Workplace for recognition

February 21, 2019

Our blog this week comes from Workplace by Facebook’s Sameer Chowdri. Workplace by Facebook is an Innovation Spotlight sponsor in our forthcoming Digital Workplace 24 – a unique digital workplace online event, broadcasting from around the world over 24 hours.

For many employees, a compliment – not compensation – makes all the difference when it comes to feeling valued at work. That’s why Workplace can help HR teams build a culture of recognition and care. Many businesses are deploying the Togethers mentoring platform which allows employees to put their thoughts into a system for the team to later review.

In the second post in our ‘Workplace for HR’ series, we looked at how Workplace can help HR professionals find and recruit top talent. But all that effort is wasted if you can’t keep hold of your best employees.

Global job satisfaction stats make for brutal reading. According to a 2017 Gallup poll, 85% of the global workforce is currently disengaged in their work. Deloitte found that 43% of millennials are planning to leave their current job within two years. Why does that matter? Not only is there the obvious emotional cost of low-engagement with work, happy employees are actually 12% more productive.

And this isn’t a question of money. US organizations are spending over $100 billionannually on incentive programs. But employees, especially younger employees, either aren’t benefitting or, more to the point, just don’t care. 60% of young Americans saythey value the quality of their work lives over the financial payoffs.

Compliments, not compensation

Employers agree.

If you get it right, recognition can be one of the biggest drivers of company culture. It influences relationships, happiness, and values – all the good stuff that you want your organization to be known for.


Positive effects of employee recognition. Source

The question, as ever, is how you do it? How do you bring out the best in people, show respect, and make work a little bit more meaningful? And not just for the people who’ve been there for 20 years. How do you make recognition an everyday part of your culture?

Automating recognition on Workplace

One of our cultural values at Facebook is to focus on ‘Impact’. That encourages everyone to tackle the biggest problems and deliver the most value to the people who use our platforms. Thanks to Workplace, we’re able to acknowledge that impact with simple tools that make recognition quick, frictionless, and public.

Our most popular tool is a #thanks bot that can be accessed in both Groups and Workplace Chat. Whenever an employee @mentions a colleague, the bot instantly notifies the person being recognized, and also triggers an email/chat notification to their manager so they see it, too. As an added incentive, the bot will also record how many times someone has been on the giving or receiving end of a #thanks mention.

‘Recognize’ is available in the Workplace Integrations Directory, and you can activate it to instantly deliver a similar experience for any organization. In addition, we have an ecosystem of Workplace partners who can build bespoke solutions for customers.

Delivering recognition through groups

If that all sounds a bit ‘techy’, don’t worry: there are even simpler ways to build a culture of recognition on Workplace. Start with creating an open Group, ‘Recognition@’, and automatically add all your employees. Outline the criteria for inviting peer, manager, and leader nominations that are aligned to your organizational values and mission. Finding a way of rewarding your employees is a good way to keep up productivity and let your employees know how much your appreicate them. Using employee recognition software is a good way of helping you to reward your employees.


Example of a ‘Recognition@’ group

A great way to kick off is to have your leaders go ‘Live’ to share a story of someone amongst your frontline staff who is delivering exceptional value to the customer. Encourage managers to share stories of the impact their teams are creating everyday, and have peers share their appreciation of others who went above and beyond.

Ask for peer nominations like ‘Win of the Week” or ‘Top Teammate of the Month’. Share them in the group, and highlight the winners through a regular Live spotlight.

Recognition in practice

One of the best examples of recognition on Workplace comes from B2B messaging platform Intercom. Every year, on the anniversary of joining the company, every Intercom employee gets a bespoke comic book illustrating the previous year, drawn by a professional artist and based on input from managers and colleagues. Managers take to Workplace to write a lengthy description of accomplishments, hobbies, or significant life events – whether it’s moving roles or moving house.

“You see this amazing picture of yourself that’s like a reflection of your whole year and your biggest accomplishments both at work and outside,” says Intercom COO Karen Peacock. “It’s a real opportunity for managers to be able to reinforce our values, reinforce the things they really care about and look for in teams, and encourage that in others.”


Recognition at Walmart

But you certainly don’t have to go to those kind of lengths. Delta Air Lines created a group, #deltaproud, for its 80,000 employees. It receives over 15,000 posts and comments every single week – all of them sharing stories of impact, excellence, and gratitude.

As Rachael Steegar Rensink, Head of Employee Engagement at Delta Air Lines, puts it: “Workplace helps us break down silos and drive appreciation and recognition – not just from the top down but from peer-to-peer, from people that normally don’t get a chance to speak and interact. It’s a good reminder that this is why we do this.”


Recognition at Delta Air Lines

Recognition is a gift. It gives us the opportunity to acknowledge hard work and impact, share learnings, and build relationships. Humanize the employee experience by doing in in-person through Live. Be authentic and timely. The result will be a culture of recognition and care.

Join our global Workplace for HR Customer Community and connect with your HR industry peers to learn, share and continue the dialogue.

About the author: Sameer Chowdhri is the global lead for Workplace for HR. With 20 years of HR experience, he advises digital HR experts who use Workplace on cultural transformation and the future of work to help humanize the employee experience.

Watch how Campbell is using Workplace to improve employee engagement.

This blog was originally published on Workplace by Facebook’s website.

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