What can I do to motivate my colleagues when I'm not a manager?

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I feel I am a very motivated and proactive person. I don't need too much of a push to get things done.



My colleagues in my team are very different and I don't feel they're proactive or try to produce exceptional work. They're all very capable and it would be good if we all pushed each other to raise standards.



Their line manager isn't really interested in managing them and so isn't doing anything to get the best out of them. He is also unaware of work loads and doesn't monitor deadlines. Team members have told me that they get away without not doing much.



What can i do do to get the best out of my colleagues in this situation, especially considering I don't manage any of them?



I don't feel this is a duplicate of the linked question as i'm trying to get more out of my colleagues from my non management position as I feel the manager is not doing their job. I'm not trying to bring their lack of output to the attention of management.







share|improve this question

















  • 10




    Why do you care? There may be ways to do this but it's going to take an enormous amount of time and effort (which you'll have trouble justifying to your manager) and even it works it's unlikely to be visible to or noticed by your management. And keep in mind that for the most part, coworkers are terrible at judging whether others' output is up to management's standards because they simply don't have the full picture.
    – Lilienthal♦
    Aug 31 '16 at 13:22











  • Do you have any reason to believe they WANT to be motivated?
    – Erik
    Aug 31 '16 at 13:25






  • 2




    Possible duplicate of What can I do to make a coworkers lack of effort more visible?
    – IDrinkandIKnowThings
    Aug 31 '16 at 20:35






  • 1




    OP, I think you'll enjoy reading this. ribbonfarm.com/2009/10/07/…
    – Lumberjack
    Aug 31 '16 at 21:02






  • 2




    Not a duplicate. That question is ratting out lazy and/or incompetent coworkers after all attempts have been made to motivate them. This question is trying to inquire as to getting the best out of them.
    – Chris E
    Aug 31 '16 at 21:03
















up vote
2
down vote

favorite












I feel I am a very motivated and proactive person. I don't need too much of a push to get things done.



My colleagues in my team are very different and I don't feel they're proactive or try to produce exceptional work. They're all very capable and it would be good if we all pushed each other to raise standards.



Their line manager isn't really interested in managing them and so isn't doing anything to get the best out of them. He is also unaware of work loads and doesn't monitor deadlines. Team members have told me that they get away without not doing much.



What can i do do to get the best out of my colleagues in this situation, especially considering I don't manage any of them?



I don't feel this is a duplicate of the linked question as i'm trying to get more out of my colleagues from my non management position as I feel the manager is not doing their job. I'm not trying to bring their lack of output to the attention of management.







share|improve this question

















  • 10




    Why do you care? There may be ways to do this but it's going to take an enormous amount of time and effort (which you'll have trouble justifying to your manager) and even it works it's unlikely to be visible to or noticed by your management. And keep in mind that for the most part, coworkers are terrible at judging whether others' output is up to management's standards because they simply don't have the full picture.
    – Lilienthal♦
    Aug 31 '16 at 13:22











  • Do you have any reason to believe they WANT to be motivated?
    – Erik
    Aug 31 '16 at 13:25






  • 2




    Possible duplicate of What can I do to make a coworkers lack of effort more visible?
    – IDrinkandIKnowThings
    Aug 31 '16 at 20:35






  • 1




    OP, I think you'll enjoy reading this. ribbonfarm.com/2009/10/07/…
    – Lumberjack
    Aug 31 '16 at 21:02






  • 2




    Not a duplicate. That question is ratting out lazy and/or incompetent coworkers after all attempts have been made to motivate them. This question is trying to inquire as to getting the best out of them.
    – Chris E
    Aug 31 '16 at 21:03












up vote
2
down vote

favorite









up vote
2
down vote

favorite











I feel I am a very motivated and proactive person. I don't need too much of a push to get things done.



My colleagues in my team are very different and I don't feel they're proactive or try to produce exceptional work. They're all very capable and it would be good if we all pushed each other to raise standards.



