There is a lot of information written about motivation. New manager/leader training found in organizations and books everywhere has at least one course or chapter devoted to the topic of employee motivation. Located within the material, one will find lists of tips and tricks to keeping employees happy and motivated to meet performance objectives. There is another school of thought that believes it is not the manager’s responsibility to motivate employees or create the motivation for employees. Instead it is the responsibility of the manager to hire motivated employees and then act in such a way to keep them motivated and stay away from things that would de-motivate.
After many years of teaching motivation techniques to managers, I have come to the realization that the later is actually the way to go. In reality everyone is motivated by something different. People seek jobs that are a match for their needs. For some, that might be a job that provides training or skills in area of interest; for others, the perfect job will allow them to work flexible hours to meet the needs of their family while utilizing already developed skills. Regardless of the motivation to seek a job or the factors that keep one motivated on the job, the first step for a manager/leader who wants to maximize the discretionary effort of employees is to figure it out.
What do you do that de-motivates your team? Have you ever said, “Oh, he loves it when I do that?” assuming your actions are inspiring or motivating? Keep in mind, if you are the manager/leader you have the control in the situation and the employee is well aware of this fact. He might not actually love it.
What things do you leaders do that de-motivate you?
Your thoughts are welcomed and encouraged!
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This is not the case presently, but in the past, one thing that demotivated me was those supervisors with a habit of taking credit for something I had done myself without any help from them: sort of “lack of recognition” taken to a whole new level.
Interesting post, Sheri. I have read so much about motivation and I agree that individuals are motivated by different things.
I wrote a couple posts that I think you would find interesting and would create some good conversation. Check out the one I wrote about individual motivating factors here http://www.careercurve.com/blog/?p=106.
I also see how coming at this discussion from the point of view of hiring those that are motivated and trying to keep them that way could be more effective than trying to make them that way. But how do you know someone is really motivated? I touch on that here http://www.careercurve.com/blog/?p=106 where my take is trying to inspire rather than motivate as motivation is a short term state of mind and more task-related than big picture.
I would love to hear your thoughts on this. I enjoyed this post coming from a different perspective of the “motivate your employees” discussion.
This is a insightful piece. Manager, like doctor, sometimes think they can do so much to change one’s behavior (body), not knowing it is the person (body) himself that learn (heal). His role is really understand the structure and things that stuck of such person, and then clear the path for them.
Thanks for your comment.