The annual performance appraisal is an opportunity to enhance employee
performance and create greater success for the company and the individual.
My intent is to explore how coaching skills can be used in creating a good
performance appraisal experience for both the employee and the supervisor
and how to keep good performance going throughout the year. As a manager
for 18 years my experience was that performance appraisals were a tense
time for the employee and the supervisor. In either position, for me it
often felt uncomfortable, so how do we reframe it so that it is a good
experience for both?
Start with vision:
It's important to start with vision: the company's and the employee's.
What is the company vision? The company vision should be compelling and
known by staff. When staff don't know the owner's vision for the company
it is hard for them to help move it forward. Having a clear and compelling
vision that employees can buy into provides a foundation for success.
But what drives the individual isn't the bosses vision, the company's
vision, but their own compelling vision.
* Employees can embrace the company vision but...
* True success comes from within and from personal vision
* Personal vision should be compelling and tie into the company vision
* Do you know your employees dreams and visions for their lives and
career
Take time to create a vision:
If the employee hasn't thought about their vision, take the time to
create a vision with them. Does their vision, their passion tie into the
company vision? Can you as the supervisor help the employee to achieve
their vision? What if their vision is your job? Well, that's great. As
supervisors, managers and leaders part of our role is mentoring and
developing our employees. It's great to have employees that are motivated
to learn and grow. It's also great to have employees that know your job
and can do it competently.
Compelling visions are personal, written in the present tense, as
if...they are happening now, and point to an exciting future. Encourage
your staff to write their own compelling vision and share it with you.
Our current appraisal framework:
Often the manager talks about issues that the employee didn't know was
coming. Today we are talking about how to reframe the experience for both
the employee and the manager. With the manager as a coach and partner
committed to the employee's success the environment can shift. The goal is
to reframe the experience, creating a positive, goal oriented environment
that thrives on success and enhancing performance. In working with many
groups of people solving problems, when they focused on what was going
well and built upon it they were more successful than when they worked on
what the problems were that they were having and what they needed to
improve. In focusing on solutions, they ultimately identified the things
that needed improvement as well.
It's important to recognize your feelings about performance appraisals
and to imagine the employee's perspective.
* History of being an uncomfortable experience
* Reframe the experience & create a positive, goal oriented environment
that thrives on success, enhancing performance
* An opportunity to tune into the person and find out what is going on
with them
* Create a plan for the upcoming year.
* Most individuals (most employees) want to be successful
Use Coaching Skills to develop success and excellence:
Where are we at now? After you have created a compelling vision, find
out where we are at right now, using five key coaching questions you can
quickly get to where the employee is at. In these questions you have the
opportunity to create powerful positive energy, find out what the gaps are
and what the resources needed are. In talking about what would be ideal
you are also focusing a bit back on the vision, but you are also pointing
in the direction that you need to go- so how do we get there?
* When meeting with a staff member:
o Be present
o Tune into them and tune out everything else
o See their greatness
* Use Five Coaching Questions:
o What's going right?
o What makes it right?
o What is it that would be ideal
o What's not quite right yet?
o What resources do you need?
As the supervisor, I see my role as one of supporting my staff so that
they can do their job, I'm their coach, their success partner and the
person that is helping to get them the resources they need to do their
job. As the director of an outdoor center, my job was to get the clients
there, but it was also to make sure that our resources were there for the
client, we had the infrastructure we needed to provide the service- the
ropes course, trained staff, food for meals.....
Create a plan for excellent performance:
You, the supervisor become the partner or the coach - coaching for
success. In creating a plan focused on success for the employee, the
manager begins to shift the paradigm to one of employee and coach/partner.
As supervisors, our role is build successful teams and we have to have
successful team members in order to do that. If we focus on creating
success we are more likely to create it. Focus on the positive, the
solutions. What's going right, how do we create more of it? In working
with teams I have found that when I focus on what they are doing well and
how we do more of it - we build on our success.
When we create goals that are SMART, we can measure them, and track
their progress. If goals are soft, not measurable it becomes difficult to
progress the plan or give any feedback. So, how do we make them
measurable? Measurable is countable, how many, when, who?
Goal Planning
* Goals tie into the company vision and the employees vision.
* Goals Point to an exciting future.
* They are positive, specific, measurable, attainable, relevant and
time bounded
Tips for setting goals
Start with the RESULT in mind.
Set SMART goals.
Make it easy to see the next steps.
SMART Goals
SMART Goals have certain attributes that make them measurable. When you
can measure the goal you then know if you are attaining it. Goals should
be results or outcome oriented and not process oriented.
* Specific: o Has clear deliverables or results
* Measurable: o Can be counted: how many? How much? Who?
* Attainable: o Can be attained at least 80%
* Relevant: o Important to the people you serve, your future viability
and relevant to your vision and values.
* Time-Bounded: o Think big, but it's a 12 month plan, an annual plan.
