Why You Should Build Rapport with Everyone You Manage

by Jason Evanish, CEO Get Lighthouse, Inc.

If your team is shipping, hitting their numbers, or otherwise executing as needed for the business, your work is done as a manager, right?

Maybe not.

If you want to retain your team over the long term and take advantage of motivators that last, then there's more to the job of leading your team.

One of the most underrated, and foundational parts of management is taking the time to build rapport and trust with each person on your team.

When you build rapport, it helps you in a myriad of ways with your team. Today we look at 7 of them:

If you take the time to build rapport with your team you will see the results instantly

7 Reasons Why You Should Build Rapport With Each of Your Team Members

From data and research, to anecdotes and lessons from experienced leaders, there are a wide variety of benefits to taking the time to build relationships with your team. They go well beyond the touchy-feely and deep into core, important areas for being an effective leader and manager.

Reason #1: They'll be more engaged.

One of the most quoted statistics you'll find in the HR industry today is how low engagement is in the workforce.  Approximately 30% of all American workers and 35% of all managers are engaged. Those are disappointingly low percentages.  If you look around your office, that means less than 1 in every 3 people are truly happy and motivated on their job.

Gallup has done some tremendous research on engagement and in their 2015 "State of the American Manager" report, they found one of the key ways to improving engagement is to build rapport with your team members:

Build rapport with your team and they'll be more engaged

As you can see from Gallup's data, if your people "Strongly Disagree" about being able to come to you, there's almost no chance they're engaged at work. The only way someone will feel comfortable coming to their manager with any issues is if there is rapport and trust in their relationship.

You wouldn't talk to a stranger about your problems. A standoffish manager that only asks for status updates might as well be a stranger when it comes to asking questions and bringing up nonwork issues that affect their work.

Reason #2: It helps motivate your people.

The old agreement that a company will employ you for your whole career and you'll stay the whole time is a fallacy long gone; after seeing layoffs become commonplace, and especially for Millennials entering the workforce during the Great Recession, it's hard to believe you'll be at any company for long.

Combined with how easy technology makes it to look for another job, the stakes on whether any employee is happy are much higher.

Fortunately, along with these changes, we've learned more about what motivates employees in the modern workforce. Dan Pink has shared a new framework in a great TED talk (and book, "Drive") on 3 key tactics: Autonomy, Mastery, and Purpose.

We're big fans of Pink's framework as we've seen it work firsthand and align with much of the research we've seen. Camille Fournier, CTO of Rent The Runway, has added a great insight to Pink's 3 categories: Relatedness.  She describes it as follows:

Relatedness is the fourth element that is absent from Drive...Relatedness is very touchy-feely. It's hard to quantify. It requires interpersonal engagement.

[...] As a leader, you will lead people who want Relatedness in their job. They want you to know about their family, their hobbies. They want to chat with you about their weekend, their trips away. They want to get lunch sometimes.

The nice thing about Relatedness is that it is the easiest thing to provide. You don't have to have management buy-in to ask people about their weekends. You don't have to go through contortions to find business cases for sharing an occasional meal or coffee. And you may find that once you start caring about people, you feel a bit happier yourself at work.

Or put more simply:

Build rapport by showing you care about your people, according to Camille Fournier

Reason #3: They'll be more receptive to your feedback.

Feedback is a simple, and powerful way to motivate employees. However, the best feedback in the world won't help if they're not willing to listen to what you have to say.

That's where taking the time to build rapport matters.

In a post on the First Round Capital blog, Kim Scott, former faculty at Apple University and advisor to Valley startups like Dropbox, Shyp, and Twitter, shares the value of radical candor.

Before you can be so candid with your team (usually to provide unfiltered feedback), she describes how important it is to build rapport:

"Part of the reason Sheryl [Sandberg] was able to say to me so bluntly, ‘You sounded stupid,' was that I knew that she cared personally about me. She had done a thousand things that showed me that." ... Sandberg didn't just invest in her professionally, but showed she truly cared about her..."Caring personally makes it much easier to do the next thing you have to do as a good boss, which is being willing to piss people off.”

