Tips for Boosting Employee Morale
Xerox offers a wealth of information for small business, in its Small Business Resource Center. One of those is tips to help any small business boost morale, which, in turn boosts sales.
Think of morale like a checking account. Every day there numerous transactions. Some are deposits and some are withdrawals. At the end of the day, the month, the year; is the account growing or is it overdrawn? Healthy morale is the result of a rewarding work experience. A place where employees feel respected, valued and appreciated. A place where an individual feels that their contribution matters.
1. Do little things make a difference? Yes and no. Morale is the underlying way someone feels. Transient rewards such as birthday celebrations, tchotchkes and events are viewed through the lens of the individual’s current state of morale. They’re short term considerations that either complement or contrast with the way an employee feels about where they work.
2. Attitude adjustment. Consider the value of morale. In terms of production, it affects quantity, quality, delivery and service; and the resulting company reputation. In terms of operations it affects productivity, turnover and absenteeism. The impact of morale is too important to be addressed solely with low-cost tactics. It requires a strategic plan and leadership’s support.
3. Listen for understanding. When you listen for understanding you show that you respect, value and appreciate what the person speaking has to say. And they’ll be more open to focus on your response after they feel they’ve been heard and understood.
4. Rote or real? Take note of how “thank you” sounds when it’s simply a polite
acknowledgement or when it’s heartfelt. Sincere appreciation is confident, enthusiastic and most meaningful when it’s specific.
5. Communicate. Information can be thought of as a form of currency. When the wealth is shared it creates a sense of connection, respect and trust. But when it’s withheld or delayed it can have the opposite effect.
More Training

Train the Mind, Grow the Department
Agents who want to create real value must do more than bring coverage options. They must help dealers build stronger thinking, better habits and better results.
Read More →
Headlines Can Be Deceiving
Warning letters sent by the Federal Trade Commission to dealers suspected of deceptive pricing have retailers and the agents who counsel them on edge. Read past the headlines to get and stay compliant.
Read More →
Service Drive Satisfaction Up
Auto dealerships have a ways to go, though, on many basic points, along with some new consumer expectations that would boost their competitiveness if fulfilled.
Read More →
Agents Bring the Message and the Focus
The most predictable profit in today's unpredictable automotive retail market is a dealership’s finance-and-insurance department.
Read More →
Policy Responses to Data Breaches
The recent 700Credit cyberattack is a wake-up call for agents and dealers. Review disclosures and tighten vendor oversight to maintain compliance and preserve customer trust.
Read More →
How Agents Help Dealers Avoid Bust-Out Scams
Update your F&I training program to include the three warning signs of a bust-out, or a nefarious, two-pronged form of bank fraud that leaves dealers and finance sources holding the bag.
Read More →
Accountable Is as Accountable Does
Auto dealerships work better when all staffers own their duties.
Read More →
The Power of Saying No
Agents should build this muscle to make themselves and their dealer clients strong.
Read More →
Dealers Have Room to Run on Satisfaction
Survey finds it inched up this year, but consumers crave more communication
Read More →
The F&I Agent's Roadmap: Mastering the Cold In-Store Visit
Register for Allstate's FREE webinar on Oct. 21
Read More →