Can workplace competition be healthy? Is it good to foster it?


Workplace harassment if not taken negatively is always healthy. It motivates each employee to only work better. Here are a few things to keep in mind while fostering a healthy competitive environment at your workplace.

1.Team always comes first

This is the mantra everyone in the group should know and value the most. Every time they are performing an action, members of your team should be asking themselves: is this going to have a positive effect for the team? And only keep going if the answer is positive.

There is nothing wrong with following a personal agenda as long as it will benefit the team as a whole. For the same reason, internal competition should always be kept within the lines of mutual respect.

2. Achieving individual goals

Individual goals are important for each member of your team. Workplace should be an environment where people are encouraged to grow personally and professionally. However, it is important to acknowledge that working towards achieving individual goals should never undermine or come against other members of the team. Helping each other grow can bring a lot more benefits for everyone involved.

As a team leader, you should be aware of the professional goals of your people and guide them in the right direction. Assigning tasks that would strengthen the right skills is crucial. Also, encouraging teammates to practice mentoring each other could tone down the competitive spirits, with positive outcomes for everyone.

3. Stars are important, but so are the others

Even though star employees might bring more business and better results, constantly appreciating a small number of employees while neglecting others might trigger unwanted effects. Not only that other employees might turn against the top performers, but they could also lose their motivation. If the same person is constantly winning, what is the point in even trying to compete?

 Studies show that peers feel threatened and try to undermine top performers in companies and teams where resources are limited. When resources are shared and everyone benefits from working together, peers tend to support star employees.

Therefore, you need to make sure you also encourage and praise the performances of underdogs and keep the stars shining without totally eclipsing the others. Think of a bonus system that gives everyone a piece of the prize and motivates them to perform at their best.

4. Give constructive feedback to all

Giving feedback is one of the primary responsibilities of a team leader. But that is not always easy. Negative feedback can damage employees’ self esteem and trust. Positive feedback can create a false image of self, especially when undeserved. That is why it is very important to keep a balance.

The sandwich method is a known and widely used recipe: packing negative feedback in a positive shell. Even though controversial, it is so widespread because it actually works. Employees get to understand your expectations and the reasons why they are not meeting them, while also feeling a sense of accomplishment that keeps them going.

However, don’t always leave feedback for the moments you have to criticize your employees. Giving positive feedback each time you are proud of someone’s work is an extremely powerful motivation for that person but also for the ones around. Who doesn’t want to have their efforts publicly recognized?!

5. Make a game out of it

Everybody loves playing games. Some of us are more competitive than others, but even the most calm and introverted person likes a good challenge from time to time. Work must be taken seriously but there is no reason why we shouldn’t have fun while doing it. Actually, it has been demonstrated that happy employees are more productive, so keeping spirits up is definitely a winning strategy.

Organize friendly competitions among teammates that involve a fun and less official prizing system. Sometimes the smallest gestures can motivate employees even more than salary and benefits. It is the reason why many companies have the employee of the month system. A picture on the wall and a honorary diploma can be enough to spark some competition, while keeping it within healthy limits.

6. Best competition is against yourself

Some of the most competitive persons are in an endless competition with themselves. Always doing their best to improve previous results, always going bigger and better, always wanting to do more, to win more. This is the key to self-improvement and the healthiest kind of competition.

As a leader, you can help employees in their pursuit of self improvement by making sure you keep challenging them. Competitive individuals might lose their edge when stuck with boring and repetitive tasks that don’t represent a real stimulation.

Get to know your people in order to make sure you always pick the right person for the job and don’t allow competitive spirits to get wasted.

Competition benefits everyone

Encouraging a healthy level of competition among your employees might bring a lot of benefits.

Incentives push people to become more creative and find new ways of doing things. Competing with each other inspire people to put in more effort, work harder, and become more productive. It helps managers spot top performers and decide on promotions. Ultimately, competition helps the company by bringing in more revenue than the cost of incentives, which is why it makes it all worth it without a doubt.


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