And it's not just hot Silicon Valley companies.

In the book "Turn the Ship Around!" a Captain turns around one of the worst performing submarines in the U.S. Navy using a series of fascinating approaches centered on a "Leader-Leader" approach. One of the key approaches was showing care for each member of his crew as he wrote:

Build rapport like Captain David Marquet if you want your feedback well received

Whether your team is over 100 men on a nuclear sub, tech workers in an office, or any other environment, taking the time to build rapport will help you ensure your feedback is more effective.

Reason #4: You'll earn their loyalty.

A few months ago, I met with a founder whose team was struggling. He was trying to maintain a flat organization, but it was breaking as they had grown to well over 50 employees. He rarely made time to meet with his people. When he did have one on ones with them, he told me he often had to, "give them bonuses so they wouldn't quit." 

While there's many issues with trying to be a flat org (that's a story for another day), the key issue today is that he was forced to buy their loyalty.  They also weren't coming to him with problems until they were ready to leave, which is fatal.  As SaaS expert and investor Jason Lemkin writes, that's too late:

"Once they tell you they have another offer … they're already out the door. A raise won't do it, at least not for the good ones.

[...] Even if a raise would work then, which it won't … the relationship is damaged at that point anyway."

So how do you build the rapport that creates loyalty? By making time for them and meeting with them regularly. You have to put in the effort to earn their loyalty. As Lemkin continues in his post:

Build rapport like Jason Lemkin by making time to ask

While loyalty can be bought temporarily, the best way to retain your team over the long term is to invest in them. That's why Dale Carnegie reminds us in his seminal book, How to Win Friends and Influence People, "the only way to influence people is to talk in terms of what the other person wants."  If you take the time to build rapport with them, you'll develop stronger relationships which will help reveal how to continue to keep their loyalty.

Reason #5: It's cheaper and better than bonuses.

So you've done enough to avoid having to buy your people's loyalty, but you still need to reward your team from time to time for great work. The default for many companies is to give out bonuses. They're easy to budget for, usually simple enough to issue, and who doesn't love money, right?

If your workers have creative tasks or have to solve problems, it turns out you may be making a mistake. As research by Dan Ariely shows (as covered in Dan Pink's TED Talk):

"As long as the task involved only mechanical skill, bonuses worked as they would be expected: the higher the pay, the better the performance. Okay? But once the task called for even rudimentary cognitive skill, a larger reward led to poorer performance."

Now, there are many ways to better motivate people than bonuses as Pink's framework of Autonomy, Mastery, and Purpose shows. At a high level, these are key areas to focus on.

But what about when you want to reward someone in a specific instance? This is where the rapport you've built comes in.

A Story: Rapport & Rewards

At a past job, I was a product manager. One of the biggest challenges in being a product person is that you have to influence people; you don't have direct authority, so instead you have to earn their buy in.  A key lesson I learned was that taking the time to build rapport with your team can help significantly in this area.

One time, one of the engineers I worked with went above and beyond to help on a project and I wanted to thank him. Unfortunately, I had no budget, so any reward was coming out of my pocket.

Because I had built rapport with him, I knew he was a mega-fan of a basketball player named Mark Price. So, I went on Ebay and found a Mark Price figurine and bought it and sent it to him with a thank you note for him being awesome.

Build rapport and you'll be inspired to give great, inexpensive rewards

The result? He was thrilled. Our working relationship was stronger, and unlike a bonus, the figurine still sits on his desk today. (Read the full story here)

Build rapport and it's still on their desk

And it doesn't have to just be tchotchkes. I've convinced my friends to try this and it's led to tearful voice mails (when my friend bought his assistant a signed record of her all time favorite artist), and even the right functional gift:

Build Rapport - cheaper than a bonus and more thoughtful

Money is a cheap motivator. Thoughtfulness goes much further and costs so much less on your bottom line. All you have to do is take the time to get to know your people and then apply it when the time is right.

