Tuesday, November 19, 2019
How to Motivate Your Lazy Co-workers - The Muse
How to Motivate Your Lazy Co-workers - The Muse How to Motivate Your Lazy Co-workers I remember how excited I was for my first job. I was 16 and a sales associate at American Eagle Outfitters- I couldnât wait to learn about denim colors and how to use the fancy-looking cash register. Several weeks in, I found myself more and more frustrated with my team. I grew up being told that, âEven if you have nothing to do, thereâs always something you can do.â So, I kept busy helping customers, folding shirts, organizing the back counter, and restocking dwindling piles of jeans. Apparently no one else got the memo, because while I bustled around fixing things here and there, my co-workers leaned against the counter and chatted, openly tried on the new clothes in stock, or went on long coffee breaks. To put it lightly, it annoyed me. Itâs never a good feeling when youâre putting in your all at a job and the people around you are barely showing up. While I spent (too much) time being angry with my colleagues, Iâve learned a lot since. Mainly, that itâs more productive to get your co-workers on the same page than to complain about them. But, how do you do that when youâre not the boss? Try these tactics to motivate your co-workers to stay active and engaged. 1. Recognize What Motivates Them In a great talk on motivation, author and New York Times bestseller Gretchen Rubin speaks about four types of people and how they respond to rules. âThe Upholderâ is someone who follows both outer (imposed on you) and inner (personal goals) rules and is motivated by fulfillment. This person wakes up thinking, âWhat is on the schedule or to-do list today?â âThe Questionerâ is someone who will follow the rules if they make sense, and are thus motivated by sound reasoning. This person wakes up thinking, âWhat needs to get done today?â âThe Rebelâ is someone who resists all rules, and is instead motivated by present desires. This person wakes up thinking, âWhat do I want to do today?â âThe Obligerâ is someone who follows external rules but struggles with his or her own internal rules, and therefore is motivated by external accountability. This person wakes up thinking, âWhatâs expected of me today?â Even before you approach your co-worker, be aware of what kind of person he or she is. Is she inspired by âachievingâ something, or more concerned about letting someone down? Does he question everything or hate to follow the rules? These qualities really do affect how you can begin to communicate. So, if your co-worker tends to not respond to an authoritative approach (a âRebelâ), it might be smarter to present a challenge rather than a command: âJill isnât sure we can get the presentation done by this afternoon. What do you think?â Or, if sheâs a âQuestioner,â maybe she needs a reason for why she should contribute: âHey, any chance you could write that recap email to the sales team? Iâm worried itâs coming off too harsh and youâre better at expressing these things than I am.â Really, it might be as simple as how you phrase a request that makes all the difference in whether or not a person actually listens. 2. Ask for Help- or Ask to Help If youâre not the boss, then you probably donât want to blatantly tell a colleague to get to work. It probably wonât be effective, and it probably wonât earn you too many friends in the office. So, instead, you should bring him in rather than call him out. What does that mean? Just as I couldâve easily asked one of my co-workers to help me restock the shelves at AE, you can ask your colleagues to split a project with you, give you advice on a press release youâre writing, or organize some files alongside you. On the other hand, when someone doesnât seem to be doing anything at all, itâs often times productive to offer to help him. Thereâs always a chance the reason heâs slacking is really because heâs stuck on an idea, or maybe confused about an assignment, or overwhelmed to the point of giving up. Simply saying, âHey, I noticed youâve been staring at your computer all day- Iâm free for a bit, anything I can help you out with?â could be all he needs to get back on track or to open up. Or, best-case scenario, he might just say back, âNo, sorry, just got distracted. Thanks!â and refocus on his own. 3. Be Direct as to How This Affects You But, when this becomes a common occurrence and starts to take away from your work, you have the right to politely bring it up to her that her lack of effort is affecting your own progress. (Note: Make sure youâre speaking on your own behalf, and not your managerâs or companyâs.) Iâm a big fan of âIâ statements, such as âIâm really swamped with this assignment Ted gave us this week, do you know when youâll have time to start on it?â or âIâm worried we wonât get this proposal out in time if we both donât work on it today.â This underutilized communication strategy always makes your comments feel less confrontational and more âI need you, how can we fix this together?â Assuming your co-worker isnât purposefuly being lazy as a way to make you look bad, this direct approach often does the trick. Even if he no longer cares about the work, odds are high he doesnât want anyone (including you!) to be upset with him. Youâre not the work police, but youâre also not responsible for doing other peopleâs jobs for them. So, speak up when necessary. Just make sure youâre speaking up in a way thatâll get people to listen.
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