37 Ways to Motivate Your Team

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Whether you run a virtual business or not, these tips will help you manage and motivate your team.

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Encouraging your team to do their job, perform well or even just hang in there during a difficult period is tough. It’s one of those things that are hard to learn in a business management class. If you run a business, virtual or otherwise, this list is for you!

Intro

Money is by far the easiest way to encourage your staff. So let’s get this list out of the way before we get to the real goodies. Remember, I got 37 of these bad boys!

Money

#1 Since the dawn of time, bosses have been giving raises. Sometimes this is due to inflation, sometimes this is due to merit, sometimes it is due to the guilt of the boss that you are working too hard. It is, by far, the easiest to accomplish but doesn’t do a whole lot to motivate people. And it rarely keeps any motivating juice after the check is cashed.

Give a Raise

#2 Traditionally, commission is part of a salary package but don’t let that limit your thinking. If your dishwasher comes in with a multi-million dollar idea that saves your company, you should give him a commission on the idea. In my business this means if one of my writers brings me a new client on a plate, they typically do as much of the client’s work as possible plus they get a cut of the profits as a commission.

Commission

#3 As a virtual business owner this means I send out gift certificates or a PayPal transfer. After a really tough week, I want to buy everybody ice cream. If we worked in a real office I could just get some ColdStone; but a gift certificate works and it conveys the same message.

Buy Lunch or Dinner

These are the “low-cost” options but that takes some real effort. Unlike sending out gift certificates, each of these points takes some background knowledge of each team member. If your company is more than 50 people… you might want to delegate this to management.

Personal Touch

#4 Go to Hallmark, buy a few packs of thank you cards and include the card in your next payroll. Or, just send it on a whim. This comes better at strategic points in your employee’s life. So instead of blasting all of them, keep the cards at your desk and once a week (put this in your calendar!) ask yourself who did an awesome job and send that person a card.

Handwritten Notes

#5 Set aside the time to hear the full answer. I’m not above making a Skype call just to check in.

Simply ask “How are you doing?”

#6 It’s tacky and a lot of people won’t like it. Rather, send out individual emails. And no, don’t use your email software to “personalize” the names.

Never, ever, ever send out a mass

“thank you” email

#7 My staff is around the country so I try to keep my Kentucky slang to a minimum when conversing with Michigan. You can always be casual with team members, but don’t start text speaking with 50-somethings. It’s offensive.

Use the language of your team members

#8

Especially in a smaller company, there is always something to get done – who says it has to be the same person all the time?

Find projects slightly outside of the normal

routine but more in line with team members’

outside interests

#9 Make a note on a paycheck about

something stellar the person did that pay

period

#10 If your company had a particularly hard month with tons of overtime, send a thank you letter to the spouse of your team member for the support.

Gives thanks to all involved

#11 Note: this can be to do their job better or just for anything. “I saw this and thought of you” is a great thing to read.

Pass along articles or links that would be

helpful to your team member

#12 Have a team member that you want to put on the fast track for management? Let them know where you see them in six months and how they can get there.

Let people in on your personal plans for them

#13 Buy it when appropriate. For example, maybe you have an endurance runner on your team: send them runners socks or a gift certificate. Or you have a die-hard redvsblue fan, buy them some swank.

Research a unique prize for each team

member

These are the ways you can encourage your team by giving them some glory. Give them the tools to look and feel awesome. Or, put them in a position that they will be praised. Keep in mind that this isn’t a great thing for all team members, so be mindful of who you “encourage” with these:

Glory

This is a hallmark of Marriott management and it is amazing. Give guidelines like, “if you can solve the problem with $100, solve it without a supervisor” so your team members can feel empowered.

Empower your team members to “own”

projects and customer issues #14

This is easier said than done in a virtual environment. You can’t see them so you have no idea if they are going to hit deadlines, until they do. Give them more work then you expect and just wait. You might find they are beyond impressive!

Give your team members room to

impress you #15

The winner gets bragging rights or a new car. That part’s up to you.

Have a company-wide contest for the most

sales, leads, performance, etc. #16

This is great on a lot of levels including gauging the leadership skills of team members.

