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Item Upon - The Fallacy of Performance Reviews
Developing an Identity Statement that Truly Tells Others Who You Are read these examples and nod our heads in agreement. Then we go to work and do exactly the opposite.The identity statement should allow anyone to understand or recognize your business as you would like them to. Taking this one step further, it should also answer the question – Who Cares? … If you are having trouble with your identity statement, ask your spouse, friend or colleague to tell you what they perceive your business to be. This may help you assess if you have been clear in your description of what you do. (Taken from “The Ultimate Guide to Creating a Thriving Business”, Yvonne Weld, 2007).Simply put, your identity statement does precisely that; conveys to others what exactly your identity is. Your business name is a start to your identity, but is it really telling others exactly what you do? Your identity statement should not leave any questions in the mind of the person hearing it as to who you are a In the most fundamental ways our work is no different from the dancer or golfer – in our work we perform (do our work) all the time. In order for us to benefit from coaching it needs to be in context, and in the flow of our work. Unfortunately the performance review process is set up to look at our work as a snapshot, rather than a running video recording. Stated simply, while performance is an ongoing process, a performance review is an event (and usually a far too infrequent event at that). What You Can Do as a Leader There are several things you can do as a leader to work within your current performance review process and still make it work significantly b Seven Benefits Of Strategic Thinking And Planning For A New Year Every year the dance begins. Supervisors and managers know they’ll soon have to do the annual performance review for all of their employees. They get the notice from HR reminding them of the deadlines. They get copies of the forms that will be used. They may even get some training on how to use the forms or conduct the reviews more effectively. Every few years the process will change – either in a small administrative way or in some more substantial way – at least from the perspective of those revising the process.As another new calendar or fiscal year begins, it is wise to take a good hard look ahead at where your business is heading in light of the business environment of the new year. It is also wise to develop new goals for the upcoming year in this new business environment. The way to take this proactive and positive step in your business is to use strategic thinking and planning.Looking at the start of a new year, we can acknowledge some uncertainty in the business environment and perhaps in our personal lives. Therefore, it is the perfect time to engage in strategic thinking and planning to benefit from the opportunities that are always present, especially during uncertainty.So what are the benefits of using strategic thinking and planning for a new year? Here are seven (7) benefits, according to your st But to the supervisor, it is all the same. Once a year they have to have a performance conversation with their “direct reports.” While the employee doesn’t get the memo from HR, they know the time is coming too – they know that at some point they’ll get an email from their boss, or the topic will come up in a staff meeting. “Performance Reviews will be soon, look at your calendars and let’s find a time to do this.” Most supervisors make this proclamation with a serious tone – they know that they represent the organization’s interests, and that even if they don’t like doing these reviews, they know they are a part of the job. Most employees with more than a couple of years on the job know what their bosses are thinking as well – and the dance continues. And so it goes – supervisors do performance reviews because they are expected to. And employees participate because they must. Far too infrequently does this conversation lead to meaningful changes in performance – either taking a high performer and making him or her a star or taking a person with some performance challenges and helping to make significant strides of improvement. Of course these are the goals of the performance review – to provide people with feedback on performance, compare that to the expectations of the job and provide an opportunity for conversation on how to improve (regardless of the current level of performance). These goals are wonderful. Unfortunately, in most all cases, a performance review, no matter how well done, no matter the intentions of the participants or the skill of the supervisor, won’t achieve these goals. In other words we do the performance review in our organizations because these goals are valid and “everyone does them.” Then when they don’t reap the desired results, organizations look to update the forms, improve the feedback skills of the supervisors or otherwise improve the process. Here is the best way to improve the process: Eliminate the Performance Review. That’s right, I said get rid of performance reviews! The Fallacies of the Performance Review Imagine that a dancer had a personal coach. That dancer would expect their coach to provide them with a clear picture of what excellent performance looked like, expect ongoing encouragement, positive feedback when appropriate and correction when needed. The dancer wouldn’t be very happy if the coach only watched once in awhile throughout the year during occasional performances or practices, then scheduled an annual meeting to discuss progress. In the same way, a golfer would want a coach to provide feedback frequently and timely. We read these examples and nod our heads in agreement. Then we go to work and do exactly the opposite. In the most fundamental ways our work is no different from the dancer or golfer – in our work we perform (do our work) all the time. In order for us to benefit from coaching it needs to be in context, and in the flow of our work. Unfortunately the performance review process is set up to look at our work as a snapshot, rather than a running video recording. Stated simply, while performance is an ongoing process, a performance review is an event (and usually a far too infrequent event at that). What You Can Do as a Leader There are several things you can do as a leader to work within your current performance review process and still make it work significantly be Choosing The Right Professional Coach - 6 Tips eir boss, or the topic will come up in a staff meeting. “Performance Reviews will be soon, look at your calendars and let’s find a time to do this.”You and your coach are a partnership focused on you and your success. Coaching isn't a magic wand; it is a lot of hard work. You need to be committed to the process. Change, especially the kind evoked through coaching does not take place overnight. You will make subtle and powerful shifts if you are willing and able to commit to your success. Coaching is about your being in the present and focused on the future.