Have
You Been Appreciated Lately?
-
Six Steps to Make Yourself and Others Feel Better at Work by Bob
Selden
©2006
The National Learning Institute
Used
with permission of the author:
Author: Bob Selden
Managing Director
The National Learning Institute
http://www.nationallearning.com.au/
10 April 2006
We all want to be associated with a winner,
be it a winning person, a winning team, a worthwhile cause or a
successful organisation. We
all have sports people, teams, actors or artists that we consider
“ours”. When they
do well, we bask in their reflected glory.
It’s the same at work - we want to be associated with a
worthwhile “winning” organisation.
Our greatest reward is receiving acknowledgment that we
have contributed to making something meaningful happen.
More than anything else, people want to be valued for a job
well done by those they hold in high regard.
A famous study by Lawrence Lindahl in the
1940’s came up with some surprising results.
When supervisors and their employees were asked to list
“What motivates the employees?” . . .
-
Employees
listed “appreciation of a job well done” as number one and
“feeling in on things” as number two.
-
Supervisors,
on the other hand, expected the employees would rank these two
items as eighth and tenth respectively (supervisors thought
employees would put wages as number one and promotion number
two!).
These results were replicated in similar
studies in the 1980’s and again in the 1990’s.
In another recent study, employees were asked to rank
job-based incentives – “personal thank-you’s” came first
and “a note of appreciation from my manager” came second.
“Money” came in at 16th!
Praise, the thing that motivates us the
most, takes so little time and costs nothing!
Famous management writer Rosabeth Moss Kantor once said “Compensation
is a right. Recognition
is a gift.”
Have you appreciated the work of others
lately? Has the value
of your own work been appreciated?
Here’s a quick test - over the last week, have you:
-
Told someone they have done a
good job?
-
Looked specifically to find
someone doing something well?
-
Made someone else look good
rather than taking the credit yourself?
-
Thanked others for your own
success?
-
Passed on positive comments you
have heard about others?
These are simple examples of the things we
need to do regularly to acknowledge the good work of others.
You might say, “If it’s that easy, why
don’t more people do it?”
There are many reasons, but they all fall into two
categories – personal and organisational.
On a personal level, many of us are not
comfortable giving praise. We
may be awkward about it, or perhaps believe that people are paid
to do a job, so why do we have to praise them?
From an organisational perspective, it may
be the culture that is holding us back, or perhaps technology
preventing us from valuing the work of others.
For example, technology has changed the way many of us
operate. Email may
have replaced personal interaction, so we no longer see what
others do well – out of sight is out of mind, so how can we
praise good work if we don’t see it?
Here are six ways we can put praise for a
job well done back into our working lives.
1.
Look for things people do well
and acknowledge them for their good work.
2.
Be a model of acknowledgment –
show others it’s OK to give praise.
3.
Have a conversation with a
colleague about how to give praise for work well done.
4.
When people have performed above
the norm, write them a small thank you note.
5.
Encourage others to thank one
another and pass on stories of good work to your manager.
6.
Work to create a culture of
appreciation – make acknowledgment part of your daily routine.
Finally, you might get the ball rolling by
passing on this article to a colleague as an introduction on how
you both can encourage others to give more praise.
The essential point is that praise must be
frequent and given locally (by colleagues and managers).
It should not be seen as a corporate initiative or program,
but merely “the way we do things around here”.
What’s not been said so far, is that
praise must be genuine. People
in general are very good at spotting insincerity.
The message? When
you do praise someone, make sure it’s for the good work they
have done and not just for the sake of it.
A final word of warning.
Many organisations turn acknowledgment into an event.
They distort it with extrinsic motivators (such as money)
and taint it with internal competition.
Pure and simple, giving praise for a job well done is just
that – pure and simple.
So, find someone doing something good today
and simply tell them what a good job they’ve done!
If
you’d like to give me some thanks for this article, you can do
so at http://www.nationallearning.com.au/
Bob
Selden is the Managing Director of
the National Learning Institute and the author of the Negotiating
Advantage™, a blended learning process on negotiating.
You can get more information on Bob and the Negotiating
Advantage™ at http://www.nationallearning.com.au
http://www.nationallearning.com.au/index_files/NegotiatingAdvantageProfile.htm
Short description
Sometimes
the best things in life are free!
This article suggest a new twist on an old topic –
“praise”.
Key words
Motivated
employees, employee feedback, recognition, praise
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