Measuring Behavior
Generally speaking, organizations wish to demonstrably improve in terms of revenue and profits, but also in their employee engagement and, for instance, safety. We would like to share two valuable tips to support your improvement initiatives by measuring behavior. One measurement for the people you lead; one measurement for yourself as a leader. But firstly, let’s look at what behavior management is.
What is Behavior Management?
Behavior management refers to the systematic approach of understanding, measuring, and influencing the behaviors of individuals and teams in order to improve organizational performance. Within the field of Organizational Behavior Management (OBM), behavior is viewed as something observable and measurable. Instead of focusing on attitudes, intentions, or personality traits, OBM focuses on what people actually do in the workplace.
Behavior management is grounded in behavioral science, particularly in the principles of behavior analysis. These principles explain how behavior is influenced by antecedents (what happens before behavior) and consequences (what happens after behavior). By systematically analyzing these elements, leaders can create environments that make desirable behaviors more likely and undesirable behaviors less likely.
For example, if a team consistently follows safety procedures, leaders can examine what conditions support this behavior. Are expectations clearly defined? Are procedures easy to follow? Do employees receive positive feedback when they act safely? By identifying these factors, leaders can strengthen the conditions that promote safe behavior.
In practice, behavior management involves defining desired behaviors, measuring their occurrence, providing feedback, and reinforcing improvement. It is widely used in industries such as manufacturing, healthcare, aviation, and IT service management because it provides a practical and scientific way to improve performance.
Another key element of behavior management is that it focuses on leading indicators rather than only lagging indicators. Lagging indicators describe outcomes that have already happened, such as revenue, accidents, or downtime. Leading indicators, on the other hand, describe the behaviors that produce those outcomes. By measuring and influencing the right behaviors, organizations can influence results before problems arise.
Ultimately, behavior management recognizes a simple but powerful principle: organizational results are the product of behavior. If we want to improve results, we must understand and influence the behaviors that produce those results.
Why is it Important to Measure Behavior?
Many organizations measure results extensively, but they often overlook the behaviors that create those results. Financial indicators, service levels, production numbers, and incident statistics are all examples of lagging indicators. They tell us what has already happened, but they do not necessarily reveal why it happened.
Measuring behavior helps bridge this gap. When leaders measure behavior, they gain insight into the actions that lead to desired outcomes. This allows organizations to move from reactive management to proactive improvement.
There are several reasons why measuring behavior is important.
First, measurement creates clarity. When behaviors are clearly defined and measured, employees know exactly what is expected of them. Instead of vague instructions such as “improve collaboration” or “be more proactive,” employees receive concrete guidance about what actions are valued within the organization.
Second, measurement enables feedback. Without measurement, feedback becomes subjective and inconsistent. By measuring behavior, leaders can provide objective feedback that supports learning and improvement.
Third, measurement supports accountability. When behaviors are visible and measurable, teams can track progress and celebrate improvement. This strengthens engagement and ownership within teams.
Fourth, measuring behavior helps organizations detect early signals of improvement or decline. If a team’s behavior changes, this can often be observed long before performance indicators change. Measuring behavior therefore enables organizations to intervene earlier and more effectively.
Finally, measuring behavior helps leaders improve themselves. Leadership behavior strongly influences organizational culture. When leaders measure their own actions—such as how often they provide recognition, coaching, or support—they become more aware of how their behavior affects the people they lead.
In this sense, measuring behavior serves two purposes. It helps leaders guide their teams toward better performance, and it helps leaders develop their own effectiveness. This dual perspective is central to effective leadership in modern organizations.
Additional insights for organizations interested in the broader benefits of Organizational Behavior Management.
Measure What You Do Want
If we take a closer look at measuring organizational performance, we observe something remarkable. Many organizations specifically measure the number and duration of all kinds of disruptions in their production and delivery processes. They meticulously measure downtime, the number, type and impact of outages, complaints, accidents, etcetera.
Ask yourself: “Why do we keep track of these things?” The answer is: “These areas show us where we need to improve.” These indicators are considered to be important. Scoring poorly on them usually has negative consequences for those involved. Scoring well is usually ignored.
In the long run, this is destructive on morale, performance and employee engagement. It stops any change initiative dead in its tracks. Guaranteed. Nobody wants to personally take the blame for disruptions and accidents. To avoid being blamed, people become “creative”. Before you know it, all kinds of undesirable, clever behaviors are embedded in your organizational culture. The Blame Game and Micromanagement being the most apparent.
The most frequently given advice to remedy the situation is: “Fix the system.”