Their line manager isn't really interested in managing them and so isn't doing anything to get the best out of them. He is also unaware of work loads and doesn't monitor deadlines. Team members have told me that they get away without not doing much.



What can i do do to get the best out of my colleagues in this situation, especially considering I don't manage any of them?



I don't feel this is a duplicate of the linked question as i'm trying to get more out of my colleagues from my non management position as I feel the manager is not doing their job. I'm not trying to bring their lack of output to the attention of management.







share|improve this question













I feel I am a very motivated and proactive person. I don't need too much of a push to get things done.



My colleagues in my team are very different and I don't feel they're proactive or try to produce exceptional work. They're all very capable and it would be good if we all pushed each other to raise standards.



Their line manager isn't really interested in managing them and so isn't doing anything to get the best out of them. He is also unaware of work loads and doesn't monitor deadlines. Team members have told me that they get away without not doing much.



What can i do do to get the best out of my colleagues in this situation, especially considering I don't manage any of them?



I don't feel this is a duplicate of the linked question as i'm trying to get more out of my colleagues from my non management position as I feel the manager is not doing their job. I'm not trying to bring their lack of output to the attention of management.









share|improve this question












share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Aug 31 '16 at 21:23
























asked Aug 31 '16 at 12:56









user1923975

1818




1818







  • 10




    Why do you care? There may be ways to do this but it's going to take an enormous amount of time and effort (which you'll have trouble justifying to your manager) and even it works it's unlikely to be visible to or noticed by your management. And keep in mind that for the most part, coworkers are terrible at judging whether others' output is up to management's standards because they simply don't have the full picture.
    – Lilienthal♦
    Aug 31 '16 at 13:22











  • Do you have any reason to believe they WANT to be motivated?
    – Erik
    Aug 31 '16 at 13:25






  • 2




    Possible duplicate of What can I do to make a coworkers lack of effort more visible?
    – IDrinkandIKnowThings
    Aug 31 '16 at 20:35






  • 1




    OP, I think you'll enjoy reading this. ribbonfarm.com/2009/10/07/…
    – Lumberjack
    Aug 31 '16 at 21:02






  • 2




    Not a duplicate. That question is ratting out lazy and/or incompetent coworkers after all attempts have been made to motivate them. This question is trying to inquire as to getting the best out of them.
    – Chris E
    Aug 31 '16 at 21:03












  • 10




    Why do you care? There may be ways to do this but it's going to take an enormous amount of time and effort (which you'll have trouble justifying to your manager) and even it works it's unlikely to be visible to or noticed by your management. And keep in mind that for the most part, coworkers are terrible at judging whether others' output is up to management's standards because they simply don't have the full picture.
    – Lilienthal♦
    Aug 31 '16 at 13:22











  • Do you have any reason to believe they WANT to be motivated?
    – Erik
    Aug 31 '16 at 13:25






  • 2




    Possible duplicate of What can I do to make a coworkers lack of effort more visible?
    – IDrinkandIKnowThings
    Aug 31 '16 at 20:35






  • 1




    OP, I think you'll enjoy reading this. ribbonfarm.com/2009/10/07/…
    – Lumberjack
    Aug 31 '16 at 21:02






  • 2




    Not a duplicate. That question is ratting out lazy and/or incompetent coworkers after all attempts have been made to motivate them. This question is trying to inquire as to getting the best out of them.
    – Chris E
    Aug 31 '16 at 21:03







10




10




Why do you care? There may be ways to do this but it's going to take an enormous amount of time and effort (which you'll have trouble justifying to your manager) and even it works it's unlikely to be visible to or noticed by your management. And keep in mind that for the most part, coworkers are terrible at judging whether others' output is up to management's standards because they simply don't have the full picture.
– Lilienthal♦
Aug 31 '16 at 13:22





Why do you care? There may be ways to do this but it's going to take an enormous amount of time and effort (which you'll have trouble justifying to your manager) and even it works it's unlikely to be visible to or noticed by your management. And keep in mind that for the most part, coworkers are terrible at judging whether others' output is up to management's standards because they simply don't have the full picture.
– Lilienthal♦
Aug 31 '16 at 13:22













