Motivate Your Employees With This Proven Strategy
Businesses across the globe face the growing challenge of workforce retention and boosting employee engagement, while at the same time staying focused on results. Keeping employees happy while holding them accountable seem like mutually exclusive goals, but not according to David Hassell.
- Fear Doesn’t Motivate
“Intimidation doesn’t solicit authentic accountability, and any sense of responsibility born of fear won’t last long. Sure, people will get their work done, but it isn’t self-motivated. They’ll only perform to the point where they won’t incur your wrath,” Hassell explains.
Employees should be committed to their jobs from a place of desire, not fear. “Fear can motivate, but it will never inspire people to be more engaged and show up as accountable, reliable people,” he adds.
- Trust Your Employees
One way to ensure you’re not leading with fear is by trusting your employees. Trust is the center of accountability and the core of a healthy company culture. It leads to self-motivated engagement, instead of fear-driven motivation. Some studies show more autonomy leads to better employee performance.
“As the leader of an organization, your primary job is to communicate the vision, give people the information, tools and resources to march toward it, then get out of the way,” Hassell shares. “Not only will getting out of your staff’s way allow them to be as productive as possible, it will also allow you to focus on your responsibility to drive the company forward strategically.”
- Set Clear Expectations
The workplace moves quickly today, and employees can become confused by changing priorities and goals. It’s difficult to hold workers accountable if you don’t clearly explain expectations and update them regularly as projects and responsibilities shift.
“Without well-articulated goals, employees quickly get frustrated, and frustrated employees stare longingly at the exit sign,” Hassell explains.
- Focus on Positive Reinforcement
No one likes to have tough conversations about performance in the workplace—not employees and not managers either. But those conversations around poor performance are a part of accountability. Your move? Accentuate the positives.
Employees know when they’re falling short of goals. They don’t need a tongue-lashing; they need support. “Positive reinforcement and constant support work better than intimidation or fear of being fired,” Hassell says. “When employees know their manager supports them, they’re more likely to be fully engaged in their daily tasks.”
- Trust is a Two-Way Street
Leaders can model these values by holding themselves accountable. “A leader willing to say, ‘I dropped the ball on this initiative’ welcomes the same candor from everyone else at the company,” Hassell says.
Mutual trust also improves communication between managers and employees. “By regularly asking your team questions, you invite them to communicate their big wins, their innovative ideas, and the places where they’re stuck. You instill a sense of ownership in your talented team,” Hassell says.
Having those types of conversations regularly creates a safe environment in which accountability doesn’t seem like a burden, but rather a support mechanism.
Ultimately, your business can get the results it desires without throwing carrots around the office or using sticks to prod people into action. It just takes the right kind of accountability. He concludes, “By giving and receiving regular feedback in a culture that highly values trust and accountability, people will naturally show up more engaged, empowered, and driven to do their best.”
Source : Forbes