Tuesday, November 13, 2018

Does You Company Give Turkeys Away for the Holidays



How many companies give turkeys to their workers each year over the holidays? While estimates are hard to attain, some studies show that it’s probably a little less than 3%.  

According to a survey few years ago of 210 businesses by the Bureau of National Affairs, the figure has bounced around, tumbling from about 5 or 6 percent each year between 2000 and 2004 to only 2 percent in 2005 and 3 percent in 2006. 

Americans associate turkeys with the feast that Pilgrims and Indians shared after a bountiful harvest in Colonial days. And some historians speculate that passing out turkeys to workers during the holidays began in 19th-century England with bosses who had read about, and did not want to be compared with, Ebenezer Scrooge (who, after all, eventually bought one for Bob Cratchit).

But times have changed.  Stats today show that over 4 times more companies give away gift certificates for the holidays rather than the actual turkeys.  The employees use them to redeem for almost anything at the supermarket.  Others give away the kind of super gift certificates that can be redeemed for either grocery stores, or many other brand named retailers.  So many things have changed in the American workforce that giving employees a choice of what they want is a far more popular option. 

Why do companies use holiday gifts for employees? 

It’s good business
Employee recognition is a key piece of employee engagement and a holiday gift shows you care and are grateful for employees’ hard work and dedication to the success of your business.

It’s an opportunity for managers to engage with employees
Sharing the gift, personally, with a big smile, warm handshake and hearty “Thank You” is a priceless opportunity for managers to make employees feel valued and appreciated.

It’s about family
These gifts are often shared with families and add joy to their holiday season. Holiday gifts embody the grateful spirit of the season, and that includes your company’s gratitude.

For more information on Ultimate Choice Inc.’s products or services or other white papers please contact us at Ultimatechoiceinfo@cox.net

Tuesday, November 6, 2018

Employee Engagement - If It Is Right – It Is Right



The following excerpt was shamelessly stolen from a Blog entitled “What is Paul Thinking?’,

The blog is written by Paul Hebert, a friend and one I truly admire for his knowledge of how to employe incentives and recognition to motivate employee performance.  He also has a knack for telling it like it is and hitting the nail on the head about subjects such as this. He tells folks what they should hear but rarely do, as experts in those fields would rather tiptoe around the subjects for fear of losing potential sales. 

The article was posted 5-4-17 and was titled, “New Research: Employees Work Harder When They Are Almost StarvingIt should be very meaningful to anyone who is involved with employee engagement and recognition.

“How many posts have you read about proving the ROI of engagement programs? How many articles, posts, tweets talk about how to show senior management the “financial value of engagement.” Too many.

Because, if you’re looking for business rationale to recognize people in your organization, you’re doing it wrong.

If you have to sell your senior manager on the ROI of engaging with your employees your CEO sucks. If your leadership team doesn’t have time to recognize and validate the work your employees are doing you now have evidence they only do their job for the money. Period.

For them, engagement and recognition efforts are simply variables in an equation that gets them mo’ money, mo’ money, mo’ money. Again. Period.

Granted – there are limits to what any company can do to support and engage employees. But those limits get a bit blurry when you can’t prove the ROI on better employee support but for some reason the car allowances for all your executives don’t have the same scrutiny applied. What is the ROI on all those perqs you spread like peanut butter across everyone on mahogany row? How can you say THAT is important, but training for managers on how engagement works isn’t?

I know I’m being facetious to prove a point. Of course you need to plan the expense of engagement and recognition. Of course you have to put some boundaries around this. But when you don’t require the same due diligence for executive perqs and other questionable business expenses you are simply being thick. And a bit callous and a bit disconnected. And just a lousy manager.

Don’t be that guy or gal. Be a good manager. Do engagement. Do recognition. Do employee support. Don’t worry about the ROI – worry about ROH – return on humanity.

For more information on Ultimate Choice Inc.’s products or services or other white papers please contact us at Ultimatechoiceinfo@cox.net

Tuesday, October 30, 2018

What’s Missing in Leadership Today?


