Archive for the ‘Employee Performance’ Category

Motivation Train Jumps Tracks

Wednesday, November 24th, 2010 by Martha Forlines & Thad Green

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

Survey Results: Top 4 Leadership Challenges

Wednesday, November 10th, 2010 by Martha Forlines & Thad Green

Here’s what people told us in a sampling of the 1900+ people who follow us on our leader quick tips, linked-in, facebook, and twitter.

The top four leadership challenges as of early November 2010 are:
1. Keeping employees motivated and focused on results.
2. Dealing with trust issues with their team.
3. Retention of high performers.
4. Leading effectively through change.

You can participate in this ongoing survey by clicking here

Knowing you’re not alone can give some comfort, but what you need are solutions!

Some of the top four leadership challenges are bound to show up where you work.

And these same challenges surely will rise to the surface during upcoming end-of-the-year performance reviews—those you’re conducting and the one you’ll have with your own manager.

leadership survey results
This is all the more reason to look for some simple and practical solutions.

So here’s what we’re going to do.

In each of the next four solutions for leader BLOGS, we’ll take one of the top four leadership challenges and share our thoughts on quick-and-easy, effective solutions you can use.

You can participate in this ongoing survey by clicking here

Be sure to stay tuned.

Martha Forlines and Thad Green

Creativity Sleeps, but Where?

Wednesday, October 13th, 2010 by Martha Forlines & Thad Green

You don’t have to BE creative to be a leader.

But believing in the power of creative thinking can turn around your life as a leader.

Take the case of Chris Petersen, football coach at powerhouse Boise State.

His inspiration came from an unlikely place—bi-monthly meetings with a group of eight leaders that included a ballet dancer, a sheriff, and a software engineer.

chris-petersen

Prior to joining this group, he said, “We are not creative here. We are football coaches. We try to do the same thing over and over. It’s about routine.”

Then he changed his turn. “After meeting a few times, I had an epiphany. Bam! I started looking at things in a different way.”

Like many organizations, he said, “We need structure, we need order, we need schedules, and we need our system taught a certain way.”

Does that sound familiar?

Then he says, “But within that there needs to be a creativity to keep growing, to keep the energy and the enthusiasm.”

Three huge benefits for any leader!

So Petersen goes from “We are not creative here” to extolling the power of creative thinking.

How does he make it work?

It’s pretty simple actually. “He’s a master at asking questions. ‘How can we do it differently?’ ‘How can we do it better?’” says Nancy Napier, Boise State business professor who brought the group of eight together.

How do you get started? All you have to do is believe in the power of creative thinking.

How do you make it work? Look to those you lead. Show them you value creativity. Show them you value THEIR creativity. Get them engaged and watch the ideas flow.

All the best to your success,

Martha Forlines and Thad Green

Does Your Belief about Employee Motivation Really Matter?

Wednesday, September 29th, 2010 by Martha Forlines & Thad Green

Recap of Leader Quick Tip: Employee motivation, engagement, and performance can get confusing

Yes, extrinsic motivation often is effective. The danger is that it works just enough that it becomes easy to lose sight of the importance of intrinsic motivation. And, for many leaders, intrinsic motivation can be scary stuff.  It means going below the surface to find out what makes a person tick. So it’s easy for leaders to shy away from intrinsic motivation.  Also, if the leader’s own personal motivation is extrinsic factors, it is only natural to assume that others are motivated the same way. (This is another case of projection.) These are some of reasons why the value of intrinsic motivation goes untapped.

When it comes to using specific approaches (like fear, pressure, money, etc.), they work for some employees, not for others.

Only one person really knows what will motivate—the individual employee! Except . . .

Employees don’t always CONSCIOUSLY know what will motivate them. You may ask, but whatever they say off the top of their head probably isn’t it. Most people haven’t clearly sorted out what motivates them, so it takes some digging to find out.

If you’re going to dig (rather than assume everybody is motivated the same way), you want to have the right tools.

If you’d like more information about “the right tools,” go to www.beliefsysteminstitute.com or call Martha at 678.576.5207.

Martha Forlines and Thad Green

Managers in the Hot Seat (Excerpt from LinkedIn Topic)

Wednesday, September 15th, 2010 by Martha Forlines & Thad Green

Martha recently posted the following on LinkedIn for discussion and got some passionate responses.  Here are some excerpts:

Motivation management = creating the conditions required for motivation . . . for yourself or for those you lead. What are they for you? As you’d expect, this can get tricky. Why? Because we all are different (and thank goodness for that). We believe there are 3 primary conditions for motivation:

(1) confidence – “I can do it”

(2) trust – “I get what my performance deserves,” and

(3) satisfaction – “What I get is satisfying to me.”

