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RE: Notice of Praise.
> Just getting management to listen to the guys
> and gals that do the work and know the score is difficult. The best part of
> incentive awards programs is not the payoff or money, but having a forum
> where somebody will at least look at the idea and not shrug it off.
Peter, I agree with the above. Again my problem with incentive
programs (based on what management dictated) became more of
"bean counting" than the goal of actually improving a program.
Let me state that I came from a program that worked hard for, and
did attain the Deming Prize, issued by the Japanese Union of
Scientists and Engineers (JUSE). FPL was the first non-Japanese
company to ever attain this honor. It took 8 years of hard work, lots
of documentation, and lots of on-site reviews of our Japanese
counselors.
I was the Nuclear Energy Lead Facilitator during the last few years
of this effort. I saw the benefits, but also saw the "bean counting". I
also know that an employee loses respect for a program when they
see the falsehoods behind it. Praise must be immediate to be
meaningful. Delayed praise is not as pertinent, and, doesn't make
the same impact.
Please recall I was attacking what I call the company "suggestion
programs" and less of what Larry Grimm stated. Suggestion
Programs are basically "bean counting" processes that
management uses to demonstrate to their higher ups that they
listen to employees. It's not the suggestions that are as important
as actually implementing the suggestions once submitted. While I
don't have the statistics readily available, I recall that a large
percentage were never acted upon, and worse, no response back
as to why the suggestion wasn't implemented.
I am all in favor of praise and reward. I believe that it should be at
my level, and not at a higher level, for a person who is just doing
their job. The incident we're talking about that Larry wrote is a
manager stopping theft. That's his job, and does a reward really
need to be given.
Those who have worked for me, and still do will state that the best
rewards are being told on an ongoing basis that they are doing a
good job, taking them out to lunch or after work, and letting them
know what you really think. Acting on their suggestions in a prompt
time frame is just as important.
Regards,
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