How many warped, dried-out scraps of paper have we seen languishing on announcement boards? What are the open rates on your company newsletters?
Many companies include employee recognition in these same areas. It’s ineffective, impersonal, and does nothing to enhance company culture.
Employee recognition walls are areas where we curate content to support a sense of belonging, convey important information, and celebrate everyone’s success. Sit tight as we share creative employee wall ideas, design tips, and more.
Employee recognition walls enhance morale and a sense of belonging. They reflect company values, gratitude, success, and community back onto employees who see and contribute to them.
Taking the time to add employee acknowledgment to a virtual or physical wall is meaningful and memorable for two reasons:
Also, it’s a great way to engage in and strengthen the company culture. With few limits on style, category, and content, it can represent diverse teams in niche industries.
Your wall can look however you like, but here are the most important design factors to consider before going live.
Accessibility is the most critical factor in making the wall a success.
Physical employee recognition walls should be in common areas or those with the most employee foot traffic. It should be legible and easy to view at eye level.
The same goes for digital displays. If it’s in a conference or meeting room, how often would the bulk of the staff reasonably come across it?
Virtual recognition is the only option for asynchronous teams. First, it’s advisable to use a platform the team is already on. Test, test, and test again before inviting everyone to ensure accessibility on all devices.
Don’t forget to set permissions so that employees can contribute to areas of the virtual board.
Eclectic maximalism, clean and modern–the branding and culture of the company should steer you in the right direction. Incorporate colors associated with company branding as well.
Both virtual and physical recognition walls require visual balance. The placement and percentage of text versus images, as well as the use of blank space, heavily influence the viewer’s experience.
For instance, visualize a wall where there is a rather tight collection of text on one side, and then a collection of well-spaced photos on the other. A lot of people will scan the photos, not even bother committing to all of that text, and split.
Let’s get down to it–what to put on the wall? Even if you have a relatively small area to work with, you can choose a minimum of four different features.
If you’re making your recognition wall virtual or digital, you’re still in the right place. Many of these creative employee wall ideas translate well across formats.
Employee of the Month doesn’t fit with every company and culture, but you should still add shout-outs to the wall.
Celebrate multiple employees for different reasons and ensure everyone gets a turn. Best collaborator, most cheerful, or any other positive behavior you picked up on.
Pick a company value to highlight. Content for this corner can include definitions, examples, and employees whose actions or behavior have best exemplified company values.
What if we used this strategy for this problem? Created a special task force for this project? Moved our desks to face the window? Dedicate a space for employees to share ideas and suggestions that can enter the company conversation.
Polaroids, throwback photos, corporate headshots. Collect pics of employees in the spotlight, add decorative borders, and share reasons the company appreciates them. It adds visual interest and keeps walls from getting too text-heavy.
If you’re at a larger company or don’t get much opportunity to observe the team regularly, here’s who to highlight. Use the HeyTaco leaderboard to showcase the top taco givers and receivers.
These are the people who showed the most appreciation as well as those who garnered the most kudos. Both are your most engaged, supportive employees.
That guy in IT is already a real Confucius, so you don’t have to choose famous, historical quotes. Listen closely during meetings and coffee breaks to pick up bits of wisdom and humor everyone should enjoy.
What are the team’s Top 10 apps this month? Films, songs, memes–have everyone nominate their faves for the ranking. Incorporating some “just for fun” questions into company polls and surveys is very helpful for engagement and personalization anyway.
There could be an employee who wants everyone to see their cat in its Christmas sweater. The appreciation wall is a golden opportunity. Cute pet pics are like catnip, enticing more employees to view the wall.
Employees can share something they appreciated recently (help on a task, getting to leave early, someone sharing a snack) on a simple sticky note.
You can theme this one so the sticky notes are leaves on a tree, flowers in a bouquet, etc. It’s a good participation tactic since it takes very little time or effort to jot it down and slap it on.
Create visuals showing employees how their work impacts company success. Graphics and charts can demonstrate how a project or strategy led to a positive outcome.
Share an interesting fact about the company that current employees may not know. Maybe the founder originally planned to break into a different industry or had a story-worthy lightbulb moment.
Refresh the employee appreciation wall with each month’s birthdays and service milestones.
Celebrate the positive personal attributes of employees with a throwback to this yearbook feature. Carefully choose categories such as Best Dressed, Most Creative, Best Team Spirit, or anything that best describes your staff.
Sam can speed-read, Pam has perfect pitch, and Chandra is a chess champion. Invite employees to share their impressive, unusual, or flat-out unbelievable lore (and sit back as their coworkers ask for a demonstration during break).
What is the team working toward together? Maybe they’re manifesting a celebration after meeting a company goal or raising enough money for a destination team-building event.
Make part of the employee recognition wall a vision board where everyone can contribute to the collage.
Post the company’s best reviews on the appreciation wall. This is another idea that will help foster engagement as employees feel more connected to company success.
Taco TV helps you create a clean, digital recognition wall that serves as a team broadcast. See the latest company achievements and up-to-date taco activity, ensuring recognition never goes unnoticed.
If your employee recognition program includes these monthly awards, a recognition wall is a prime place to showcase their achievement. Here are some ways to make them really stand out.
Many employees just don’t care about standard trophies and plaques. Customize honors to your company culture, and it becomes something more meaningful to the community.
You can try a humorous trophy that gets passed around every month instead. In place of a traditional wall display, have their coworkers share their appreciation with remembrances and compliments they can revisit all month long.
The day the display changes, it’ll attract tons of new eyes. So, don’t just replace one person’s photo with another. Change layouts, colors, and fonts to reflect a brand-new celebration.
You can also use seasonal themes to herald in the change. A new honoree can be associated with fall colors, spring flowers, or summer fun.
On the wall, share more than one reason why this employee is the monthly winner.
Transparency and specificity serve a dual purpose. A clear understanding of why the winner was chosen reduces resentment or suspicions of favoritism among employees. It sets a positive example and tells other employees what to strive for.
It also makes the honor more special for the winner. Highlighting someone’s outstanding performance, unbeatable morale, and creative problem-solving instills much more pride than, “Great job!”
Outside of dedicating someone to manage the wall, there are a few things you can do to help guarantee its success.
If you’re creating a physical wall, you should never have to dust it off. You’ll refresh many elements weekly, but generally, try not to let anything sit for more than a month.
There may be an exception, like an inside joke or team motto. Anything else will grow stale faster than you think, and people will stop looking.
Employees should know they’re all invited to contribute to the board, but you should also extend personal invites. There will be features more than one employee (hopefully) contributes to, like gratitude posts, quote-sharing, and bright ideas.
But also, ask the artistically inclined if they’d like to help decorate. Invite the social butterfly to help pick the superlatives. This is a form of recognition, too. Plus, normalizing everyone’s involvement means others won’t think twice about sharing when the mood strikes.
An employee recognition wall should be reliable, not predictable. Swap out one special feature for another every cycle or two, returning to the first later on. This way, something won’t be left sitting too long due to low participation.
The features you rotate should be in a similar category. For example, if you don’t have enough staff with pets to justify Pet of the Month year-round, rotate it with another personal interest feature, like the hidden talent spotlight.
A creative employee wall is just one way you can build a better workplace environment through recognition. HeyTaco has resources to take you all the way, from meaningful employee reward ideas to a full step-by-step guide on building a recognition program from scratch.