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10 Guidelines for Recognizing &
Rewarding Employees
A good recognition and reward system
provides employees with three
things:
-
A fair return for their efforts
-
Motivation to maintain and
improve their performance
-
A clarification of what
behaviors and outcomes the
organization values
Here are 10 Guidelines for
recognizing and rewarding employees
that you can use to help develop a
successful program:
-
Involve employees in
designing your recognition
program.
You don't need a lot of money to
implement a meaningful
recognition program. Employees
will take pride in a token award
when it acknowledges they did a
good job that impressed their
boss and peers.
One way to give your recognition
program that kind of credibility
is to involve employees in
creating and administering it.
If they design it, they will
know exactly what they have to
do to earn rewards. They will
know what their peers have to do
also, so they will respect other
winners. They can also ensure
that the program provides
everyone in the department with
an opportunity to earn a reward.
-
Specify reward criteria.
Too often, awards for things
like "innovation," "showing
initiative," and "quality
improvement" don't define what
employees need to do to win.
Without that information, some
employees will be stymied before
they begin.
When a winner is announced,
employees may attribute a
co-worker's success to
favoritism or luck. Or, if you
offer an award on an ongoing
basis, such as "employee of the
month," they may begin to think
everyone's turn comes up
eventually.
-
Reward everyone who meets the
criteria.
You could announce a contest,
urge everyone to participate,
provide plenty of reminders
during the contest period, and
announce the winner with a
flourish. Then what? You've got
one winner and a lot of losers
who discover that their hard
work did not pay off.
For a longer-term impact,
determine specific criteria -
individual goals - and reward
everyone who meets them.
Publicize each accomplishment
and acknowledge each achiever.
As long as the criteria are
meaningful - the more winners
the better!
-
Recognize behaviors as well
as outcomes.
In most organizations, results
earn rewards. That's
appropriate, but it lessens the
opportunity to use recognition
as a way to encourage poor
performers to improve. Since
they don't produce many
worthwhile results, they seldom
get rewarded.
By recognizing small behavior
shifts - arriving on time,
correcting mistakes, helping
another person - you can
reinforce incremental
improvements. This doesn't mean
you should arrange a parade in
someone's honor just because the
person finally did what was
expected. A sincere thank you or
some specific positive feedback
is an appropriate response.
-
Individualize rewards.
Give people what they want.
Before you give a workaholic a
week off, make sure it won't
feel like exile to that person.
On the other hand, before you
reward someone with an exciting
new project, find out if the
recipient will be thrilled or
feel burdened.
-
Say "thank you" frequently.
"Thank you" is always timely. It
is as useful to acknowledge
small successes as it is to
recognize major achievements. It
validates the importance of work
people do. And it starts a chain
reaction: Pretty soon more
people start saying it to more
people, boosting morale and
improving relationships as well
as motivating people to work
well.
-
Nurture self-esteem.
When you give people positive,
specific, and realistic feedback
about their potential, their
efforts, and their
accomplishments, their
self-esteem goes up. They
develop into employees with
confidence to set and meet
challenging goals, overcome
setbacks, and self-manage their
work.
-
Foster intrinsic rewards.
Intrinsic rewards are the good
feelings people get from doing
their work; enjoyment of the
task, excitement about the
opportunities, pride in doing a
good job. You can't hand someone
an intrinsic reward, but you can
create an environment that
encourages these feelings. Make
sure people know their work is
worthwhile, treat problems as
opportunities for innovation,
encourage people to try new ways
of doing things, and let them
know when they have done a good
job.
-
Reward the whole team.
For team accomplishments, it's
important to reward the whole
team, or you foster competition,
not cooperation, among team
members. Still, there are always
some team members who give more
effort, and sometimes there are
members who coast along on the
efforts of others. When the
coasters get the same reward and
the doers, resentment occurs.
Some companies are meeting this
challenge with a double-tiered
system of team and individual
rewards. What ties it together
is that for individual rewards,
the assessors are fellow team
members.
-
Be careful: You get what you
reward.
We've all seen it. An
organization publishes its
values, then rewards people for
behaving quite differently.
Since one of the things rewards
do is clarify for employees what
the organization really wants,
they quickly determine that the
stated values are meaningless.
If you are looking for teamwork,
be sure you aren't rewarding
competition. If you want people
to resolve problems, don't
reward them for covering up
complaints. If you ask for
initiative, you may even need to
reward people for doing things
in ways that make you
uncomfortable.
Overall, remember that employees
can feel rewarded in many ways,
not merely with cash. For top
performers, increased
responsibility and lessened
supervision can be rewards in
themselves, as can flexible
schedules, additional time off,
first pick of desirable
assignments, and so on. The
point is, the employee must
indeed feel that he or she is
being rewarded for both working
hard and getting results. Good
luck!
This information was obtained
from AOCNet.com
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