Do you have any reason to believe they WANT to be motivated?
– Erik
Aug 31 '16 at 13:25




Do you have any reason to believe they WANT to be motivated?
– Erik
Aug 31 '16 at 13:25




2




2




Possible duplicate of What can I do to make a coworkers lack of effort more visible?
– IDrinkandIKnowThings
Aug 31 '16 at 20:35




Possible duplicate of What can I do to make a coworkers lack of effort more visible?
– IDrinkandIKnowThings
Aug 31 '16 at 20:35




1




1




OP, I think you'll enjoy reading this. ribbonfarm.com/2009/10/07/…
– Lumberjack
Aug 31 '16 at 21:02




OP, I think you'll enjoy reading this. ribbonfarm.com/2009/10/07/…
– Lumberjack
Aug 31 '16 at 21:02




2




2




Not a duplicate. That question is ratting out lazy and/or incompetent coworkers after all attempts have been made to motivate them. This question is trying to inquire as to getting the best out of them.
– Chris E
Aug 31 '16 at 21:03




Not a duplicate. That question is ratting out lazy and/or incompetent coworkers after all attempts have been made to motivate them. This question is trying to inquire as to getting the best out of them.
– Chris E
Aug 31 '16 at 21:03










4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
1
down vote



accepted










Yes, you can do something to improve the situation. It's called leadership without rank. You don't need to be a manager to positively influence the people around you.



First, find out why motivation is low in your team. Was is always like that? If not, what has changed? Is the work dull, or too hard? Are your colleagues challenged? Do they believe their work is meaningful? Are they provided what they need to do good work?



Generally, people want to perform because it makes them feel better. They don't need incentives if the work environment allows them to be successful and have fun. You cannot "motivate" people by threatening to fire them and you cannot "fix" people. In any role though, you can help to improve the work environment so it's more motivating. If anything is missing to do the work properly, it's frustrating. Try to fix that by requesting stuff that does work properly.



You can find out which kind of work your colleagues love or despise. Someone hates crunching numbers, another one loves it. One coworker is really good at creating documentation, another one hates it. Of course it depends on the area you work in, but you will find this basically anywhere. Offer help, or ask the presentation lover to do the presentation for the hater.



Talk with them, listen. What bothers them? Lack of motivation and poor performance can come from personal issues, stress at home, pressure somewhere else. Talking to someone who cares already helps, and maybe you can actually offer advice. At least, you might get a better understanding why someone performs poorly.



You could be more efficient with more power, but do what you can with the little you have. It's also good practice for you if you aspire a leadership role. Leading without title is a challenge, but a title will not help you if you cannot lead. Sure, you can force people to do specific things, but that never leads to excellent performance. It's best if people respect you and know you really care for them (don't fake it, they'll know), then you can ask them to do things and they will follow.



I wish you success.






share|improve this answer




























    up vote
    11
    down vote














    What can i do do to get the best out of my colleagues in this
    situation, especially considering I don't manage any of them?




    You really can't. It's not your role to "get the best out of [your] colleagues".



    That said, you can lead by example.



    Stay very motivated and proactive. Continue to get things done without requiring a push. Maybe some of that will rub off on others. Or maybe when you are rewarded for your efforts others will start to take notice and change their behavior.



    And next time a management position opens, go for it. Then you can motivate your team more directly, and perhaps be in a position to change the culture around you. It then becomes your role to get the best out of your team, and to be judged on their results.






    share|improve this answer























    • To wait for a specific role to act as a leader is a bad idea. It's much more helpful for everybody involved to first show that you have what it needs for a leadership role, and then assume it. Although, in this company, they don't seem to reward good work.
      – daraos
      Sep 2 '16 at 21:10

















    up vote
    3
    down vote













    There are only two ways to motivate the team;



    1. Stay motivated and proactive yourself. In your current position you can't dictate anything, so you need to lead by example only.

