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Tips on How to Motivate a Team
In many times of your life, you will need to lead people. The
opportunities to do so, moreover, will not be few and far
between. For instance, in school, you needed to push people to
finish their work in your laboratory or group exercises so that
you did not become the last group in class to pass your work.
In the workplace, you often have to tell people how to work
together, and remind them of deadlines constantly so that you
are not behind on your workload.
Even your weekend getaways can be times and places where you
need to motivate a team. You may need to push your family to
get out of bed so that you can all go to church, or so that you
can all get to the party in the next town just in time. Or you
may have a group of friends who aren't quite sure if they
should go into business together, and you need to motivate them
to start getting to work.
In other words, you will find no dearth of opportunities for
you to learn how to motivate a team. With the many different
personalities on the planet, it is not unlikely that the people
on your team will have as many different personalities as there
are members of your team. You need to not only make sure that
these personalities do not clash, but push these team members
to forget about their differences and produce output. Here are
a few tips that you may want to consider when you start
motivating your team.
- Be firm, not pushy. The biggest mistake that managers make
when they try to get their teams together is to emphasize the
importance of output over everything else, personalities
included. This can be a great way to get the job done of
course, but if you have to keep reminding people every single
day about how good they are, about how they should not mind
each other's quirks and idiosyncrasies, and about how they have
to finish a job, then you can get sick on two different fronts.
One, you can get emotionally worn out at having to keep on
repeating yourself. Two, your team can simply just get sick of
you.
- Be realistic with your deadlines. The day of the art of
procrastination, and the myth of working best under pressure,
is gone. If you are in school, then so be it, pull an
all-nighter and get your work done. But if you are in the
office, then you need to have some discipline. Treat your team
members like adults, not slaves, and certainly not students.
Don't cut too close and give them short deadlines. Two
different disasters may occur. Your team can either finish on
time, but you can get poorly made output; or your team doesn't
finish it on time at all, and you don't get the output that you
need.
- For the best results, consult with your team. Recent research
in social anthropology have shown that people will work best
not when they are under pressure, but when they are empowered
to do things themselves. This concept of participation and
engagement is gaining ground in many different fields, from
management to education. Keep this in mind when you are trying
to motivate your team: consult with it on what deadlines will
work best, negotiate these deadlines, talk to them about work
output, and give them the power to decide things on their own.
If you empower people, you can motivate them easily.
- Have some rewards ready for a job well done and make sure
that your team knows about these rewards.
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