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Email Management Tips
Much inbox-related angst is easily avoided with a few
simple changes in what you use for email and how you
process it.
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Meetings
101
If you want to have more effective meetings, first you have
to learn the basics. Here are some simple, easy-to-follow
and proven guidelines that should be followed each and every
time your group meets.
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Why Your
Employees are Losing Motivation
Business
literature is packed with advice about worker
motivation—but sometimes managers are the problem, not
the inspiration. Here are seven practices to fire up the
troops.
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Why your
Employees are Losing Motivation
Business literature is
packed with advice about worker motivation—but sometimes
managers are the problem, not the inspiration. Here are
seven practices to fire up the troops. From Harvard
Management Update.
Most companies have it all wrong. They don't have to
motivate their employees. They have to stop demotivating
them.
The great majority of employees are quite enthusiastic when
they start a new job. But in about 85 percent of companies,
our research finds, employees' morale sharply declines after
their first six months—and continues to deteriorate for
years afterward. That finding is based on surveys of about
1.2 million employees at 52 primarily Fortune 1000 companies
from 2001 through 2004, conducted by Sirota Survey
Intelligence (Purchase, New York).
The fault lies squarely at the feet of management—both the
policies and procedures companies employ in managing their
workforces and in the relationships that individual managers
establish with their direct reports.
Our research shows how individual managers' behaviors and
styles are contributing to the problem (see sidebar "How
Management Demotivates")—and what they can do to turn this
around.
Three key goals of people at work
To maintain the enthusiasm employees bring to their jobs
initially, management must understand the three sets of
goals that the great majority of workers seek from their
work—and then satisfy those goals:
Equity: To be respected and to be treated fairly in areas
such as pay, benefits, and job security.
Achievement: To be proud of one's job, accomplishments, and
employer.
Camaraderie: To have good, productive relationships with
fellow employees.
To maintain an enthusiastic workforce, management must meet
all three goals. Indeed, employees who work for companies
where just one of these factors is missing are three times
less enthusiastic than workers at companies where all
elements are present.
One goal cannot be substituted for another. Improved
recognition cannot replace better pay, money cannot
substitute for taking pride in a job well done, and pride
alone will not pay the mortgage.
What individual managers can do
Satisfying the three goals depends both on organizational
policies and on the everyday practices of individual
managers. If the company has a solid approach to talent
management, a bad manager can undermine it in his unit. On
the flip side, smart and empathetic managers can overcome a
great deal of corporate mismanagement while creating
enthusiasm and commitment within their units. While
individual managers can't control all leadership decisions,
they can still have a profound influence on employee
motivation.
The most important thing is to provide employees with a
sense of security, one in which they do not fear that their
jobs will be in jeopardy if their performance is not perfect
and one in which layoffs are considered an extreme last
resort, not just another option for dealing with hard times.
But security is just the beginning. When handled properly,
each of the following eight practices will play a key role
in supporting your employees' goals for achievement, equity,
and camaraderie, and will enable them to retain the
enthusiasm they brought to their roles in the first place.
Achievement related
1. Instill an inspiring purpose. A critical condition for
employee enthusiasm is a clear, credible, and inspiring
organizational purpose: in effect, a "reason for being" that
translates for workers into a "reason for being there" that
goes above and beyond money.
Every manager should be able to expressly state a strong
purpose for his unit. What follows is one purpose statement
we especially admire. It was developed by a three-person
benefits group in a midsize firm.
Benefits are about people. It's not whether you have the
forms filled in or whether the checks are written. It's
whether the people are cared for when they're sick, helped
when they're in trouble.
This statement is particularly impressive because it was
composed in a small company devoid of high-powered executive
attention and professional wordsmiths. It was created in the
type of department normally known for its fixation on
bureaucratic rules and procedures. It is a statement truly
from the heart, with the focus in the right place: on the
ends—people—rather than the means—completing forms.
To maintain an enthusiastic workforce, management must meet
all three goals.
Stating a mission is a powerful tool. But equally important
is the manager's ability to explain and communicate to
subordinates the reason behind the mission. Can the manager
of stockroom workers do better than telling her staff that
their mission is to keep the room stocked? Can she
communicate the importance of the job, the people who are
relying on the stockroom being properly maintained, both
inside and outside the company? The importance for even
goods that might be considered prosaic to be where they need
to be when they need to be there? That manager will go a
long way toward providing a sense of purpose.
2. Provide recognition. Managers should be certain that all
employee contributions, both large and small, are
recognized. The motto of many managers seems to be, "Why
would I need to thank someone for doing something he's paid
to do?" Workers repeatedly tell us, and with great feeling,
how much they appreciate a compliment. They also report how
distressed they are when managers don't take the time to
thank them for a job well done yet are quick to criticize
them for making mistakes.
Receiving recognition for achievements is one of the most
fundamental human needs. Rather than making employees
complacent, recognition reinforces their accomplishments,
helping ensure there will be more of them.
A pat on the back, simply saying "good going," a dinner for
two, a note about their good work to senior executives, some
schedule flexibility, a paid day off, or even a flower on a
desk with a thank-you note are a few of the hundreds of ways
managers can show their appreciation for good work. It works
wonders if this is sincere, sensitively done, and
undergirded by fair and competitive pay—and not considered a
substitute for it.
3. Be an expediter for your employees. Incorporating a
command-and-control style is a sure-fire path to
demotivation. Instead, redefine your primary role as serving
as your employees' expediter: It is your job to facilitate
getting their jobs done. Your reports are, in this sense,
your "customers." Your role as an expediter involves a range
of activities, including serving as a linchpin to other
business units and managerial levels to represent their best
interests and ensure your people get what they need to
succeed.
