Recap of Leader Quick Tip: Is it time to get employee motivation on track?
The number one leadership challenge today is “keeping employees motivated and focused on results”, according to our latest survey.
Here are some typical reactions to this news, and the resulting response:
1. “What’s new?” and “My hands are tied” lead to an ignore the problem response.
2. “I don’t have time to deal with it now” leads to procrastination.
3. “I need to fix it” and “I need more data” both can lead to an action response.
If you’re having an action response, the direction you take should be a simple common sense approach.
You’ll want to assess the situation first, then plan a course of action based on what you find.
There are two steps to take:
1. Assess the situation
2. Then act on what you find
Assessing begins with asking people who will be honest with you, “What’s the motivation like here now?” Focus on the issue—employee motivation, engagement and employee satisfaction.
If the “asking” suggests a problem, then follow up by gathering more information to get a better handle on it.
You can do this either with a few in-depth interviews with selected individuals or surveys with selected teams.
When it’s time for action, you’ll be ahead of the game (in terms of both time and cost) if you choose the right way to survey or conduct your in-depth interviews.
Either way, the information gathering should uncover three things: where the motivation problems are (by individual), what is causing the problems, and possible solutions.
In other words, casual conversations or employee surveys won’t cut it. You might find out where the problems are, but you need more and you need it now.
This means targeting your interviews or surveys. Get to the employees or teams known or suspected to be poorly motivated and not focused on results.
In other words, you don’t need to interview everyone or conduct a 100% survey.
Go where you have the best chance of improving performance quickly—no skirting around the edges.
If you want to dance, save it for some live music Saturday night.
Dig in now and get the motivation train on track.
If you feel uncomfortable with this, get some executive coaching or go for some leadership consulting.
Whatever you do, remember that the “ignore” and “procrastination” responses ultimately lead to a train wreck.
Is that the kind of leader you want to be?
Martha Forlines and Thad Green










