Ducks In A Row: Secrets Of Doing Great (Painless) Reviews
by Miki SaxonThe foremost thought to hold in you mind when creating a positive and powerful review culture is that it’s similar to Chinese cooking—most of the time is spent in preparation, whereas the food cooks quickly.
(Note: terminology can be confusing; ‘goal’ and ‘objective’ are interchangeable as are ‘appraisal’ and ‘review’.)
Here are the underlying steps that you need to learn, practice and absorb into your MAP.
Annual reviews alone don’t work even when that’s all your company requires.
To succeed people need semiformal feedback each quarter along with constant, informal daily input and coaching focused on helping them achieve the goals set forth in the previous annual review. (More on goals later.)
Reviews are the same as every other management task—they require good planning, open communications and accountability on both sides.
The first step to painless reviews is to commit to doing
- one HR-blessed annual review, with full paperwork, during the last two weeks of December;
- four quarterly reviews within the first week of each quarter; and
- constant, informal, ‘how am I doing’ feedback all year long.
Remember that
- any time you set a goal it needs a delivery date to be real; and
- never make commitments you either can’t or aren’t planning to fulfill.
First tell your people what to expect, then post your commitment on the department intranet and tell every person you hire how it works—and follow-through.
When you commit publicly you make yourself accountable.
Good reviews aren’t about filling out a lot of paperwork, whether by hand or computer. Yes, you need to follow company guidelines and use company approved forms, but as stated at the beginning, those are the mechanics.
The secret of a positive review culture is defining exactly what you want a person to accomplish during the year, discussing the goals and refining them together, in other words, the heart is the interaction between you and each person on your team, because one size does not fit all.
The result is that your people not only know exactly what their goals are, but they own them.
Setting Goals
- The basic rule is to never set more than three to five major goals in a year and the exact number depends on their size and complexity.
- Annual review goals should be high level, complex, and take 12 months to accomplish. They can include hard skills, such as technical certification, and soft skills, such as improving presentation skills.
- All goals should be quantified. “Be more willing to share” is a self defeating goal because it offers no way for the person or you to measure improvement; it becomes totally subjective, a matter of opinion and a source of contention at next year’s review. Instead the goal might be “Increase time spent sharing knowledge 10%” and agree on what the baseline is currently.
- Work together during the discussions to break down large/complex annual goals into smaller, more manageable goals that can be achieved each quarter and still more bit-sized pieces for each month, week and even day.
The cool thing is that achieving a constant stream of smaller goals keeps people motivated and prevents the large goals from overwhelming them.
And before you start complaining about the time involved, perhaps you should go back and read your job description or, better yet, go back a little further and think about all the lousy reviews you’ve had along the way, either because they didn’t happen or because they were all form and no substance.
Then think about, hopefully, the manager(s) who saw the value and used reviews to challenge, stretch and juice your growth, so you were ready for a promotion that put you in their shoes.
Then decide which one you want to be for your people.
Be sure to come back next week when I show you a simple, amazing tool that helps identify goals for each of your people and also has some terrific side benefits.
Your comments—priceless
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Image credit: flickr
March 21st, 2009 at 1:48 am
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