Since 1975, Madison has been a leading global employee recognition and incentive company. As a proud Employee Stock Ownership Plan (ESOP) company, our employee-owners are deeply committed to delivering innovative recognition programs, corporate events, and incentive travel experiences that strengthen workplace culture and drive business success.
Madison is a global leader in employee recognition and incentives, pioneering digital programs since 1995. As an employee-owned company, we deliver recognition, events, and incentive travel solutions that strengthen culture and drive results.


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Valentine’s Day is all about showing that you care. Cards and flowers will be sent today between people in various stages of a relationship. So let’s use today to focus on what makes a good “working” relationship.
Relationships begin when people have things in common. Respect and trust cement the bond over time, but shared interests are the foundation. On a personal level, Valentine’s Day is a way of reinforcing that connection you feel with someone special. The best messages today will be personal and meaningful. They will reinforce that bond and connection that both parties feel.
See where I am going with this? Engaged employees also have “much in common” with their co-workers and their managers. They too share expectations, values and aspirations and like any other solid relationship, they feel that they are in it together.
In any work setting, recognition can acknowledge the connection that’s critical to both sides. By calling attention to what an employee has brought to the “working relationship,” employers and/or peers acknowledge that someone is important to them.
Here’s the big difference. Unlike the once-a-year cadence of Valentine’s Day, you don’t need a special occasion to recognize someone in the workplace. In fact, you can and should do it as often as possible.
Just like personal relationships, working relationships can become stale when people don’t hear from one another. People who work together can “grow apart” and begin to feel like they have “nothing in common” with others.
Recognition is like a Valentine you can send every day — one that celebrates and strengthens that sense of shared purpose employees and managers feel — one that says I am happy we are in this together.