-One
Coaching. Coaching is
employee development. Your only cost is time. Time means you care. And remember
your people don't care how much you know... until they know how much you care.
Whenever the
emphasis is on positive feedback, I make sure to do this coaching in
"public." Whenever you recognize and encourage people in
"public," it acts as a natural stimulant for others who are close
enough to see or hear what's taking place.
4. Training. Is training ever finished? Can you possibly overtrain? NO
and NO. For whatever reasons, too many people feel "My people have already
been trained" or "I've got good people...they only need a little
training." But training never ends. Schedule "tune- up" training
sessions. These should be led by you or by a supervisor with help from specific
employees who show a particular strength in the skills taught. I know this
takes time, but these types of training sessions will continually enhance the
performance of your people and the productivity of your business.
5. Career
Path. Your employees need to know what is
potentially ahead for them, what opportunities there are for growth. This issue
is a sometimes forgotten ingredient as to the importance it plays in the
overall motivation of people.
Set career
paths within your organization. Do you promote from within? I hope you can
answer yes to that. Although specific circumstances require you to look for
talent outside your company you should always first consider internal
personnel. If you do this you are sending a very positive message to every one
that there are indeed further career opportunities within your organization.
6. Job
Titles. When you talk about job titles you are
tapping the self-esteem of people. How someone feels about the way they are
perceived in the workforce is a critical component to overall attitude and
morale. Picture a social gathering that includes some of your staff. The
subject of work inevitably comes up. Will your people be proud, or embarrassed,
to share their title and workplace? The importance of feeling proud of who you
are and what you do is monumental.
Be creative as
you think of possibilities for titles. Have your staff come up with ideas
giving them input into the titles. Bottom line, you are dealing with
pride...and pride enhances a positive attitude...and a positive attitude is the
foundation for continuing success.
7. Good Work
Environment. A recent industry study shows just how
inaccurate your results can be. Employers were asked to rank what they thought
motivated their people
and then employees were asked to rank what really did motivate them.
and then employees were asked to rank what really did motivate them.
Employers felt
"working conditions" was a nine (or next to last) in terms of
importance. What did the employees say? Number two! Working conditions are very
important to the way employees feel about where they work.
Cosmetically,
does your office look nice? Are there pictures on the walls, plants and fresh
paint among other features that generally make people feel good about their
environment? Does their work space have enough room or are they cramped in a
"sardine can?" What about furniture? Is the desk the right size,
chair comfortable? Is there file space and do they have the miscellaneous
office supplies needed for maximum performance? Is the temperature regulated
properly so they don't feel they're in the Amazon jungle one minute and the
North Pole the next?
8. On-the-Spot
Praise. This too is associated with recognition
but the key here is timing. When there is a reason for praising someone don't
put it off for any reason! Promptness equals effectiveness. Praise people when
the achievement is fresh on everyone's mind.
What is
effective is for us to get off our keisters and go out and tell whoever it is
what a great presentation it was or applaud them for the sale...praise them
promptly for what they accomplished or achieved! Don't allow time to creep in
and snatch away any ounce of the positive impact that praise can have when it
is delivered promptly.
9. Leadership
Roles. Give your
people leadership roles to reward their performance and also to help you
identify future promotable people. Most people are stimulated by leadership
roles even in spot appearances. For example, when visitors come to your
workplace use this opportunity to allow an employee to take the role of
visitors guide.
A great place
to hand out leadership roles is to allow your people to lead brief meetings.
Utilize your employees' strengths and skills by setting up "tune up"
training sessions and let one of your employees lead the
training. The best time to do this is when new people start.
Or, assign a
meeting leader after someone has attended an outside seminar or workshop. Have
them lead a post show, briefing the other employees regarding seminar content
and highlights.
Have your
employees help you lead a project team to improve internal processes.
10. Team
Spirit. Have a picture
taken on your entire staff (including you!), have it enlarged and hang it in a
visible spot. Most people like to physically see themselves as part of a group
or team.
When running
contests in your area, try to create contests and affiliated activity that are
team driven. People driving to reach goals together definitely enhance team
spirit solely because they must lean upon others and be prepared to be leaned
on.
One very
effective idea for me has been building a collage of creative ideas with the
"Team" theme. All employees are responsible for submitting a phrase
referring to TEAM on a weekly rotation. Each of these ideas (such as TEAM:
Total Enthusiasm of All Members or There is no I in Team) is placed on a wall,
creating a collage of Team-oriented phrases. Don't have one person responsible
for this...do it as a team.
