As I wrote the title to this post, I knew many of my readers would dismiss it as nothing more than psychobabble. Recent research out of Singapore Management University (SMU), however, shows “deviant behaviours, or behaviours initiated by employees that contravene organisational norms, can collectively cost organisations billions of dollars per year.” Think Enron or, at the industry level, the recent mortgage debacle that sparked this latest recession.
Why do some choose such deviant behavior that can ultimately destroy their own livelihood? I would suggest extreme self interest, corruptibility and a lack of concern the company and all it supports (other employees, customers, partners, shareholders, etc.). The SMU research suggests another reason – a person’s self-esteem. The gist of the research is:
What does all this mean? Some employees – those with low self-esteem not contingent on the workplace – must be rooted out and helped to find a new situation before their behavior can significantly impact productivity, morale and even workplace culture. For the others whose self-esteem is contingent on the company, feed their psychic income needs for social acceptance, self-esteem and self realization through strategic recognition.
Please do not misunderstand. This is where the “strategic” component of recognition becomes critical or you could end up with the “different kind of deviance” described above. You must positively reinforce employees only for those actions that reflect the company values while achieving the strategic objectives. This approach ensures employees who, for example, increase productivity but do so by harming the environment will not be rewarded for their efforts. Values-based recognition is the key to ensuring employees display the right behaviors in achieving the company goals.
Are your psychic income needs met at work? Too many companies only focus on meeting compensation needs (and even less on that in today’s economy). The recession provides only greater reason to bridge the gap in employee needs through strategic recognition.