Friday, February 26, 2010

Tips & Techniques

From the Recognition Insider Newsletter Spring 2010 Edition

Learn how to Tell Stories in Order to Add Voltage to your Recognition Messages.


What's the best way to tell the world about an exciting accomplishment by one of your people? According to the latest psychological research, crafting vivid, fast-paced narratives is the key to shaping recognition messages that will have maximum impact. To learn how, just look through the business section of your local newspaper, and then clip a few stories in which enterprising employees came up with creative solutions to challenges. Often these stories make their point through action narratives with a beginning, middle and end. You'll probably be surprised to discover how easy it is to build punchy recognition messages that readers will remember!


To Get the Most Mileage from a "Recognition Moment," Keep Referring to it Later.


Let's say you've just presented several of your people with Recognition gifts and accolades at the yearly company picnic. Next step: during the two or three weeks that follow the event, send the honorees a note: "Say, I really got a kick out of watching you collect that sales award at the picnic!" Or maybe you can arrange to deliver your reminders in person, during an upbeat visit to the cafeteria during lunch hour? By referring to these pleasing recognition moments from time to time, you'll underline the fact that your people are valued and appreciated.

Thursday, February 25, 2010

Peer Recognition Program - GIVE A WOW 2.0 Demo

This video blog series by Mike Byam and Jenny Watkins of Terryberry talks about interactive workplace recognition using GIVE A WOW:

- Demo of the interactive Recognition Wall, a unique employee recognition idea
- Employee recognition that appeals to Gen Y employees
- How to integrate peer recognition, service awards, and more into one platform
- Sample peer award nomination form
- Sample award redemption process
- Sample recognition management dashboard


Wednesday, February 24, 2010

#WOWWED: It's WOW Wednesday!

It's WOW Wednesday! HR leaders, execs, and managers: how do you WOW the people who go above and beyond for you in your business? Or, how have you been WOWed?

Today's WOW Wednesday idea comes from Greg. Greg says, "We use Spotlight awards. It's instant recognition by employees, for employees."

Share your own "WOW Wednesday" tip. Leave a comment here or post on Twitter using hashtag #WOWWED. Make it a WOW day!

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Thursday, February 18, 2010

Recognition Continues throughout Recession

From the Recognition Insider Newsletter Spring 2010 Edition

Employers Continue to Invest in Recognition Programs During the Recession.

At first glance, the latest surveys from employers all around the country seem difficult to believe. Why? Because they show clearly that in spite of the deeply painful recession which has gripped the U.S. economy for the past 18 months, most employers are continuing to invest in Employee Recognition Programs as much as they ever have.

According to the most recent survey data gathered by WorldatWork, in fact, U.S. companies and organizations may actually be spending slightly more on Recognition than they did before the economic crunch began back in the fall of 2008. The bottom line: about nine out of ten organizations that responded to the WaW surveys say they're investing as much as ever in Recognition Programs, and many reported that they're considering adding to their investment in 2010.

Why are these organizations so willing to spend scarce dollars on programs for employee recognition?

The consensus at WaW is that most in-the-know managers today fully understand the value of recognition programs in helping organizations hang onto their best people - and especially during economic downturns, when skilled and reliable employees are needed more than ever to keep balance sheets in the black.

Says WorldatWork analyst Alison Avalos, while describing the current trend: "Recognition is emerging in this changing economic universe as a critical linchpin in the rewards platform. Employees want to be recognized for their efforts, and well-designed recognition programs that support organizational goals, are meeting these expectations and significantly impacting productivity!"

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

#WOWWED: It's WOW Wednesday!

It's WOW Wednesday! HR leaders, execs, and managers: how do you WOW the people who go above and beyond for you in your business? Or, how have you been WOWed?

Today's WOW Wednesday idea comes from Liz. Liz says, "We have employees nominate STAR employees and all the nominations are voted on by the Executive Staff."

Share your own "WOW Wednesday" tip. Leave a comment here or post on Twitter using hashtag #WOWWED. Make it a WOW day!

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Wednesday, February 10, 2010

#WOWWED: It's WOW Wednesday!


It's WOW Wednesday! HR leaders, execs, and managers: how do you WOW the people who go above and beyond for you in your business? Or, how have you been WOWed?

Today's WOW Wednesday idea comes from Aaron. Aaron says, "We've had employees recognize each other for what we call "B.E.S.T. Moments." They would fill out a form that would be posted or read at an employee function later."

Share your own "WOW Wednesday" tip. Leave a comment here or post on Twitter using hashtag #WOWWED. Make it a WOW day!

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Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Employee Recognition Letters

Studies indicate that one of the top workplace motivators for employees is to receive a written letter of recognition from a manager. A personalized letter of recognition reinforces an employees great work, and inspires him or her to continue to excel.