How do you know, beyond what's obvious, what is most
important to your employees for getting their jobs done? Ask
them! "Lunch and schmooze" sessions with employees are
particularly helpful for doing this. And if, for whatever
reason, you can't immediately address a particular need or
request, be open about it and then let your workers know how
you're progressing at resolving their problems. This is a
great way to build trust.
4. Coach your employees for improvement. A major reason so
many managers do not assist subordinates in improving their
performance is, simply, that they don't know how to do this
without irritating or discouraging them. A few basic
principles will improve this substantially.
First and foremost, employees whose overall performance is
satisfactory should be made aware of that. It is easier for
employees to accept, and welcome, feedback for improvement
if they know management is basically pleased with what they
do and is helping them do it even better.
Space limitations prevent a full treatment of the subject of
giving meaningful feedback, of which recognition is a
central part, but these key points should be the basis of
any feedback plan:
Performance feedback is not the same as an annual appraisal.
Give actual performance feedback as close in time to the
occurrence as possible. Use the formal annual appraisal to
summarize the year, not surprise the worker with past
wrongs.
Recognize that workers want to know when they have done
poorly. Don't succumb to the fear of giving appropriate
criticism; your workers need to know when they are not
performing well. At the same time, don't forget to give
positive feedback. It is, after all, your goal to create a
team that warrants praise.
Comments concerning desired improvements should be specific,
factual, unemotional, and directed at performance rather
than at employees personally. Avoid making overall
evaluative remarks (such as, "That work was shoddy") or
comments about employees' personalities or motives (such as,
"You've been careless"). Instead, provide specific, concrete
details about what you feel needs to be improved and how.
Keep the feedback relevant to the employee's role. Don't let
your comments wander to anything not directly tied to the
tasks at hand.
Listen to employees for their views of problems. Employees'
experience and observations often are helpful in determining
how performance issues can be best dealt with, including how
you can be most helpful.
Remember the reason you're giving feedback—you want to
improve performance, not prove your superiority. So keep it
real, and focus on what is actually doable without demanding
the impossible.
Follow up and reinforce. Praise improvement or engage in
course correction—while praising the effort—as quickly as
possible.
Don't offer feedback about something you know nothing about.
Get someone who knows the situation to look at it.
Equity related
5. Communicate fully. One of the most counterproductive
rules in business is to distribute information on the basis
of "need to know." It is usually a way of severely,
unnecessarily, and destructively restricting the flow of
information in an organization.
A command-and-control style is a sure-fire path to
demotivation.
Workers' frustration with an absence of adequate
communication is one of the most negative findings we see
expressed on employee attitude surveys. What employees need
to do their jobs and what makes them feel respected and
included dictate that very few restrictions be placed by
managers on the flow of information. Hold nothing back of
interest to employees except those very few items that are
absolutely confidential.
Good communication requires managers to be attuned to what
employees want and need to know; the best way to do this is
to ask them! Most managers must discipline themselves to
communicate regularly. Often it's not a natural instinct.
Schedule regular employee meetings that have no purpose
other than two-way communication. Meetings among management
should conclude with a specific plan for communicating the
results of the meetings to employees. And tell it like it
is. Many employees are quite skeptical about management's
motives and can quickly see through "spin." Get continual
feedback on how well you and the company are communicating.
One of the biggest communication problems is the assumption
that a message has been understood. Follow-up often finds
that messages are unclear or misunderstood.
Companies and managers that communicate in the ways we
describe reap large gains in employee morale. Full and open
communication not only helps employees do their jobs but
also is a powerful sign of respect.
6. Face up to poor performance. Identify and deal decisively
with the 5 percent of your employees who don't want to work.
Most people want to work and be proud of what they do (the
achievement need). But there are employees who are, in
effect, "allergic" to work—they'll do just about anything to
avoid it. They are unmotivated, and a disciplinary
approach—including dismissal—is about the only way they can
be managed. It will raise the morale and performance of
other team members to see an obstacle to their performance
removed.
Camaraderie related
7. Promote teamwork. Most work requires a team effort in
order to be done effectively. Research shows repeatedly that
the quality of a group's efforts in areas such as problem
solving is usually superior to that of individuals working
on their own. In addition, most workers get a motivation
boost from working in teams.
Whenever possible, managers should organize employees into
self-managed teams, with the teams having authority over
matters such as quality control, scheduling, and many work
methods. Such teams require less management and normally
result in a healthy reduction in management layers and
costs.
Creating teams has as much to do with camaraderie as core
competences. A manager needs to carefully assess who works
best with whom. At the same time, it is important to create
the opportunity for cross-learning and diversity of ideas,
methods, and approaches. Be clear with the new team about
its role, how it will operate, and your expectations for its
output.
Related to all three factors
8. Listen and involve. Employees are a rich source of
information about how to do a job and how to do it better.
This principle has been demonstrated time and again with all
kinds of employees—from hourly workers doing the most
routine tasks to high-ranking professionals. Managers who
operate with a participative style reap enormous rewards in
efficiency and work quality.
Participative managers continually announce their interest
in employees' ideas. They do not wait for these suggestions
to materialize through formal upward communication or
suggestion programs. They find opportunities to have direct
conversations with individuals and groups about what can be
done to improve effectiveness. They create an atmosphere
where "the past is not good enough" and recognize employees
for their innovativeness.
Participative managers, once they have defined task
boundaries, give employees freedom to operate and make
changes on their own commensurate with their knowledge and
experience. Indeed, there may be no single motivational
tactic more powerful than freeing competent people to do
their jobs as they see fit.
Reprinted with permission from "Stop Demotivating Your
Employees!" Harvard Management Update, Vol. 11, No. 1,
January 2006.

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