Employee Appreciation Day should be EVERY day
Wedged between Valentine’s and St. Patrick’s Day lands a little-known celebration called Employee Appreciation Day. This year, Employee Appreciation Day is March 1.
Curmudgeonly bosses might stop reading here and say: “What?! Every day is Employee Appreciation Day by me paying them when they work!”
True. Employers are compelled by law to pay their employees on a regular basis. But showing true appreciation for employees goes beyond a paycheck.
Who invented this holiday?
Celebrated on the first Friday in March, this unofficial holiday gives management the opportunity to thank employees for their efforts at work.
Dr. Bob Nelson, a founding member of an HR group called Recognition Professionals International, came up with this holiday back in 1995. The idea coincided with a book he authored called “1,001 Ways to Reward Employees.” Dr. Nelson focused much of his professional attention on the impact worker recognition has on retention, job performance, and talent acquisition.
Show me the numbers
Employees report feeling 40 percent more engaged when their managers are great at showing recognition, according to a study noted in a 2022 Harvard Business Review article. This recognition made employees feel more confident, better informed, and they were less likely to quit, the article went on to say.
However, work can also be tough on employee mental health; 94 percent of workers report feeling stress at work, according to the American Institute of Stress.
Some employers might think their company benefits demonstrate appreciation; and to a certain extent that might be true. Yet, employees' satisfaction with their benefits fell to 61 percent in 2023, down from 64 percent in 2022 and reaching its lowest point in the past decade, according to data released by MetLife.
Turning some of these numbers around can be tough. Demonstrating employee appreciation and recognition might not be a cure-all technique for workplace challenges, but it’s a great place for employers to start.
Where to begin?
For employers that didn’t realize Employee Appreciation Day was approaching or are reading this after the fact, there’s no need to panic. There is still plenty of time to say “thank you” to staff.
In fact, displaying gratitude is a practice that should occur on a more regular basis anyway. It doesn’t have to take a lot of time or costly resources.
Here are a few ideas:
- Email: Sending a personal email to each direct report takes minutes and doesn’t cost a dime. When recognizing someone, it’s best to give a specific example of gratitude like, “I’m grateful for the positive attitude you bring to our team meetings” (or something like that).
- Card: Taking it a step further, nothing adds more of a personal sentiment than drafting a handwritten note to an employee. This likely adds even more weight to the message compared to an email.
- Verbal: Expressing employee gratitude either in-person or on a call is also a thoughtful gesture. Keep it short (receiving verbal compliments can sometimes feel awkward) and offer a specific example of why the employee is important to the team.
- Free food: Springing for donuts, treating employees to lunch, or offering to pick up afternoon coffee … who doesn’t like to get a treat from their boss now and then?
Key to remember: Employee Appreciation Day should be every day — or at least more often than once a year. Recognizing employees can help with retention, job performance, and more.