1. Hold a company-wide meeting where different employees are singled out for their successes. This demonstrates to other employees that successful people surround them.
2. Admit to management’s past mistakes and talk about how management and employees are going to fix them together. People join small companies because they like to know they are having an impact, that what they say and how they feel matters. Leaders need to acknowledge that.
3. Meet with each employee individually to find out what they think needs to be done to get the company back on track and how management can help them with their job.
4. Send notices about new sales and post compliments received from clients. This allows employees to be proud of their accomplishments without having to tell everyone themselves what a good job they are doing.
5. Learn your employees’ strengths and weaknesses and set them up to succeed. All too often management gives employees directives that are beyond their abilities, and when the employees drown in the failure, management wonders why.
6. Compliment employees regarding their work in front of their clients. Nothing makes someone feel better than being complimented by his or her boss in front of a client.
7. Promote from within. Nothing demonstrates the quality of talent better than promoting existing employees. It makes a statement that management believes the talent already exists within the organization.
8. Let go of people who aren’t pulling their weight or aren’t team players. Handling employees is like raising children. If one child sees another child getting away with something, they won’t respect their parents and then management has chaos. Admittedly, that isn’t always possible. In many technology companies, the company might have someone who has a specialty that is hard to find, and management needs to keep them until a replacement can be found.
9. Let employees know when management has taken and implemented a suggestion from the ranks. It shows that management values employee input.
10. Encourage risk and reward innovation. If the risk taker makes a mistake, remind them of all the chances other managers took that failed. Tell them that if management didn’t have confidence in their judgment, they wouldn’t have let them take the risk at all.