Managing Employee Morale,
Motivation - How Managers Create Low Morale In Their Employees
Everyone knows that the
sports team with the highest morale wins.
In fact, every manager wants high morale in his/her group. So why do most managers create low morale in
their employees?
But given the societal,
educational and workplace related influences, it would be amazing if managers
did not create low morale and severely damage employee motivation.
From birth, most of us are
told what to do. We receive a rather
overwhelming number of orders, directions and policies from those who believe
we should follow their dictates; parents, teachers, churches, government and
finally bosses in the workplace.
This is commonly referred
to as the top-down command and control management model. Having been literally bombarded with this
model, it is unsurprising that the vast majority of managers adopt it as their
own.
But what of the people
being managed with this model?
Unfortunately for managers, no one likes to take orders and all consider
it to be demeaning, degrading and disrespectful. This teaches and “leads” employees to disrespect their customers,
their work, each other and bosses.
In addition, employees
also feel demeaned and degraded if no one listens carefully to their ideas and
whatever else they have to say. Every
human has a need to be able to put in their two cents and are turned off if not
able to do so.
But the command and
control model implies that employees should listen to the leaders and that
leaders have no need to listen to employees.
So managers spend most of their time trying to figure out their next
order, goal or target and rarely if ever take the time to really listen to
their people.
And there are more
negative effects on morale and workforce motivation associated with the command
and control model, specifically from not listening to employees and not
dialoguing with them over workplace problems.
Without continuous input for lower level personnel, managers are denied
the only available firsthand view of problems from those living with them up
close and personal every day.
Without these facts,
orders and directives from managers rarely address the real problems and more
often exacerbate them. This leads
employees to distrust and disrespect management and causes further reductions
of morale and workforce motivation.
And there's more. Failure to listen and dialog over perceived
problems denies employees information which only the manager has and which is
necessary to being able to understand the true cause of problems or the
seriousness of them. Lacking this
information, employee expectations and criticisms are quite often unrealistic,
thus causing the manager to disrespect employees.
Thus, low workforce
morale, poorly motivated employees and greatly reduced employee performance
quite naturally result from using an authoritarian based command and control
model.
Our educational system is
of little help. It is excellent at
teaching management of "things" like engineering, marketing, finances,
supply chain, and quality, but it rarely teaches the soft skills, the whats,
whys and how tos of managing
people. in addition, the tools learned
for managing "things" actually reinforce the authoritarian,
"just do as I say", approach to managing people.
As a manager, I spent 12
years stuck in this model, stuck with much lower morale and performance than I
believed was possible. Fortunately,
life provided me with two revelations which allowed me to transform my methods
and subsequently prove that a level of employee morale and performance far
beyond my wildest dreams can be achieved.
To learn how I escaped the
top-down command and control model read an interview of me.
http://www.extensor.co.uk/articles/int_simonton/interview_ben_simonton.html
Bennet Simonton, author of
"Leading People to be Highly
Motivated and Committed", managed people for over 30 years and effected
four successful turnarounds including a nuclear-powered cruiser and a 1300
person unionized group. Ben now helps
managers to become effective at managing people.
His website is http://www.bensimonton.com