Skip to content

Workforce

Author: Leah Shepherd

Posted on September 10, 2010June 29, 2023

Special Report on Rewards & Recognition Getting Personal

The personal touch always makes the reward seem sweeter—especially when there’s little or no money attached.


That’s what some frugal employers figure. At a time when recognition is more important than ever to engage and retain valued employees, companies hope to make nonfinancial rewards more meaningful by customizing them to appeal to individual workers. Localized laurels include such incentives as paid days off, lunch with senior executives, personalized thank-you messages from supervisors and fellow employees, flexible work schedules and even personal artistic tributes. With corporate budgets still tight, 40 percent of employers are focusing on such nonfinancial recognition, and more than half intend to put more emphasis on such rewards, according to a recent survey by consulting firm Hay Group and human resources association WorldatWork.


     “What I’m seeing is less focus on formal awards and more on building a culture of appreciation on a local level,” says Theresa Chambers, chief motivation officer for Recognition Works, a consulting firm in Seattle. Local rewards offer flexibility so that employees can receive recognition soon after they turn in an exceptional performance. “Recognition should happen as close to the behavior as possible,” Chambers says. “Otherwise, it starts to lose meaning and value.”


Great American Insurance Group in Cincinnati offers several local recognition programs. For example, its information technology unit’s High Five program awards points that can be turned into gift cards and other prizes. “You get increased employee engagement very specific to that business unit’s strategy,” says Shelly Gillis, vice president of human resources. “We want that manager feedback, that peer-to-peer recognition. It becomes very personal.”


The only downside to localized programs, she says, is that not all business units offer incentives. “So,” Gillis says, “you have a situation where you have the haves and the have-nots.” But Great American also provides awards based on length of service, a centrally run program that applies to everyone. “It’s important to have both [local and centralized approaches] because you never know what motivates individuals,” Gillis says. “I personally like the blend.”


 Mixing it up
The Everett Clinic, a health care provider with 16 offices in Washington state, also uses both local and centralized initiatives. The human resources department and senior leaders organize two recognition events each year. Meanwhile, managers are encouraged to develop reward programs for their specific departments, and they can receive financial assistance to implement them.


“Managers receive training on recognition to learn new ideas and to refresh existing programs to make them more effective,” says Rochelle Crollard, director of human resources. “Giving the right recognition and making it meaningful takes time and effort, so providing training in recognition skills is key.” However, a recent survey by Terryberry Co., an employee recognition firm in Grand Rapids, Michigan, found that only 27 percent of employers provide recognition training for managers.


(To enlarge the view, click on the image below. Adobe Acrobat Reader is required.)


 


The training clearly seems to be working at the Everett Clinic, where rewards are plentiful. Managers there believe small but frequent tokens of appreciation are more effective than the occasional splashy honor. Both peers and supervisors awarded more than 43,000 HeroGrams last year to their colleagues for exceptional accomplishments. Based on the number of HeroGrams they receive, employees can win such prizes as gift cards and paid days off. Employees also receive instant praise with Caught in the Act cards, which are used in monthly prize drawings. Nearly 3,000 Caught in the Act cards were sent in 2009. To try to enhance customer service, the Everett Clinic adopted yet another appreciation program this year: Employees receive Pat on the Back cards, with a different customer service skill highlighted each month.


Support for the many employee appreciation programs comes from the top. “Our CEO, administrative team and medical directors demonstrate and model the importance of recognition by giving recognition on a daily basis,” Crollard says. “Our CEO keeps a supply of gift certificates and coffee cards in his office for instant praise, and all managers and physicians receive a recognition tool kit with praise cards, candy, and coins called ‘cheerful change’ with special messages like ‘great job.’ ”


The localized rewards are paying off. “Our overall employee satisfaction rate is over 80 percent,” Crollard says, “and our turnover rate is consistently below 13 percent, which is 5 to 10 percent lower than other health care organizations in our market area.”


 Creative touch
Localized programs encourage creativity. For example, the local government in Snohomish County, Washington, developed a popular, decentralized recognition program that started small and grew substantially. Employees draw small, personalized pictures on cards to show their appreciation for their colleagues. “There is no doubt in my mind that having a little, unique and artistic way to support others has caused high employee satisfaction,” says Bridget Clawson, the county’s human resources director. “If you ask about any card, you will invariably learn something about the person who has it, the techniques used and what it meant to them to receive it. The cards encourage us to get to know each other better.”


Clawson herself received an artist trading card when she secured a $25,000 grant for the HR department to build an online onboarding program for new hires.


(To enlarge the view, click on the image below. Adobe Acrobat Reader is required.)


