All articles Behaviour change

How behaviour change actually sticks.

Habits, not courses. A standard holds when it is practised, motivated, recalled, recognised and checked — not when it is presented once. Here is what makes it stick.

A manager walking the floor on a standards check

Most companies do not fail for lack of knowing what good looks like. The standard is written down. The brand promise is clear. They fail in the distance between knowing it and doing it — every shift, at every site. So it is worth asking why we still reach for old systems to solve a daily problem: the digitised slide deck, the intranet nobody opens, the once-a-year engagement survey. The problem is daily. The tools were built for an annual rhythm.

Part of the answer is inertia. This is how it has always been done, so the slide deck gets refreshed and sent round again. But behaviour change is not an event you schedule. It is a habit you build. The brands that hold their standard are the ones that treat it that way — and the mechanics underneath are well understood. Five of them do most of the work.

Make it a habit, not an event

Frequency beats intensity. A standard covered once a quarter is forgotten long before the shift where it matters; the forgetting curve is steep, and a single exposure rarely survives it. A few focused minutes a day, built into the rhythm of the shift, works the other way around. Repetition is what turns a standard into a habit. That is the core bet of a performance platform: not another place to store courses, but a daily return that keeps the standard alive.

What actually motivates people

A habit only forms if people come back to it, and what brings them back is a balance of two forces. The durable one is intrinsic: the sense of mastery as a skill clicks, visible progress that feeds the desire to grow, and purpose — the line from a few minutes of practice to better service on the floor. The concierge who loves sharing the best local table is already running on it.

The other force is extrinsic: recognition, rewards, friendly challenges and streaks. These are useful for starting a habit, when the intrinsic pull has not taken hold yet. But lean on them alone and returns diminish — points for their own sake wear thin. The blend is what lasts. Extrinsic cues to begin, intrinsic meaning to keep going.

Knowing the standard has never been the problem. Doing it, every shift, is.

Recall beats review

There is a difference between recognising an answer and being able to produce it. Passively re-reading a policy feels like learning, but it fades fast. Active recall — retrieving the answer from memory — is what makes knowledge hold, and what turns it into something a person can actually do under pressure, when a guest is waiting and there is no time to look it up. It builds confidence as well as competence: people trust a skill they have practised. A short challenge that asks someone to remember does more than a longer one that lets them skim.

Recognition makes it stick

Across the floor, peer recognition is consistently the most-used and most-loved behaviour there is. When a colleague notices someone handle a hard moment well and can recognise it on the spot, two things happen at once: the right behaviour is reinforced by the people who matter most, and the person feels a sense of belonging that keeps them coming back. Recognition is not a nicety bolted onto the standard. It is one of the strongest levers on whether the standard holds.

Check what is actually landing

None of this is worth much if you cannot see where it reaches the floor. Observation, audits and light mystery-shopping close the loop: they show where the standard is translating into behaviour and where it needs support, site by site. That visibility lets leaders act on evidence instead of anecdote, and direct help where confidence is genuinely thin — rather than running another blanket session and hoping.

It compounds

Each of these is modest on its own. Together they make a system. The gains rarely come from a single intervention; they come from the compounding of many small ones, repeated until they hold. A standard practised daily, motivated honestly, recalled actively, recognised by peers and checked on the floor does not slip back. It becomes the way things are done. That is the whole point: behaviour change, small and repeated and reinforced and checked, compounds into a standard that holds.

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