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Accelerate Recognition to Accelerate Profits 
 AccelerateRecogniton_Final.pdf
Here’s a newsflash—but only if you’ve been living in a cave: A serious shortage of skilled U.S. workers that began in 2005 is expected to grow to 5.3 million by 2010, and to 14 million by 2015.1

What are companies doing to prepare for this crisis?

About a third of them are doing nothing.2

Now, we’re assuming your company is not one of those cave dwellers.

Regardless of your corporate level of consciousness, this trend still hits close to home when you realize that at this very moment about 3 in 10 of your workers are thinking about walking out the door for greener pastures. Nearly half expect to be working for a different company three years from now.3

You probably already did the math in the nanosecond since you read that last sentence. Every new head you have to hunt costs you somewhere between $2,000 and $100,000, and it takes no small amount of effort and expense to get them oriented and trained, and, yes, engaged in your company.

When you’ve invested that dearly in each one, how could they think so cavalierly about leaving your company? There are reasons, and it’s well documented that high on their list may be this simple yet profound complaint: They do not feel they are recognized adequately for their work.4

Well, you say, our top performers are surely well recognized. We treat them like prized racehorses.

But what about the other 80 percent of your workforce? Do you expect them to plod along, grazing happily on their salaries—I’m assuming you pay them handsomely? Statistics say that fence won’t hold. According to a recent Gallup poll, more than two-thirds of employees say they are not as motivated by cash as they are by non-monetary recognition.

I’m here to tell you that many of those people you are taking for granted would become better performers—and more contented, too—if you would build some well-thought-out recognition into your systems.

“Systems” is the operative word. Recognition is not a stand-alone program that changes every month. It is part of a system for employee engagement.5

Systems take effort to design. Yet some Managers seem to think that recognition happens by magic. Or maybe by talking about it a lot. We’ve met more of those people than you care to hear about.

Our experience has confirmed over and over that recognition—the accolades people receive for doing the right things and doing them well—is not only a key to retaining good employees, it is often the determining factor for getting employees engaged and focused on what they need to do NOW to retain customers and increase profits.

When combined with rewards, recognition can become a powerhouse for permanent culture change, while delivering dramatic improvement in business performance. A recent Web-based system we designed for 90,000 employees of a major company has transformed the company’s culture from one that employees found unpredictable and disjointed, to one in which everyone is engaged. (See The Power of Engagement) While it is not simple to design such a program, technology makes it easier than ever to get a multi-faceted system installed, and to change certain elements to keep it fresh. Often, however, people overlook several important considerations that can make all the difference in the success of their efforts.

I’ll let you in on a few tips I’ve discovered while working with corporate leaders to get their recognition efforts more focused.

  1. Keep it super simple with an online platform. A platform is not expensive to purchase or maintain, and allows one-click access to the important elements of your recognition system. Ideally, anyone should be able to recognize anyone for anything—within the system’s parameters, of course.

    Our proprietary platform lets people customize an e-card with a picture and a personal message, and send it to anyone in their group’s database. If rewards are part of the system, Managers can give reward ePoints and check the program’s progress via the same platform that’s used for recognition.

    Participants can browse popular rewards and build their own wish list of reward items. It’s visual. It’s motivating. It’s nearly as fun as playing computer games, which we know that no employee of yours would ever do at work.

    You can build parameters into your program, such as having a Manager sign off on peer nominations, to prevent monkey business, but the easier you make it, the more people will enjoy using it.
     
  2. Don’t forget about your Call to Action.

    When you launch a recognition effort, key leaders must be on board and they must call people to action. No wishy-washy speeches allowed. The rules for giving and receiving recognition and/or rewards have to be crystal clear. Have a theme and make it an event. There should be some hoopla, some prizes, some festivity. And don’t forget the food.

    The most important decisions are made when designing your system: How will you structure it to focus on the behaviors and knowledge that will drive results for your organization? If you have an ePoint system, how can they earn ePoints toward rewards? A well-designed system will pay for itself in increased efficiency, sales, and customer retention. Not to mention more employees who aren’t thinking about jumping ship.

    Your Call to Action doesn’t end with the first-time launch. Each time you modify your goals, you must trumpet your new call to action. Use visuals around your work space. Make sure everyone knows what’s expected TODAY and “
    What’s in it for ME?”

  3. Create an environment for fast learning. From our observation, the most successful companies are those that create an environment for their employees to learn fast, and then immediately use what they learn in order to meet customers’ needs better than competitors can. The creative use of online quizzes is an inexpensive way to transfer and validate knowledge.

    It’s never been easier. You can recognize or reward people on the spot who pass online quizzes in a timely manner. Use frequent little quizzes to keep them up to date on the essentials:
    • How to listen for customers’ needs
    • How to talk about new product and service features
    • How to determine which product features apply to a specific customer’s needs

    We call these items the knowledge mantra.

    And while we’re on the subject of knowledge, consider how you can recognize and reward top performers for sharing their knowledge. Why would they want everyone to copy what they’re doing if it’s getting them star treatment? But that’s exactly what you need them to do. Make it worthwhile for them to share their knowledge instead of keeping it to themselves.

  4. Be sure your metrics move your Managers. Who has time to wade through a lot of data? You only need a few good numbers:
    • Who is using the recognition tools and who is not?
    • Who is achieving the behavioral goals (acquiring knowledge and demonstrating skills)?
    • Is performance improving (efficiencies gained, sales closed, money collected, issues resolved)?
    • Are customers satisfied?

    Make it easy for Managers to access and interpret the numbers. They will become champions of the program when they see the return on investment—especially if they can figure out how to take credit for it.

  5. Celebrate successes immediately. We set up a system at an insurance company to recognize people who made offers and captured referrals. Each new success was posted on the bulletin board—nothing fancy; it was just a piece of paper with the person’s name and their accomplishment. The rewards portion of the solution hadn’t even launched yet, and the Customer Service Representatives had already increased their offers by 63 percent!

Now that you’re convinced that recognizing your skilled workers is critical to keeping them at your company instead of your competitors’, what’s your Call to Action?

Don’t just sit there and talk about it. Do something! Find a partner who has years of experience designing online recognition and reward systems. This partner should understand the science of performance improvement and know how to recognize and reward the knowledge and behaviors that meet your organization’s strategic goals. Contact us at Incentives.Recognition411@AndersonPerformance.com or call 651-438-9825 for a recommendation.

You’ll find many more how-to pointers and success stories in our book, Cream of the Corp., available at Amazon.com. Go to AndersonPerformance.com, to book a demo of our online platform, the Anderson Enterprise Incentive Solution® (AEIS), and experience first-hand how easy it is to design and track success.

Don’t get caught in that thirty-percent group of primitive companies that are doing NOTHING to retain their valued employees.6 Get going and start recognizing everyone for engaging in your strategies to accelerate profits NOW! You’ll be happier with their performance and they’ll be happier in their jobs.


1Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics
2Purdum, Traci. “Workforce Shortage: Retaining Knowledge And Expertise,” May 1, 2006,
http://www.industryweek.com/ReadArticle.aspx?ArticleID=11834
3Robert Half International and careerbuilder.com. “Employment dynamics and growth expectations (EDGE) report reveals job seekers have more influence than they realize,” May 1, 2005.
42004 Poll, The Gallup Organization.
5Employee engagement is one of the five metrics of Human Capital Measurement (HCM) that predict superior business performance. Engagement is measured in terms of employees’ satisfaction with items such as work design, workload, job security and advancement and recognition. See Bassi, Laurie and Daniel McMurrer. “Maximizing Your Return on People,” Harvard Business Review, March 2007.
6Purdum, Traci.

 
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