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7 ways to recognize your EMS agency鈥檚 top performers

The best feedback is timely, relevant, specific and actionable

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Look for opportunities to nominate your top performers for intra-department, local, state or national awards.

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All EMS providers, from the rookie to seasoned professionals, appreciate feedback and recognition for their job performance.

Don鈥檛 let an agency culture of 鈥渏ust doing the job鈥 stoicism be an excuse to brush aside feedback as something just for younger generations. As a supervisor, mentor, leader or aspiring leader, you have a responsibility to recognize the top performers on your ambulance, crew, company or department.

Whether directed at top performance or poor performance, the best feedback is timely, relevant, specific and actionable. In my experience, we are quick to critique but slow to give praise. You can recognize a job well done in the moment, at the station after an incident, and during regular intervals, such as quarterly performance reviews or annual agency reports. Feedback also needs to be honest and delivered with a tone of sincerity.

Here are seven ways to recognize top performers in your organization, but don鈥檛 limit yourself to these ideas.

1. Catch them doing good

The best way to identify top performance is to be out and about among providers. 鈥淢anagement by walking around鈥 is most useful when supported by the data you are collecting to recognize good performance, then using that data to improve processes and opportunities for others to do great work. Observe EMS providers doing their jobs, completing tasks and serving the community. If you see a paramedic doing good work, tell them specifically the good work you saw and why that work matters.

Because you can鈥檛 be at every lift assist, rescue, ambulance run, training event or community education program, it鈥檚 important to regularly read incident reports, electronic patient care reports and evaluations. If your agency鈥檚 volume is high, develop a system to spot check a certain number of reports each day or week. Use your review as an opportunity to recognize a well-written patient care narrative or a novel approach to solving a problem.

There isn鈥檛 much that tops specific, timely feedback from an immediate supervisor or organziation leader. If you can, deliver feedback face-to-face. If that鈥檚 not possible, send an email, text message or even a handwritten note.

Chief tip: Keep a box of 鈥淔rom the Chief鈥 cards on your desk. A handwritten note with a chief鈥檚 challenge coin might become a memento an EMS provider keeps their entire career.

2. Tokens of appreciation

Just like major events (e.g., severe on-duty injury or apparatus crash) trigger an automatic review, there should be events that trigger automatic recognition. These events, from the routine to once a career, are worth recognizing with a card, certificate or pin:

  • Baby delivery
  • Cardiac arrest save
  • Opioid overdose save
  • Limb save with tourniquet application
  • Structure fire rescue
  • Work anniversaries

What events would you add to the list? Share in the comments below.

Like birthdays, work anniversaries should be celebrated every year, not just every five or 10 years. Longevity and retention are worth recognizing in a chief鈥檚 memo to the department, in-station display monitors, and with personalized emails or notes. And, yes, a cash bonus or gift card to a local store or restaurant is additional recognition for annual anniversaries. A personalized plaque is a great gift to recognize career milestones like 20 years, 30 years or retirement. But don鈥檛 wait until the end of a paramedic or EMT鈥檚 career to thank them for their service to the community.

3. Celebrate survival

Every agency should extend an annual invite to survivors of sudden cardiac arrest, as well as major trauma or rescue, to a reunion event with their rescuers. Remember, the top reason most people pursue a career in public safety is to serve their community and help others. There is no better recognition of the call to serve others than to meet the people whose lives were saved by your personnel. Reunions can be public or private events and should include all the public safety personnel involved in the save, including dispatchers.

Chief tip: A reunion can be an emotional event for all who are involved. Give your personnel a chance to meet privately with the person they saved and their family before any public-facing component of the celebration.

4. Mentor or champion

Strong performance by an EMS provider is an indicator of both current work and future potential. Recognize a top performer by offering to be their mentor or champion. Meet with them to envision their aspirations and ambitions. Regularly meeting with them, as well as connecting them to other people and opportunities, is a way to recognize their performance, strengthen your organization and bolster the profession.

5. Select or recruit

Recognize top performance by selecting or recruiting those personnel for advanced training opportunities, special assignments, or committees. Though continuous learning is commonly associated with millennials, a desire to learn and strengthen skills is a universal trait. If given the opportunity within an agency culture that embraces continuous improvement, most people will appreciate opportunities to increase their knowledge, grow their skill set and hone their abilities.

