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Article Series: Motivation What Will It Take To Motivate Me?
Avoiding
Misguided Motivation
Misguided
motivation can cause as much damage as positive motivation. Misguided managers and business leaders
can use motivation as a positive or negative means of getting
the wanted performance for their employees. Managers are often
caught in the middle of being the buffer zone between upper
management and employees.
I’m concentrating on the business aspect of motivation because
I have been on both sides. I’ve been a manager and I’ve been
a team member working with a manager. The manager I liked working
for was a positive motivator. Motivation is related
to our emotions. When I came in to work and there is a little note
on my desk, thanking me for the extra effort I put in the day
before, I tried to stay at that level of production. I accepted
the effort it took to leave the note, and I appreciated that
I was recognized as a valuable part of the team. On the other
hand, I also worked for a manager that was constantly standing
over my shoulder ready to catch me in any little mistake. I
felt I was under a constant microscope and dreaded coming to
work each day. This in turn, led to physical and emotional
problems that made the situation even tenser.
Managers
that hold threats over their employees are convinced
they can make their employees more productive by using threats
of job loss or loss of opportunity to advance. These negative
motivators may work for a while but in the end, they will fail.
A manager may not think they are using misguided motivation
but what is important to remember is how the employee hears
what the manager is saying. The manager may think they are
being conversational but the employee has been conditioned
to hear only negative speech, and so they will hear only negative
speech coming from the manager.
Threats are a misguided motivational tool. The manager I had
difficulty with would always end our “guidance sessions” with
the words. “Any repeat of that action could be used as cause
for your dismissal.” Wow! Do you think that motivated me to
come to work the next day? What it did was put more pressure
to perform to standards that were unrealistic and add even
more stress to my work situation.
Threats can come down from a higher level and its then up
to the manager to challenge their employees to rise to the
occasion with positive motivation. Threats that are collectively
targeted to the entire workforce more often will have a negative
effect than a positive one. Threats of withheld bonuses, pay
cuts, and shortened hours resulting in smaller paychecks are
demoralizing.
Bonus
programs can also be turned into misguided motivations
such as annual reviews that decide if an employee will earn
a bonus or affect their pay scale. Yearly reviews can be disheartening
when you are listening to your manager or supervisor and they
begin talking about something that may have happened six months
or longer before your review. Those items should have been
addressed directly and immediately. Waiting for an annual review
can discourage employees and have a negative effect on their
future performance.
Usually threats are subtle and can be hinted at during a conversation.
Managers should be careful to not attack an employee personally.
This not only creates strife in the workplace but stress for
the whole team. In my case, my manager finally took a small
infraction of a “standard” and used it to skip disciplinary
steps and fire me. Fortunately, I was a union member and the
union did get my job back. I asked for a different manager
as a condition to coming back to work, and from then on, had
no other problems with work performance or sickness keeping
me from work.
Opportunities
motivate, threats won’t. You can move your employees
into a more positive work environment by opening opportunities
instead of pushing the negative all the time. A good supervisor
doesn’t have to be soft on their employees or a pushover. You
can be firm but only take proper action when necessary. Most
employees know that certain actions will cause notes to go
into their employee file. Once the policies are handed down
to employees, they are then responsible for their own actions.
If an infraction occurs, write it down in their file, and after
positive reinforcement turns your employee around, note that
in their file as improvement. Then, don’t forget to give that
employee a pat on the back and let them know that you recognize
their improvement. Good managing means good people skills.
Actively listening to what your employees are saying and being
tuned in to their emotions and feelings can go a long way in
making you a manager that employees enjoy working for.
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by SolveYourProblem.com
: 2006
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