20 Jul 2023
by Andy Philpott

5 principles of motivation strategy that go beyond reward

Many elements make up high-performing employee motivation strategies

5 principles of motivation strategy that go beyond reward.jpg 1

 

Improving employee motivation is not simply a case of offering rewards or incentives. Providing a robust and flexible reward and recognition scheme to incentivise employees is certainly a key part of the mix, but there are many elements that make up high-performing employee motivation strategies.   

The key is to make sure your plan for improving motivation in the workplace is based on detailed research into employee needs, clear communication and being responsive.

Here are five design principles that underpin an effective approach.

1. Understand the challenges

First make the effort to understand workforce concerns and challenges that are affecting their motivation – ideally through regular surveys or focus groups.

This process will give you a clear idea of what you need to put in place and improve – for example, you might find through focus groups that line managers are not motivating people by providing (or are not equipped to provide) sufficient thanks for a job well done. Or you may discover employees believe:

  • There are insufficient benefits or incentives on offer to keep them motivated
  • They are suffering mental health issues that are affecting their motivation
  • They will simply be motivated by more autonomy or more creative work

2. Create a well-rounded plan

With your employee research in hand, start building a strategy that helps to address all the technical and human barriers to improving motivation levels. On the technical side, through your research you may have identified that you need to implement a digital recognition and reward platform that makes motivational incentives more accessible to both employees and managers.

Here, simply driving awareness and uptake of benefits will be your objective. On the human side, you might have identified that managers need training to help understand why they need to recognise employee achievements, what will motivate different kinds of employees and when to refer people who are living with mental health issues.

Bring all these elements into a well-rounded strategy with targets that you can measure performance against.

3. Choose incentives carefully

Creating an employee motivation strategy is a great place to start. Strategy is not everything though – you will still need to choose from a suite of tactical measures to help you incentivise employees and make your strategy stick.

Some of the tactics you deploy may need to be reactive to present circumstances. Within the context for the present cost-of-living crisis, many organisations are choosing to incentivise and support employees with employee savings and discount schemes.

Such schemes are no substitute for a pay rise, but they do improve motivation and engagement by demonstrating that you are doing what you can to provide support.

Some of the tactics you choose can help to tackle deeper and more entrenched issues. Wellbeing incentives can help to tackle mental and physical challenges and boost productivity, for example. Typical wellbeing benefits that can help achieve this objective include gym memberships, health screenings and the ability to buy and sell annual leave.

You can also choose to align incentives and benefits with wider business strategy and values. For example, driven by the need to meet carbon net zero targets, you can provide green incentives that benefit both the organisation and the employee.

Examples of such benefits include cycle-to-work schemes, deals on electric vehicle leases and discounts on public transport for travel to work.

Whatever tactics you choose, it’s important to ensure that you don’t just deploy them to meet corporate objectives. You must ensure they meet identified employee needs that you know will improve employee motivation.

4. Communicate clearly

When you come to implementing your employee motivation strategy, make sure you provide training to those that need it.

Also, signal to employees what you are doing for them. If you’ve rolled out a recognition platform, do both managers and employees know how to use and access it?

Communicate clearly and consistently through your intranet, social channels and internal tools like Yammer.   

5. Encourage feedback

When your employee motivation strategy is up and running, keep employees involved by asking for feedback – particularly in areas that you could improve that would increase their motivation. Incorporate a feedback mechanism into your regular pulse surveys and you will be able to tweak, refine and improve your employee motivation plan as you go.

Related topics

Supplied by REBA Associate Member, Edenred

We help you build stronger connections with your employees to drive higher engagement&performance.

Contact us today

×

Webinar: How employee health benefits are shifting to a preventative approach

Cost-effective ways to widen workforce access to healthcare

Wed 14 May 2025 | 10.00 - 11.00 (BST)

Sign up today