Reason #6: It's just good manners.

Sometimes it really is that simple. If someone is going to spend 1/3rd of their waking life working with you, then showing you care about them is the right thing to do.  As management expert Peter Drucker wrote:

"Manners are the lubricating oil of an organization... Manners - simple things like saying "please" and "thank you" and knowing a person's name or asking after her family - enable two people to work together whether they like each other or not."

Drucker raises an important point: Building rapport with your employees and colleagues does not mean you have to be best friends with everyone. It simply means you have to care enough about them as a person to recognize what's important to them.

Think back to the best and worst bosses you've ever had. The ones you had a great relationship with were the ones that showed they cared. The ones that distant, careless, Dilbert-like ones, probably kept their distance. Don't be Dilbert's pointy-haired boss.

Build rapport or end up like dilbert's boss

Reason #7: You'll enjoy work more.

Work doesn't have to be a slog. It can be a fun, creative environment where you and those around you thrive and enjoy working together.

When you build rapport with those you work with, you help create a positive environment. Remember what Camille Fournier wrote:

"You may find that once you start caring about people, you feel a bit happier yourself at work."

This is in line with an amazing story from Omid Scheybani on his experience with an amazing manager that cared for him:

"I saw how truly caring about someone as a person could unlock an infinite amount of trust and authenticity. It could tear down walls of fear and bridge oceans of uncertainty. Seeing how my manager wanted the best for me was my biggest motivation to exceed his expectations day after day after day."

As you get to know people you may be surprised what you have in common with them. You'll also better understand what motivates your people and be able to apply that to how you manage them.  All of this can make you a more effective leader and make life better for everyone on your team. Positive attitudes can help bring positive work results, so everyone wins.

And remember: As a manager, you have the power to create a great environment for you and your team. That's why Andy Grove wrote:

"As a middle manager, you are in effect a chief executive of an organization yourself… As a micro CEO, you can improve your own and your group's performance and productivity, whether or not the rest of the company follows suit.”

You have the power to make your work environment a much friendlier, collaborative place. All you have to do is take a little time to build rapport with the people around you.

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How to Build Rapport

Building rapport is easy to do, so now that we've hopefully convinced you to give it a try, here's a few easy ways to do so:

1) Have regular one on ones with each person on your team

Giving them time out of your schedule every week or two creates a free space to have these kinds of conversations to get to know them and what drives them.  Don't waste them on status updates. If you're new to one on ones, this post can help you get started with one on ones and you can learn more about one on ones here.

2) Ask good questions. Be curious.

A hallmark of great management is asking good questions. It also happens to be the key to building rapport. Showing interest in others and getting to know them is as easy as asking and genuinely listening to their answer. This list of 101 questions for one on ones includes a great set including:

  • If around a holiday: What did you do for [Holiday]? How was it?
  • How are your parents/grandparents? Where do they live?
  • If they have children: How is [name of child] doing? (Ask something related to their age like starting school, playing sports, or other interests.)
  • What do you like to do in your free time? What are your hobbies?
  • What did you do for fun in the past that you haven't had as much time for lately?
  • What drives you? What motivates you to come to work each day?

3) Write things down.

If it's important and you want to remember it, it's worth writing down. A weak memory is no excuse to forget key things about your people. You build the best rapport when you build on past discussions; it demonstrates you were listening and cared about their past answers.  If it's important to them, don't risk forgetting. Write it down.


Further Reading:

Thinking more about how to build rapport or work with remote team members? Here's where to continue your learning:

Want to continue learning about 1 on 1s? This post is one of dozens we have to help you be your best in any situation. Find our comprehensive guide to one on one meetings here.

Jason Evanish

Jason Evanish

As the founder and CEO of Get Lighthouse, Inc, Jason and the Lighthouse team have helped managers grow their leadership skills in dozens of countries around the world. They’ve worked with a variety of companies from non-profits to high growth startups, and government organizations to well known, publicly traded companies. Jason has also been featured in publications including NPR, the Wall Street Journal, and Fast Company.

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