Chapter 83. Recognize the Value of Team Morale

David Bock

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MORALE IS ONE OF THOSE THINGS YOU KNOW YOU NEED, but it is hard to grow and measure. A team with high morale will occasionally put in extra effort cheerfully, but a team with low morale will not. High morale isn't just about a better workplace, it is about a more productive team.

A few years ago, I worked with a team that exhibited high morale. At times, the office felt more like a community of friends than a workplace. Productivity was high. We would occasionally have crises that required a little extra "push," and team members would volunteer for that extra effort.

A few years later, I saw that same team at an ice cream social at the office, and it didn't appear happy. The team members weren't socializing, and their body language seemed cold. When I approached them, they were complaining that there were only "chocolate Jimmies, not colored sprinkles" as a topping for the ice cream. Think about that transition: same team, same project, much different morale. It went from cheerfully working overtime, when needed, to complaining about free ice cream.

How did this happen? The team had a new manager who made some bad decisions. His errors led the team down a false path and created more work for it. Senior management blamed the entire team. And when the manager took no responsibility, the team lost confidence. The project became "more ...

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