Customized versions of Entelechy's leadership development programs have changed the lives of hundreds of thousands of leaders throughout the years. And in all my experiences in working directly with leaders, one of the most irksome and frustrating is responding to the leader who doesn’t think motivating employees is their job.
In this article, I'd like to examine the arguments and offer my thoughts. Spoiler alert: it IS your job!
Before I address this argument, let's provide a little Motivation 101: There’s intrinsic motivation and extrinsic motivation:
While I would agree with most people — including the leader that says “it’s not my job” — that intrinsic motivation is most effective for true long-term behavior change, I feel that simply throwing up one's hands and shirking any responsibility for motivating employees on this premise is simply wrong for many reasons:
As Frederick Herzberg, motivation researcher, explains, “true motivation comes from achievement, personal development, job satisfaction, and recognition.” As leaders, we can set up the environment that drives the first three and we can directly provide the last one.
Recognizing employees once just doesn’t cut it. We all want to know that our efforts, our contributions, our ideas, and our involvement are appreciated. And that our continued efforts, contributions, ideas, and involvement are continually appreciated.
Here’s a thought: double whatever recognition you're now providing. If you provide someone positive praise once a month, try doing it TWICE a month. If you provide praise once a week, try catching someone doing something right TWICE a week. The fact of the matter is that in my experience, I have NEVER had anyone complain that their leader provides them with too much recognition and positive reinforcement.
No, please don’t reward people for expected behavior. (There are exceptions when you’re moving someone from unacceptable performance or behavior to acceptable. See our article on Difficult Conversations, This is Why You Get Paid the Big Bucks, for more information.)
However, I sense something else at play here. If you can’t find something exceptional — something beyond expected — in a person, then I don’t think you’re trying hard enough. And if you can’t find anything noteworthy about ANY of your team members, then I suggest that the problem isn’t them … it’s you.
Being able to recognize someone for something requires first that the person have the opportunity to rise to the occasion. That’s where you come in! Are you providing opportunities for your people to take on more, do more, do it faster or safer, or otherwise contribute in meaningful ways? Are you delegating to develop? Are you providing challenges? Are you giving your people the freedom to screw up and learn? Do you trust them to recover?
If you’re finding that no one on your team is worth recognizing, you may not be giving them opportunities to prove themselves.
John Steinbeck, great American author wrote, “Now that you don’t have to be perfect, you can be good.” What we as leaders should be looking for is progress, not perfection. If we only reward perfection (or best), we miss opportunities to recognize growth, effort, and potential:
Most leaders focus ONLY on results: most sales, lowest average handle time, fewest errors, etc. While results are important (keep recognizing them), sometimes people achieve results by accident, by luck, by being there the longest, or some reason other than something THEY did.
In our Motivating Employees module and eLearning, we suggest that leaders broaden their thinking to include more than results (tangible contributions) when recognizing team members:
Let me be clear: I am NOT about recognizing someone just because it’s their turn. Nor am I about inventing trivial reasons to recognize folks. But I WILL search hard for something that an individual did that demonstrates initiative, effort, persistence, collaboration, team building, and any one of a billion job-related behaviors and I will tell that person.
So, YOU’RE the leader! We’ve all encountered the manager who calls a group meeting to admonish the whole team publicly when everyone knows Isaac is the one who’s been coming in late. Don’t be that leader! Motivation — like discipline — is an individual thing.
Yes, you should be EQUITABLE — finding ways to motivate all the team members — but that doesn’t mean you need to be EQUAL. In fact, praising everyone when a single person should be recognized, or making up nice things to say about others when you’re truly recognizing one person not only dilutes the power of the recognition to the one who truly deserves it, your recognition of the others can come across as patronizing, a bit embarrassing, and is most certainly obvious to everyone.
A corollary to this excuse is “If I recognized only the ones worthy of recognition, then I keep recognizing the same people for the same things.”
Again, I think the problem stems from lack of trying. If you’re only recognizing one or two people over and over again because they’re the ones achieving the goals you set, then add more and different goals. As we illustrated in the graphic, you can recognize people for growth (most improved) or effort (most number of hours). Or if your recognition is bestowed only on the top person, change the recognition to include anyone above a certain threshold.
Of course, people prefer different types of praise and recognition, just as people differ in their communication preferences, the type of work they do, how they do it, with whom they do it, the level of autonomy, etc. People are different!
If Anshul prefers not to be called out in a staff meeting, praise her privately or maybe in an email if they would appreciate that more. Try a handwritten note.
At one of the companies we worked with, safety is a big deal. Each quarter, they would recognize a few employees for their safety records and safety efforts by sending their partner at home a thank you card (and, if I recall correctly, a gift certificate) recognizing that the family and the company are better off thanks to the safety efforts of the employee.
If you are looking for creative ideas for rewarding individuals, check out Bob Nelson’s 1501 Ways to Reward Employees.
Don’t let excuses or a lack of imagination keep you from recognizing and motivating your team. You won't regret it.
This article is the first in a two-part series. Be sure to reach the second article, Included Employees are Motivated Employees, for tips on how to best create a culture of inclusivity to inspire above-and-beyond performance. The end result will be a highly motivated — and engaged — workforce.