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Motivating your team
People who are unhappy at work do their jobs badly, are often absent and are
likely to leave. Your business will suffer unless you understand what motivates your team
and take positive steps to understand and meet their needs.
The ability to manage people well comes easily to some, more difficult to others;
but is essential to business leaders. Whilst there is no magical formula, the
BusinessHR notes on motivating your team concentrate on the practical things
that you can do to make a difference.
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Your behaviour is one of the strongest influencers of the attitude and motivation
of your people. It is absolutely critical, therefore, that you are committed and
motivated yourself.
- Behave better than you would expect your best employee to behave.
- You dont own your employees, so recognise that they have an
important life outside work.
- Treat people as individuals and make allowances for their differences.
- Encourage team work and co-operation: bring your people together, talk
to them as a team, encourage people to get involved in each others jobs.
- Be consistent; dont have favourites. Dont allow relationships
outside work to affect work.
- Dont encourage employees to talk about each other to you.
- Never make promises you cant keep.
Remember that we are all at our most effective when we enjoy work:
- Review the content of each person's job regularly.
- Give responsibility by allowing decisions to be made at the most junior level possible.
- Routine and repetition is boring, reduces concentration levels and increases
the incidence of mistakes. Find ways to vary the methods, sequence and pace
of work.
- Move away from individuals working on one small part of a process to
teams working together on the whole process.
- Control is a motivator allow people as much control as possible
over the way in which they do their jobs.
- Consider giving people different jobs for a while,
or broadening the scope of their existing job.
Provide the best working environment that you can. Providing up to date
equipment, good facilities and nice surroundings can be a sound investment. Try to
avoid signaling that some employees are more important than others eg different
car parking arrangements, segregated eating areas. Allow people control over their
own environment and the freedom to make decisions that affect them.
Manage by objectives which are specific, agreed and
measurable
eg we are going to increase sales by 5% in Quarter 2. Measure everyones
contribution and help people to measure their own performance. People like to see
how well theyre doing. Set high standards that make people stretch
challenge is a big motivator. Meet regularly to discuss individuals
progress against their objectives.
Employees will take an interest in the business if they know whats going on:
- Keep them informed about whats going on, how the business is
doing, what the plans are.
- Involve employees in planning and innovations. This is highly motivating for
most. Involvement in decisions recognises an individuals value.
- Hold regular meetings with individuals and teams and make meetings a
positive experience. They should be a vehicle for two-way communication and
problems raised should be addressed.
Pay people fairly and competitively and link financial rewards to individual
performance whenever possible. Use incentives and bonuses wisely, to encourage and
reward superior performance.
Non-financial reward can be equally powerful: recognition from management can,
for example, be a real motivator. Other factors include:
- Being appreciated publicly eg an individuals success recognised at a
meeting or in a newsletter.
- Being asked to participate in special projects, as a recognition of an
employees contribution.
- A clear career development path, where promotion is seen as a reward for
outstanding performance (as well as the capability or potential to do the next job).
Show your appreciation. A simple thank you is often underestimated.
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