Four
Simple Ways to Make Your Employees
Happier
There is a very
simple secret to long-term employee loyalty and retention and
it is not money, perks, or stock options. It's giving them
meaningful roles.
This is not an
idealistic motherhood-and-apple pie dream, but rather a basic
condition of human behavior and psychology that many businesses
and leaders often forget: people are driven as much or more by
intrinsic meaning as they are by extrinsic
rewards.
Look around
your social circle and you'll quickly remember that some of
your brightest friends are working at places that pay jack-all
relative to what they could be earning in a different job. They
are in those jobs because they provide fulfillment and a sense
of purpose beyond the job. Another easy example? Go to an Apple
Store and talk to an employee there. Now compare that to the
average employee at 95 percent of other retail establishments.
Enough said.
In life, people
make the "love or money" trade-off all the time. What can
businesses do to minimize this trade-off? It comes down to
balancing the intrinsic with the extrinsic rewards. The former
is the heart and soul of an organization and a person's reason
for working there. The latter is the practical mind and wallet.
Here are four design points towards unlocking the secret of
long-term employee loyalty:
-
Help her
create a meaningful
role. Ask
in an interview what she would be doing if she had
all the money she needed; explain and remind the
employee why her role is critical and how it fits
into the bigger picture. This is the foundation and
most critical component of long-term
retention.
-
Give
feedback. Do
so regularly, with both honesty and
thoughtfulness.
-
Offer
professional
development. Keep
her larger career path in mind; ask what she wants
most to learn. People want to know where they are
heading and that you care in helping them get
there.
-
Say thank
you. This
means both intrinsic and extrinsic recognition — that
is, reaffirm your appreciation for their role (a
simple hand-written note or verbal thanks from time
to time goes a long way) and pay them fairly.
Making people
happy at their
jobs is not as hard as it seems.
Anthony (Tony)
Tjan
is CEO, Managing Partner
and Founder of Cue Ball, a venture and early growth equity firm
investing in the information media and consumer sectors. As an
entrepreneur, investor, and senior advisor, Mr. Tjan has become
a recognized idea generator and business
builder.
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