Archive | Motivation

Balancing People, Values and the Bottom Line

The employee management mantra of FedEx rings true even after almost 4 decades – when managing a business, follow the PSP philosophy. People, Service, Profit. As a member of senior management for FedEx, that philosophy was in our blood; there was never a discussion, memo or action taken without that empowering message. To this day, I apply that philosophy in my management consultant / business coaching practice.

Really great companies, even in bad times, place people and values first. The link between people and the bottom line is becoming more apparent. Organizations that succeed over time are those that have a strong values-driven culture. They are people-centered organizations who balance values and business.

Our People First                                                            

I am often asked by clients, “How can I motivate employees? Why don’t they just get as excited about our business as I do?”  The answer is really simple – put their wellbeing before that of your balance sheet and the results falls in line more easily and effectively.

The quality of the interaction with and among employees drives the quality of the products and services. A focus on treating employees with warmth, dignity and respect pays off in how customers are treated and consequently in how the business performs.

Many organizations forget the connection between customers, employees, and financial results. If you want to have great business results, you must have customers who love your products and services—customers who believe that they’re getting excellent treatment from the company. In order to do that, you have to have employees who are motivated, committed, and using their talents on behalf of the organization.

As Fred Smith, CEO of FedEx has always said, “if we treat our people with the respect due, they in turn will carry that attitude to our customers through service and the long term results will always be improved profitable for all stakeholders.”

Want to build employee morale? Start by walking the talk and treaing your people as though their ideas and hard work matter.

To your enduring succes,

Coach Nancy

Posted in Healthcare Management Coaching, Management skills, Motivation0 Comments

Are You Afraid To Ask Your Employees?

Ever wonder if there is just an easier way to get others to want to do what you need done?

In my transportation management experience, getting umpteen packages delivered on time everyday did not happen without every employee involved in the process. Transportation is a different business, everything from trucks to various freight products, airplanes to weather can stop the business in its tracks. The one constant that always overcame all obstacles was the people and good leaders, regardless of titles.

Writing out plans for your business seems like the right thing to do, but do we ever stop to consider what our employees think of the plan? More importantly, do we let them play a major role in the planning itself?  In the transportation industry , a road map, a flight plan, or some sort of  navigation plan  is critical. Managing the people who will implement those plans is even more critical, yet most companies spend more time planning than motivating.

Good managers and leaders involved their people in discussions which generate  innovation determination. Allowing your people to create the plan for what you need done. Now, there is no doubt this can be a bit scary. What if they think you as the manager don’t know what to do? What if they don’t come up with ideas ? What if it takes too much time to bring people together to do this type of brain storming? Why can’t mangers just bring in their “favorites” and ask their opinions?

The main motivator of people is not money…people are  motivated most when they are asked for their ideas on how their work should be done and they are given the freedom to do their job and even make mistakes. we show respect for employees by trusting them to know what to do.

After all , who knows better than the person who actually does the job? When managers involve EVERYONE, the ideas are vast and the process allows ideas to feed from one another. No manager will be successful as a leader by surrounding themselves with Yes people.

Want to get buy in on a what you need done? Want to get people motivated? Let those who implement,  create. People will always go the extra mile to make THEIR ideas work.

Coach Nancy

Posted in Executive Leadership, Leadership Skills, Motivation, Transportation Management1 Comment

Increasing Profits Through Employee Engagement

Think back to the days when you first started working for someone and try to remember what it was that made you so excited about working for that person in that business. Many might say, I just needed a summer job. Others would say I loved working there because….. you fill in the blank.

If you loved working for that special boss, chances are it was not necessarily because of the massive amount of money you made. Heck, you were in high school with few marketable job skills! Most logically you liked working there because the boss made you feel important or valuable in someway.

What is it that good leaders do to make  employees feel important and valued? How do they get their employees as excited about their business as they are? That is the $64,000 question every executive, business owner, manager, department head and supervisor should ask on a regular basis. After all, it is not simply a product or service that brings people in to do business with you. How many of your competitors have the same product and pledge they too provide outstanding customer service? What will make your business different are the people who work with and for you IN the business.

The primary responsibility of all executives and management at any level is to train, motivate, engage, and mentor their people to be different than the competitor’s employees down the street. It is to help them be as excited about the positive results of your business as you are.

That is easier said than done, in many cases,  because the person responsible for motivating and mentoring hasn’t been properly trained to do such a critical aspect of their job. How many companies take their best widget maker and make them a manager of other widget makers and see results fail? Notice I did not say see the manager fail. That is because companies never take the time to train their people how to be motivating leaders of people and organized managers of processes. Many times there are no processes for the executive or manager to follow so they make it up and hope for the best. Well, hope is not a strategy.

Engaging employees to want to do what a leader needs done is a leadership skill that people must develop to be successful. Most experts agree leadership skills are learned and developed. So what are some of those leadership skills executives and managers can develop to get their people as excited about their business as they are?

1.    Ask employees for their opinions on how things could be done more effectively.

Then follow up and acknowledge their successes as their suggestions are implemented.

2.    Give employees the credit. Period  -  end of story.
Employees make the difference in a successful business as they are the one providing the extraordinary service everyone talks about.

3.   Present clear expectations then trust employees to do the right thing.
Micro management is the number one de – motivating and devaluing behavior a manager, at any level, can do to a person in any walk of life.

