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  • Atricle Dump - Ten Principles of Motivation

    Direct Mail Fundraising Arithmetic: Avoid Blunders By Knowing Your Numbers
    Your direct mail fundraising results never lie. But they mislead you if you let them. I worked as Director of Development for a national charity that held a lavish fundraising banquet each year. The staff, from the executive director down to the receptionist, including the development staff, thought this banquet was the organization’s most successful fundraiser. Shortly after being hired, I conducted a comprehensive development audit that measured the profitability of the organization’s fundraising methods, including this annual banquet. I added up the cost of the venue, catering, table and chair rental, lighting, sound, speaker honorarium, invitation printing, postage and every other related cost and subtracted this number from the gross income. What a surprise we got!What looked like a successful fundraiser was actually the organization’s least-effective fundraiser. In 1999,
    ns and problems are.

    It's very important that executives listen to their staff and associates. We need to take the time to get to know them, not just by name, but also by their interests and aspirations.

    We should try not to come across as interrogators, but ask them friendly questions about how they are, what they did over the week-end, and what they're doing on vacation. Then listen. It's amazing what you'll learn.

    PRIDE IS A POWERFUL MOTIVATOR .

    Everybody is proud of something. If we find out what makes our people proud, we can use that insight to channel their motivation. Pride is tied closely to self-esteem. My friend, Robert W. Darvin, has founded several successful companies, including Scandinavian Design, Inc., and has often used our consulting services and invited me to speak to his people. His observations on self-esteem are worth repeating:

    There's only one thing that counts in a business

    Unlock the Hidden Creativity of Your Employees
    To release creativity in employees, managers must get involved in their employees’ work. Look at each employee as if he or she is the expert on the job and tap into their creative energy.When we engage our employees and tap into their creative energy, they can show us ways to improve. All employees can be thinking about how to reduce costs, looking at safety issues, reducing wastes, and improving the environment, while at the same time developing skills to identify, articulate and communicate those kinds of things.What can people do with their creative energy?Michael took some wood, cardboard, and tape and made a ’flipper’ to close boxes, eliminating the work he was doing.Omar used a cardboard box to protect coworkers from a hot pipe. Later the box was replaced by a plastic coated wire guard.Claudia designed a fixture to hold bubble wrap she used for packaging.Physicians at UCLA Medical Center
    One of the questions I hear most often from executives is "How do I motivate my employees to do the things I want them to do?"

    The answer is: You don't!

    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    We can't motivate people. They are already motivated. But we can determine what motivates them and use this knowledge to channel their energies toward our company goals.

    From my 20 years of helping executives solve their people challenges, I've learned a few basic principles about motivation. Let me share them with you:

    ALL PEOPLE ARE MOTIVATED.

    Some people are like water in a faucet. They have the motivation; all you have to provide is the opportunity. The water is already motivated to flow. But it doesn't have the opportunity until you open the tap.

    Others are like mountain streams, which flow swiftly but follow their own channels. People, too, may move energetically, but toward their own goals. We in management should make it worth their while to channel their motivations toward the results management is seeking.

    PEOPLE DO THINGS FOR THEIR REASONS; NOT FOR YOURS OR MINE.

    We in management have to show employees what's in it for them when they follow behaviors that benefit the company. We can show them by using rewards and recognition, appealing to their sense of pride and achievement.

    PEOPLE CHANGE BECAUSE OF PAIN.

    When the pain of staying the same becomes greater than the pain of changing, people will change. For example, Americans didn't start buying smaller, fuel-efficient automobiles until the pain of high gasoline prices became greater than the pain of switching to less roomy and less powerful cars.

    THE KEY TO EFFECTIVE COMMUNICATION IS IDENTIFICATION.

    When something becomes personal, it becomes important. When our clients or our employees begin to identify with who we are and what we are, good things begin to happen.

    Large corporations have discovered that. Prudential, for example, knows that its customers want to buy security. So it doesn't just sell insurance; it markets peace of mind by inviting all of us to buy " a piece of the rock."

    Kodak doesn't sell film; it invites its customers to " trust your memories to Kodak ."

    AT&T doesn't tell us to make long-distance calls. It asks us to "reach out and touch someone."

    In dealing with employees, it isn't enough to appeal to them on the basis of loyalty to the company. They need personal reasons for showing this loyalty. Whether we're instituting a new educational program or undergoing a total restructuring, we can get our employees on board more readily if we show them how the change will affect them for the better. When my company sets out to lead corporate teams in developing their human-relations skills, we don't tell them what we're going to do for the company. We talk about what we're going to do for the individual. For example, in the introduction to one of our manuals, we tell supervisors:

    We've designed this complete educational system to help YOU master the skills of supervisory management and enjoy the rewards of leadership and career enhancement.

