Essential guide to motivating employees

Motivating employees

Most employees spend less than half their time at work being genuinely productive. For the business owner, this is frustrating and expensive.

Ironically, the employer is usually the major cause of the problem. The way you manage employees is the key influence on levels of enthusiasm and motivation.

What is motivation about?

No 'us and them'

Agree goals

Praise and criticism

Handling disagreements

Building up new skills

Pay as a demotivator

Make the work interesting

When times are difficult

1. What is motivation about?

Motivation is based on giving people an appropriate combination of rewards. Remember that what motivates you may not motivate your employees.

Employees need an awareness of the possibilities for them at work

  • They need the freedom to choose options and goals.

Most individuals need to feel they have responsibility

  • Their actions must have the power to influence results

People have their own priorities in relation to the rewards they get from work

  • Rewards may include money, recognition, friendships, security, the challenge of new projects or a sense of doing something worthwhile and 'making a difference'.

For many people, the chance to achieve ambitions is a major motivation

2. No 'us and them'

Manipulating and bullying people simply does not work. It leaves them demotivated. The key to successful motivation is your attitude.

Treat employees as partners in the business

  • Keep people informed about business performance and management decisions.
  • Ask employees for their views before making decisions which affect them.
  • Give each person a good, comfortable working environment and the right training and equipment for the job.

Build up an atmosphere of trust and teamwork, not defensiveness and fear

  • A company run on fear is a miserable place to work, full of people who avoid making decisions in case they are wrong.
  • Avoid blame - and acknowledge that mistakes are an inevitable part of the learning process.
  • Encourage people to ask for help when difficulties arise.

Keep communication open and honest

  • Schedule regular appraisals for employees, to review progress, problems and plans.
  • Encourage employees to do most of the talking during these sessions, by using open questions like: 'How well do you feel you are doing?'

Take an interest in people's lives

  • Be prepared to chat about the things your employees are interested in. Listen actively to whatever people have to say.

Be consistent and fair in your approach

Build team spirit with regular briefings

  • Hold brief daily or weekly meetings to plan work, establish goals and discuss any special events and deadlines.
  • Hold daily or weekly debriefings. Share any news and problems and give employees credit for their achievements.

3. Agree goals

People will not be motivated if they do not know what is expected of them.

The objectives you identify for the company need to be turned into practical, achievable goals for the individuals working in it. If employees can see how their success contributes to the big picture, they will feel motivated and enjoy being part of the team.

Always agree realistic goals that directly benefit the business

  • Ensure employees can influence the results they are being asked to achieve.
  • Agree targets against which both you and the employees can monitor performance.
  • Reward employees for achieving their goals - with money, praise or opportunities to run new projects.

Give everyone a chance at success

  • If employees understand problems, they often come up with solutions themselves.

4. Praise and criticism

Let your employees know when they are doing well, and when they are doing badly.

Remember why you are giving feedback

  • The objectives are to improve performance, help learning and build employees' motivation and self-esteem.
  • Any feedback that does not contribute to these goals is counterproductive.

Respond to people's successes and failures as soon as possible

  • This lets them progress by making many minor adjustments.
  • Be specific. Say exactly what you are congratulating people on or wanting to help them improve.
  • Show real feelings. Be delighted or disappointed. Make it clear that business is not just numbers to you.
  • Allow time to praise people properly.
  • Do not save up praise or criticism for reviews, or for when you lose your temper.

Avoid getting personal

  • Describe the negative consequences of an action, rather than criticising the person.
  • Keep your messages of praise and criticism entirely separate.
  • Do not end a conversation with a criticism.
  • Once the message has sunk in, encourage the employee to think through with you how better results could be achieved.

Most employers find it all too easy to complain about employees' mistakes

  • Frame criticisms constructively, in ways that will help people make improvements.
  • Aim to praise people's achievements ten times as often as you point out errors.

5. Handling disagreements

You can never win an argument with an employee. The loser will become demotivated, and that is not in your interests as an employer.

If disagreements arise, limit the damage

  • Separate facts from opinions.
  • Emphasise the areas where you agree.

Listen while employees talk

  • They may have spent a long time thinking about the matters under discussion - and they may have excellent ideas.

Acknowledge employees' opinions, even if they are at odds with your own

  • Try putting yourself in their shoes.

Give people room to save face, especially after criticism, failure or disappointment

  • Riding roughshod over employees leads to poor morale, low productivity and staff turnover.

6. Building up new skills

You can help people progress from being beginners in a role to the point where they enjoy real competence and take full responsibility. The process involves several stages.

When people do not know where to start, they need clear, confident instruction

  • New employees, in particular, will need to be told what to do, and how to do it.
  • This also applies when existing employees are asked to take on new tasks.

Coaching helps the employee build up skills and develop a feel for the job

  • Teach the more advanced skills as soon as the individual is ready to learn them.

