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What Really Motivates Employees
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| Guest post by: Jeb Blount |
Article Overview: Each week I travel the country speaking to groups of leaders at meeting and conferences. No matter where I go I’m asked the same question time and again by leaders ranging from frontline managers to CEOs , “How can I motivate my employees?” I’ve heard this question repeated thousands of times. However, what the person asking usually means is “How can I manipulate my employees to do what I want them to do?”
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What Really Motivates Employees
Managers
and companies from every walk of life waste billions of dollars on manipulation
disguised as incentives in an attempt to change employee behavior. Sometimes
they get short-term results, but manipulation never works over the long haul.
Because motivating people is such a mystery for leaders a $30 billion industry
has been built around helping companies motivate their people. There is
certainly nothing wrong with providing valuable incentives to employees who do
a good job, but what these programs don’t do is teach leaders how to tap into
what really motivates employees.
Take
Steve, a regional account executive for a huge business services company. In a
management shake-up his company hired a new vice president of sales. The new VP
came in full of ideas. One of those ideas was to build a national incentive program.
In doing so, he took the local budgets away from his sales managers and
insisted that any recognition be in compliance and under auspices of the
corporate office and the national sales incentive program. He established a
process, rules for recognizing the salespeople, hired a staff to administer the
program, and proudly announced the new and improved program to his field sales
team of over 1,000 people.
Steve
was a consistent top performer for the company, so it wasn’t a surprise when he
sold more than anyone else on his team the quarter after the program was
announced. “About a month after the end of the quarter, UPS dropped a box off
on my front porch. Inside was a plaque with my name on it, a catalogue, and a
form letter congratulating me on my achievement that explained what I could
order from the catalogue.” Steve shook his head in disgust as he told me his
story. “It meant nothing to me. I threw the plaque back in the box and handed
the catalogue to my wife. No one, not even my manager, called to say anything
about the award. At least before the program, we would all go out to dinner at
the end of the quarter and my sales manager would toast all the top
performers.”
He
went on to tell me about the other plaques he’d been awarded that were still gathering
dust in his closet. “This was truly the dumbest recognition program in the
history of sales. It did not motivate me in the least. But what really pissed
me off was when I found out that they were deducting taxes from my paycheck for
the value of the prizes in the catalog they sent me. I finally went to my
manager to ask that they not send me anymore catalogues. I was making plenty of
money, and all I really wanted was a pat on the back in front of the other
salespeople on my team.” Steve eventually was recruited away and said he is
very happy at his new company.
If
you are shaking your head, believe me—this is not the worst story I’ve heard.
Unfortunately, far too many leaders have no idea what actually motivates
people. They wrongly assume that there is a complex motivation formula, and the
gurus and companies in the employee-incentive trade encourage this false
notion.
What Really Motivates People
The reality is
that motivating people is extremely simple. Psychologists and social scientists
have proven time and again that the most powerful motivators of people are
achievement and the recognition of
that achievement. It is important to note that these two elements cannot be
separated. Achievement in the absence of recognition is rarely rewarding, and
recognition in absence of achievement is empty.
However, when
people are given the opportunity to achieve (win) and those achievements are
recognized by leaders, amazing things happen. People who are being consistently
recognized for their achievements report higher job satisfaction and perform at
higher levels than those who are not. In virtually any organization, leaders
who consistently find ways to recognize the achievement of their employees
through positive emotional experiences deliver superior results.
Recognition, to
be effective, must be directed at achievement, big and small. Most leaders find
it easy to recognize the big achievements. However, where the top leaders excel
is in consistently recognizing the many small achievements required for big
things to happen.
One of the
easiest ways to motivate people for small achievements is to catch them doing
something right and recognize them for it. The secret is paying attention.
Recognizing small, everyday achievements is difficult for leaders who are under
pressure to produce results because they are often so focused on delivering on
plans, tasks, or fixing a problem that it is easy to forget to take time to pat
people on the back.
One of leader who
is highly regarded by her team admitted to me that although she knew it was
important to consistently recognize small achievements she found it difficult
to remember to give those pats on the back. So she devised a simple trick. Each
morning she put a handful of chocolates in her pocket. Each time she recognized
an employee for doing something right, she ate a chocolate. “It worked for me
because I love chocolate and I rewarded myself for doing the right thing for my
people.”
Another manager
we interviewed explained that with the unrelenting demands of his workday,
which often included back-to-back meetings, it was often impossible to
recognize achievements in real time. “I found that on many days I would be
working late after all my people had gone home. One night after a particularly
hard week where my team had gone above and beyond, I wrote personalized
thank-yous on sticky pads and stuck them on everyone’s computer screens. The
reaction the next morning was amazing. People were coming into my office to
thank me! It meant so much to them. After that I made it a regular part of my
day to recognize outstanding performance with after-hours sticky notes.”
When
it comes to motivation, thoughtful recognition of achievement in real time will
take you to the next level as a leader. Certainly big experiences, like
national sales meetings, president’s clubs, special recognition dinners,
contests, trips, and so on are appropriate opportunities to recognize and appreciate
employees for big achievements. However, in most cases small gestures carry far
more meaning than big ones.
Article Tags: auspices, billions of dollars, budgets, business services company, disgust, employee behavior, front porch, good job, long haul, manipulation, new vp, plaque, regional account executive, rsquo, sales incentive program, sales managers, salespeople, top performer, ups, waste billions
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About the Author: Jeb Blount RSS for Jeb's articles - Visit Jeb's website Jeb Blount is CEO of The Sales Leadership Group, author of PowerPrinciples, the creator of the popular internet sales community, http://www.SalesGravy.com and the host of the top rated Sales Motivation Podcast on iTunes, SalesGravy: PowerPrinciples. Considered one of the leading experts in sales and sales leadership with over 20 years experience in Fortune 500 sales and marketing, Jeb holds a core philosophy that in sales and life there are a handful of basics, which if focused on intently, will drive peak performance and achievement. He seeks to remove complexity from inevitable challenges, and instead, focuses individuals and businesses on key actions that deliver quick and sustainable results. http://www.jebaudio.com http://www.reachsales.com Click here to visit Jeb's website In the Workplace Trust is Fragile The Small Voice of Adversity The Five Levers of Leadership You Need Your People More Than They Need You What Really Motivates Employees |
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