    From management's standpoint, the training was designed to increase the effectiveness of the organization. That's what sold the company on the program. But from the employee's standpoint, it was to upgrade the skills of the individual. That's what sold the employees on the program.

    THE BEST WAY TO GET PEOPLE TO PAY ATTENTION TO YOU IS TO PAY ATTENTION TO THEM .

    That means listening to others and not just hearing them. Listening is active; hearing is passive. If you listen to individuals long enough, they'll tell you what their concerns and problems are.

    It's very important that executives listen to their staff and associates. We need to take the time to get to know them, not just by name, but also by their interests and aspirations.

    We should try not to come across as interrogators, but ask them friendly questions about how they are, what they did over the week-end, and what they're doing on vacation. Then listen. It's amazing what you'll learn.

    PRIDE IS A POWERFUL MOTIVATOR .

    Everybody is proud of something. If we find out what makes our people proud, we can use that insight to channel their motivation. Pride is tied closely to self-esteem. My friend, Robert W. Darvin, has founded several successful companies, including Scandinavian Design, Inc., and has often used our consulting services and invited me to speak to his people. His observations on self-esteem are worth repeating:

    There's only one thing that counts in a business:

    Building A Blockbuster
    Imagine a movie that debuts in the theaters without anyone knowing in advance it is coming. Would that film succeed? Not likely. Hollywood knows better. Even a terrible movie can be pushed over $1000,000,000 by imaginative publicity. Consider this summer’s blockbuster Pirates of the Caribbean. In spite of the fact that the movie is a sequel to a popular film, Disney took no chances. There were TV commercials, inserted mentions on Disney’s ABC network, reports about historical pirates on TV networks Disney has an ownership stake in, including the History Channel and Lifetime, a web site, tie-ins at Disney theme parks, children’s meals at fast food places, a website with interactive features, Pirate’s themed cell phone rings tones and Pirates video games. All these efforts were directed towards a goal of making potential attendees aware of, and exciting about attending, the upcoming release.Now imagine the members of two dif
    ergetically, but toward their own goals. We in management should make it worth their while to channel their motivations toward the results management is seeking.

    PEOPLE DO THINGS FOR THEIR REASONS; NOT FOR YOURS OR MINE.

    We in management have to show employees what's in it for them when they follow behaviors that benefit the company. We can show them by using rewards and recognition, appealing to their sense of pride and achievement.

    PEOPLE CHANGE BECAUSE OF PAIN.

    When the pain of staying the same becomes greater than the pain of changing, people will change. For example, Americans didn't start buying smaller, fuel-efficient automobiles until the pain of high gasoline prices became greater than the pain of switching to less roomy and less powerful cars.

    THE KEY TO EFFECTIVE COMMUNICATION IS IDENTIFICATION.

    When something becomes personal, it becomes important. When our clients or our employees begin to identify with who we are and what we are, good things begin to happen.

    Large corporations have discovered that. Prudential, for example, knows that its customers want to buy security. So it doesn't just sell insurance; it markets peace of mind by inviting all of us to buy " a piece of the rock."

    Kodak doesn't sell film; it invites its customers to " trust your memories to Kodak ."

    AT&T doesn't tell us to make long-distance calls. It asks us to "reach out and touch someone."

    In dealing with employees, it isn't enough to appeal to them on the basis of loyalty to the company. They need personal reasons for showing this loyalty. Whether we're instituting a new educational program or undergoing a total restructuring, we can get our employees on board more readily if we show them how the change will affect them for the better. When my company sets out to lead corporate teams in developing their human-relations skills, we don't tell them what we're going to do for the company. We talk about what we're going to do for the individual. For example, in the introduction to one of our manuals, we tell supervisors:

    We've designed this complete educational system to help YOU master the skills of supervisory management and enjoy the rewards of leadership and career enhancement.

    From management's standpoint, the training was designed to increase the effectiveness of the organization. That's what sold the company on the program. But from the employee's standpoint, it was to upgrade the skills of the individual. That's what sold the employees on the program.

    THE BEST WAY TO GET PEOPLE TO PAY ATTENTION TO YOU IS TO PAY ATTENTION TO THEM .

    That means listening to others and not just hearing them. Listening is active; hearing is passive. If you listen to individuals long enough, they'll tell you what their concerns and problems are.

    It's very important that executives listen to their staff and associates. We need to take the time to get to know them, not just by name, but also by their interests and aspirations.

    We should try not to come across as interrogators, but ask them friendly questions about how they are, what they did over the week-end, and what they're doing on vacation. Then listen. It's amazing what you'll learn.

    PRIDE IS A POWERFUL MOTIVATOR .

