It’s Valentine’s Day this weekend. So, we have stripped away the heart-shaped chocolates and awkward cards. Instead, we’re encouraging you to think of the day as a reminder of a fundamental business truth: Appreciated people stay. Ignored people leave. Show your team some love.
In a manufacturing and engineering sector facing a “know-how gap,” retaining your talent is the ultimate ROI. Here are 5 ways to show your team love – or at least genuine appreciation this week.
1. Social Connection (Not Forced Fun)
Forced socialising can feel like a chore. True appreciation is about creating a space for genuine connection.
The Action: Instead of a formal “team building” event, simply provide the resources for a casual break. Order high-quality pastries for the breakroom and encourage people to actually take their full lunch hour.
The Uncomfortable Truth
If you only show appreciation once a year on a Hallmark holiday, your team will see right through it. Consistency is the only currency that matters in culture. Use Valentine’s Day as a “re-engagement” trigger, but make the “love” a standard operating procedure.
2. The “Focus” Gift: Protect Their Time
In our recent feature on the Crazy Busy Cure, we learned that constant interruptions are the enemy of brilliance.
The Action: Declare a “Meeting-Free Friday” or a “Deep Work Afternoon.” Giving your team the gift of uninterrupted time to actually finish their tasks is more valuable than a free lunch.
3. Show Your Team Love With Personalised Recognition
Generic “well done everyone” emails are the “To the Occupant” letters of the workplace.
The Action: Spend 10 minutes writing three specific, handwritten notes to team members who went above and beyond this month. Reference a specific project or a “soft skill” they demonstrated. It costs £0 but builds immense political capital.
4. Invest in Their “Path to Gold”
As Aaron Phipps and John Cooper showed us on the NSC stage, high performance requires a roadmap.
The Action: Book a 15-minute “Career Pulse” chat with a direct report. Don’t talk about current tasks; talk about where they want to be in 2027. Showing you are invested in their future makes them invested in yours.
5. Upgrade the Environment
If your team is working with outdated tools or in a cluttered space, it signals that their comfort isn’t a priority.
The Action: Identify one “small friction” in the office or on the factory floor and fix it.
Whether it’s a better coffee machine or updated software, improving the daily “user experience” of work is a long-term win.