Discussion respondent • Martha, I like the simple way you have positioned this, but those three conditions take in quite a range of knowledge and skill sets. Also, I am curious to learn more about #2, “I get what my performance deserves.” Could you explain more about what you mean? Does this include compensation, recognition, bonuses, and a simple thank you? What do you see as the driving force behind establishing that trust? I see trust as starting at the top and filtering down so everyone believes the mission and is involved in seeing it come to fruition. But when you use “get what my performance deserves,” I think it is more about the individual seeing what is in it for them. I don’t necessarily see the trust connection as a function of that.

Martha Forlines • Great points. Trust here means “Do I trust my manager to give me what my performance deserves?” This trust breaks down most clearly when the manager makes “promises” of things the employee wants, (like the items you listed) but does not deliver. Often a bigger issue for the high performer is when the manager does not have the courage to truly use discretion and give each employee what their performance truly deserves. However, there are other outcomes that the manager has control over that may not be part of that “promise,” but affects employee motivation.

Examples of these outcomes that may be viewed as negative are excessive overtime, work stress, insensitivity to work life balance, etc. We have a list of 49 workplace experience outcomes developed over the years that can be either motivators or de-motivators. So at the end of the day, the “what’s in it for me” is still a driver . . . people pursue personal payoffs!

Motivation Management


Discussion respondent • Thanks for clarifying your comments, Martha. I see this all the time, that a manager is not handling each employee as an individual and therefore negating any attempt to build trust. I believe you are right that “people pursue personal payoffs!” And I love the alliteration.

Discussion respondent • ”I get what my performance deserves” could not be stated better! This is the best motivational tool.

Martha Forlines • Unfortunately, many times managers don’t have the courage to follow through on this consistently.

Discussion respondent – Motivation is a balance between risk and reward… If you want to “take a chance”, you’re likely to be singled out as not conforming. That’s the risk of giving people what their performance deserves.

The better question is how do you motivate others that are not likely to take any risk? Management has to demonstrate! Unfortunately, you’re right. There are few self motivated managers willing to take “all out risk” and demonstrate. Most managers like their jobs and will not risk anything. Without good demonstration of “courage”, many are not willing to do more than management demonstrates.

Discussion respondent – I live in that realm and could write a book on the good/bad/and ugly associated with risk verses reward management.

Discussion respondent- You are aware that this is a real hot button topic for the safe management style individuals?

Martha Forlines – Yes, sad but true, too hot to handle for too many managers. The strong and courageous just have to lead the way.

Martha Forlines and Thad Green

Are You Curious as to What’s Really Behind Employee Engagement?

Wednesday, September 1st, 2010 by Martha Forlines & Thad Green

Leaders everywhere

Are talking about

The importance of engagement

Of having employees

Fully involved in

And enthusiastic about

Their work

We all get

The WHY of engagement

It’s the HOW

That stumps us

It’s simple really

Motivation is the key to engagement

It’s like the often used phrase

If you really want to know

What’s going on

Follow the money

In your case

If you want to know how to

Engage employees

Follow their motivation

Then you’ll know

How to engage them

Because motivation determines engagement

And more

Motivation is the fuel for performance . . . no gas, no go

When motivation sags below the enthusiastic line

Effort shows a corresponding decline

Causing performance to cough

Like an engine begging for fuel

fuel_gauge_analog

As a leader you have to wonder

How much unrealized potential

Is silently seeping away

Every second of every working day

In these turbulent and troubling times

Just imagine redirecting all of that unrealized potential

Like rechanneling fresh water into parched soil

Could you produce more

And what would happen to the wilted flower called profit?

Is your lost opportunity measured

In ounces or pounds or tons?


Please note… this is an excerpt from Martha Forlines and Thad Green’s new book, Inspiring Women…BECOMING Courageous, Wise Leaders, available here -  women’s leadership book

What Does Employee Engagement Have To Do With Customer Satisfaction?

Wednesday, August 18th, 2010 by Martha Forlines & Thad Green

Recap of leader Quick Tip: What does employee engagement have to do with customer satisfaction?

If you measure customer satisfaction by having reliable processes in place to deliver quality products and services, plus good customer relationships, then there are a handful of employee engagement measures that can make a difference.

customer-satisfaction

Employee Engagement Measures for Process Improvement

  • One of the key measures for employee engagement around process improvement is having the materials and equipment for employees to do their very best job.  Ok, that sounds reasonable and fair.
  • The second employee engagement measure for successful process implementation is having the opportunity for employees to do what they do best in their job every day.  This gets back to selecting the right people for the right seats on the proverbial bus, doesn’t it?

