Most people will work hard for money if properly motivated.
Though it may help, more money is not the key to making your employees more
passionate.
Most people will work hard for money if properly motivated. Though it may help,
more money is not the key to making your employees more passionate. It is a myth
to think that you do not need passion if only you have good staff and pay them
well. It helps to have good people and to pay them well. However, passion needs
to be embedded in a cause that the people can buy into. This will spur the
employees on as they can grasp something out of this cause. It is not just about
money. People simply would not follow someone for long if he is not chasing
after a big and worthwhile dream. Thus companies need to provide a deeper
meaning or purpose to life for their employees to unleash their fullest
potential. If the employees find a meaningful cause for what they are doing,
many will be passionate and some will die for that cause. People through the
ages have demonstrated this intrinsic desire to die for one's beliefs whether
they are religious, political or social. In the same vein, good organisations
are those that are great at rallying people around a lofty cause. And the
magnitude of this cause can even turn into a crusade. The Indian born founder of
Hotmail Inc, Sabeer Bhatia could only offer a cause to the people who join him
in starting up Hotmail. He could not afford to offer them any salary. Many of
his people continued to join him because of their faith in his project and the
potential of the Internet. They had no goals for immediate monetary
gratifications. Today, as a result of the huge success of Hotmail, the people
who stuck with Sabeer have struck it rich. Sabeer Bhatia was able to turn the
cause into a crusade with cult-like fanaticism. He was able to command the full
dedication of his followers. If what people do on the job is placed in the
context of a good cause such as improving the quality of life, contributing to
the betterment of mankind etc, the impact can be dramatic. Barnevik, the former
chairman of ABB Brown Boveri, says that he is motivated by a desire to create a
better world by generating employment thereby making the world more livable with
clean energy and transportation. For Branson, too, social concerns are an
important concept of his corporate philosophy. On many occasions, he has put his
money where his mouth is. For example, Virgin produced low-priced Mates condoms
in response to the AIDS crisis. He also bid for the national lottery franchise
in the UK with the promise to donate all the profits to charity. The CEO of BP,
David Simon has said that environmental protection is a significant corporate
cultural value: "We have an action plan in which 50,000 BP employees
participate. Our employees have hopes for the world and for their children." Some environmentalists concede that BP is at the forefront
of multinational organisations taking global
warming seriously. Anita Roddick, the founder of The Body Shop has also
built a successful business that respects nature, animals, people and employees.
When your staff firmly believe in the company's cause, they will go beyond the
call of duty.
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