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Motivation
Made Simple
Copyright
© 2007 Wally
Bock
Used
with permission of the author (http://www.threestarleadership.com/bookreviewpermissionform.htm)
As [published on www.threestarleadership.com
Author:
Wally
Bock
Three Star Leadership Enterprises
http://www.threestarleadership.com
20
April 2007
If
you're a business owner then you've been told at least once that
you have to "motivate your people." But how do you do
that? Here's what you can do to get the job done.
Change your mindset. Forget about "motivating" people.
You can't see motivation. Motivation is inside another person's
head and heart. You can't touch it. You can't measure it. And,
therefore you can't manage it.
Think about managing the things you can see and measure. Start
concentrating on behavior and performance. The things people say
and do are behavior. The results of their efforts are performance.
Use the things you say and do to influence the behavior and
performance of the people who work for you. Talk your talk. Walk
your walk. Your people will pay attention to what you say and do
and try to do what you want them to do.
Set clear targets. If your people don't know what you want them to
do, they'll guess. And you may not get the behavior or performance
you want. Learn to give good directions. Constantly check for
understanding.
Tell people how they're doing. Give frequent and usable feedback.
If you're the boss, your job is to help your people succeed and
take away any excuses for failing.
Make sure that behavior and performance have consequences.
Consequences are the result of behavior and performance. If you
touch a hot stove, the pain you feel is a consequence of your
behavior. If you make a great sports play or cook a great meal,
the joy you feel is a consequence of your performance.
Good things should happen when behavior and performance are good.
We call those good things positive consequences.
Positive consequences include praise, a better assignment, time
off and cash. Positive consequences are things people want. They
get people to continue what they're doing or try something new.
Reward good behavior and performance. Catch people doing things
right.
Bad things should happen when behavior and performance are bad. We
call those bad things negative consequences.
Negative consequences include discipline, more work,
embarrassment, and penalties. They get people to stop what they're
doing. Make bad behavior and performance something that has a
consequence every time. And remember that lots of small
corrections are better than fewer, bigger corrections.
Keep doing it. This is work that is never done and it's the core
of your work as a boss. Great bosses do the things we're talking
about over and over, every day.
This may be simple, but it's not easy.
Wally
Bock helps organizations improve productivity and morale, as
well as deal with the challenges of massive Boomer retirements. He
is the author of Performance Talk (http://www.performancetalk.com/).
He writes the Three Star Leadership blog (http://blog.threestarleadership.com/),
coaches individual managers, and is a popular speaker at meetings
and conferences in the United States and elsewhere. Read
more about him in his own words: http://www.threestarleadership.com/learnwally.htm
and contact
him at email: wally@threestarleadership.com
and website: http://www.threestarleadership.com
.
Click
here for more resources to help you deal with the challenges of
the Boomer Brain Drain.
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Short summary
Motivating employees is futile; rather give them actions to
perform and set the desired example.
Keywords and relevant phrases
Behaviour, consequences, discipline, feedback, motivation,
objectives, penalties, performance, positive consequences,
targets, understanding.
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