    2. Become the manager. Then you can track, motivate and fire as you see fit.

    I strongly recommend the first option initially.






    share|improve this answer




























      up vote
      0
      down vote













      Summon the hounds!



      I'm kidding, obviously. Sometimes, even managers can't come up with incentives at all, especially in a company culture that tends to demotivate the workers. You could give out gifts, and sing kum-bye-yah by the fireside, but some people only respond under threat to their livelihood. You sound like an achiever in a group of low performers. If there is no higher company standard for performance, then you may be wasting your breath on the lay-people and might be more effective in showing management (including those above your boss) where the payoff is.



      In the meantime, don't let this totally frustrate you. Make sure you're encountering successes - in whatever form you prefer - outside of work. That way, it won't sting as much.






      share|improve this answer





















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        4 Answers
        4






        active

        oldest

        votes








        4 Answers
        4






        active

        oldest

        votes









        active

        oldest

        votes






        active

        oldest

        votes








        up vote
        1
        down vote



        accepted










        Yes, you can do something to improve the situation. It's called leadership without rank. You don't need to be a manager to positively influence the people around you.



        First, find out why motivation is low in your team. Was is always like that? If not, what has changed? Is the work dull, or too hard? Are your colleagues challenged? Do they believe their work is meaningful? Are they provided what they need to do good work?



        Generally, people want to perform because it makes them feel better. They don't need incentives if the work environment allows them to be successful and have fun. You cannot "motivate" people by threatening to fire them and you cannot "fix" people. In any role though, you can help to improve the work environment so it's more motivating. If anything is missing to do the work properly, it's frustrating. Try to fix that by requesting stuff that does work properly.



        You can find out which kind of work your colleagues love or despise. Someone hates crunching numbers, another one loves it. One coworker is really good at creating documentation, another one hates it. Of course it depends on the area you work in, but you will find this basically anywhere. Offer help, or ask the presentation lover to do the presentation for the hater.



        Talk with them, listen. What bothers them? Lack of motivation and poor performance can come from personal issues, stress at home, pressure somewhere else. Talking to someone who cares already helps, and maybe you can actually offer advice. At least, you might get a better understanding why someone performs poorly.



        You could be more efficient with more power, but do what you can with the little you have. It's also good practice for you if you aspire a leadership role. Leading without title is a challenge, but a title will not help you if you cannot lead. Sure, you can force people to do specific things, but that never leads to excellent performance. It's best if people respect you and know you really care for them (don't fake it, they'll know), then you can ask them to do things and they will follow.



        I wish you success.






        share|improve this answer

























          up vote
          1
          down vote



          accepted










          Yes, you can do something to improve the situation. It's called leadership without rank. You don't need to be a manager to positively influence the people around you.



          First, find out why motivation is low in your team. Was is always like that? If not, what has changed? Is the work dull, or too hard? Are your colleagues challenged? Do they believe their work is meaningful? Are they provided what they need to do good work?



          Generally, people want to perform because it makes them feel better. They don't need incentives if the work environment allows them to be successful and have fun. You cannot "motivate" people by threatening to fire them and you cannot "fix" people. In any role though, you can help to improve the work environment so it's more motivating. If anything is missing to do the work properly, it's frustrating. Try to fix that by requesting stuff that does work properly.



          You can find out which kind of work your colleagues love or despise. Someone hates crunching numbers, another one loves it. One coworker is really good at creating documentation, another one hates it. Of course it depends on the area you work in, but you will find this basically anywhere. Offer help, or ask the presentation lover to do the presentation for the hater.



          Talk with them, listen. What bothers them? Lack of motivation and poor performance can come from personal issues, stress at home, pressure somewhere else. Talking to someone who cares already helps, and maybe you can actually offer advice. At least, you might get a better understanding why someone performs poorly.



