17 Proven Tactics for Motivating Employees and
Building a Stronger Team
Have there been instances when you noted a drop in your team’s
productivity or observed a behavioral change in someone who used to be an
excellent performer?
Before you blame the team for not being motivated enough or
worse still, choose to ignore these warning signs, look inwards and ask
yourself if YOU are doing enough to keep your team motivated in the first
place.
Motivating employees is extremely crucial. As the leader of the
pack, it is your responsibility to ensure each and every member of your team
feels valued, driven and motivated.
After all, you cannot expect a bunch of disengaged and
demotivated people to deliver results and grow your business, can you?
Here are 17 surefire tactics for motivating your employees and
building a productive team:
1. Show your
appreciation
In the whole race to achieve external business goals, leaders
often forget to value their most important assets — their employees.
The least you can do to boost performance and morale is to
appreciate your employees, recognize their efforts and give them credit when it
is due.
Whether it’s sending a personalized note, recognizing
achievements publicly during team huddles or even rewarding top performers at
the end of every month, you will be surprised to see how these small acts of
appreciation can go a long way.
2. Communicate
effectively
Effective communication can do wonders in motivating employees.
Who is a strong communicator? Someone who knows what they are talking about and
are able to convey their message accurately.
Communication is a lot more than just
language and talking. Factors such as eye
contact, active listening, hand gestures and postures also say a lot about a
person’s communication skills.
3. Be open to
dialogue
Gone are the days when leading through fear and putting on the
tough, distant leader act would work.
New age leadership is all about instilling trust by being
accessible and encouraging discussions. Your team needs to feel comfortable
speaking to you and you need to set the tone for such a camaraderie.
In spite of having a busy schedule, you can still show you care
through simple, effective acts.
For instance, having an open door policy, showing genuine
interest while interacting with your employees or even greeting your team
members helps breaking barriers and projects you as an accessible leader.
4. Provide
constructive criticism
Giving negative feedback is always tricky — you don’t want to
hurt feelings nor do you want the feedback to be taken lightly.
So, what do you do? The idea is to offer criticism such that it
inspires change and delivers results.
Firstly, take criticism behind closed doors because nothing
breaks self esteem the way calling out employees in public does.
Have a one-on-one discussion with the concerned person and make
your feedback very specific. Be clear about your expectations and offer
guidance on how they can improve.
Most importantly, give them the chance to explain their side of
the story too instead of jumping to conclusions.
5. Conduct
one-on-ones
Yes, you conduct weekly meetings with the team but how well do
you know them on a personal level?
While you may think this isn’t an important practice to follow,
it is one of the best ways to engage with your employees and identify what
drives them.
Conduct a one-one-one session every month and use it to
understand how your employees are doing and if they are facing any roadblocks.
More than reviewing performances, consider this as a
relationship building tool to ensure you are aligned with your team and are
working towards a shared, common goal.
6. Build training
programs
In this ever-changing business landscape, it is important to
ensure your employees are updated with the latest, relevant skills that can
help boost productivity and performance.
From imparting technical and soft skills to offering mentoring programs – investing
in training and development significantly helps in motivating employees and
keeps the learning going.
While conducting training programs, remember to keep them
engaging and interactive. They need to ultimately drive value and reinforce
learnings.
7. Offer growth
opportunities
Every employee envisions a different career path for themselves
and demotivation strikes the day they feel they have reached stagnation. As a
leader, you need to first be aligned with their goals and offer ample growth opportunities
that constantly keeps them engaged and motivated.
Growth opportunities go beyond just financial growth. While
money is a huge driving factor, what makes most people tick is making progress
in the company and going up the career ladder.
Being faced with new challenges and responsibilities lets them
push the envelope and broaden their knowledge and skills.
8. Reward them
Go beyond verbal recognition and reward employees for their
notable work. You can start an incentive program and reward top performers.
This ensures increased productivity and brings out the best in them.
If you don’t have enough budgets for that, you can also reward
top performers with movie tickets, a paid vacation or something as simple as
giving them the option to work from home.
Rewarding employees promotes healthy competition and motivates
them while meeting business goals.
9. Encourage team
outings
Employee motivation also stems from how connected the team is.
Invest time in team building because a team that works collaboratively is
likely to deliver better results.
From bowling nights to hosting team dinners – team outings are a
great way to get to know each other and bond. Assign someone from your team to
be in charge of organizing these monthly outings and make sure you join them
too!
10. Involve them
Involve your employees in decision making because when they are
involved, they feel more valued and part of a larger cause.
Seek your team’s opinion and encourage healthy debates within
the team. This boosts employee morale and challenges them to work harder as
they know they are in a position to make an impact and will be taken seriously.
11. Set meaningful
goals
In the beginning of the financial year, make sure you sit down
with each employee to set meaningful and realistic goals. The goal-setting
conversation is an extremely crucial one and needs to be a two-way street.
Whether your employee feels burdened or doesn’t feel inspired
enough by the assigned goals – this is the time to come to a consensus and
assign goals derived from business objectives that foster individual
development while keeping in mind their strengths and weaknesses.
12. Empower them
You cannot expect employees to be motivated for long if you
micro manage the team and do all the talking.
Trust your employees and empower them to take decisions.
Mistakes will happen but that is the only way they will learn.
Be open to discussions, delegate effectively, set your
expectations and give your team the freedom to do it their way.
13. Deal with
conflict
A conducive work environment is one wherein there is open
communication and trust, but every once in a while, you do encounter people in
the team who indulge in office politics and spread
negativity.
How much ever fulfilled an employee feels with their work,
gossiping co-workers are bound to ruin it for them. Workplace gossip if not
tackled hampers productivity and soils working relations.
As a responsible leader, you need to maintain a conducive work
environment and act as a mediator in such cases. Don’t be the leader who is
locked up in his/her cabin and is unaware of what is brewing within the team.
14. Implement a
flexible work culture
Flexible work cultures are a growing trend and are here to stay.
Whether it is offering flexible working hours or allowing
employees to work from home once in a month – a flexible work culture promotes
work-life balance and aids in employee satisfaction.
It shows that the management is sensitive to employees’
schedules and is thereby highly appreciated.
15. Host engaging
activities
All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy and we cannot agree
more! So, why not devote one day of the week to employee engagement activities?
From hosting baking competitions to introducing wellness
programs in the office – let your team have some fun beyond work. This keeps
the environment engaging, light-hearted and interesting, giving them all the
more reason to look forward to coming to work.
16. Maintain a
positive work space
Your employees spend more than half their day at work and in
order to keep them energized and motivated, it is important to maintain a
positive and inspiring work space.
Have a recreation center where employees can unwind after a hard
day’s work, offer free snacks and beverages and invest in an open office design
that promotes socializing and conversations.
These are simple yet effective ways to create a space your
employees will love coming to.
17. Avoid
discrimination
Any kind of discrimination, be it due to age, gender, religion
or race hugely impacts employee motivation and performance.
In order to avoid such cases, you must lay down rules against
discrimination and take strict action against accused employees. Lead by
example and make sure no one in the team is a victim of bias and
discrimination.
Adela Belin
https://www.lifehack.org/801667/motivating-employees
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