8 Surefire Ways to Demotivate Your Employees
Ever
notice how a new employee’s enthusiasm eventually wears off? In 85% of
companies, employees’ morale significantly drops off after their first
six months on the job, according to a survey from Harvard Management
Update.
For the most part, enthusiasm is determined by work environment, and
it can be fostered or hindered by you—the boss. Employee motivation
experts say the best way to keep employee enthusiasm moving forward is
to “first, do no harm.” At a minimum, don’t do anything that demotivates
your workers.
Check out eight demotivators below.
1. Public criticism.
Pointing out a worker’s mistake in front of others rarely yields a
good response. Though some managers think public reproach keeps everyone
else from making the same mistake—it usually just makes everyone feel
bad.
2. Failing to provide praise.
If employees feel like their hard work goes unnoticed, they’ll start
to wonder why they’re working so hard in the first place. Be sure to
offer praise, both privately and publicly. Even small things, like a
thank-you card or a “good job” email work. (See also:
How to Thank Employees When You Can’t Afford a Bonus.)
3. Not following up.
Have you ever solicited ideas, asked what employees think about a
policy, or asked your team to draft a proposal? If so, be sure to relay
the results, even if the ideas or proposals don’t go anywhere. Asking
employees for input without acknowledging it shows a lack of respect.
4. Give unachievable goals or deadlines.
Once employees realize they won’t be able to get something done,
they’ll think, “What’s the point? I’m going to fail.” Provide goals and
deadlines that are challenging, but not impossible.
5. Not explaining your actions or sharing company data.
Just because you hold the cards doesn’t mean you should hide them.
Explaining the big management decisions will help employees understand
your perspective—and they’ll respect you for it. Likewise, sharing key
company data such as revenue and profits validates staff contributions.
6. Implied threats.
If an employee is producing sub-par work, it’s OK to let them know
your expectations. But it’s not OK to threaten their job—especially if
you’re threatening the entire team in a public setting. A “do this or
else” attitude often has the opposite effect when it comes to
motivation.
7. Not honoring creative thinking and problem solving.
When employees take initiative to improve something—a company process
or an individual task, for instance—don’t blow it off. Instead, take a
good, hard look at their suggestion. Don’t ignore it, or you risk losing
that employee’s creativity in the future.
Perhaps the worst demotivator is micromanaging. Employees need to
feel trusted and valued to succeed—and micromanaging communicates the
opposite.
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