Motivate Your Staff to High Performance

Medical Practice Staff Performance
It goes without saying that if you want a high performing practice, you need to have a high performing staff.

And while hiring the right people to begin with is a big part of the equation, there’s a lot you can do right now to bring out the best in your people – regardless who they are, and regardless how they have performed in the past.

A great example of the power of management to motivate employees comes from Toyota.

In the early 1980’s, Toyota and General Motors partnered in a first-ever collaboration between the Japanese company and a major US automaker.

For Toyota it was a golden opportunity to establish operations in the US and to benefit from GMs vast
distribution network.

For GM it was a last-ditch effort to save a failing plant.

You see, the deal that GM offered Toyota was to take over the management of their Fremont California factory – the worst performing plant in the company. A plant with overhead costs 30% higher than GMs other plants, 20% worker absenteeism, frequent strikes, poor customer service ratings, and dismal sales.

Not only that, to close the deal Toyota had to agree to reemploy the same union employees who had performed so poorly for GM.

Yet despite these obstacles, Toyota agreed. And within 2 years the plant’s production had grown to twice the average of other GM factories, costs had decreased to 50% of average, worker absenteeism had fallen to 2%, and customer satisfaction ratings – and car sales – had increased significantly.

How did Toyota managers do it?

Not with a new factory or equipment. The old plant had remained virtually unchanged.
And not with new workers – 85% of the staff were rehires from the old factory.

Toyota managers accomplished the seemingly impossible with a highly effective management strategy.

They motivated these formerly disgruntled and unproductive employees by making them feel that their work was significant. They empowered employees to solve problems and make decisions. And they got employees at every level to actively participate in improving the factory’s operations.

You can use these same proven principles to motivate your staff to a higher level of performance.

Read more about Toyota’s strategy in this article (pdf) Motivating Sustained High Performance: Psychological Lessons From Toyota

You can learn the specifics of implementing these employee motivation strategies in your clinical practice in our new audio-seminar: A Profitable Practice Is Everyone’s Business: How to Maximize Staff Performance and Productivity For Increased Bottom-Line Results

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