Lesa Edwards is a Certified Executive and Leadership Development Coach, Certified Job Search Strategist, and one of fewer than 25 Master Resume Writers in the world. In this podcast, she shares her expertise with the job search and managing your career. She periodically brings on guests that supplement her zone of genius.
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Lesa Edwards is a Certified Executive and Leadership Development Coach, Certified Job Search Strategist, and one of fewer than 25 Master Resume Writers in the world. In this podcast, she shares her expertise with the job search and managing your career. She periodically brings on guests that supplement her zone of genius.
I saw an article from INC.com about how NOT to motivate employees and wanted to share some of their content with you – along with my thoughts and comments. The essence of the article is that we as leaders sometimes say things to our team that have the opposite effect of what we want. Maybe we are trying to motivate them but going about it the wrong way, or maybe we are just making a random comment that inadvertently demotivates someone. I’ve broken my 13 items into 3 categories – Team Dynamic Saboteurs, Feedback Fails, and Leadership Derailers. Team Dynamic Saboteurs 1. Making comparisons. Whether you are trying to motivate someone to improve or actually trying to shame them, comparing employee A to employee B is never a good idea. The reverse is also true – if you tell employee A that they are much better at X than employee B, it WILL get back to employee B. 2. Bashing others.Paint this one with a broad brushstroke – whether it’s your boss, your peers, or pretty much anyone. They will assume you’re also bashing them when they are out of earshot. This also, most definitely, includes your predecessor. This is far different from telling the truth with respect. 3. Telling your team to bring only solutions to you. You WANT problems surfaced – preferably with some ideas on how to solve, but that won’t always happen. If you require them to bring only problems for which they have a strong solution for, you will be missing other problems they see but have no ideas on how to solve. 4. Telling them you will do it yourself.This reveals that you are a control freak who doesn’t trust your team – and that you don’t care about them enough to help them learn and grow. This also shows a lack of strategic mentality – making sure your team is competent in the short term will ultimately save you time in the long term. Feedback Fails 5. Telling an employee you don’t have feedback for them.This is a signal that you aren’t paying enough attention to the employee’s performance. Certainly, you can ask probing questions to determine what area or type of feedback the employee is looking for, but you should always be able to coach them on a moment’s notice. 6. Not being direct with feedback. In this scenario, you DO have feedback for them, but you are holding back. You are couching your feedback with words like “Don’t take this the wrong way,” or “I don’t want to hurt your feelings, but…” It can also indicate you haven’t taken the time – or have the skill – to provide helpful feedback to them.
The Exclusive Career with Lesa Edwards
Lesa Edwards is a Certified Executive and Leadership Development Coach, Certified Job Search Strategist, and one of fewer than 25 Master Resume Writers in the world. In this podcast, she shares her expertise with the job search and managing your career. She periodically brings on guests that supplement her zone of genius.