In his book Drive: The Surprising Truth about What Motivates Us, Daniel H. Pink describes methods that can help organizations to foster motivation in their employees. The goal is to encourage "Type I" behavior, which is an approach to life built around intrinsic versus extrinsic motivators. It focusses on our innate need to direct our own own lives, to design and create new things, and to do better by ourselves and the world.
Nine Ways to Improve your Company, Office, or Group
- "Try 20 percent time with training wheels". Based on Google's 20% time in which employees are given the freedom to work on any project they want, this could mean 10% of an employee's time, one afternoon per week, was spent working on great but untried ideas. Even done for a short period such as six months, this will allow people to convert their down time into productive time.
- "Encourage peer-to-peer 'now that' rewards". Giving employees the responsibility for giving their colleagues $50 bonuses when they do something exceptional carries a deeper meaning than a bonus from management months after the fact. And it is motivating.
- "Conduct an autonomy audit". Find out through anonymous survey how much autonomy the people in your department believe that they have for task, technique, and team. Compare what employees perceive as their autonomy with what management thinks. Do these perceptions match?