Engagement dies the moment appreciation becomes optional. Make appreiation a mindset with a purpose.
While opening The Mirage, I spent time in Housekeeping studying what motivated guest room attendants (GRAs). They cleaned an average of 14 rooms per shift. Studies showed they liked their job. Yet turnover was a dizzying 300%.
The Executive Housekeeper said, “It’s a very difficult job.” True — but that wasn’t the reason they left. I asked 100 GRAs who had recently resigned why they left a job they said they liked. Every single one said the same thing:
“There was no recognition for the good work we did — only the bad.”
So, we retrained supervisors to do two things:
• When performance slipped, treat it as a coaching opportunity, not a reprimand.
• When something was done right — up to standard or beyond — give a “gotcha” award. These shoutouts earned points redeemable for prizes or time off.
Within a year, turnover dropped to manageable levels. Why? Because they liked their job — and they liked the way they were treated. Fairly. By supervisors who stopped keeping their appreciation a secret.
Employees at every level need positive feedback, two‑way communication, and supervisors who are present, observant, and genuinely interested. In real time. Your interest in your employees is reflected in their interest in their work, their customers, and their co‑workers. That’s engagement in action.
If you want happy and engaged employees, tell them how much you appreciate them today.
Mary Kay Ash (1918 – 2001): American businesswoman and founder of direct sales company Mary Kay Cosmetics, Inc. At the time of her death, she had a fortune of $98 million, and her company had more than $1.2 billion in sales with a sales force of more than 800,000 in at least three dozen countries.[1][2]