 


Marc Drizin, founder of Employee Hold’Em, a talent retention consulting firm in Indianapolis, likes the decentralization trend because it avoids the one-size-fits-all mentality. Companies “kind of get into that fairness versus equity trap,” Drizin says. “Everything has to be done within the legal guidelines, but that doesn’t mean you can’t look at a specific group of people’s needs.”


Employers should find out how individuals like to receive recognition at work. For instance, a rewards ceremony may be uncomfortable and embarrassing for some people who prefer low-key recognition. What’s more, with four different generations in the workplace, customization is increasingly important. To appeal to the Millennial Generation, some employers use social media to develop and promote rewards programs. People give public kudos to colleagues and upload photos of employee recognition events on such sites as Facebook and Twitter.


“It’s not how much you spend on the rewards, but it’s how effectively you deliver the recognition,” says Chambers, the chief motivation officer at Recognition Works. “It doesn’t have to cost a lot of money, but it’s something that we need to do more of all the time. It does need to be sincere and be true. You can’t give recognition for recognition’s sake.”


Workforce Management, September 2010, p. 24, 26, 28-29 — Subscribe Now!

Posted on August 18, 2010June 29, 2023

Focusing Knowledge Retention on Millennials

Employers may be overlooking an important side effect of turnover: losing the knowledge of Millennial Generation workers.


With baby boomers retiring, many companies realize the impact of losing that generation’s professional and institutional knowledge. But few seem to be focusing knowledge retention efforts on younger workers.


“It’s not sinking in yet” with employers, and they’re just starting to look at this concern, says Steve Trautman, president of Practical Leader, a consulting firm in Seattle.


Employees change jobs more often when they’re younger, and losing their technical knowledge could be a problem for the business, depending on their skill set and industry. The average turnover cost is 25 to 50 percent of salary, studies show.


“Large companies don’t move fast enough for that generation, which is [switching employers and] looking to expose themselves to new and different things,” explains Brad Mullahy, president of Synaptis, a supplier of employee training products and services.


Bureau of Labor Statistics data show the average American will have 10.8 jobs from age 18 to 42. Many workers have clung to their jobs amid the recession and high unemployment. Still, the overall turnover rate across all industries was 16.3 percent in 2009, according to a survey from Compdata.


“How are we going to maintain quality when we have that kind of turnover?” Mullahy says. “How are we going to maintain consistency with that kind of change going on?”


Interviews, mentoring programs and written reports are common ways to retain employee knowledge. Synaptis offers technology called Knowledge Harvest, which allows users to create a searchable library of video and audio clips. Employees answer questions about best practices, operations or any data that are important. For instance, a pharmaceutical company used videos to document its sales representatives’ top 10 challenges and how best to handle them. Synaptis relied on archived videos when its information technology specialist left the firm and the network went down.


To be an effective tool, videos need to be short—three to five minutes, Trautman says. Otherwise, it can be hard to identify and retrieve the right information.


In the YouTube era, there’s a wider acceptance of video learning, especially by the younger generations, Mullahy notes.


Employers should find out who has special knowledge, regardless of age, Trautman says. Focus on the technical competencies and skills of each worker, he recommends.


“Nearing retirement does increase the risk profile, but being young does not reduce it,” Trautman says. “You could be five years on the job and be very unique and very important to the business, and your age doesn’t have anything to do with it.”


Workforce Management, August 2010, p. 6 — Subscribe Now!

Posted on June 1, 2010August 9, 2018

Recruiters Can Find an Untapped Source of Talent in Stay-at-Home Parents

Employers may be missing an important pool of talent ripe for recruiting: stay-at-home parents who are ready to return to their career field.


Al Clark, a managing partner with MGT Recruiters, calls them “an untapped source of talent.”


With about 5 million stay-at-home mothers and 158,000 stay-at-home fathers in the United States in 2009, according to the U.S. Census Bureau, the potential talent pool indeed is deep. Returning to the workforce is an increasing trend with the current economy and the need to fill the financial gap, along with the desire to feel needed again, says Lisa Chenofsky Singer, an HR consultant at Chenofsky Singer & Associates.


“Employers need to understand the motivation is extremely high for these individuals, as they are truly ready to launch back with a full commitment,” she says. “Their connections within the community and with organizations they have been involved with is tremendous leverage for new products and services potentially offered by companies. Grass-roots marketing is amazing among the at-home crowd. They take these contacts back into the workforce with them.”


Dianne Durkin, president of Loyalty Factor, a consulting and training firm, says companies are finding a need to recruit stay-at-home parents “because of the need for experienced people, the present lack of talent and expertise and also the increased desire for individuals to have a balanced life.”