          You could be more efficient with more power, but do what you can with the little you have. It's also good practice for you if you aspire a leadership role. Leading without title is a challenge, but a title will not help you if you cannot lead. Sure, you can force people to do specific things, but that never leads to excellent performance. It's best if people respect you and know you really care for them (don't fake it, they'll know), then you can ask them to do things and they will follow.



          I wish you success.






          share|improve this answer























            up vote
            1
            down vote



            accepted







            up vote
            1
            down vote



            accepted






            Yes, you can do something to improve the situation. It's called leadership without rank. You don't need to be a manager to positively influence the people around you.



            First, find out why motivation is low in your team. Was is always like that? If not, what has changed? Is the work dull, or too hard? Are your colleagues challenged? Do they believe their work is meaningful? Are they provided what they need to do good work?



            Generally, people want to perform because it makes them feel better. They don't need incentives if the work environment allows them to be successful and have fun. You cannot "motivate" people by threatening to fire them and you cannot "fix" people. In any role though, you can help to improve the work environment so it's more motivating. If anything is missing to do the work properly, it's frustrating. Try to fix that by requesting stuff that does work properly.



            You can find out which kind of work your colleagues love or despise. Someone hates crunching numbers, another one loves it. One coworker is really good at creating documentation, another one hates it. Of course it depends on the area you work in, but you will find this basically anywhere. Offer help, or ask the presentation lover to do the presentation for the hater.



            Talk with them, listen. What bothers them? Lack of motivation and poor performance can come from personal issues, stress at home, pressure somewhere else. Talking to someone who cares already helps, and maybe you can actually offer advice. At least, you might get a better understanding why someone performs poorly.



            You could be more efficient with more power, but do what you can with the little you have. It's also good practice for you if you aspire a leadership role. Leading without title is a challenge, but a title will not help you if you cannot lead. Sure, you can force people to do specific things, but that never leads to excellent performance. It's best if people respect you and know you really care for them (don't fake it, they'll know), then you can ask them to do things and they will follow.



            I wish you success.






            share|improve this answer













            Yes, you can do something to improve the situation. It's called leadership without rank. You don't need to be a manager to positively influence the people around you.



            First, find out why motivation is low in your team. Was is always like that? If not, what has changed? Is the work dull, or too hard? Are your colleagues challenged? Do they believe their work is meaningful? Are they provided what they need to do good work?



            Generally, people want to perform because it makes them feel better. They don't need incentives if the work environment allows them to be successful and have fun. You cannot "motivate" people by threatening to fire them and you cannot "fix" people. In any role though, you can help to improve the work environment so it's more motivating. If anything is missing to do the work properly, it's frustrating. Try to fix that by requesting stuff that does work properly.



            You can find out which kind of work your colleagues love or despise. Someone hates crunching numbers, another one loves it. One coworker is really good at creating documentation, another one hates it. Of course it depends on the area you work in, but you will find this basically anywhere. Offer help, or ask the presentation lover to do the presentation for the hater.



            Talk with them, listen. What bothers them? Lack of motivation and poor performance can come from personal issues, stress at home, pressure somewhere else. Talking to someone who cares already helps, and maybe you can actually offer advice. At least, you might get a better understanding why someone performs poorly.



            You could be more efficient with more power, but do what you can with the little you have. It's also good practice for you if you aspire a leadership role. Leading without title is a challenge, but a title will not help you if you cannot lead. Sure, you can force people to do specific things, but that never leads to excellent performance. It's best if people respect you and know you really care for them (don't fake it, they'll know), then you can ask them to do things and they will follow.



            I wish you success.







            share|improve this answer













            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer











            answered Sep 2 '16 at 20:58









            daraos

            19216




            19216






















                up vote
                11
                down vote














                What can i do do to get the best out of my colleagues in this
                situation, especially considering I don't manage any of them?




                You really can't. It's not your role to "get the best out of [your] colleagues".



                That said, you can lead by example.



                Stay very motivated and proactive. Continue to get things done without requiring a push. Maybe some of that will rub off on others. Or maybe when you are rewarded for your efforts others will start to take notice and change their behavior.



