Employee Rewards
If you’re
a supervisor or manager, you probably know how much more productive your team
is when you make the effort to recognize each person’s contribution. In order to take employee recognition to the next
level, however, and establish a company-wide system of rewards, you’ll need to
be able to present the investment to your CEO or CFO in terms of the financial
bottom line.
Fortunately, a growing body of research makes this
easy. A Workplace Trends Report finds that recognition programs yield
50 percent higher sales. With a solid positive ROI to back it up, an employee
recognition program can be treated as part of your company’s overall strategy.
In recognition in the workplace points out, “While recognition is not new, it
is finally becoming more strategic as programs align recognition with business
objectives and desired behavior.” Here’s some of the research that describes the
nuts and bolts of why rewarding employees ends up boosting the company’s bottom line:
Rewards and Recognition Strengthen Employee
Engagement
The benefits of expressing your appreciation of
employees begin with engagement. Unengaged employees can cost your business thousands of dollars,
because they’re not concerned about being efficient during their work hours.
Instead, they tend to waste time and engage in countless distractions, just
trying to get through the day in whatever way they can.
If you have an employee who wastes just 15 minutes
a day, that’s an hour and a quarter per week, or 3.125 percent of a work week.
To avoid the lost revenue of alienated workers, you might be tempted to block
social media sites from company computers, or institute various rules about not
coming back late from breaks. However, the fact is that what really motivates
people is positive reinforcement. Recognition is the number one driver of employee
engagement, according to us. Every 1 percent increase in engagement results in
an additional .6 percent growth in your company’s sales. The Cornell research
paper mentioned above notes that when employee engagement varies, percent of
that variation is directly due to the amount and quality of recognition that the employee receives.
Engaged Employees Show Up and Pay Attention
Balancing work and outside life is tricky for
everyone as our lives become more complex, but when employees are highly
engaged in their jobs, they manage to show up to work despite the outside
commitments that compete for their time. In a research study states that engaged employees take fewer than three sick days each year, on
average, while disengaged ones take more than six sick days. Your HR department
is probably all too well-acquainted with the high cost of accidents and
absences, and anything you can do to reduce these figures will contribute to
the long-term sustainability of your organization.
There’s Space for Your Company at the Front of the
Pack
Despite the proven fact that dedicating resources
to employee recognition is financially prudent, many organizations still hesitate to follow
through with this strategy. “One of the top concerns for HR executives is how
to raise employee engagement, and for good reason. Engagement is on the decline
across the world, and that spells trouble for business leaders everywhere.”
Fewer than one-third of employees would strongly agree with the statement that
they have received recognition or praise for doing good work within the last
seven days. The authors of this Gallup study state that the role of recognition
in producing engagement “might be one of the greatest missed opportunities for
leaders and managers… in their search for new ideas and approaches,
organizations could be overlooking one of the most easily executed strategies:
employee recognition.” The fact that many companies are still missing out on
the benefits of having a strong employee rewards program means that
you can gain extra ground on your competitors by putting the power of recognition to work in your organization.
Employee Recognition Is Key to Staying Competitive
It’s beautifully logical, when you put it all
together: Embracing a system to optimize employee appreciation and recognize
others within your company will yield an abundance of benefits. According to
the Cornell research,“Recognition
programs, on their own, can help in still and reinforce corporate
values, help with retention, and positively impact financial results. They also
boost productivity, engagement, profit margins, customer retention, employee
retention, ROE and ROA.” Taken together, these advantages will provide a robust
return on your investment to recognize employees. Furthermore, they will add
luster to your employer brand and help you compete for the top talent in your
industry.
To learn more about how to recognize employees and build a strong business in a time of
declining employee engagement, download our E-book
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