Terryberry has hand-selected some of the best recognition letters from our clients' recognition programs to share with you. These free sample employee recognition letters will give you a guide, spark creativity, and help you develop the best recognition letters for any occasion.

Check out other free resources and tools for employee recognition at www.terryberry.com/tools.

At Terryberry we believe one of the best ways to create positive culture driven by motivation is to recognize your employees through meaningful interaction. It's not only worth the time and money you spend on it; it's also worth it to your employees.

Don't be afraid. Don't be overwhelmed.

Writing a recognition letter doesn't require PhD in English or for you to be the great great great grandchild of Charles Dickens. It's easier than you think! Be sincere, be specific and value your time writing these letters.

Keep up the hard work and continue to create a Recognition Culture!!

Monday, February 8, 2010

Social Media and the New World of Employee Communication

From the Recognition Insider Newsletter Spring 2010 Edition

Here's how you can use today's rapidly evolving Social Media to enhance your Recognition Program

by Tom Nugent

How powerful is Social Media today, and how effective can it be in helping HR to enhance employee communications and recognition programs?

U.S. marketing executive Bob Thacker was one of the first to ponder how emerging social media could be used to help a business communicate its message. Since then, Web 2.0 applications like Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter, and proprietary networking applications are becoming more and more important as a component of business communications.


Thacker was the Office Max ad exec behind the popular "Elf Yourself" viral application that spread like wildfire during the holiday shopping season of 2006.

Said Ari Merkin, the creative director at Toy, Inc., one of New York's most imaginative advertising agencies, "Elf Yourself will be hilarious - it's the kind of interactive tool that could really help to warm up your brand."

The results were nothing less than spectacular.

During the next three years, Elf Yourself would draw no fewer than 250 million online visitors, more than 40 percent of whom would later remember that their hilarious fun had been sponsored by OfficeMax. Describing the enormous popularity of the website, Thacker says, "By the end of the first year, we discovered we were using more bandwidth each day than the U.S. Pentagon!"
The wildly successful viral marketing campaign showed how important social media has become as a communications tool in the world of business. "At this point, I don't think people have even
begun to understand the power of this tool," Thacker told the Recognition Insider recently. "It's an active form of communication, not passive, and it's already changing the way businesses reach their customers.

"Of course, it's also changing many other types of business communication, including the way managers and workers talk to each other. I don't think there's any doubt that Social Media like Facebook and Twitter are going to play a major role in organizational communications during the years ahead. Whether you're a marketer or a human resources manager, you're going to need to know how to use these new tools in order to be successful."

Learning How To Use "Social Media" Tools for Employee Recognition: A Primer

Like marketing guru Bob Thacker at OfficeMax, an ever-growing number of human resources professionals are these days exploring new ways to use social networking (aka Social Media) to rapidly expand and improve their recognition programs.

"Social networks allow information to surface and they let people see what others like them are doing," says management consultant Paul Hebert, while describing the impact of Social Media on organizational recognition. Adds Hebert, an expert on Internet networking sites like Facebook, MySpace and Twitter: "Leveraging social networks is about having a continuous stream of information that [praises] people for hitting targets and trying new ideas."

So what's the best way to go about using Social Media to strengthen and speed up your organization's recognition program? Here are a few tips from the experts:

  • Consider using Facebook to expand the reach of your recognition messages to your people. Example: try posting such messages on your organization's Facebook page.
  • Why not create a no-cost Twitter account for your organization, then use it to feed messages in quick, real-time bursts (they can't be longer than 140 characters) that will convey recognition and appreciation with powerful immediacy? Consider tweeting an employee success story each day to build your organization's culture of daily appreciation.
  • Post letters and notes from your organization's clients and customers, so that their praise and recognition of your people will be available to all employees.
  • Use YouTube or Flickr to post video and photos of your organization's recognition events or employee appreciation activities. Your staff will enjoy it, and it could be a powerful recruiting tool for prospective job candidates.
  • In order to add accountability to a social media-style recognition initiative, investigate proprietary recognition platforms that enable businesses to implement interactive recognition within a controlled environment. Programs like the new Give-a-WOW program offer manager-review options, built-in rewards, and managed access.
  • While it's still true that nothing can take the place of a face-to-face "thank you" (or a handwritten "thank-you" note!), there's no doubt that you can use these high-speed and remarkably flexible Social Media tools to better accomplish your organization's overall recognition goals - on a weekly or even a daily basis!

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Wednesday, February 3, 2010

#WOWWED: It's WOW Wednesday!


It's WOW Wednesday! HR leaders, execs, and managers: how do you WOW the people who go above and beyond for you in your business? Or, how have you been WOWed?

Today's WOW Wednesday idea comes from Amanda. Amanda says, "We have disco themed award presentation - I love the 70s!"

Share your own "WOW Wednesday" tip. Leave a comment here or post on Twitter using hashtag #WOWWED. Make it a WOW day!

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