I've built teams across the Navy, teaching, sales, and now running Your Home Solar--and here's what I learned the hard way: recognition needs to tie directly to your company's standards, not just effort. When I was training crews on solar installations, I stopped praising "working hard" and started recognizing "first-time inspection passes." That shift changed everything because my team knew exactly what mattered. The most important thing to focus on is recognizing behaviors that protect your standards when nobody's watching. I had an installer named Cody who once spent 90 extra minutes re-routing conduit because the original path would've looked sloppy from the street--even though it met code. I made sure the whole crew heard why that mattered during our next safety meeting. Now our installs look like they belong in a magazine, and our inspection pass rate stayed above 95%. New managers think recognition is about making people feel good. It's actually about showing your team which behaviors you'll defend when things get hard. In my Navy days, QA inspectors got recognized for catching problems before they became disasters--not for being pleasant. That same principle applies whether you're working on nuclear missiles or residential rooftops.
I lead Sexual Wellness Centers of America in Texas, where we deal with deeply personal health issues--ED, hormone imbalances, vaginal wellness. Recognition in our space has to balance clinical precision with genuine human empathy, because one missed detail in a treatment protocol or one cold interaction can destroy a patient's trust forever. The single most important thing: recognize the preparation work, not just the outcome. When a team member takes extra time reviewing a patient's hormone panel before their consultation, or calls to check on someone three days post-HEshot(r) procedure without being asked--that's what I spotlight immediately. Those invisible moments determine whether we hit our 97.2% ED reversal rate or fall short. I learned this the hard way early on. We were celebrating appointment volume and revenue milestones, but our patient retention was slipping. Turns out we were accidentally training staff to book fast and move on, when the real value was in the follow-through. The moment I started recognizing chart prep, post-treatment calls, and thoughtful answers to embarrassing questions, our membership renewals jumped 34% in six months. Recognition needs to protect what's hardest to measure. In sexual wellness, that's dignity and discretion--nobody will tell you when those slip until they're already gone.
As CEO of Software House, my advice to any new manager on employee recognition is simple: be specific and timely, not generic and scheduled. The most important thing to focus on is recognizing the behavior, not just the outcome. When I first started managing people, I'd say things like "great job on the project." It felt good to say but meant almost nothing to the recipient. Now I say something like "the way you restructured the database query reduced our load time by 40%, and the client noticed immediately. That kind of initiative is exactly what makes our team stand out." The difference is night and day. Specific recognition tells the employee exactly what to repeat. Generic praise just creates a momentary good feeling that fades by lunchtime. I also learned this the hard way: don't wait for formal review cycles. At Software House, we had a developer who quietly fixed a critical security vulnerability on a Saturday. I didn't mention it until the next monthly team meeting, two weeks later. By then, the moment had passed, and my recognition felt like an afterthought. Now our rule is: if someone does something worth recognizing, acknowledge it within 24 hours. The most important thing for new managers: recognition doesn't have to be expensive or elaborate. A specific Slack message in a public channel explaining what someone did and why it mattered outperforms any gift card program I've ever seen.
In my role at Glass Bottom Boats of Islamorada, I have learned that the most effective recognition connects an employee's specialized knowledge to the direct emotional impact they have on a guest. When our guide, Greg, is singled out in reviews for explaining the "slimy" appearance of a green moray eel or spotting a baby reef shark, we share that specific feedback to validate his expertise as an educator. My advice is to implement a "Guest-to-Guide" feedback loop where you prioritize external validation from platforms like Google or KAYAK as the primary source of praise. At our company, seeing a 10/10 rating for a family adventure on the Transparensea reminds the crew that their navigation and storytelling are what truly make our brand-new 2023 vessel successful. Focus on recognizing the "magic" your team creates, such as successfully managing the atmosphere during our unique night eco-tours using our innovative underwater lighting system. This reinforces their identity as specialists who provide experiences guests can't find anywhere else in Florida, making the work feel like a mission rather than just a shift.
I've spent over a decade leading landscaping and snow management crews through New England's toughest winters, where reliability is the only currency that matters. My advice is to recognize your team by obsessing over their safety and the quality of their gear before the job even starts. When my crew performed a "face-lift" on 8-foot hedges in Belmont, I recognized their expertise by providing high-end ladders and utility belts so they never had to balance on the top rungs. Investing in premium tools like **Stihl** trimmers or commercial-grade trucks proves you value their craft and physical well-being more than the bottom line. Acknowledge their commitment to site safety by treating every "Call 811" digging check or proper de-icing run as a significant achievement. This focus on equipping them for success creates a culture of pride where the "meticulous cleanup" becomes the team's signature.
