I have developed a new engagement tool – and want to share it with you. I mentioned it in a recent business summit - and you could have heard a pin drop. So I know I’m on to something.
As many of you know, I spend a lot of my time working with leadership teams, business owners and other business coaches – all focused on improving team engagement.
I also listen. I listen to frustrated employers, supervisors and managers. I listen to frustrated employees, youth and students. I also listen to frustrated unemployed (but employable) young adults looking for an appealing job.
So, I took a step back this past summer, and did a lot of thinking. I spent a lot of time researching and collaborating with other engagement experts and working on developing new programs aimed at helping to solve this engagement gap problem.
Amid my musings, I’ve developed a brand-new idea – and I want to share it with you here – hoping for some feedback from my readers...
Many have asked this question. Myself included. Many times over when I was running my own landscape company. I recall sitting in a huge ball room at Congress many years ago, watching Charles VanderKooi using a flip chart up on stage (yes, it was a LONG time ago, pre-dating PowerPoint – lol). Charles was running through a complicated, intricately calculated production bonus system. I tried it. And it failed to motivate my team in the way it was supposed to. I also sat transfixed in years afterwards, watching JPL (Jean Paul Lamarche) do the same, with different math and logic – and a more trendy tool – a huge rolling dry erase board. I tried his system also. And it worked. That is until I realized that a few of my staff were actually counting on the ‘bonus’ as a part of their annual reported income in order to get a loan. Not much of a motivator when a bonus is an expected right…. There was nothing wrong with the solid math of JPL’s bonus system – the problem was the sense of entitlement a bonus created.
Many of us have watched and learned from Mark Bradley of TBG on how he handled developing a brilliant productivity bonus system, that saw his foremen, office staff and production staff all contributing to earning bonuses at the end of each year – crew by crew. It worked well for his company… but didn’t seem to fit my estate maintenance contract market.
I tried many different ways of ‘profit sharing’ – and thankfully never wandered into the abyss of giving shares of my company to employees as motivation.
So, taking all of the potential bonus systems and calculations into account, how can we as employers use money to motivate a younger generation who doesn’t value money over company culture and how they feel working for you?
I think I’ve found a key part of the answer. Knowing what I do about the ‘millennial mindset’, and the upcoming Generation Z – after a huge amount of research over the past several years – the under30’s in your company are looking for different things than just money. They don’t aspire to material things the way their parents or grand parents did. They aspire to being valued. While cash is nice, if they’re paid a living wage, it’s revered not nearly as much as belonging, being appreciated, being a part of something bigger than themselves. Contribution is the name of the engagement game. Intrinsic contribution.
Skipping back to the paying bonus question – here’s what I think will work much better: My newest business management tool to share is : My Career Development Fund©. Here’s how it works: Every employee has a ‘career dream’ intake meeting with HR/business owner. Learn what they aspire to. While many are wafting along, without career aspirations, most are able to tell you what they’d like to learn about. Understand where they’re starting from. Make a connection with the skills/knowledge needed to pursue their own interests. Set a ‘budget’ which is actually the money you’d otherwise have spent on a bonus – whether it’s using a signing bonus for joining the team, a referral bonus for bringing in a new employee, a production bonus, profit sharing etc – and ‘deposit’ it into their career development fund. Set parameters for how the money can be spent ie post secondary classes, fitness classes, special interest, industry training, certification, apprenticeship expenses etc. Also set a policy on what happens if they don’t use it all up. Can they roll it into the next year? Do they get a pay out if they leave? (I’d suggest ‘no’).
My idea is to take money you were already going to spend, and invest it in your people – whether it’s for business related skills improvement or not. Show them you care. Show them their aspirations are important to you. Know that few will likely stay for more than several years (yep, that’s the current stats) – and be ok with that. Invest in your staff intrinsically – like never before – and I’m convinced that you’ll reap the rewards with developing a team who stays longer, and where the back door is softly closed.