• You and your coach need to have a good rapport. Be specific about what you need. The more you identify your needs, the greater chance you will find the person who can help you.For example: Do you need—-A coach to help you become motivated and to help you capitalize on your personal abilities? -A coach to have openness and flexibility to their approach at being 'your' coach; Ab Most supervisors make this proclamation with a serious tone – they know that they represent the organization’s interests, and that even if they don’t like doing these reviews, they know they are a part of the job. Most employees with more than a couple of years on the job know what their bosses are thinking as well – and the dance continues. And so it goes – supervisors do performance reviews because they are expected to. And employees participate because they must. Far too infrequently does this conversation lead to meaningful changes in performance – either taking a high performer and making him or her a star or taking a person with some performance challenges and helping to make significant strides of improvement. Of course these are the goals of the performance review – to provide people with feedback on performance, compare that to the expectations of the job and provide an opportunity for conversation on how to improve (regardless of the current level of performance). These goals are wonderful. Unfortunately, in most all cases, a performance review, no matter how well done, no matter the intentions of the participants or the skill of the supervisor, won’t achieve these goals. In other words we do the performance review in our organizations because these goals are valid and “everyone does them.” Then when they don’t reap the desired results, organizations look to update the forms, improve the feedback skills of the supervisors or otherwise improve the process. Here is the best way to improve the process: Eliminate the Performance Review. That’s right, I said get rid of performance reviews! The Fallacies of the Performance Review Imagine that a dancer had a personal coach. That dancer would expect their coach to provide them with a clear picture of what excellent performance looked like, expect ongoing encouragement, positive feedback when appropriate and correction when needed. The dancer wouldn’t be very happy if the coach only watched once in awhile throughout the year during occasional performances or practices, then scheduled an annual meeting to discuss progress. In the same way, a golfer would want a coach to provide feedback frequently and timely. We read these examples and nod our heads in agreement. Then we go to work and do exactly the opposite. In the most fundamental ways our work is no different from the dancer or golfer – in our work we perform (do our work) all the time. In order for us to benefit from coaching it needs to be in context, and in the flow of our work. Unfortunately the performance review process is set up to look at our work as a snapshot, rather than a running video recording. Stated simply, while performance is an ongoing process, a performance review is an event (and usually a far too infrequent event at that). What You Can Do as a Leader There are several things you can do as a leader to work within your current performance review process and still make it work significantly b Instantly Accept Payments in Multiple Different Ways e performance challenges and helping to make significant strides of improvement.All online registration systems will allow you to automate your event registration by moving registrations from manual to online, but only some will have the ability to process payments online. There should be no PDF downloads, no printed forms, and absolutely no faxing or mailing allowed. You should never have to take credit card numbers over the phone and manually key them in because all registrations should be processed instantly over a secure connection. Registration fees should show up in your merchant or bank account effortlessly.Many planners still process payments by hand, either by paper or phone. But this is a massive waste of time and energy. Why spend human effort to do something a well-equipped web site can do better, faster, and cheaper? The clear answer is that you shouldn't.You should choo Of course these are the goals of the performance review – to provide people with feedback on performance, compare that to the expectations of the job and provide an opportunity for conversation on how to improve (regardless of the current level of performance). These goals are wonderful. Unfortunately, in most all cases, a performance review, no matter how well done, no matter the intentions of the participants or the skill of the supervisor, won’t achieve these goals. In other words we do the performance review in our organizations because these goals are valid and “everyone does them.” Then when they don’t reap the desired results, organizations look to update the forms, improve the feedback skills of the supervisors or otherwise improve the process. Here is the best way to improve the process: Eliminate the Performance Review. That’s right, I said get rid of performance reviews! The Fallacies of the Performance Review Imagine that a dancer had a personal coach. That dancer would expect their coach to provide them with a clear picture of what excellent performance looked like, expect ongoing encouragement, positive feedback when appropriate and correction when needed. The dancer wouldn’t be very happy if the coach only watched once in awhile throughout the year during occasional performances or practices, then scheduled an annual meeting to discuss progress. In the same way, a golfer would want a coach to provide feedback frequently and timely. We read these examples and nod our heads in agreement. Then we go to work and do exactly the opposite. In the most fundamental ways our work is no different from the dancer or golfer – in our work we perform (do our work) all the time. In order for us to benefit from coaching it needs to be in context, and in the flow of our work. Unfortunately the performance review process is set up to look at our work as a snapshot, rather than a running video recording. Stated simply, while performance is an ongoing process, a performance review is an event (and usually a far too infrequent event at that). What You Can Do as a Leader There are several things you can do as a leader to work within your current performance review process and still make it work significantly b Make Your Interviewing More Effective With Personality Identification Techniques of the supervisors or otherwise improve the process.When you interview someone for a job you already know their qualifications and work experience from reading their resume. These might need some clarification and expansion, but you have the basic facts.What you don’t have is a real understanding of the personality of the applicant. Would it be beneficial to you, the employer to be able to see and understand not only the negatives but also the positives in your job applicants without depending upon answers to questions? It can be done, easily, quickly and with simple training.As you progress through the interview, you do get to know each other better, quite naturally, through give and take of conversation, and through the candidate relating past experiences.However, the old questions that used to “trick” Here is the best way to improve the process: Eliminate the Performance Review. That’s right, I said get rid of performance reviews! The Fallacies of the Performance Review Imagine that a dancer had a personal coach. That dancer would expect their coach to provide them with a clear picture of what excellent performance looked like, expect ongoing encouragement, positive feedback when appropriate and correction when needed. The dancer wouldn’t be very happy if the coach only watched once in awhile throughout the year during occasional performances or practices, then scheduled an annual meeting to discuss progress. In the same way, a golfer would want a coach to provide feedback frequently and timely. We read these examples and nod our heads in agreement. Then we go to work and do exactly the opposite. In the most fundamental ways our work is no different from the dancer or golfer – in our work we perform (do our work) all the time. In order for us to benefit from coaching it needs to be in context, and in the flow of our work. Unfortunately the performance review process is set up to look at our work as a snapshot, rather than a running video recording. Stated simply, while performance is an ongoing process, a performance review is an event (and usually a far too infrequent event at that). What You Can Do as a Leader There are several things you can do as a leader to work within your current performance review process and still make it work significantly b Joint Ventures for Immigrants read these examples and nod our heads in agreement. Then we go to work and do exactly the opposite.As an immigrant myself, I understand the hopes, fears, dreams and unique problems faced by immigrants, no matter where they are in the world. Immigrants often face challenges that only other immigrants can understand. Often their qualifications are not accepted or they have no local experience, so they accept whatever they can get. Having worked with hundreds of immigrants, I know how hard it is to start all over again.Immigrants don’t always understand the culture in their new home. They might be afraid of risking their savings. They often don’t realize just how different things are in this new world. They sometimes face racism, xenophobia and people who take advantage of their vulnerability. They want to be accepted and blend in to their new environment, but it can be very strange and difficult. Money problems In the most fundamental ways our work is no different from the dancer or golfer – in our work we perform (do our work) all the time. In order for us to benefit from coaching it needs to be in context, and in the flow of our work. Unfortunately the performance review process is set up to look at our work as a snapshot, rather than a running video recording. Stated simply, while performance is an ongoing process, a performance review is an event (and usually a far too infrequent event at that). What You Can Do as a Leader There are several things you can do as a leader to work within your current performance review process and still make it work significantly better. Everything suggested is within your control and won’t violate any of the tenets of your existing organizational process. 1. Stop thinking of the annual event. Yes, you may have to do the forms each year, but you can meet and discuss performance as often as you want. 2. Turn it into a process. Regular conversation, perhaps informal, will make for a much better outcome. 3. Remember the key purposes. Clear expectations, discussion of progress and feedback for continual improvement. These three guideposts will make your conversations more useful to every one. 4. Explain the change. Let your people know what you are doing and why. Once they know why you are doing this, they likely will love it! 5. Improve your skills. Yes, you can get better at giving feedback, building rapport and all those things (we all can!). And when you are having regular conversations you will get better faster! 6. Use your review process as a culmination. You can fill out the forms and paperwork anytime. And if you are having ongoing conversation, it should be quite simple! What You Can Do as an Employee As an employee you may be thinking that, while you agree with everything you’ve read, there is really nothing you can do to change your situation. While you don’t hold all the cards in this game, you can be proactive in asking for more of a process approach. 1. Ask for a clearer picture of success. It is your success you want to create – it is only appropriate that you know exactly what is expected. 2. Ask for feedback regularly. Even if it looks very informal or if your boss doesn’t recognize this as “reviewing your performance,” you can create something that is more like an ongoing process, and less like an annual event. 3. Share successes and challenges regularly. This will help you get the feedback you need to continue to improve. Final Thoughts People often ask me, “How can we improve performance reviews?” I surprise many people by saying “The best thing you can do is eliminate them.” Hopefully this article explains why I feel this way. I do recognize that many aren’t in the position to eliminate them completely, and so my secondary advice is to take the focus off of the annual review and put it back on performance. Since performance is ongoing, so should the conversation about it. Turn your review event into an ongoing conversation and you will have taken the most important step you can in making your process relevant and useful to everyone.
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