The biggest recognition mistake is praising "being busy" instead of recognising outcomes people can repeat, especially in hybrid teams and AI heavy workflows. Make your recognition specific to impact and decision making: "You used AI to draft the first pass, then you caught the compliance risk and rewrote it. That judgement saved us from rework." Call out things that don't show up in dashboards, like preventing issues, improving quality, documenting a process, mentoring, or making a handover clean. Also, don't let recognition get outsourced to tools. Slack emojis and automated kudos are fine, but they don't replace a manager naming what mattered and why. Your main focus should be trust: consistent, evidence based recognition that feels fair across remote and in office staff. That's what keeps good people when everyone's getting pinged by recruiters.
If I had to give one piece of advice to a manager who is new to employee recognition, it would be this: Recognition is about human connection not performance management. It's not just about saying "great job" in a team meeting or sending a Slack shoutout. Those things are nice, but meaningful recognition starts much deeper. The most important thing to focus on is genuinely caring. Take the time to: - Get to know your employee's goals and career aspirations - Understand their strengths and development areas - Learn what excites them and where they want to grow Recognition isn't only verbal praise. It's: - Giving stretch assignments that help them expand - Creating opportunities for them to shine in front of leadership and their team - Advocating for them when promotion or growth conversations happen - Asking, "How can I best support you right now?" It's all about psychological safety. When employees know you: - Keep confidences - Treat everyone fairly - Hold the whole team accountable (not just overburdening your top performers) - Protect them from burnout and advocate to take time off That's when recognition feels real. True recognition says: "I see your contribution. I care about your growth. And I'm committed to creating an environment where you can thrive long-term."
Employee recognition should be done on both a macro and micro level. It is not exclusive to a company gathering, performance evaluation process, or team meeting. For example, employee recognition can be as simple as saying how much you appreciate someone when they complete a task that was assigned to them last minute. It could be Cc'ing a C-Suite Executive on a communication highlighting the work an employee is doing, making the employee feel valued and seen. Of course, having formal employee recognition programs is important as well. Performance evaluations can potentially impact an employee's compensation, so recognizing the work that they are doing during this formal process, can be a key component in aligning effort with monetary gain. Celebrating milestones or key achievements during company gatherings or team meetings can be another way to let the employee know that their work is being appreciated on a grander scale, which in turn can continue to further motivate them. In short, celebrating both small wins and big wins, in a variety of ways, is vital to having a successful employee recognition strategy.
Base recognition on data, not feelings. The fastest way to destroy team morale is to reward the manager's favorites while everyone else watches. People notice it immediately, and it kills motivation across the board. Meritocracy is the key to building a team that actually stays motivated. But meritocracy only works when people can see the rules. So before you start recognizing anyone, create clear rules of the game and show your team exactly how to win. What does great performance look like? How is it measured? Make that visible. Once the rules are clear, use real data to back up every recognition decision. When someone gets recognized, and the whole team can see why, it does not create jealousy. It creates a standard that everyone wants to reach. That is the difference between recognition that motivates and recognition that divides.
One of the biggest frustrations people have at work is feeling like they have no voice. They see ways things can be improved, they have good ideas, and those ideas go nowhere. For a new manager learning to recognize their team, the most important thing to understand is that recognition without action is just noise. New managers often default to praise because it feels safe and immediate. But praise without follow-through starts to ring hollow. People are smart. They notice when "great idea" never turns into "let's do it." The recognition that actually lands is when someone sees their contribution shape how things work. So my advice is this: make recognition mean something by tying it to real impact. When someone brings a good idea, don't just thank them. Give them the space to run with it. Let them see it through and own the outcome. That's the kind of recognition that builds trust and keeps people engaged. The managers who struggle are the ones who hand out compliments but never let anyone influence decisions. The ones who keep great people are the ones who make recognition tangible. Words matter, but proof matters more. Show your team their contributions actually move things forward.