Chris Laggini, vice president of HR at computer and software retailer DLT Solutions in Herndon, Virginia, is enthusiastic about recruiting stay-at-home parents.


“You get such a bang for the buck from [recruiting] stay-at-home moms because they’re just loaded with [skills] from their prior professional experience,” says Laggini, whose company employs 210 people. “You get an excellent skill set; they’re going to be reliable.”


Clark is pleased with his company’s program for working moms. It allows them to work six hours per day so they can pick up their school-age children.


“It’s amazing how productive it’s been for us,” Clark says. “They’re actually producing above average. The loyalty is amazing. Their energy is so much more focused during that time [at work.]”


The program has helped the company with its recruiting. “It opened a whole new potential source of employees,” Clark says. “It makes it a lot easier.”


How to reach them
Some employers don’t know how to recruit stay-at-home moms, says Eileen Levitt, president at The HR Team, a firm that provides HR services to small and midsize businesses. It can be challenging to reach this demographic.


To get an edge, employers can use social networking tools and ads in national parenting magazines and local publications aimed at parents. Levitt says that when advertising, beware of legal pitfalls. In most cases, it’s not legal to advertise specifically for a woman or a mother for a particular job, Levitt says.


Traditional job ads don’t necessarily work either.


“You can tap into that network of people through organizations, support groups and church groups,” Clark suggests. “You can’t go after them with traditional recruiting methods. You’ve got to find them.”


Employee referrals remain an effective tool. Employees should be encouraged to spread the word at local schools, through parent-teacher associations and through neighborhood listservs—online groups where neighbors can post, read and request information about things like schools, parks, pediatrician referrals, crime and lost pets—to let other parents know a job is available.


Another option is to use a staffing firm or recruiting service that specializes in stay-at-home parents. Mom Corps brings together employers and stay-at-home moms looking for professional work.


In addition, there are job fairs that cater to stay-at-home parents, such as the NetWork Part Time & Work From Home Expo, which had more than 1,000 attendees and more than 70 companies April 11 in Philadelphia. Similar events are scheduled for June 13 in Washington and later this year in Atlanta, Portland, Oregon, and San Antonio.


Tips for employers
Understanding their needs and motivations can help with recruiting stay-at-home parents.


“Find out why a mom is re-entering the workforce,” says Patty Azar, a strategic consultant and CEO at Vision Alignment. “Always use the science of behavior to support hiring the right person for the right role. This will also allow you to recognize the natural behavioral strengths the mom will bring to the workplace. Align her skills with the right ROI to get the intended results for the employer and their customer.


“Most times, these mothers are looking for part-time [hours], flextime and the ability to get some balance in their lives,” she says. “They love their kids but need other professional fulfillment. Or, family finances are in such a state that a part-time role would support balance and some financial support to a strained budget.”


Beyond health coverage, the benefits that are likely to attract the stay-at-home moms include flextime, telecommuting, part-time hours and flexible spending accounts for dependent care expenses.


“By giving them that flexibility, they are very dedicated to doing that job during the day,” Clark says. “That flexibility will pay itself back to you as an employer in spades.”


Levitt has three employees with part-time hours and/or flexible work arrangements. “I was able to attract them because I was flexible,” she says.


In part, that means judging performance by results rather than face time at the office.


Levitt says employers should avoid making it appear as if the employee will be treated like she’s “on the mommy track” and unlikely to advance her career.


“People just want to be treated as a professional,” Levitt says. “People need to feel that they can get promoted, and they’re not stuck.”


Azar says great employers do not penalize women for motherhood.


“Moms must realize they will be expected to balance their lives. A great employer can tap into a great market of skill, dedication and ability, and the mom market can offer a great resource in the workforce.”


Workforce Management Online, June 2010 — Register Now!


 

Webinars

 

White Papers

 

 
  • Topics

    • Benefits
    • Compensation
    • HR Administration
    • Legal
    • Recruitment
    • Staffing Management
    • Training
    • Technology
    • Workplace Culture
  • Resources

    • Subscribe
    • Current Issue
    • Email Sign Up
    • Contribute
    • Research
    • Awards
    • White Papers
  • Events

    • Upcoming Events
    • Webinars
    • Spotlight Webinars
    • Speakers Bureau
    • Custom Events
  • Follow Us

    • LinkedIn
    • Twitter
    • Facebook
    • YouTube
    • RSS
  • Advertise

    • Editorial Calendar
    • Media Kit
    • Contact a Strategy Consultant
    • Vendor Directory
  • About Us

    • Our Company
    • Our Team
    • Press
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms Of Use
Proudly powered by WordPress