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Employee
Evaluations: Four Tips to Help Managers
with Performance Review Conversations |
by:
Dick
Grote |
Managers
talk with the people on their teams every
day. Whatever the topic, most of these conversations
happen with no stress, little anxiety, and
minimal tension. But when the conversation
is about an employee's performance, anxieties
often abound. Here are four ways to reduce
the tension and defensiveness that too often
surround performance evaluations.
1. Don't wait for the meeting to deliver
the performance appraisal form.
I worked for large corporations for fifteen
years before beginning my consulting career.
Every one of those companies - GE, United
Airlines, PepsiCo - took performance appraisal
very seriously. And my bosses at those companies
also took their responsibilities for performance
evaluation seriously as well. But all of
my bosses kicked off the appraisal discussion
in a way that was guaranteed to get it off
to a bad start. How did they begin? They
set up the time for the meeting and then
waited until I was sitting across the desk
to hand me their completed appraisal form.
At the start of the meeting my boss would
give me his appraisal form and I would engage
all of my speed-reading skills, whipping
through the document as fast as I could
to see what he had said about my performance.
While I was reading the evaluation (and
probably missing some key points in my haste
to take everything in) my boss would be
behind his desk, pretending to work, but
in truth trying to gauge how I was reacting
to the evaluation he had written.
What a terrible way to begin! Don't wait
until the meeting starts to give the employee
your performance appraisal document. It's
far more effective to go up to the employee
an hour or so in advance of the meeting,
and say something like this: "Mary, you
know we're getting together at two o'clock
to go over your performance appraisal. Here
it is. Why don't you take some time between
now and then to review it? Read it carefully
and jot down any questions that you'd like
to ask."
Giving the person the appraisal to review
in advance of the meeting can lessen defensiveness.
It allows her time to think about what you've
written and prevents spur-of-the-moment
reactions. You'll usually find that giving
the person a chance to read what you've
written in advance produces much more effective
business discussions.
2. Set a time frame (and give yourself an
extra fifteen minutes).
Your discussion of a person's performance
evaluation may be one of the most important
interactions you'll ever have with that
individual; make sure you've allowed enough
time. In most cases, an hour should be sufficient
to review the appraisal document itself
as well as discuss many of the other subjects
that often pop up during performance reviews
- development activities, career plans,
and future goals and projects. Make certain
that the very next activity you've scheduled
after finishing the review isn't one that
must begin at a set time. If you provide
yourself with a little flexibility at the
end, you can take the time to wrap up the
discussion comfortably.
3. Don't start by discussing the form itself.
Yes, the form is important, but the form
simply serves as the formal record of your
assessment of how well the individual has
done over the past year. Rather than beginning
with the first entry on the appraisal form
and moving lockstep through the document
item-by-item, it's more effective to start
by asking a general question that requires
the employee's thoughtful consideration:
"Tim, you've had a chance to read the appraisal.
Why don't you start by telling me how you
feel the past year has gone?" Then listen
as the individual responds and continue
the discussion from there.
4. Don't fixate on getting the employee
to agree with your performance appraisal.
One of the most common questions managers
ask me during training sessions involves
how they can gain an employee's agreement
with what they've written in the performance
appraisal, particularly when what they've
written isn't entirely favorable. "Don't
try!" is my advice to them.
What is a performance appraisal? It is a
formal record of the supervisor's opinion
of the quality of the employee's work. Pay
attention to the key phrase, ". . . the
supervisor's opinion . . ."
Of course the employee is going to have
a different opinion - all of us believe
we're above average. The goal in the performance
review discussion is not to gain the employee's
agreement, although it is nice if that happens,
the goal is to gain the employee's understanding.
As long as the employee understands how
you came up with the evaluation, you've
done your job. Of course, he may disagree
(particularly if you've set the bar high
and have tough, demanding standards). But
don't waste time trying to convince a person
that you're right and she's wrong. The important
thing is that she understands your expectations
and how her performance was assessed.
There's a lot more to conducting good appraisal
discussions, of course. But these four tips
should make a tough job just a little bit
easier.
About the author:
Dick Grote is one of America's best-known
consultants on employee
performance management. He is the Chairman/CEO
of Grote Consulting Corporation and developer
of the GroteApproach web-based performance
management system at http://www.groteapproach.com
Circulated by Bandoni
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