Keeping your eye on the business and improving employee performance
at the same time can be a challenge; that is why performance management
is so important in organizations. By its very definition, performance
management contributes to the development of individuals and teams in
order to achieve higher levels of organizational performance.
- Do you have the skills and ability to coach employees toward peak performance?
- Are
employees clear on what is expected of them, do they have the tools to
continuously upgrade their skills and develop their potential?
Employees
may never reach their full potential until you first learn how to
establish performance goals, clearly communicate expectations, identify
the gaps between where an employee is today, the gains that are needed,
and design a plan for how to get there.
Performance management
can not be a once-a-year event to be ceremoniously concluded by the
completion and filing of a form. What good does it do an organization
to have completed forms that only document lack luster performance?
True performance management is more than tracking and monitoring what is.
It must become an everyday conversation and relationship building
process that managers initiate to create what can be. The power of the
process is realized when employees are clear about whats expected of
them and managers use it as a collaborative tool to reach goals, and
optimize performance.
Performance is the one thing that every
company wants from its employees. After all, isnt that what they are
paying for? Conducting review sessions that do not better enable or
inspire improved performance just add to the costs.
In his book Supermotivation, Dean Spitzer listed the following statistics:
- 50% put in enough effort to keep their jobs
- 55% of employees not engaged
- 9% see connection between job and work
- 8/10 looking for new jobs
- 80% could perform better
- 33% believe that management communicates effectively
- 39% trust their senior manager
Business can not operate this way. Well, they
can and they do but we all pay the cost. Isnt it easier to make
effective communication a priority; spend time helping employees find
the best tools; giving them access to the best resources, and helping
them find reasons and incentive to put forth more than the minimum
level.
With those kind of statistics, managers might want to explore performance improvement
strategies; increase their focus on employee development, seek out cross-training
opportunities, provide more challenging assignments, and provide
continual feedback.
You cant just go to the employee when something is
wrong that is too much time and energy wasted. You should take care
to observe the employee often to find out how they work and where they
may be making mistakes.
Lest we forget, managers are employees too. If you are taking
action, are you putting forth more than the
minimal effort? If you only think about performance management
after you get your other real work done -- what job do you have that is
more important than developing your employees and shoring up the
organizations most
valuable asset? You need people to sustain the viability of the
corporation.
There are seven performance enhancing strategies
that you might try in service to the employee. Ultimately they are
responsible for their actions but they also need you to:
Assess performance, identify competency gaps, and then define performance objectives in precise and demonstrable terms.
Communicate
expectations, roles, and responsibilities through performance
discussions that simultaneously build relationships, improve
performance, commitment and accountability.
Coach
employees in a way that corrects performance deficiencies, reinforces
appropriate behaviors, teaches new skills, and inspires them to higher
levels of performance.
Diagnose performance problems early and remove any barriers that may impede employee performance.
Collaborate
with employees and others to identify performance goals, support
systems, and improvement strategies that will improve both today's
performance results and the skills needed for tomorrow's challenges.
Document all performance-related discussions, quickly, confidently and legally.
Retain your most talented performers, recognize all employees for their efforts, and reward great performance.
Article Source:
BusinessCurrents.net