For example: My partner works for a yacht club, maintaining their fleet
of boats, so he might have a goal of refurbishing 3 boats this winter,
including hull, topsides, interior and undersides.
Another example could be:
A sales staff might have a sales goal such as increasing personal sales
by 20% during the year.
Or The CEO might have a goal of hire 4 new staff.
Annual goals are typically big. It's important to break them down into
smaller steps. Refurbishing three sailboats is big, 1 boat per month over
the course of the winter becomes more manageable.
But the sales goal - can also be the foundation for creating a plan to
accomplish the goal. How are you going to accomplish it?
* Certain number of cold calls
* A systematic follow-up plan for each lead
* Direct mail, advertising - what are the specifics that are going to
create the success?
Build in Accountability:
Building in accountability in your annual success plans is the key to
success. How many performance appraisals have you had or have you done,
that didn't get looked at until the next year?
You need to meet with people regularly and reviewing the goals. It's
unfair to come at a staff person at the end of the year and say you didn't
accomplish what we outlined in your plan. Yes, you can accomplish some
things just by writing down the goal, but the level of accomplishment is
usually lower than what we want in our companies.
* The key to success is building in accountability through regular
meetings, weekly or monthly
* We often fall short on keeping a plan alive
* Regular meetings that keep focus on the plan and keep it moving
forward.
* Celebrate success, write down accomplishments, build on success
Monthly accountability:
Meet with staff at least monthly and review the plan. Bringing out the
plan and talking about it, keeps it alive. If it is never mentioned it
gives staff the impression that it wasn't that important and they don't
need to work on the goals outlined. Remember the goals outlined are
focused on creating better results for the company. You want that. Focus
on the plan. At the monthly meeting spend time to:
* Review the vision
* Review the accomplishments (What's going right?)
* Review the goals
* Score each goal - give it a percentage 60%; 85%
* When a goal is falling short use coaching skills to help figure out
what the problem is and how to change it.
* Does the leadership need to shift to provide more supervision,
training, direction....?
You are looking for success of at least 80%. If the person is in their
own way, do they need to make a shift in their feelings, beliefs,
paradigm, to move forward and get themselves out of the way. Are they
choosing not to make the necessary shift. It's an opportunity to talk
about choices that we make. We each operate from a place of personal
responsibility. We are responsible for ourselves, our actions.
* Measurable goals can be scored
* Score the goals each month
* If the goal is below 80% talk about what's in the way? Is the
individual in their own way?
* Go back to the five coaching questions:
Create a partnership:
The monthly review of the PLAN gives you the opportunity to really
check-in with staff and support them in developing success. It also
prevents the annual performance review dread. They know you are invested
in their success as well as that of the company. This is powerful. It
develops you as a leader and partner of the staff member and lets you know
where the focus needs to be. It also creates a regular stream of
communication-both ways that can only improve results. Use the five
coaching questions:
* What's going right?
* What makes it right?
* What's the ideal, the vision?
* What's not quite right now?
* What are the resources needed?
Coach them to succeed.
Handling poor performance: I believe that coaching skills can help you
as a supervisor create better success. When there is poor performance the
coaching questions give you an opportunity to build success. But you have
also built a framework for having real conversations. We are all adults,
and we each have personal responsibility and make choices about our
behavior. If you do you discipline or progressive discipline in your
organization you need to have a clear policy on it and employees need to
be informed of the policy. They also need to know the expectations and job
responsibilities. And with that foundation believe you can have real
conversations about their behavior and choices and the position it puts
you in. Your behavior as a supervisor is a consequence of their behavior.
I've had this conversation with staff in a union shop, in a supervisory
session that involved poor performance. It went something like: Fred, you
have great skills and talents that we see here, and you also know why
we're here - you didn't show up for work and you didn't call, it's
considered a no show/no call. It puts me in a position where I have to
take action, and if it continues then I have to continue taking actions.
You are responsible for you and you are making choices for how you handle
your position.
And in having these conversations - it's important to remember that our
goal is success and the employee's goal is to be successful also. Employee
retention is important to everyone.
* Go back to the coaching questions - it gets them talking about what
is going right, what their vision for success is and what is in their way.
* Help staff to identify limiting behaviors, how they are in their own
way, and shift their paradigms to get out of the way.
To create the success you want; Keep focused on your goals
Staying focused on your goals and those of your employees keeps the
momentum going. As the supervisor you can create a positive and
encouraging environment and create a performance culture.
Copyright © 2006, Donna Price www.businessbuildersintensive.com mail@businessbuildersintensive.com
About the Author
Donna Price, President of Compass Rose Consulting, LLC, provides
business coaching to small business owners, business leaders, and work
teams; using her experience as a senior level manager & extensive
background working with people to achieve their goals. The focus of her
work is on building businesses and helping individuals to launch their
dream. www.businessbuildersintensive.com; www.compassroseconsulting.com;
mail@businessbuildersintensive.com