Create a group contest where the groups

choose their leader #17

Is someone in your office running a race for charity? Share that on your company social platforms and give them virtual kudos!

Share their goods on social media #18

I love this idea. If you see something or notice something that a team member does that is great or is simply something you would like to encourage in other team members, give them a little bonus. Even $50 can motivate the team and give some glory to the recipient.

Random Act of Bonus

#19

Share testimonials on your site, in your company newsletter, anywhere.

Document client feedback and let the

company know which team member did a

good job #20

An internal social network, a bulletin board, even an employee-only newsletter.

Create a place for your employees to interact

with one another #21

Even if it isn’t 100% work-related; make sure to promote it enough that there are plenty of visitors.

Ask a team member to do a presentation or

training on something they are awesome at

doing #22

Who cares if it is outside their “job description?” They can provide some great perspective.

Invite team members to join in the

brainstorm of company-wide projects #23

Ask them to come back and recap what they’ve learned.

Send a team member to a convention or

training #24

These are the things that keep all your team members motivated. They should be implemented as soon as possible and keep a steady morale.

General Goodness

…including yourself. Fairness is a hallmark of American culture. Use it.

Create company wide rules, and keep them

for everyone #25

For example, if you have a holiday coming up ask about who wants time off, etc.

Be proactive about holidays or other events you know people will be

wondering about #26

For example, our company has mostly freelancers as team members, so we bring in a CPA to do a virtual training twice a year so people know how to plan for and do taxes. It’s not required, but it shows your team that you care about them outside of work.

Invite a speaker to a company meeting to

discuss things that are important to your

team members #27

You don’t have to open the books, but giving people a snapshot of the progress can be motivating. Especially when you emphasize how they have impacted the good!

Have quarterly goals and make them known

to your team #28

For example, provide childcare services or 401K matching. This is going to drastically change company to company, so get a pulse of their needs and then fill them.

Provide resources that help some of your team

members #29

Keep track of your discouraging remarks. It can’t be all roses and bonuses but being intentional of sprinkling compliments with your criticism keeps you from being bossy.

Be mindful of your criticism

#30

If you really want to land a specific client or you really want to get everything done in time for a special event, let your team in on the background chaos. Never complain to your team, but showing them some skin never hurt.

Let people in on your priorities

#31

This is huge and will help you keep morale. If your team knows that you will always defend them (to clients, to one another, etc), they will trust you.

Defend your team at all costs #32

Okay, filter a little. If you are in a service-based business and a client comes screaming about something your team member did, make sure they know the concise issues brought up. Take out the angry words and hateful tone but if the meat of the feedback is “X wasn’t done” or “this needs X” then you owe it to your team member to pass that along.

Don’t !lter feedback

#33

You or your managers should know the pace of your team members. In writing, this is super easy. I can see the amount of words coming in each day for each writer. After I take into account the complexity level of their assignments, I know whether they are at a good pace. Once they slow down I investigate. Do they just hate that assignment? If so, can I give it to someone else? This helps morale... and your bottom line.

Re-adjust based on performance

#34

In a virtual environment, this means team members have my cell phone and Skype. For you, it could just be having your door open. Be sure to let people know what works for you.

Have a truly open door policy #35

Unless it is something you truly wouldn’t know how to do based on a lack of skill.

Don’t ask your team members to do something you

wouldn’t #36

For me, I let my writers know that I am not a strong bulk writer. For you, this can be anything that overlaps you and your team’s skill set.

Admit your limitations

#37

Wow! That pretty much wraps it up, huh? I love customer service, but I love team service even more. When you can motivate your team you are helping them help you. Small business development is more than just software or technique. It’s the people you are bringing to the next level.

Conclusion

Amie Marse Amie Marse is the enthusiastic founder and resident dream maker at Content Equals Money. She has been making a fulltime income online for over six years and has loved each and every single day of it. She launched ContentEqualsMoney.com in October of 2010 as a natural outgrowth of her personal content writing business. She is constantly researching ways to increase conversions and business for your site!

Content Equals Money Content Equals Money is a content writing service that serves a wide variety of clients with top-shelf, sharable content.

http://www.contentequalsmoney.com info@contentequalsmoney.com

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