    Everybody is proud of something. If we find out what makes our people proud, we can use that insight to channel their motivation. Pride is tied closely to self-esteem. My friend, Robert W. Darvin, has founded several successful companies, including Scandinavian Design, Inc., and has often used our consulting services and invited me to speak to his people. His observations on self-esteem are worth repeating:

    There's only one thing that counts in a business

    What is a Certified Public Accountant or CPA?
    In some states, people can work as an accountant even if they have no formal education or experience whatsoever. In order to impose standards of quality and respectability upon the accounting industry, the idea of a CPA was born.A CPA is someone who has earned a board-certified accounting license that guarantees that he or she has at least the entry-level skills required to be a good accountant.If an accountant acts in an incompetent or unethical way, his or her CPA license can be revoked. Furthermore, a CPA is required to receive continuing education in the accounting field, to ensure that he or she stays up to date with the latest updates and changes in information. Each CPA license is granted for only one of the 55 U.S. jurisdictions, which include each state, plus the District of Columbia, the U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam, Puerto Rico, and the Commonwealth of Northern Mariana Islands. If a Certified Public Accountant wants t
    es begin to identify with who we are and what we are, good things begin to happen.

    Large corporations have discovered that. Prudential, for example, knows that its customers want to buy security. So it doesn't just sell insurance; it markets peace of mind by inviting all of us to buy " a piece of the rock."

    Kodak doesn't sell film; it invites its customers to " trust your memories to Kodak ."

    AT&T doesn't tell us to make long-distance calls. It asks us to "reach out and touch someone."

    In dealing with employees, it isn't enough to appeal to them on the basis of loyalty to the company. They need personal reasons for showing this loyalty. Whether we're instituting a new educational program or undergoing a total restructuring, we can get our employees on board more readily if we show them how the change will affect them for the better. When my company sets out to lead corporate teams in developing their human-relations skills, we don't tell them what we're going to do for the company. We talk about what we're going to do for the individual. For example, in the introduction to one of our manuals, we tell supervisors:

    We've designed this complete educational system to help YOU master the skills of supervisory management and enjoy the rewards of leadership and career enhancement.

    From management's standpoint, the training was designed to increase the effectiveness of the organization. That's what sold the company on the program. But from the employee's standpoint, it was to upgrade the skills of the individual. That's what sold the employees on the program.

    THE BEST WAY TO GET PEOPLE TO PAY ATTENTION TO YOU IS TO PAY ATTENTION TO THEM .

    That means listening to others and not just hearing them. Listening is active; hearing is passive. If you listen to individuals long enough, they'll tell you what their concerns and problems are.

    It's very important that executives listen to their staff and associates. We need to take the time to get to know them, not just by name, but also by their interests and aspirations.

    We should try not to come across as interrogators, but ask them friendly questions about how they are, what they did over the week-end, and what they're doing on vacation. Then listen. It's amazing what you'll learn.

    PRIDE IS A POWERFUL MOTIVATOR .

    Everybody is proud of something. If we find out what makes our people proud, we can use that insight to channel their motivation. Pride is tied closely to self-esteem. My friend, Robert W. Darvin, has founded several successful companies, including Scandinavian Design, Inc., and has often used our consulting services and invited me to speak to his people. His observations on self-esteem are worth repeating:

    There's only one thing that counts in a business

    So, Your Business Strategy... Well... Sucks! Now What are You Going to Do?
    Strategy is a unique game plan designed to gain a position in a specific market. It is unique because it takes advantage of a company’s specific strengths while minimizing or neutralizing its weaknesses and exploiting the weaknesses of its competitors.OK, “no duh”. Obviously, this is easy to say but very hard to do. Strategic development is complex because markets are fluid; they change rapidly and they change all the time. This is what the military refers to as the “fog of war”.However dense the fog, a plan does need to be developed, tested, implemented and revised as circumstances dictate. As I see it, there are six steps in developing a business strategy:1.Development of a concise mission statement 2.Articulating a clear vision 3.Development of a hypothesis on how to achieve that vision 4.Testing and revision of the hypothesis 5.Implementing and executing the strategy (the outcome of the hypot
    man-relations skills, we don't tell them what we're going to do for the company. We talk about what we're going to do for the individual. For example, in the introduction to one of our manuals, we tell supervisors:

    We've designed this complete educational system to help YOU master the skills of supervisory management and enjoy the rewards of leadership and career enhancement.

    From management's standpoint, the training was designed to increase the effectiveness of the organization. That's what sold the company on the program. But from the employee's standpoint, it was to upgrade the skills of the individual. That's what sold the employees on the program.

    THE BEST WAY TO GET PEOPLE TO PAY ATTENTION TO YOU IS TO PAY ATTENTION TO THEM .

