Tuesday, September 22, 2020

Create Employee Recognition That Builds Customer Satisfaction


 

Providing quality customer service requires engaged employees, and communicating to employees how much their work is valued is an important but often overlooked way to maintain high levels of workforce satisfaction.  Millennials especially want immediate acknowledgment that their performance on the job meets or exceeds expectations. 

Employee recognition programs can play a central role in increasing employee engagement and satisfaction.  There are many “how to” recipes for building the best recognition program.  Here’s a simple design that can help you get started in building what’s best for you.

 Create an Employee Reward and Recognition Team 

The main function of this team is to design your recognition activities to align with the organization’s standards of behavior. To ensure operational success, the team should routinely meet with company managers to discuss what is going well in their areas of the organization. These conversations remind managers how important it is to recognize outstanding employees. This constant reinforcement by your recognition team helps everyone realize that it is worth taking the time to recognize their employees.  

Measure How Employees Like to Be Rewarded 

This may seem like a simple thing to do, but it is very often overlooked. It is not uncommon for senior and even mid-level management to think they know what employees want.  It is not unusual to project their bias into the thought process.  They may be right, but based on past experience they are more often wrong.

This discussion should also touch on the type of awards the employees want.  Just remember that if you ask someone if they want cash or praise, it is just human nature for the answer to be the cash.  But cash will rarely be what gets the job done, especially when the budgets per individuals is likely minimum compared to income.  Two quotes to remember:

 

                           “ A soldier will fight long and hard for a bit of colored ribbon.”

                                        …Napoleon Bonaparte

 “There are two things people want more than sex and money…recognition and praise”

                                        …Mary Kay Ash 

By using some kind of motivational assessment tool during the hiring process, you can identify how each employee likes to receive recognition.  The tool can also give you valuable information about the employee to help design programs to achieve the employee’s desired outcomes. 

Tie Recognition to Employee Performance Management 

If you have implemented any kind of performance management system make sure you incorporate it into your recognition program reporting and use it so management can have more reasons for recognizing employee performance.  This helps your program feed on itself and grow from within.  We see many companies that don’t tie things together and miss out on this synergy. 

Correlate Recognition Programs with Employee Satisfaction and Customer Experience 

Use past, current and future employee satisfaction surveys and measure against the performance of your recognition efforts.  There are always a variety of reasons why employee satisfaction will have increased (hopefully) but reward and recognition programs will be a contributing factor.  In addition there is prevailing wisdom that a correlation exists between happy and more engaged employees and higher customer satisfaction.   

Employee recognition creates an important link between employees’ day-to-day actions and broader organizational goals and objectives. There are significant benefits that result from tying employee recognition programs to employee evaluations. Although reward and recognition programs require a small time commitment, they pay major dividends in terms of greater staff engagement, employee satisfaction, and better customer experiences.

 

 

 

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