Motivation for a Team

A member of an indoor rowing team or club? If so, this is the place for you.
Locked
Senttothegallows
Paddler
Posts: 2
Joined: May 15th, 2016, 12:35 pm

Motivation for a Team

Post by Senttothegallows » May 15th, 2016, 2:35 pm

Hello,

I am on a small club collegiate program and I was looking for a way to help motivate some of my fellow teammates. We have a very promising freshman class, but none of them erg/train for rowing. We have slowly become more competitive as many members of the team have started to train hard and put up some decent erg scores, but I want to make sure this big and strong freshman class can become great rowers, as opposed to what usually happens on my team where a select few learn to train, but most just drink/fraternity there rowing careers away.

User avatar
jackarabit
Marathon Poster
Posts: 5838
Joined: June 14th, 2014, 9:51 am

Re: Motivation for a Team

Post by jackarabit » June 2nd, 2016, 11:54 am

Work hard, play hard, drink hard? That should separate the real men from the Methodists! Tell em those who leave a legacy are remembered just slightly longer than those who merely recieve one.
There are two types of people in this world: Those who can extrapolate from incomplete data

M_77_5'-7"_156lb
Image

User avatar
bisqeet
10k Poster
Posts: 1482
Joined: July 20th, 2015, 3:17 am
Location: Bavaria, Germany

Re: Motivation for a Team

Post by bisqeet » June 3rd, 2016, 2:05 am

here is the textbook solution I was taught:

well - you can't motivate them -motivation comes from within;
motivation is either extrinsic (driven by reward), or intrinsic (meaningfullness for lack of a better on the fly description).

- what you can do is give them clear goals to meet the above:

Goethe said:

„Erfolgreich zu sein setzt zwei Dinge voraus: Klare Ziele und den brennenden Wunsch, sie zu erreichen.“ – Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

transl.
Being successful requires two things: Clear objectives and a burning desire to achieve them

which just about sums it up.

Find out the individuals wishes - define a goal for each of them using SMART
Specific – target a specific area for improvement.
Measurable – quantify or at least suggest an indicator of progress.
Assignable – specify who will do it.
Realistic – state what results can realistically be achieved, given available resources.
Time-related

i.e.
by the end of the season you will be rowing a 2k on the c2 ergo in under 7 minutes so that you can qualify for xxx race.
Dean
2020 Season: 196cm / 96kg : M51
Training Log - ʕʘ̅͜ʘ̅ʔ -Blog
~seven days without rowing makes one weak~

Locked