As the employee becomes more involved, the manager's role is to support

  • Continued encouragement helps build the confidence of even experienced people.
  • Stop offering advice at this stage.

Once full competence is achieved, trust is a major motivational force

  • Skilled employees may enjoy accepting devolved responsibilities, but you must still be there if problems need to be discussed.
  • Give generous recognition for good work.

Review your own skills

  • You may need to develop your ability to coach and motivate people.

7. Pay as a demotivator

Pay can also be an effective way of undermining motivation in your business. Be aware that every pay packet sends a message - and employees are sensitive to its nuances.

If you pay less than the competition, you can expect to have demotivated employees

  • If you pay higher rates to attract new employees, current employees will resent it
  • If you give rises only when people threaten to quit, you are rewarding disloyalty

Bonuses need to be clearly linked to employees' efforts

  • If you use year-end profit as a target for bonuses, employees will not see a direct link between their efforts and their bonuses.
  • The delay is too long, people know the profit figure may be altered for tax reasons and only a few employees will believe their efforts can influence the result.

Bonus schemes

Bonus schemes can play an important part in fine-tuning employees' motivation.

Bonuses linked to clear targets for individual performance will encourage individual effort

  • Each person should only have one or two immediate targets to aim for.
  • Bonuses like this do not encourage teamwork.

Bonuses linked to company profits can promote teamwork

  • Individuals must be able to see how they can affect the figures.
  • Team goals could include sales, margins, costs and employee punctuality.

Bonus targets should be set monthly, so results can be monitored immediately

  • You can target a key area for one month only, to focus on something which would otherwise be neglected.

Bonuses based on short-term goals may actually damage long-term profit

  • For example, a salesman on commission may neglect after-sales service and harm the company's reputation.

Bonuses should be on top of basic pay

  • Reducing pay in order to fund a bonus scheme will do more harm than good.

Bonuses need not be large to be effective

8. Make the work interesting

You need to know which employees are ambitious

  • Some are likely to be content to stay in the same jobs.
  • Identify which employees have the capacity to learn new skills.

Take any opportunities that arise to make people's jobs more satisfying

  • Increasing the variety of tasks employees undertake makes work more stimulating.
  • Giving employees the chance to shoulder more responsibility increases their sense of involvement.
  • Swapping people around so they try each other's jobs and appreciate each other's roles develops versatility and team spirit.

You risk losing talented employees if they are under-used, frustrated or bored

  • Ask them what you could do to make their jobs more rewarding.
  • Ask employees the key question: 'If you could improve just one thing about your work situation, what would it be?'

9. When times are difficult

Any kind of change can be stressful for employees. Negative situations, like redundancies, are particularly tricky.

To keep morale in good shape, pay attention to how you communicate

  • Tell employees what is happening, and back up what you say with factual evidence.
  • Offer support - be understanding if people are upset.
  • Give encouragement - accentuate the positive.

Explain why change is occurring

Motivational carrots

Remuneration packages play an important role in motivating employees. But every employee is different and what motivates one employee may be of little or no interest to another. To tackle this, some companies offer a 'salad bar' approach to remuneration that allows staff to pick and choose their benefits package.

The most visible or obvious part of any remuneration package is the salary

  • Salary can be made up of several elements including basic pay, commission, bonuses, profit-related pay and share dividends.
  • But remember that many of the most motivated people are also the worst paid (eg nurses and teachers).

Many employees appreciate company contributions to financial products

  • For example, pension, insurance or healthcare schemes.
  • It is often much cheaper for companies to offer access to group schemes like pensions than it would be for employees to purchase individual rights.

Company cars remain a popular perk for many employees

  • Make sure the benefit is worthwhile taking into account any extra tax the employee has to pay.

Consider offering staff discounts on your products or services

  • Subsidised meals and accommodation can also be attractive benefits to many staff.

Rewarding staff through company events and days out can be very effective

  • It is a particularly useful way of rewarding groups of people and helps build team spirit at the same time.

Money and benefits may not be the main motivator

  • For many employees, doing something worthwhile or working for a worthwhile cause is all the motivation they need.

Signpost

Expert quotes

"Everyone makes mistakes, but few people go to work with the intention of failing. Misplaced or unjust criticism is hugely demotivating, so you must get your facts right." - Peter Neall, Neall Scott Partnership training consultants

"These days, 'telling' people what to do should be minimised. Focus mainly on your coaching skills to help them achieve more." - Frank Thaxton, Thames Valley Partners business advisers

"One thoughtless act can undermine years of effort to build trust and confidence. If you find yourself getting frustrated with people, recognise it as a symptom of your own stress and find someone who can help you understand what is going on." - Graham Wilson, Leadership and Organisation Development specialist

What does the * mean?

If a link has a * this means it is an affiliate link. To find out more, see our FAQs.