                And next time a management position opens, go for it. Then you can motivate your team more directly, and perhaps be in a position to change the culture around you. It then becomes your role to get the best out of your team, and to be judged on their results.






                share|improve this answer























                • To wait for a specific role to act as a leader is a bad idea. It's much more helpful for everybody involved to first show that you have what it needs for a leadership role, and then assume it. Although, in this company, they don't seem to reward good work.
                  – daraos
                  Sep 2 '16 at 21:10














                up vote
                11
                down vote














                What can i do do to get the best out of my colleagues in this
                situation, especially considering I don't manage any of them?




                You really can't. It's not your role to "get the best out of [your] colleagues".



                That said, you can lead by example.



                Stay very motivated and proactive. Continue to get things done without requiring a push. Maybe some of that will rub off on others. Or maybe when you are rewarded for your efforts others will start to take notice and change their behavior.



                And next time a management position opens, go for it. Then you can motivate your team more directly, and perhaps be in a position to change the culture around you. It then becomes your role to get the best out of your team, and to be judged on their results.






                share|improve this answer























                • To wait for a specific role to act as a leader is a bad idea. It's much more helpful for everybody involved to first show that you have what it needs for a leadership role, and then assume it. Although, in this company, they don't seem to reward good work.
                  – daraos
                  Sep 2 '16 at 21:10












                up vote
                11
                down vote










                up vote
                11
                down vote










                What can i do do to get the best out of my colleagues in this
                situation, especially considering I don't manage any of them?




                You really can't. It's not your role to "get the best out of [your] colleagues".



                That said, you can lead by example.



                Stay very motivated and proactive. Continue to get things done without requiring a push. Maybe some of that will rub off on others. Or maybe when you are rewarded for your efforts others will start to take notice and change their behavior.



                And next time a management position opens, go for it. Then you can motivate your team more directly, and perhaps be in a position to change the culture around you. It then becomes your role to get the best out of your team, and to be judged on their results.






                share|improve this answer
















                What can i do do to get the best out of my colleagues in this
                situation, especially considering I don't manage any of them?




                You really can't. It's not your role to "get the best out of [your] colleagues".



                That said, you can lead by example.



                Stay very motivated and proactive. Continue to get things done without requiring a push. Maybe some of that will rub off on others. Or maybe when you are rewarded for your efforts others will start to take notice and change their behavior.



                And next time a management position opens, go for it. Then you can motivate your team more directly, and perhaps be in a position to change the culture around you. It then becomes your role to get the best out of your team, and to be judged on their results.







                share|improve this answer















                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer








                edited Sep 2 '16 at 17:24


























                answered Aug 31 '16 at 16:22









                Joe Strazzere

                221k101648912




                221k101648912











                • To wait for a specific role to act as a leader is a bad idea. It's much more helpful for everybody involved to first show that you have what it needs for a leadership role, and then assume it. Although, in this company, they don't seem to reward good work.
                  – daraos
                  Sep 2 '16 at 21:10
















                • To wait for a specific role to act as a leader is a bad idea. It's much more helpful for everybody involved to first show that you have what it needs for a leadership role, and then assume it. Although, in this company, they don't seem to reward good work.
                  – daraos
                  Sep 2 '16 at 21:10















                To wait for a specific role to act as a leader is a bad idea. It's much more helpful for everybody involved to first show that you have what it needs for a leadership role, and then assume it. Although, in this company, they don't seem to reward good work.
                – daraos
                Sep 2 '16 at 21:10




                To wait for a specific role to act as a leader is a bad idea. It's much more helpful for everybody involved to first show that you have what it needs for a leadership role, and then assume it. Although, in this company, they don't seem to reward good work.
                – daraos
                Sep 2 '16 at 21:10










                up vote
                3
                down vote













                There are only two ways to motivate the team;



                1. Stay motivated and proactive yourself. In your current position you can't dictate anything, so you need to lead by example only.