As owner-operator of EveryBody eBikes, a social enterprise that's helped thousands rediscover riding despite age or disability, I've built a tight-knit team by prioritizing recognition that honors individual impacts on our mission of inclusion. After surviving the 2022 floods, I recognized our technical manager Richard's engineering tweaks to the Lightning eBike--designed for dwarfism riders and now shipping globally--which boosted his drive and led to our bestselling Trident trike. The most important focus: Tie recognition to how their work creates real freedom for overlooked riders, like noting a mechanic's custom trike fit that got a wobbly senior back on trails with her partner. This builds loyalty in our 70% female team of carers and specialists, fueling expansion into new states without losing our kind, patient culture.
If you're new to employee recognition, build a simple system that forces you to notice effort before it becomes invisible. The best managers don't rely on "good instincts" or mood. They keep a tiny running note of wins and helpful behaviours (one line per person), then they use it to recognise people in real time. That stops the common trap where only loud, visible work gets praised while the quiet operators, the steady performers, and the people who prevent problems get ignored. What matters most is making recognition useful. Useful means it's timely, tied to impact, and linked to a behaviour you want repeated. Instead of praising someone's "attitude" or "hard work", call out what they did, why it mattered, and what you'd like to see more of. "You flagged the risk early, proposed two options, and saved us a rework cycle. Keep bringing that kind of clarity to planning." That kind of recognition trains the team. It also makes performance conversations easier later because you've already been clear about what good looks like. Two extra things people overlook: match the channel to the person (some love public praise, some hate it), and don't let recognition become a substitute for fixing broken workloads. If someone is constantly "going above and beyond," the praise is nice, but the real leadership move is addressing the root cause so they don't burn out.
As founder of San Diego Sailing Adventures, I've led a small crew since 2015, restoring our 1904 sloop Liberty over 1.5 years to deliver personalized guest voyages. One piece of advice: Recognize by entrusting hands-on leadership, like handing over the helm during calm sails. For instance, when a crew member nails guest education--like explaining port/starboard to first-timers--I let them call maneuvers, turning praise into skill-building that maxes our 6-guest intimacy. Most important to focus on: Linking recognition to heritage preservation, such as spotlighting their role in quiet wind-powered trips versus noisy modern tours, fostering passion over transactions.
Focus on understanding what motivates each individual on your team. Not everyone responds the same way to praise—some appreciate public acknowledgment, while others value a private note or a simple conversation. Taking the time to observe and learn these preferences makes recognition feel personal and sincere rather than generic or obligatory.
I run a third-generation building materials company and spent years as a Navy helicopter pilot before that. The military taught me something crucial: people don't work harder for generic "good job" recognition--they work harder when you acknowledge the specific problem they solved. The most important thing is making your recognition immediate and tied to real business impact. When one of our warehouse managers, Benny, redesigned our material staging process to prevent delivery delays during our busy season, I didn't wait for a quarterly review. I called him that afternoon, explained exactly how his system prevented us from losing a major contractor account, and gave him a spot bonus. He knew his work mattered because I connected the dots for him. Here's what changed for us: our team now proactively identifies problems because they've seen their solutions get recognized with specifics, not platitudes. A driver who notices a jobsite access issue and calls ahead? That gets acknowledged in our Monday morning huddle with the actual outcome--like the framing crew that finished two days early because materials were pre-positioned correctly. Skip the employee-of-the-month plaques. Instead, catch people doing something that directly prevented a problem or created an opportunity, tell them what the impact was in dollars or relationships saved, and do it within 24 hours while it's still fresh.
I've been leading teams at Blair & Norris for over 30 years, growing from a one-truck operation to a multi-million dollar company. The most important thing to focus on is **making recognition immediate and specific**. When one of our well drilling techs provided same-day emergency service or went above and beyond explaining a septic issue to a confused homeowner, I learned to acknowledge it right then--not at some quarterly review. I shake their hand and tell them exactly what they did right. That handshake is a promise, and my team knows when I give recognition, it's genuine because I saw the work myself. The mistake new managers make is waiting for "big wins" or making recognition feel corporate and hollow. I've found our A+ BBB rating and those customer testimonials praising our responsiveness come directly from techs who feel valued daily. When they know I notice the small stuff--like double-checking a pump installation or taking extra time to educate a customer--they keep doing it. Start tomorrow: catch someone doing something right, tell them immediately what you saw and why it mattered. Skip the generic "good job" and be specific. That's it.
