Blue gift box decorated with a golden ribbon bow in female hands against the background of the office workplace, gift delivery, coffee break during office hours, corporate greetings and parties.
Expressing love at work may seem like a little too much. But in reality, showing love is really showing people you care. It isn’t about recognizing people’s accomplishments, it’s about appreciating people for who they are.
When we are talking about love at work, we are really talking about how to show people you appreciate them. We talked about how to apply quality time as a love language at work on the blog last week. Quality time is a love language that is sometimes hard to know how to apply to work, but the love languages that are most and least desired in terms of frequency of those who have completed the Motivating by Appreciation (MBA) Inventory assessment-a tool to assess showing appreciation through the love languages at the office- are two of the most frequently used forms of showing appreciation at the office.
But are we applying these two love languages correctly?
The most frequently used method of showing appreciation at the office is tangible gifts, yet it is the least frequently desired. The employee recognition industry is a multi-billion dollar one. But according to research cited in The 5 Languages of Appreciation in the Workplace, “Only 6% of employees choose tangible gifts as their primary language, and 68% report it is their least valued appreciation language.”
The most desired form of showing appreciation- chosen by approximately 45% of employees surveyed through the MBA– is words of affirmation. People wanted to feel appreciated by what you say to them.
The fact that the most frequently used way to thank people, or to show them appreciation, is the least desired one and that the most desired is so desired one points to what I think may be wrong with showing appreciation in the workplace in general.
We go wrong with gifts and we go wrong with words because we don’t do a good job of making them personal. In fact, we’ve written about the best way to thank employees is to make it personal.
The Way We Fail at Work with our Words
The way we make our words of affirmation mean nothing is by:
The Way We Fail at Work with our Gifts
Tangible gifts are most often given to recognize people, not to show appreciation to them. We get a watch or a plaque for our years of service, or a gift card for Christmas. These are the types of things that make the employee recognition industry big business. But they aren’t the things people desire.
Gifts go wrong when:
How often do you use words or gifts to show appreciation at work? Which one do you default to and why? And do you make your words and your gifts personal?
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