In our opinion, most leadership approaches today are based on knowing what to do and how to do it.  In our dealings with many corporations what we see missing is passion, insight, inspiration and an ability to listen. 
We all intuitively understand this.  In our own careers we all know who the great leaders are or were.  They were the ones who excited us to exceptional performance. They formed a relationship and worked with people, and didn’t act like their people worked for them.  The difference between high-performing cultures and just exceptional cultures is the quality of those relationships which formed the bond of how well people liked and trusted each other.  The leaders were inspirational.
To inspire others requires the emotional intelligence and commitment to learn how to connect with others.  Effective leadership communication is clear and deep, creates commitment rather than compliance, and for most of us, requires the learning and application of new skills.
Leadership means not listening to formulate a rebuttal but to build trust. Good leadership communication connects with the mind – it’s logical and strategic – but it also connects with the heart by being personal and meaningful.
Employee loyalty and retention are extremely important in today’s labor market and it could be like this for quite some time. In a time when employee loyalty is waning, generating loyalty can become a competitive advantage. Loyalty to a leader comes from who they are – from the motivation behind their actions. Leaders can inspire such loyalty if they first understand who they are, not just what they do.
Employee recognition is critical.  If leaders really want their employees to produce, they should try to impart a sense of meaning – not just through vision statements – but by allowing employees to feel a sense of completion and ensuring that a job well done is acknowledged.
For more information on Ultimate Choice Inc.’s products or services or other white papers please contact us at Ultimatechoiceinfo@cox.net


Tuesday, October 23, 2018

Have We Eliminated Real Recognition?




This is a complete reprint of a blog post written by a friend of mine, Paul Hebert, the Senior Director of Solutions Architecture at Creative Group, writer, speaker and consultant. Paul is widely considered an expert on motivation, incentives, and engagement.

While it was written over five years ago, the message is just as meaningful (if not more so) today.  We hope you enjoy it.

The blogosphere is full to the brim with studies, research, tea leaves and astrology charts that say employee engagement drives business success and that recognition drives engagement.  It is the siren’s call of 2011 and beyond.  Almost every HR person I talk with has engagement in one form or another on their to-do list.  In many cases it is about finding the “platform” to run their employee rewards program.
And there is no scarcity of platforms.  The ubiquity of technology now means any plaque seller and koozie-monger can be in the business of providing peer-2-peer programs and service anniversary programs.  It’s just not that hard to find someone to run a program any more.
DISTINCTIONS WITHOUT DIFFERENCES
Sure the platforms differ.  The color of the bars differ.  Some of the reporting can be pretty darn amazing.  But at the end of the day you have an automated system that allows managers and peers to send notes, cards and wall posts highlighting what Suzy and Frank did yesterday that made a difference in some other employee’s life.
Don’t get me wrong.  This is mission critical stuff.  I believe it is REQUIRED in today’s organization to find a way to let people know they are valued and their work matters.
WHERE’S THE HUMAN?
But the questions that plague me are:
  • ·        When a system removes all the friction – making it drop-dead simple to recognize someone does the recognition lose some of its value (not all of it – just some)?
  • ·        When a login page of a company intranet looks like the “gold star” chart from a first-grade classroom does it simply become wallpaper without any focus?
  • ·        When employees see recognition events for trivial performance do they start to think exceptional performance gets lost?
  • ·        Does the platform become the focus instead of the people?

I ask these questions because I see it happen in other places when effort is reduced and the value goes right with it.  When someone can mow your lawn in 20 minutes on a riding mower they end up charging less and we think it is a commodity.  When the internet at 30,000 feet on a plane is the norm – being disconnected while in the bathroom becomes a capital offense.  They become utilities – not unusual.
I wonder if all of this focus on the technology to drive easier, more ubiquitous recognition is creating a void between “commodity recognition” and “real recognition?”
When my boss used to write a letter that went in my personnel file (that would be back in the 1900’s) I was impressed.  So was everyone else.  But is anyone impressed with 162 “Kudo’s” on your intranet wall from Jimmy in the mail room?
TRAINING IS KEY
I think about these things because even if you find the platform and don’t communicate how to do recognition right – how to make it HUMAN – you really haven’t helped your company.  Sure you’ve checked the box and you have a program.  But do you have engagement?
Do you have a sustainable system that grows with the expectations of the recipient?  Do your managers and their managers understand that making something easy may actually make it less valuable?
Train your people on recognition and its many forms – from the easy to the hard.
Train them to make it human – make it more than the platform, more than the points and more than the plaque.
For more information on Ultimate Choice Inc.’s products or services or other white papers please contact us at Ultimatechoiceinfo@cox.net