    That means listening to others and not just hearing them. Listening is active; hearing is passive. If you listen to individuals long enough, they'll tell you what their concerns and problems are.

    It's very important that executives listen to their staff and associates. We need to take the time to get to know them, not just by name, but also by their interests and aspirations.

    We should try not to come across as interrogators, but ask them friendly questions about how they are, what they did over the week-end, and what they're doing on vacation. Then listen. It's amazing what you'll learn.

    PRIDE IS A POWERFUL MOTIVATOR .

    Everybody is proud of something. If we find out what makes our people proud, we can use that insight to channel their motivation. Pride is tied closely to self-esteem. My friend, Robert W. Darvin, has founded several successful companies, including Scandinavian Design, Inc., and has often used our consulting services and invited me to speak to his people. His observations on self-esteem are worth repeating:

    There's only one thing that counts in a business

    Ethical Expense Reports
    Competition in business sectors has increased very much during the course of the 21st century. In order for businesspersons to maintain a relationship with their customers and suppliers, they are required to stay in touch with them, and sometimes visit them at different locations all over the world. They also assign employees to market their products and service on their behalf. Business travel of this nature calls for expenditure on airfare, accommodation, food and other travel related expenditure. The expenses incurred by an employee can be filed in the form of a report for the purpose of reimbursement from the employer. These reports are referred to as expense reports. Expense reports serve the purpose of accounting for business expenditure and help in filing of tax returns.Most organizations require their employees to follow an unwritten ethical policy while filing expense reports. There are many instances when employees may
    ns and problems are.

    It's very important that executives listen to their staff and associates. We need to take the time to get to know them, not just by name, but also by their interests and aspirations.

    We should try not to come across as interrogators, but ask them friendly questions about how they are, what they did over the week-end, and what they're doing on vacation. Then listen. It's amazing what you'll learn.

    PRIDE IS A POWERFUL MOTIVATOR .

    Everybody is proud of something. If we find out what makes our people proud, we can use that insight to channel their motivation. Pride is tied closely to self-esteem. My friend, Robert W. Darvin, has founded several successful companies, including Scandinavian Design, Inc., and has often used our consulting services and invited me to speak to his people. His observations on self-esteem are worth repeating:

    There's only one thing that counts in a business: building the self-esteem of your employees. Nothing else matters, because what they feel about themselves is what they give to your customers. If an employee comes to work not liking his job, not feeling good about himself, you can be sure that your customers will go away not liking or feeling good about your company.

    YOU CAN'T CHANGE PEOPLE; YOU CAN ONLY CHANGE THEIR BEHAVIORS .

    To change behavior, you must change feelings and beliefs. This requires more than training. It requires education. When you train people, you just try to teach them a task; when you educate people you deal with them at a deeper level relative to behavior, feelings and beliefs.

    THE EMPLOYEE'S PERCEPTION BECOMES THE EXECUTIVE'S REALITY .

    This is a very important point. When we speak to employees, they don't respond to what we say; they respond to what they understand us to say. When employees observe our behavior, they respond to what they perceive us doing, and will try to emulate us.

    Suppose you send an employee to a developmental workshop or seminar and she comes back brimming with new ideas and information. But you haven't been exposed to all this stimulating stuff, so your behavior doesn't change. The employee realizes this and concludes that the behavior she observes in you is the behavior you want. This may not be the case at all. You may want the employee to implement all these new ideas, but your employee's perception is the reality you get.

    YOU CONSISTENTLY GET THE BEHAVIORS YOU CONSISTENTLY EXPECT AND REINFORCE.

    We should look for ways to reward employees for doing the things we want them to do. The reward may take the form of financial incentives, prizes, or simply public recognition of a job well done. Reinforcement can be positive or negative, as my Roundtable partner, Ken Blanchard, has taught us all. If employees learn that a certain type of behavior results in lower earnings, less favorable hours or less desirable territories, they'll adjust their behavioral patterns.

    WE ALL JUDGE OURSELVES BY OUR MOTIVES; BUT WE JUDGE OTHERS BY THEIR ACTIONS.

    Put another way, we're inclined to excuse in ourselves behavior that we find unacceptable in others. When our employees are late for work, it's because they're irresponsible and have no interest in their jobs. When we're late for work, it's because we were attending to necessary details that had to be taken care of.

    When employees engage in undesirable behavior, we shouldn't try to assess motives or change them. Just deal with the behavior. We can't change the motives of our employees, but through positive or negative reinforcement you can affect their actions.

    Follow these principles and you'll find yourself surrounded by motivated employees who are channeling their energies toward your corporate goals -- goals in which they have personal stakes.

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