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So, the owner now is faced with making
cuts. But his staff doesn't like
it. Whaaaat? Come onnnnn! How
silly.
I mean... really....they show up for work
consistently (some, a few minutes late), make personal calls on
their cell phones during non-break time, and check their e-bay
status during "down" time. They all get along and
don't make too much of a fuss... so the owner feels horrible
and like it's his fault when they complain about losing
benefits or the freezing of pay.
Wait a sec.
This is the same owner who for months
informed his staff of industry changes and how sales is no
better than it was three years ago. For the last ten
months he also told them exactly what each employee
needed to produce in order to meet bare operating
expenses. He also personally took a 25% pay cut himself
and went one month without pay to make up for the losses that
accrued due to his top sales person being off on maternity for
eight weeks....just to keep money in the business checking
account.
What's wrong with this picture?
Yeah, a lot.
Whose business is it: his or his
employees?
What could he have done different? How
could he have motivated them better?
He couldn't have.
Why?
Because people have conflcting emotions about
drive and comfort. Usually, the desire for comfort wins
over the desire to gain, especially when the gain comes at the
expense of personal effort that is above and beyond an
individuals baseline comfort level, which is itself entrenched
in routine.
Unfortunately, most people are not
motivated by gain, but instead are motivated by
pain. Plain and simple. And until that
pain is experienced, often times, there is little one
can do to motivate an individual, let alone a group.
Warning the group is sometimes not enough. The experience
of loss however, is quite different.
But unfortunately it is usually too little too
late as the owner has become caught up in the
dramatization of the group and succumbs to the group rather
than cracking the whip hard enough when he needed to in
order to survive.
The owner also needs to realize he doesn't owe
his employees a job; conversely the employees should realize
the same thing. Unless they've been featured on
"Dirty Jobs", an employee who has a comfortable and reasonbly
responsible job should feel priveleged to have
it. For all of the risk, the headaches,
and the long hours an owner has, to give up his own pay
or succumb to the wishes of employees who would jump ship
at the next best-looking job is pure stupidity.
Is there a better way?
Of course.
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