| Program Management: Volunteer Management |
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Recognition Principles |
Document Author: National CASA Association
Date Posted: 4/00 |
Recognition Principles:
- Deliver recognition and reward in an open and publicized way. If not
made public, recognition loses much of its impact and defeats much of the
purpose for which it provided. Do not however, think that public
recognition will substitute for private, everyday, personal thank yous and
respect. What happens 365 days a year has much more impact than what
happens at an annual recognition function.
- Timing is crucial. Recognize contribution throughout a project. Reward
contribution close to the time an achievement is realized. Time delays
weaken the impact of most awards. An immediate ‘thank you’ or ‘great job’
is much more important than a proclamation six months later.
- Tailor your recognition to the unique needs of the people involved.
Have several recognition and reward options to enable managers to
acknowledge accomplishment in ways appropriate to the particulars of a
given situation.
- Deliver recognition in a personal and honest manner. Avoid producing
recognition that is too 'slick' or overproduced. Small, personal
indications of appreciation tend to be perceived as more sincere than
formal pronouncements.
- Strive for a clear, unambiguous and well-communicated connection
between accomplishments and rewards. Be sure people understand why they
receive awards and the criteria used to determine awards. People must
think that awards are fair and deserved.
- Recognize recognition. That is, recognize people who recognize others
for doing what is best for the agency. It is the job of everyone on the
team to recognize and support excellence.
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