One way of fixing the system is to change your dashboard. Focus and measure on things you wish to see more of. Instead of complaints, focus and measure well-earned compliments the team receives. Instead of downtime, focus and measure uptime. Instead of counting mistakes, track successful problem resolutions.
This shift may appear small, but it has a profound impact on organizational culture. When leaders measure positive performance indicators, conversations change. Instead of blaming someone for failure, leaders can ask a different question:
“What do I need to do more, or support more, in order for you to be willing and able to improve your work?”
By asking this question, leaders move away from blame and towards support. This approach lays the foundation for servant leadership. Leaders become facilitators of performance rather than controllers of performance.
In an environment characterized by continuous change, this perspective becomes increasingly important. Employees are more willing to experiment, learn, and innovate when they feel supported rather than judged.
Become the Dopamine Dealer
It’s an old, practically outdated paradigm, but in real life it is still very much alive. Managers who only show up when something goes wrong are still common in many organizations. When a problem occurs on the shop floor, the manager arrives, asks a few sharp questions, and proposes the solution.
“Simply do A and B, and make sure this never happens again.”
Problem solved. Good job manager.
Although this approach may seem efficient, it can be detrimental to employee engagement. If managers only appear when problems arise, employees quickly begin to associate management presence with stress, blame, and pressure.
Every time the manager shows up, it is very likely that a certain amount of manure has hit a certain ventilator.
These behavioral patterns predictably generate stress hormones and avoidance behavior. Employees learn that drawing attention may lead to criticism or blame. As a result, they avoid taking ownership and become less proactive. Over time, performance declines and innovation disappears.
A different leadership approach would be to show up more often when things are running smoothly. This allows leaders to observe employees in the act of doing something well. Leaders can then respond to these observations with recognition and appreciation.
This approach has a powerful neurological effect. Positive recognition triggers the release of Dopamine in the brain. Dopamine is associated with motivation, pleasure, and reinforcement of behavior. When employees receive recognition for desirable behaviors, they are more likely to repeat those behaviors in the future.
In other words, leaders who actively recognize good performance become a source of motivation for their teams.
Behavior Measurement Tools
Organizations can use several practical tools to measure behavior effectively.
One commonly used method is behavioral observation. In this approach, leaders or peers observe specific behaviors during daily work activities. These observations are recorded using simple checklists or observation forms. The goal is not to judge individuals but to identify patterns and opportunities for improvement.
Another useful tool is the behavioral checklist. This checklist contains a short list of clearly defined behaviors that support performance. For example, in a service environment, behaviors may include greeting customers promptly, confirming requests, or documenting service actions correctly. By tracking these behaviors regularly, teams can identify trends and improvement opportunities.
Scoreboards and dashboards are also powerful tools. However, instead of focusing exclusively on negative events such as failures or incidents, dashboards can highlight positive indicators. Examples include successful problem resolutions, proactive improvements, or compliments received from customers.
Pulse feedback systems can also help measure leadership behaviors. Short surveys can provide insights into how employees experience leadership support, recognition, and communication. These insights help leaders adjust their behavior and improve engagement.
Digital tools can support these measurement methods. Many organizations use spreadsheets, project management software, or specialized performance management platforms to track behavioral metrics.
The most important principle is simplicity. Behavior measurement tools should be easy to use and easy to understand. If measurement systems become too complex, people will stop using them.
Conclusion
Science clearly demonstrates that when we receive attention and recognition for doing something right, the brain produces dopamine. A shot of dopamine releases positive feelings, sometimes referred to as a “pleasure wave.” Dopamine reinforces the behaviors that produced it.
For leaders, this insight has important implications.
Instead of becoming a source of stress hormones by focusing exclusively on problems, leaders can become a source of positive energy by recognizing good performance.
In practical terms, this means deliberately paying attention to behaviors that contribute to success. Leaders can track how often they provide recognition, appreciation, or constructive feedback during the week.
One practical measurement could be the number of well-deserved compliments a leader gives in a week. The goal is not to artificially inflate praise, but to become more aware of opportunities to recognize good work.
At the same time, leaders should avoid overdoing it. When compliments become constant and insincere, they quickly lose their value. Recognition should always be genuine and linked to specific behaviors.
Both tips in this article go hand in hand. Make sure you measure the behaviors you want to see more of, and catch your people in the act of doing well. When leaders consistently recognize and reinforce positive behaviors, they create an environment where employees feel motivated, valued, and engaged.
And when that happens, something remarkable occurs: performance improves almost naturally.
Watch the magic happen.