“You can’t motivate people with checklists and chain of command—you do it with trust, communication, and the willingness to get your hands dirty with them.” — Jennifer Mead, Evidence Unit Supervisor
Imagine leading a forensic team where every member wakes up fired up to tackle the toughest cases—not because of paychecks or pressure, but because they believe in the mission and trust their leader. Sounds like a dream? It’s not.
In fact, motivation is the secret weapon behind the most successful forensic units—especially when resources are tight and stakes are high.
Jennifer Mead, a trailblazing evidence unit supervisor with over 12 years of leadership experience, has cracked the code on inspiring teams to surpass expectations without throwing money at them. Her story and strategies will change how you think about leadership—and give you clear, actionable tools to boost your forensic team morale and crush those big goals.
Before you read on, make sure to check out the full podcast episode above, where Jennifer dives deep into how she transformed her unit’s culture and productivity. Then, come back here for the best of her advice distilled into easy steps you can start using right now.
Watch the full podcast episode below, then scroll down to dive deeper into the discussion!
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Why Motivation Matters in a Forensic Unit
Forensic professionals aren’t short on work. They’re short on time, resources, and in many cases… morale.
As a forensic supervisor, you don’t just manage workflows—you influence energy. Without the right motivation, team members won’t buy into goals, innovation stalls, and burnout quietly takes root.
The job still gets done—but that’s the bare minimum.
Motivation isn’t about cheerleading. It’s about leadership that sparks engagement. And when done right, your team doesn’t just follow—they push goals forward themselves.
Getting Team Buy-In: The Foundation for Any Big Goal
Here’s the hard truth: if your team doesn’t believe in the “why,” the “how” won’t matter.
Jennifer Mead shared a project that took over two years to execute—an ambitious, first-of-its-kind initiative in her agency. But she knew something right away: “There’s no way this is going to work without my team’s buy-in.”
What she did not do:
- Drop a directive and expect compliance.
- Skip over conversations with her staff.
- Assume they’d be on board “because it’s their job.”
Instead, she:
- Explained why the project mattered.
- Asked for input.
- Transferred ownership of parts of the process to the team itself.
And that’s when the magic happened. Her staff didn’t just follow—they took responsibility for outcomes.
🔑 Key Takeaway:
When you invite your team into the vision, you create stakeholders, not spectators.
Success Story: How One Evidence Team Took Over Seized Vehicle Management
Jennifer’s first major team win? Vehicles.
Her unit was suddenly assigned management of all seized vehicles in the agency. At that time, no one in the unit had ever even disposed of a single vehicle.
But with strong motivation and collaboration, her team evolved from “we don’t do that” to fully managing complex cases involving:
- Boats
- Trailers
- Homicide vehicles
- DMV contacts
- Insurance claims
They didn’t just rise to the challenge—they became the experts.
This transformation didn’t come from micromanagement. It came from her team buying into their own ability to lead. That’s what forensic team morale looks like in action.
How to Motivate a Forensic Team: Proven Tools You Can Use
Let’s break it down.
Tool #1 – Speak Their Language (Literally)
Motivation starts with communication. But not just any communication—targeted, intentional communication tailored to each individual.
Ask yourself:
- Who loves public praise?
- Who prefers private recognition?
- Who needs frequent check-ins?
- Who thrives with autonomy?
“Some people want a high five in the meeting. Others want a sticky note on their desk. You’ve got to know the difference,” says Jennifer.
Here’s what her team does that you can try too:
- Personalized post-it notes of praise
- Public shoutouts at staff meetings
- Private “great job” emails
- Handwritten team-building exercises (her Valentine’s Day hearts still hang in cubicles today!)
Tool #2 – Promote Psychological Safety
Jennifer sets a firm expectation: no gossip, no undercutting.
If someone tries to talk negatively about a teammate, she shuts it down. Period.
If you model respect, your team mirrors it. That creates a cohesive, professional environment where people feel safe—and motivated—to bring their best work.
Low-Cost (or No-Cost) Incentives That Actually Work
We get it—budgets are tight. But you don’t need money to motivate.
Try this instead:
1. Use What You’ve Got
Jennifer used leftover Chick-fil-A gift cards as micro-incentives. She pinned one on a whiteboard with the goal written next to it. First person to hit the goal? It’s yours!
2. PTO-Based Challenges
Whoever resolved the most evidence items got first pick of holiday PTO. For many employees, that’s way more valuable than money.
3. Set a Culture of Encouragement
Jennifer secretly required her senior staff to give compliments to their trainees. After a few weeks, the habit stuck. Now, they do it automatically.
These small gestures build a culture where effort is acknowledged, progress is celebrated, and team morale thrives.
Motivate Through Growth, Not Just Gifts
If you’ve got rock stars on your team, don’t forget them.
It’s easy to let high-performers operate independently. But if you never give them opportunities to grow, they’ll stagnate—or worse, leave.
Jennifer shared a real-life example that perfectly illustrates this:
While she was on vacation, a legal forfeiture request came in. One of her team leads immediately stepped up, took charge of the entire process without being asked, and then came back eager for more responsibility.
Jennifer didn’t just praise her initiative—she offered her the next case from start to finish, turning motivation into meaningful growth.
Other ways to grow your high-performers:
- Assign them to lead monthly meetings.
- Let them manage projects or training sessions.
- Offer job shadowing and internal mentorship.
- Get them involved in SOP reviews or audits.
- Nominate them for external training or leadership academies.
Growth is motivating. Recognition is validating. Combine both, and you’ve got a powerful retention strategy.
Don’t Just Talk the Talk—Walk the Walk
Here’s a final truth bomb from Jennifer:
“You can’t expect your team to grind if you’re not willing to grind next to them.”
Leadership by example isn’t optional—it’s foundational. And it goes beyond optics. When your team sees you:
- Writing reports
- Taking scene calls
- Supporting late-night purges
- Advocating for them up the chain
…they trust you.
And when they trust you, they’ll follow you—even into the chaos of major agency-wide change.
The Real Key: Know Your People
Let’s zoom out.
If you’re trying to figure out how to motivate a forensic team, here’s your bottom line:
🎯 Know your people.
🎯 Care about them.
🎯 Customize your approach.
🎯 Give them a reason to care about the outcome.
This isn’t corporate fluff. This is practical, boots-on-the-ground leadership that gets results in forensic units across the country.
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Final Thoughts
Team motivation isn’t a task you check off—it’s a mindset you live.
And as Jennifer Mead proves, when forensic supervisors lead with heart, honesty, and hustle, their teams don’t just complete tasks—they crush goals.
So whether it’s:
- Managing seized vehicles,
- Blowing past evidence disposal benchmarks,
- Or simply creating a place where people feel seen and celebrated…
…you have everything you need to inspire next-level performance from your forensic team.
Now go try it.





