For years it has been my practice to praise in public (openly in front of other staff) and provide constructive feedback in private (in a one-on-one closed door discussion). The only time I would not praise in public is if I knew that person does not enjoy public attention and would prefer more personal recognition instead.
Today, someone challenged my thoughts on this practice by suggesting public praise for one employee has a negative effect on all other staff members. The concern is that other employees may feel left out, overlooked and demotivated - they may say to themselves "I work just as hard as the publicly praised employee, but I never get recognized for it, why bother?"
I'm not convinced. It seems to me public recognition works at letting the employee and others know their work is valued and recognized. In fact,there seems to be support and encouragement for those getting the praise from other employees, at least I don't see any underlying resentment.
Could I be missing something? Is public praise bad for moral?
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