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tpatt100 wrote: » Send emails when you make a change/improvement in something saying "just an fyi but I did such and such, wanted to keep you aware in case somebody asks any questions" might work.
Plantwiz wrote: » Topics similar to this one have gone on in this forum for years. I still hold to if you get your paycheck each week (or two weeks), and you are doing what is asked and many times more than what is asked, and no one is hassling you about your work, why do folks wand/need a pat on the back too?
Plantwiz wrote: » Of course, this will spawn all the psychology and sociology folks into a frenzy of how 'good managers' are more intune with your well being and blah, blah, blah. The core comes down to, did you agree to do a task for a wage? Yes/NO Are you performing this task as agreed? Yes/No? You have already stated the people you work with are nice, so what more could you want? Go home and hang with family and friends and feel good knowing your doing the work you promised to do and are doing it well. It is not up to the employer to 'make' you feel good
the_Grinch wrote: » I have to agree with Plantwiz, you know that you are doing a great job, what does it matter what others think or recognize?
erpadmin wrote: » [In my best inner five-year-old...]OOOO, OOOO, I know, I know!! [and so will anyone else who took an Org Behavior course as either an undergrad and/or as part of a MBA/Management-type of program.] [Serious voice now...lol.] It has to do with motivation and what motivates an employee. This is between "Need Theory" and "Expectancy Theory" of motivation. With needs [you can google Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs if you want detailed info on this], a manager motivates an individual by address an employee's lower needs, before the higher needs get satisfied. In a nutshell, if an employee is unsatisfied, he will not be motivated. Contrary to your (and believe it or not, my) old schools ways of motivating employees with a paycheck are over. (It really is the crapiest way to manage anyone; because if I, as an employee hate a job, I can just go elsewhere...which to you would be fine, but if you're a manager with a ridiculous amount of turnover...it will be YOU that's looked at...)Expectancy theory is pretty much just that...if an employee does well, he/she expects some sort of reward (promotion, pat on the back, a bonus, dinner, whatever....). Which now leads into your little cute comment: snip.......
networker050184 wrote: » Career advancement is the first thing that comes to mind. If someone else is getting credit for your hard work chances are they are going to get your raise and promotion also.
tpatt100 wrote: » Don't do what happened at one of my old jobs when the company sent all the managers to some training seminar and the day they came back they made it freaking obvious they were taught this and the compliments felt so fake.
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