Pioneering Excellence

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.

Learn More

employee traveling
What Actually Drives a Successful Incentive Travel Program After 20 Years in the Field
Incentive travel has never been about the destination. That may sound surprising in an industry that...
employees working together
Sustainability Without Operational Discipline Is Just Messaging
Sustainability is now standard language in meetings and incentive travel. RFPs reference ESG commitments....
Lake Tahoe
Planning a Corporate Retreat in the U.S.? Here’s Why South Lake Tahoe Belongs on Your List
South Lake Tahoe isn’t your typical meeting destination. Nestled where California and Nevada meet, this...

Destinations

London

Scotland

Jumby Bay

South Africa

Explore All

Every Interaction Creates a Reaction

Every Interaction Creates a Reaction

How many times have you given a message without considering how it will be received? Do you often communicate thinking that you just need to get the information off your chest? Think about the last email you sent or received; did you write the email with yours or the reader's...

How many times have you given a message without considering how it will be received? Do you often communicate thinking that you just need to get the information off your chest? Think about the last email you sent or received; did you write the email with yours or the reader’s feelings in mind? Did you receive the response you hoped for? Was the message clear in the email you received or was there some ambiguity?

When communicating, we are all guilty of putting our needs first; it’s easier and faster to share the message, and we think that because we understand our message others will too. Unfortunately, the meaning can get lost in translation.

Building a positive foundation

In one of our previous posts (the power of language in recognition and learning), we talked about effective and ineffective leadership exchanges and how they can influence relationships with workplace peers. In this post, we look at specific factors that make exchanges successful.

The art of the meaningful conversation suggests four foundations to ensure constructive exchanges:

Be honest
If you’re honest about company situations – good or bad – people will feel that they are integral to company success and want to support the organization’s goals. However, the truth can be brutal so consider the feelings of the message receiver and speak the truth with good intentions.

Show your authenticity
Be true to yourself. When you are authentic, your actions are more consistent, and people are more likely to follow your lead. Remember, people follow leaders not strategies.

Act with integrity
Be genuine and follow through on your word. If you are insincere people will soon lose faith in you and your message.

Communicate with love
As Julian says in his talk, this is not meant as romantic love, but rather communicating with the receiver’s best interests in mind.

These factors will help you to communicate genuinely and will take you part of the way to getting positive reactions. However, you also need to ensure that the listener or reader acts on your message.

Communicating for results

Consider what you want your audience to ‘think,’ ‘feel’ and ‘do’ as a result of the message you’re sharing. These three actions are particularly important to building a culture of engagement. Initiating this sequence with every interaction in your social recognition solution has the potential to drive positive behaviors throughout your organization, and here’s how:

Think
The goal is to ensure the receiver is thinking about the same topic as you. They may already know something about the topic or it may be new information. Consider exactly what you want them to contemplate before you communicate.

Feel
Once the topic is on their mind, we then want to evoke emotion about that subject. Perhaps you want the message receiver to feel appreciated, or maybe you want them to expend more effort. Perhaps you want to change someone’s opinion. Consider what you want the person or people to feel about the topic and communicate accordingly.

Do
As a result of your communication, what are you hoping the person will do next? Share the information more widely? Keep it quiet? Respond in a particular way? Change their behavior? Consider the action you want the person to take and communicate to generate that action.

Final thoughts

Being more thoughtful about the exchanges you have can make your organization more efficient and ensure you have happier and more engaged employees. Think before you interact and the reactions may surprise you!

Recents Posts
employees recognizing each other
Why Gen Z Won’t Stay Without Recognition: What This Generation Gets Right About Work
people working together
Gen Z Isn’t Entitled — They’re Honest: Why the Youngest Workforce Is Calling Out What Older Generations Ignored
employees shaking hands
Why Recognition Is the Most Powerful Tool to Protect High Performers
employee smiling with all of his work
The Myth of the Unbreakable High Performer
person staring at computer
Six Early Warning Signs Your Top Talent Is Quietly Burning Out
person stressed at computer
Frontline Employees Don’t Go Silent — They Go Unseen