I'm the CEO of CI Web Group (Top 25 Best Places to Work in 2022) and we run on EOS scorecards, so I've learned recognition has to be a system, not a personality trait. One thing to focus on: recognize *alignment*, not effort--call out the behaviors that move your weekly numbers and your values at the same time. Make recognition a "scorecard moment" in your weekly meeting: pick 1-2 KPIs your team owns (ex: accounts stuck in onboarding, strategy sessions booked) and publicly recognize the person who removed friction for the team. That trains everyone to fix bottlenecks instead of chasing heroics. Example from my world: when onboarding gets stuck, I recognize the teammate who proactively updated the process so accounts move cleanly again--because that protects revenue *and* customer experience. The win isn't "worked late," it's "made the system better so we don't need late." If you're new, use one repeatable format so it's fair: "What you did - what it improved - who it helped." It keeps you from playing favorites and it makes the recognition actionable for everyone listening.
If I could give one piece of advice to a manager new to employee recognition, it would be this: focus on specificity, not frequency. Recognition is not about saying "good job" more often. It is about clearly identifying what was done well and why it mattered. Many new managers assume recognition is about enthusiasm or volume. They try to create energy with public praise or incentive programs. But generic recognition quickly loses credibility. Employees know when appreciation is vague or performative. The most important thing to focus on is reinforcing behaviors that align with team goals and company values. Recognition should answer three questions: What did the employee do? Why did it matter? What impact did it create? When managers consistently connect recognition to outcomes, employees learn what excellence looks like. It becomes a performance tool, not just a morale booster. It's also important to tailor recognition to the individual. Some employees value public acknowledgment, while others prefer private appreciation or expanded responsibility. Listening during one-on-ones helps managers understand how recognition will be most meaningful. A new manager I coached was struggling with low team motivation. She often said, "You're all doing great," but performance wasn't improving. We shifted her approach. Instead of broad praise, she began saying, "The way you handled that client concern prevented escalation and preserved the account. That protected revenue and built trust." Within weeks, the team began modeling those same behaviors because they understood exactly what success looked like. Engagement improved because recognition felt earned and instructive. Research from Gallup shows that employees who receive meaningful recognition are more engaged, more productive, and less likely to leave. Studies on behavioral psychology also confirm that specific reinforcement strengthens repeat behavior far more effectively than general praise. Recognition, when precise, shapes culture. For a new manager, the most important thing to focus on is clarity. Recognition should reinforce the right behaviors and connect them to real impact. When appreciation is specific, authentic, and aligned with values, it builds both morale and performance. Recognition is not about applause. It is about direction.
I've managed corporate travel programs for decades, and here's something I noticed early on: recognition fails when managers treat it like a checkbox instead of understanding what actually matters to their people. In business travel management, I've seen the same dynamic play out--companies that ask employees what they *actually* value get completely different answers than they expect. The most important thing to focus on? Ask your employees what recognition means to them personally before you start any program. We surveyed our travelers years ago expecting they'd want luxury perks, but what came back was surprising--they wanted control over their schedules, time home between trips, and proof we were watching out for their safety. Recognition meant respecting their work-life balance, not generic praise or gift cards. I applied this by letting employees tack vacation days onto business trips and building policies around their survey feedback. Turnover dropped, and people actually started volunteering for assignments. When one team member told me the extra day we gave him in Seattle meant he got to see his college roommate for the first time in five years, that's when I knew we'd figured it out. The takeaway: don't assume you know what people value. Spend 20 minutes with a simple survey asking "what would make you feel most appreciated here?" and build your recognition around those actual answers, not what some corporate handbook says you should do.
I run Grounded Solutions (electrical + excavation), where safety and quality aren't posters--they're daily habits, and I'm also on the Indy IEC board. The best recognition system for a new manager is one your crew can *count on*, not one that depends on your mood. One piece of advice: recognize the *behavior you want repeated*, and do it within 24 hours--publicly for effort/process, privately for growth/correction. If you wait until reviews, you're basically rewarding whoever has the best memory, not whoever built the right habits. Concrete example from our jobsite world: when someone stops a task to re-check a locate, resets the plan, and prevents a strike, I call it out the same day in the huddle as "protecting the team and the customer." That tells everyone I'll celebrate discipline and problem-solving even when it "slows us down" in the moment. Most important thing to focus on: consistency with your values--if "safety first" is real, then you must recognize the boring, repeatable actions (PPE compliance, clean panels, tight documentation, clean handoffs) more than the hero saves. Your culture becomes whatever you reward.