11. Executive
Recognition. This is the
secret weapon. And like any secret weapon, timing is most critical. If this is
used too often the value is diminished. And if it is used only for special
occasions and rare achievements the value is escalated. We talked earlier about
general recognition and the positive impact that has on your people. That will
go up a few notches when it comes from an executive. Some of the same vehicles
can be used here such as memos and voice mail. To add yet another level of
stimulation, have an executive either personally call to congratulate someone
(or a group) or even show up in person to shake hands and express his or her
appreciation.
12. Social
Gatherings. Scheduled
offsite events enhance bonding which in turn helps team spirit, which
ultimately impacts your positive work environment. Halloween costume parties,
picnics on July 4th, Memorial Day or Labor Day, and Christmas parties are only
some of the ideas that successfully bring people together for an enjoyable
time. Some others that I've used with equal success are softball games (against
other companies or among employees, depending on staff size), groups going
putt-putt golfing or movie madness.
13. Casual
Dress Day. This will
apply more to the Business-to-Business world based on the difference in normal
dress codes from the Business-to-Consumer arena. For those required to
"dress business" every day a casual day becomes a popular desire. Use
holidays to create theme color casual days such as red and green before
Christmas or red, white and blue before July 4th, or black and orange prior to
Halloween. This will add to the impact you're trying to have by calling a
casual day in the first place. Establish pre-vacation casual days for each
individual employee to enjoy on the day before his or her vacation.
Major sports
events are a perfect opportunity for casual days to support your local or
favorite team with appropriate colors, buttons, and logo wear. Spontaneous
casual days produce a lot or stimulation based on the element of surprise.
Announce a casual dress day for the following work day "just
because." Use individual or team casual dress days as contest prizes or
awards for specific accomplishment.
14. Time Off. Implement contests that earn time off. People will
compete for 15 minutes or 1/2 hour off just as hard as they will for a cash
award. And in many cases, I have had people pick time off over cash when given
the choice. Put goals in place (padded of course) and when these goals are
reached by individuals, teams or the entire staff, reward them with time off.
Allow early dismissals, late arrivals, and extended lunch periods or additional
breaks.
15. Outside
Seminars. Outside seminars are a stimulating
break. Because outside seminars are not always cost efficient for most people,
consider on-site seminars or workshops for your staff. Use outside seminars as
a contest prize for one or two people. Then set up a structured plan for those
seminar attendees to briefly recreate the seminar to the rest of your people
when they return. Now everyone gets educated for the price of one.
16. Additional
Responsibility. There are definitely employees in your
organization who are begging for and can handle additional responsibility. Our
job as managers is to identify who they are and if possible match
responsibilities to their strengths and desires.
17. Theme
Contests. Over the years
my contests have produced up to 170% increase in performance. But equally as
important, they've helped maintain positive environments that have reduced
employee turnover by 400%.
Overall the
most successful contests seem to be those affiliated with different themes.
Holidays, anniversaries, sports and culture are examples of ideas to base contests
on. Sports, without a doubt, provide the largest opportunity for a wide variety
of contests. Even Culture can be used to create theme contest. My favorite is
using the '50s and '60s as a theme for a contest that I run at least once a
year.
18. Stress
Management. There are many articles and books
available on the subject. Make this reference material available to your
people. Make sure they know it is available and encourage them to use it.
If possible,
have an in-house seminar on stress management techniques. So that production
time is not lost, you might consider having a brown bag luncheon with a guest
speaker on this subject. Because stress is an ongoing concern, anytime is a
good time for a seminar like this to take place.
Be as flexible
as you can with breaks during the course of the day.
19.
Pizza/Popcorn/Cookie Days. Every now and then pizza, popcorn, or cookie days will
help break up that everyday routine and help people stay motivated. Because it
is a natural tendency for people to get excited in anticipation of something,
structure some of these days in advance. Then buy some pizzas or different
cookies or even whip out some different types of popcorn.
20. Gags and
Gimmicks. Use different
gimmicks as awards to help inspire performance increases from your people. The
key to awards is establishing the perception of priceless value that is
associated with them. They should be recognized as status symbols in your
environment. Here are some of my ideas:
- Plastic/rubber whale for "whale" of a performance.
- Pillsbury dough boy for the person raisin' the most bread.
- Cardboard stars for star-studded performances.
- Plastic phonograph records for setting a new record.
- California raisins for those with the highest percentage of "raisin" their productivity.
- Special parking space for the person who drives the hardest.
- Toy cymbals for those "symbolizing" total effort.
- Special Mountain Dew can for that person who exemplifies the "can do" attitude.
- A figurine of E.T. for out-of-this-world performance.
- The Eveready Bunny for those that keep going, and going, and going.
- Large Tootsie Roll replica for those on a "roll."