That’s as far as the research goes for process improvement and the link to employee engagement. But what about employees having input on the process improvement activities or employees needing to be communicated with about changes in the workplace before they happen?  It truly is in the eye of the beholder – the employee.

Let’s move on to what research says about managing the customer relationship… keeping the customer satisfied and happy. These two may surprise you.

Two Employee Engagement Measures That Contribute To Satisfied Customers

  • The first: The purpose or mission of the organization makes the employee feel like their job is important. Shouldn’t everyone be made to feel like their contributions every day are important to the success of the organization?  What a lost opportunity for so many organizations and for so many leaders.
  • The second: Co-workers are committed to doing quality work. Translated, this means “If I’m going to bust my hump every day doing quality work then I expect my peers to be doing the same”. Otherwise, keeping the customers satisfied is a lost cause.

So which of these elements do you as a leader have in your control in order to create a satisfying experience for your customers?  How about all of them? Isn’t that a relief !

If you really want to know more, all you have to do is ask your employees.


Martha Forlines and Thad Green are leadership consultants with BSI, an Atlanta leadership consulting firm. We offer leadership solutions for increasing employee engagement and performance. Contact Us

Traditional Employee Engagement Strategies Are Flawed

Wednesday, August 4th, 2010 by Martha Forlines & Thad Green

Recap of Leader Quick Tip: Traditional employee engagement strategies are flawed

Let’s say (just for the sake of understanding the big flaw) that you’re not truly engaged—that is, YOU aren’t truly committed physically, emotionally, and intellectually to your work.

Now, how many things have to change for you to get “true engagement?” Exactly what would have to change? Hmmm . . .

And suppose the execs above you announce an employee engagement initiative. They’ve picked out 10 to 15 things to address to get the workforce truly engaged—a magic generic formula.

How many of the 10 to 15 would you guess are on the list YOU made?

And what’s the likelihood you’ll ever get the 10 to 15 anyway, given the way things usually are implemented due to blasé attitudes and lack of accountability?

How does this make you feel?

You are a leader. So if you feel this way, how must those below you feel?employee engagement strategies are flawed

So what is a leader to do?

Look at the strategy. It’s all based on the false assumption that everybody is the same, that everybody will be more engaged if someone does the same 10 to 15 things for (or to) them.

Well it just isn’t so. The reality is that you’re not like the guy in the office or cubicle next to you. You’re not like your boss. You’re not like the people on your team.

Sure there may be some sameness, but the truth is— everybody is different.

The workforce will never be truly engaged until leaders recognize and manage to these differences.


Martha Forlines and Thad Green are leadership consultants with BSI, an Atlanta leadership consulting firm. We offer leadership solutions for increasing employee engagement and performance. Contact Us

Why Employees Resent True Engagement

Wednesday, July 21st, 2010 by Martha Forlines & Thad Green
Employees Resent Engagement

Employees Resent Engagement

Recap of Leader Quick Tip: A truly engaged workforce is not a realistic goal

Why?

EMPLOYEES DON’T WANT TO BE TRULY ENGAGED! At least most of them don’t.

Being truly engaged isn’t worth the effort. Sure the company benefits from heightened employee engagement, but seldom do employees.

At least not in equal measure to what they give.

And besides, employees have a life outside of work. Getting more engaged means getting more work. Every employee knows this. The more they produce, the more they’re expected to produce.

No, employees don’t want to be truly engaged. Why? It’s simple. Leaders tend to have a one-way focus, and it’s not toward the employee. An “employee first” perspective is hard to find.

So how realistic is a “truly engaged” workforce? The answer is NOT VERY, and not surprisingly.

True engagement is not likely until management adopts a “true two-way street” attitude. This is where “truly engaged” begins… not with employee engagement surveys and initiatives.

If you want to really tackle employee engagement, give us a call at 678.576.5207.

BSI Experts Lambast Traditional Employee Engagement Surveys

Wednesday, July 7th, 2010 by Martha Forlines & Thad Green

Recap of Leadership Quick Tip: Engagement surveys are nothing more than employee opinion surveys by another name

employee-engagement-survey

Here’s how they are the same:

1. Survey items are around the same old employee satisfaction stuff;
2. Engagement surveys are completed anonymously too;
3. Data continue to be aggregated for reporting;
4. Survey results continue to show problems that are too pervasive, too elusive, too demanding, too costly, and too easy to let slide and
5. Good intentions to take action (based on results) lose momentum like usual.

Perhaps the biggest issue, aside from the surveys themselves, is this: If managers haven’t been held accountable to lead effectively in the past, who is going to hold them accountable now?
So what’s a leader to do, if you want to crank up employee engagement a notch or two on your team…

Call us for proven engagement solutions that work for your team or larger organization at 678-576-5207.

Martha Forlines and Thad Green