                2. Become the manager. Then you can track, motivate and fire as you see fit.

                I strongly recommend the first option initially.






                share|improve this answer

























                  up vote
                  3
                  down vote













                  There are only two ways to motivate the team;



                  1. Stay motivated and proactive yourself. In your current position you can't dictate anything, so you need to lead by example only.

                  2. Become the manager. Then you can track, motivate and fire as you see fit.

                  I strongly recommend the first option initially.






                  share|improve this answer























                    up vote
                    3
                    down vote










                    up vote
                    3
                    down vote









                    There are only two ways to motivate the team;



                    1. Stay motivated and proactive yourself. In your current position you can't dictate anything, so you need to lead by example only.

                    2. Become the manager. Then you can track, motivate and fire as you see fit.

                    I strongly recommend the first option initially.






                    share|improve this answer













                    There are only two ways to motivate the team;



                    1. Stay motivated and proactive yourself. In your current position you can't dictate anything, so you need to lead by example only.

                    2. Become the manager. Then you can track, motivate and fire as you see fit.

                    I strongly recommend the first option initially.







                    share|improve this answer













                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer











                    answered Aug 31 '16 at 16:02









                    PeteCon

                    12.5k43552




                    12.5k43552




















                        up vote
                        0
                        down vote













                        Summon the hounds!



                        I'm kidding, obviously. Sometimes, even managers can't come up with incentives at all, especially in a company culture that tends to demotivate the workers. You could give out gifts, and sing kum-bye-yah by the fireside, but some people only respond under threat to their livelihood. You sound like an achiever in a group of low performers. If there is no higher company standard for performance, then you may be wasting your breath on the lay-people and might be more effective in showing management (including those above your boss) where the payoff is.



                        In the meantime, don't let this totally frustrate you. Make sure you're encountering successes - in whatever form you prefer - outside of work. That way, it won't sting as much.






                        share|improve this answer

























                          up vote
                          0
                          down vote













                          Summon the hounds!



                          I'm kidding, obviously. Sometimes, even managers can't come up with incentives at all, especially in a company culture that tends to demotivate the workers. You could give out gifts, and sing kum-bye-yah by the fireside, but some people only respond under threat to their livelihood. You sound like an achiever in a group of low performers. If there is no higher company standard for performance, then you may be wasting your breath on the lay-people and might be more effective in showing management (including those above your boss) where the payoff is.



                          In the meantime, don't let this totally frustrate you. Make sure you're encountering successes - in whatever form you prefer - outside of work. That way, it won't sting as much.






                          share|improve this answer























                            up vote
                            0
                            down vote










                            up vote
                            0
                            down vote









                            Summon the hounds!



                            I'm kidding, obviously. Sometimes, even managers can't come up with incentives at all, especially in a company culture that tends to demotivate the workers. You could give out gifts, and sing kum-bye-yah by the fireside, but some people only respond under threat to their livelihood. You sound like an achiever in a group of low performers. If there is no higher company standard for performance, then you may be wasting your breath on the lay-people and might be more effective in showing management (including those above your boss) where the payoff is.



                            In the meantime, don't let this totally frustrate you. Make sure you're encountering successes - in whatever form you prefer - outside of work. That way, it won't sting as much.






                            share|improve this answer













                            Summon the hounds!



                            I'm kidding, obviously. Sometimes, even managers can't come up with incentives at all, especially in a company culture that tends to demotivate the workers. You could give out gifts, and sing kum-bye-yah by the fireside, but some people only respond under threat to their livelihood. You sound like an achiever in a group of low performers. If there is no higher company standard for performance, then you may be wasting your breath on the lay-people and might be more effective in showing management (including those above your boss) where the payoff is.



                            In the meantime, don't let this totally frustrate you. Make sure you're encountering successes - in whatever form you prefer - outside of work. That way, it won't sting as much.







                            share|improve this answer













                            share|improve this answer



                            share|improve this answer











                            answered Aug 31 '16 at 16:32









                            Xavier J

                            26.3k104797




                            26.3k104797






















                                 

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