If committee assignments are seen as punishment or drudgery in your organization, work on fixing the way committees are chartered and operated before using a committee assignment as recognition for a top performer. Committees that are well run, have clear responsibilities and make specific impacts on the agency have value for the organization as well as professional development potential for the committee members.

6. Announce to the public

Make it a habit to regularly share the great work being done by agency personnel with the public through press releases, social posts, annual reports and stakeholder updates. In each message, whether it is a five-paragraph press release or a 240-word tweet, include the who, what, when, why and how of the event or incident that led to the recognition. Your local media, as well as the citizens you serve, are hungry for good news. Announce:

  • Promotions and work anniversaries
  • Completion of new certifications and degrees
  • Noteworthy rescues and saves
  • Collaborations with social workers or public health

Yes, it is great to announce the receipt of a new ambulance or the purchase of mechanical CPR devices. But make sure to include the committee members who led the needs analysis, determined specifications, met with vendors, and implemented new training on the apparatus or device.

Chief tip: Always have ideas for the media by keeping a card in your pocket or a note on your phone of potential stories for your PIO or to share with media personnel who contact you directly.

7. Nominate for awards

As an EMS leader, look for opportunities to nominate your top performers for intra-agency, local, state or national awards. Match the award program criteria, such as EMT of the year or advocate of the year, to the top performers in your department. Most award programs offer a short online nomination form and, in my experience, coworkers, immediate supervisors and mentors are glad to assist in writing a support letter for a nominee. It is usually easier to support recognition for someone else than seek out recognition for yourself.

Look for award programs beyond the national award programs. Department, regional or state awards might have more perceived value to the award winners, as they are being recognized by the people whom they are more likely to know.

Chief tip: Many award programs receive very few nominees, and most people will truthfully say, 鈥淚t was an honor to be nominated.鈥 Keep a running list of your top performers so you can nominate them for awards.

Recognition is your job

Giving feedback, especially for work done well or above expectations, is a critical part of every supervisor鈥檚 job. As you climb the organizational ladder, it might get harder to regularly see on-the-ground performance, but that is an easily overcome obstacle. Here鈥檚 how:

  • Have a mindset that giving deserved and earned praise is part of your job.
  • Solicit suggestions from others 鈥 peers, supervisors, trainers, the medical director, patients and the public 鈥 with a question like, 鈥淲ho impressed you and why?鈥 or 鈥淲hat have you seen recently that really impressed you?鈥
  • Make it easy for examples of high performance to reach you. Many organizations send out satisfaction surveys to patients that ask for feedback about the quality of care they received.
  • Share handwritten cards and gifts the agency receives from citizens on social accounts. Recognition for good deeds begets more good deeds and more recognition.

Feedback rules and guidelines

Depending on your organization type, keep in mind and follow any workplace rules, state laws or federal laws for recognizing workplace performance. For example, gifts over a certain cash value, training opportunities or committee assignments may be governed by the collective bargaining agreement.

Feedback should always be fair, transparent and inclusive. If two providers of different races or genders achieve the same performance level, they should both receive equal recognition.

Finally, individual success in any business, including an EMS agency, is almost always a team success. EMS calls have two or more providers and fire calls have a dozen or more. Though a single firefighter might make the heroic rescue of a child from a burning building, they were part of a team that made it possible for them to enter the building, rescue the child and hand-off the child to medical personnel. Whenever possible recognize the team with the individual.

Editor鈥檚 note: How do you give recognition to the top performers at your agency? What was a method of recognition you appreciated?

This article, originally published in February 2022, has been updated.

Greg Friese, MS, NRP, is the Lexipol Editorial Director, leading the efforts of the editorial team on Police1, FireRescue1, Corrections1 and SA国际传媒. Greg served as the SA国际传媒 editor-in-chief for five years. He has a bachelor鈥檚 degree from the University of Wisconsin-Madison and a master鈥檚 degree from the University of Idaho. He is an educator, author, national registry paramedic since 2005, and a long-distance runner. Greg was a 2010 recipient of the EMS 10 Award for innovation. He is also a three-time Jesse H. Neal award winner, the most prestigious award in specialized journalism, and the 2018 and 2020 Eddie Award winner for best Column/Blog. Connect with Greg on LinkedIn.
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