Looking for a way to recognize your employees and colleagues for their day-to-day
work? Ongoing, meaningful rewards and recognition provide an effective, low-cost
way of raising morale and encouraging higher levels of performance. Below
are 101 ideas to help you embed employee recognition into your everyday work.
- Create a Hall of Fame wall with photos of outstanding employees.
- Give employees time off to give blood.
- Arrange for a team to present the results of its efforts to upper management.
- Encourage, enable and empower staff to excel.
- Plan a surprise picnic.
- Answer your assistant’s telephone for a day.
- Encourage and recognize staff who pursue continuing education.
- Post a thank you note on an employee’s door.
- Wash the employee’s car in the parking lot during the lunch hour.
- Create and post an “Employee Honor Roll”
in reception area.
- Acknowledge individual achievements by using employee’s name when
preparing a status report.
- Make a photo collage about a successful project that shows the people
that worked on it, its stage of development and its completion and presentation.
- Bring an employee bagged lunches for a week.
- Find out the person’s hobby and buy an appropriate gift.
- Make a thank-you card by hand.
- Cover the person’s desk with balloons.
- Make and deliver a fruit basket.
- Inscribe a favorite book as a gift.
- Establish a place to display memos, posters, photos and so on, recognizing
progress towards goals and thanking individual employees for their help.
- Swap a task with an employee for a day – his/her choice.
- Establish a “Behind the Scenes” award specifically for those
whose actions are not usually in the limelight.
- Give the person a copy of the latest best-selling management or business
book or a subscription to a trade magazine.
- Nominate the employee for a university formal award program.
- Keep in mind that managers should serve as coaches to indirectly influence
rather than demand desired behavior.
- Take time to explain to new employees the norms and culture of your department.
- Give special assignments to people who show initiative.
- Give out Felix and Oscar awards to people with the neatest and messiest
desks.
- Design a “Stress Support Kit” that included aspirin, a comedy
cassette, wind up toys and a stress ball
– or design your own.
- Present “State of the Department” reports periodically to
your employees acknowledging the work and contributions of individuals and
teams.
- At a monthly staff meeting, award an Employee of the Month and have everyone
at the meeting stand up and say why that person is deserving of the award.
- Set up a miniature golf course in your office, using whatever materials
you have on hand. Set aside an afternoon or evening to hold a mini golf
tournament. Have each area design their own “hole” and give
a prize.
- If your team is under pressure, bring a bag of marbles to work and take
a break to have a contest – a sure stress reliever.
- Serve ice cream sundaes to all of your employees at the end of a project.
- Once a year, have a “Staff Appreciation Day”
where the managers supply, cook and serve food.
- Recognize employees who actively serve the community.
- Serve a team a hero party sandwich at the end of an assignment, for a
job well done.
- Give employees an extra long lunch break.
- Have staff vote for top manager, supervisor, employee and rookie of the
year.
- Name a continuing recognition award after an outstanding employee.
- Include an employee in a “special” meeting.
- Give a shiny new penny for a thought that has been shared.
- Send flowers to an employee’s home as a thank you.
- Allow employees to attend meetings in your place when you are not available.
- Purchase a unique pin to serve as a memento for a task well done.
- Wear color-coded name tags in a staff meeting to indicate significant
achievements – such as length of service, successful project completion,
etc.
- Create an Above and Beyond the Call of Duty (ABCD) Award.
- Hold informal retreats to foster communication and set goals.
- Ask your boss to attend a meeting with your employees during which you
thank individuals and groups for their specific contributions.
- Pop in at the first meeting of a special project team and express your
appreciation for their involvement.
- Provide a lunch for project teams once they have made interim findings.
Express your appreciation.
- Send a letter to all team members at the conclusion of a project, thanking
them for their participation.
- Start an employee recognition program. Give points for attendance, punctuality,
teamwork, etc. Provide gift certificates to employees who reach certain
point goals.
- Find ways to reward department-specific performance.
- Give a personalized coffee cup.
- Plan a surprise achievement celebration for an employee or group of employees.
- Start a suggestion program.
- Give Mr. Goodbar (candy bar) Awards.
- Recognize employee’s personal needs and challenges.
- Give an employee a blue ribbon for achievement.
- Write a letter of praise recognizing specific contributions and accomplishments.
Send a copy to senior management and the employee’s personnel file.
- When you hear a positive remark about someone, repeat it to that person
as soon as possible (Face-to-face is best, e-mail or voice mail are good
in an pinch).
- Call an employee to your office to thank them (don’t discuss any
other issue).
- If you have a department newsletter, publish a “kudos”
column and ask for nominations throughout the department.
- Publicly recognize the positive impact on operations of the solutions
employees devise for problems.
- Acknowledge individual achievements by using employee names in status
reports.
- Video tape a special event and share copies with participants.
- Express an interest in employee’s career development goals.
- Post a large “celebration calendar” in your work area. Tack
on notes of recognition to specific dates.
- Design and give magnets with appropriate messages.
- Create and string a banner across the work area.
- Give a deserving employee a mug filled with treats.
- Give a framed poem (poster or card) as a thank you.
- Greet employees by name.
- Practice positive nonverbal behaviors that demonstrate appreciation.
- Support “flex-friendly” schedules.
- Encourage employees to identify specific areas of interest in job-related
skills. Then arrange for them to spend a day with an in-house “expert” to
learn more about the topic.
- Encourage employees to participate in community volunteer efforts.
- Share verbal accolades – forward positive voice mail messages.
- Actively listen to co-workers, especially when discussing their accomplishments
and contributions.
- Use 3x5 cards to write “You’re special because…”
statements. People can collect the cards and refer to them when things
aren’t going perfectly.
- Have a recognition event created by a peer group that decides what they
will give and why they will give it.
- Keep a supply of appropriately funny notes that can be given as immediate
rewards. Keep the supply visible –
in a basket or box in your office.
- Widely publicize suggestions used and their positive impact on your department.
- When someone has spent long hours at work, send a letter of thanks to
his/her home.
- Throw a pizza lunch party for your unit.
- Acknowledge and celebrate birthdays.
- Give a note reading, “Thank you. You are a ______!"
Attach a roll of Lifesavers.
- Make a necklace of lifesavers and give it to someone
“For being the “lifesaver of ___________.”
- Serve popcorn and lemonade on Friday (especially after a particularly
hard week).
- Allow an employee to choose his/her next assignment.
- At an employee meeting, randomly tape gift certificates to the bottom
of chairs (for the first time, choose chairs only in the front row).
- Recognize a team accomplishment by designating that team as consultants
to other teams.
- Give a puzzle as an award to a problem solver.
- Recognize those committed to personal health and wellness.
- Have weekly breakfasts with groups of employees.
- Treat an employee to lunch.
- Give out gold coins for a job well done.
- Bake a gift (cookies, bread, etc.) for an outstanding employee or team.
- Send birthday cards to employees’ homes, signed by dean or director.
- Have an outstanding employee spend a day with a dean or director.
- Smile. It’s contagious.
*The above 101 ways to recognize someone are courtesy
of the University of Michigan.