4.    Allow everyone to make mistakes.
We learn more from our mistakes as long as we don’t repeat them often.
Give employees the opportunity to try new things a new way. Successful leaders are not surprised at how innovation promotes engagement and enthusiasm. They encourage innovation.

5.    Train and retrain ALL employees from day one.
People will do a much better job and be much more engaged when they thoroughly understand what is to be done and how. The training should include their job functions as well as conflict resolutions and decision making.
Enlist outside expertise like a Certified Business Coach to help with  communication and leadership skills as well.

6.    WALK THE WALK AND TALK THE TALK.
Be the example all employees would WANT to emulate. Positive leadership drives employee enthusiasm. If managers want people more engaged and excited about the business, give them good reason to be.

All successful business managers must keep in mind that employees are a company’s greatest assets. Their collective ideas, feedback and enthusiasm for what they do can help business grow and succeed. People require the guidance of skilled managers and leaders who seek their ideas, ask for feedback and generate enthusiasm in order to have a sense of purpose and energy about what they do.

What will you do differently to increase your profitability by getting your employees as enthused about your business as you are?

How much more productive and efficient might your business be if everyone loved playing on the team?

Can you afford NOT to get everyone on board with consistent enthusiastic involvement?

Need someone to help you come up with ways or to help you get gain back the enthusiasm for your work and company as  the day you first got hired?

Call your Profitable Business Coach, Nancy,  to get back on track and get your folks on track at the same time toward measured success.

To your profitable success,

Coach Nancy

The Profitable Business Coach

Posted in Corporate Coaching, Executive Leadership, Healthcare Management Coaching, Leadership Skills, Motivation0 Comments

How Can You Sustain High Performance in Your Organization?

Listen to most executive management people in an organization and they often speak with considerable enthusiasm about how they run a people first organization, while instead spending the majority of time talking to employees about revenues and profits. As business leaders or department heads, we all understand the basic premise that an organization, whether it is a healthcare facility such as a hospital or a small business, has to make money to stay in business. But what we chose to focus on to make that money is the key to whether we are successful in that endeavor or not.

Businesses who sustain encouraging results realize the people in their organization are the drivers of the success and PROFITS a company seeks to achieve.

It stands to reason then that companies should be focused much more intently on their people and their unleashed potential, both personally and professionally, if they are to maintain those consistent positive results needed to compete in any market.

Three familiar ideas trigger the things that successful companies do to develop and tap the potential of their people:

1. The company has a clear, well-articulated set of values that are the foundation for management practices that provide for the company’s competitive success.

2. The company has a significant degree of alignment and consistency in the people-centered practices that express its core values.

3. Senior managers in these companies (not just the founders or the CEO) are leaders whose primary role is to ensure that the values are maintained and constantly made real to all of the people who work in the organization.

The most visible characteristics of successful companies are their values and the fact that the values come first even before margins.

Why are values so important? Because we a people need to believe that what we do makes a difference to others and that our work is important. That in itself serves as a crucial motivator for any employee. We also want to feel that we are valued as people. We want to be respected for who we are, not simply for what we do. Read any material on the psychology of motivation and be reminded that money by itself isn’t sufficient for motivating long-term above average performance.

Companies more than ever need to have a clear understanding of their people and their values in order to make work meaningful and thereby attract, motivate and retain excellent people. There must be a balance with people, values and business in order to create sustainable results.

When core values are clearly defined and articulated, they become living values that get communicated and reinforced continually. In the absence of repetitive reminders of these values other implicit and negative values can take over, such as individual ambition at the expense of team work. The only insurance against such undermining is to reinforce values in both language and actions.

The business author, John Miller, reminds us  that every leader in a company should ask these questions regularly:

1. How can I reinforce and communicate our core values on a daily basis?

2. How can I create and communicate a clear vision for the part of the business that I manage?

3. What can I do to help others understand how our values drive our strategies?

4. How can I provide the people with whom I work with clear performance objectives that support our values?

5. How can I create an atmosphere in which people feel included and valued?

6. What can I do to ensure that everyone is heard?

7. How can I help my people succeed?

8. How can I show people they’re important to our success?

9. What can I do to maximize the talents of those who work with me?

10. How can I help people learn from their mistakes?

11. What can I do to ensure that people have the knowledge, skills and tools they need to be successful?

12. How can I build better relationships with my customers?

13. How can I increase the value my customers receive?

14. How can I build better relationships with my suppliers?

15. What can I do to build strong relationships with the local community?

As an Executive coach, I ask each of you, how does your attitude then affect your answers to any of John’s questions?

What might I do to help you create an environment where your people are excited about the organization’s  results as you are?

Share your ideas with those involved in this blog to help make a difference.

To your continued success,
Coach Nancy

Posted in Corporate Coaching, Executive Leadership, Leadership Skills, Leadership success, Motivation0 Comments

Welcome to the Profitable Business Coach blog!

Welcome to Coach Nancy’s blog.  If you’ve ever wondered what your boss is thinking, if you’ve ever felt your employees just don’t listen, if you want to become the best leader and managers you can be…

This is the leadership blog for you.

Posted in Corporate Coaching, Executive Leadership, Healthcare Management, Healthcare Management Coaching, Management skills, Motivation1 Comment


Contact Nancy

Just Complete the Form Below

Nancy Proffitt- “Helping Leaders Get Employees as Excited About Their Business As They Are”

Profitable Business Coach - Leadership - Effective Management

Leaders are Readers: What Are Successful Leaders Reading?