You can be on Entrepreneur’s cover!

3 Ways to Nurture a Happily Productive Team People are happiest on the job when they are respected for doing good work.

By Jason Forrest

entrepreneur daily

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

Shutterstock

A company's biggest asset (and biggest investment) is its team. When the people who represent the brand and see the vision through are at their most productive, they are also at their happiest. The reverse is true, too. When they're happy, they're more productive. It behooves leaders to nurture that cycle.

People require respect and consistent tending to achieve their fullest professional potential. The single biggest variable affecting production is how people utilize their time. The following three steps will help leaders support team members in maximizing their time, and therefore, productivity.

1. Set clear goals and expectations.

Before we hire anybody in my company, we make sure the purpose of their role and the specifics of what they'll be doing are perfectly clear.

Clearly defining roles and how they support big-picture objectives up front allows us to identify and hire the right people. If we don't know exactly what we expect someone to accomplish, we can end up putting too much on their plate, misaligning how they're using their time, and/or failing to play to their strengths.

Related: 6 Alternatives to Micromanaging Employees

2. Meet with employees regularly.

A quarterly analysis allows leaders to do a 5,000-foot review to assess whether something needs to change in an employee's role. Ideally, they'll be maximizing their talents and doing things that engage and strengthen them at least 80 percent of the time. Reviews may help uncover areas people didn't know were strengths and provide opportunities for them to evolve into new and unfamiliar roles. Leaders can help them expand their role if they're thriving, or take stuff off their plate that's distracting them if they're overwhelmed or lacking stimulation.

Look at what each employee is really doing and identify what distracts them. Sometimes the right person is just in the wrong place. Ask employees to share what they're doing on a typical day and compare that with what charges their batteries. Ideally, they'll spend less than 20 percent of their time on tasks required by their role that don't stimulate them.

In addition to quarterly meetings, provide targeted coaching every other week. Talk through employees' short-term goals, what they're doing to achieve those goals, and what obstacles are in the way. Find out what they need from teammates and any tools and systems that would support them. Provide support that enables them to stay on track. These meetings minimize the need for major course corrections during quarterly reviews while also contributing to the cycle that leads to happy and productive employees. This is an ongoing process that's about teaching, not doing someone's work for them.

Related: How to Turn an Underperformer Into an Ideal Employee

3. Tell them why their contributions matter.

Have regular review meetings to share why each person's work matters. They need to see how what they do contributes to the overall goals of their department and/or the business as a whole. A lot of employees don't understand the big picture without this kind of coaching. Take the time to show them, then keep reminding them.

Time is money. Investing in the most important and dynamic aspect of any business (its people) is time (and money) well spent.

Related: 5 Keys to Inspiring Leadership, No Matter Your Style

Jason Forrest

Author, Speaker, Coach

Jason Forrest is CEO at FPG, a national sales training company. He is an award-winning executive, the author of seven books, and the creator of cutting-edge sales and leadership training programs.

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Editor's Pick

Business News

James Clear Explains Why the 'Two Minute Rule' Is the Key to Long-Term Habit Building

The hardest step is usually the first one, he says. So make it short.

Side Hustle

He Took His Side Hustle Full-Time After Being Laid Off From Meta in 2023 — Now He Earns About $200,000 a Year: 'Sweet, Sweet Irony'

When Scott Goodfriend moved from Los Angeles to New York City, he became "obsessed" with the city's culinary offerings — and saw a business opportunity.

Living

Get Your Business a One-Year Sam's Club Membership for Just $14

Shop for office essentials, lunch for the team, appliances, electronics, and more.

Business News

Microsoft's New AI Can Make Photographs Sing and Talk — and It Already Has the Mona Lisa Lip-Syncing

The VASA-1 AI model was not trained on the Mona Lisa but could animate it anyway.