A motivated employee is more engaged, and an engaged employee is more productive. Gallup calculations on the U.S. workplace indicate 34 percent of workers are engaged (a survey high), 13 percent are “actively disengaged” (a new low – in a good way), and that engagement is a key driver of positive business outcomes. Ready to engage? Explore our 5 proven employee motivation strategies.
To fully appreciate the Gallup data points, you must understand “engagement” and “motivation” in respect to business. Motivation is the desire to get something done; engagement is the process of getting something done.
Intrinsic motivation comes from within (pride, satisfaction), and extrinsic motivation derives from an external source (bonuses, praise).
Now we’re ready to talk 5 proven motivation strategies.
Cue the human resources department. It’s up to your screeners to assess job applicants’ motivation. You’re looking for a responsible person who can focus on a task and stick with it, someone who has skills and finds pleasure in using them, a person with commitment and energy.
You can supply extrinsic motivation, from competitive wages and benefits to kudos and citations, but you’ll get more wins in the motivation game if you start with team members who have a propensity for intrinsic motivation.
Your business needs clear statements of mission and vision. There’s a difference. Consider the Make-a-Wish Foundation. Its stated mission is “to create life-changing wishes for children with critical illnesses.” Its stated vision is “to grant the wish of every child diagnosed with a critical illness.”
It’s about setting goals, distant and immediate, tangible and abstract, on organizational and personal levels. Business2Community.com notes that employee performance goals help with:
Communication in the workplace matters a lot, be it boss to subordinate, employee to supervisor, or peer to peer. In fact, communication skills are a make-or-break factor in almost every aspect of every endeavor:
The problems associated with a failure to give or take feedback regularly and properly are myriad. Business News Daily lists four common communication failures:
Defaulting to email. Inboxes stay full because too many people turn to the keyboard instead of grabbing a phone or some facetime.
Inside news breaking on the outside. If something external is going to hit home, be it a market swing or a takeover, leadership has a responsibility to inform employees before they are awash in rumors and misinformation.
Information silos. This is when necessary information stays locked up in the department or person of origin. In a word, the solution is collaboration.
Remote employee isolation. Distant teams, branches, team members need to be kept in the loop.
The workplace and play space have something in common: constant change. So, whether you’re leading an aerospace design squad or a softball team, two keys to regularly winning are adaptability and flexibility.
Here are some adaptability goals your workers should strive to achieve:
This is a two-way street. Employee adaptability that advances organizational goals should be met with workplace flexibility that improves employees’ lives:
The online publication Entrepreneur recommends having a reward system for employees that addresses compensation, benefits, recognition, and appreciation:
The best leaders are great motivators who recognize obstacles such as generation gaps. They also know that lessons in leadership can be found in magical places and in more traditional settings such as brick-and-mortar classrooms and online.
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