Saturday, July 25, 2020
Time to Review or Not to Review My Opinion on Performance Appraisals
Time to Review or Not to Review My Opinion on Performance Appraisals Iâm often asked to give an opinion on performance appraisals. This time, it had to do with a bunch of companies that were replacing the annual or twice yearly appraisal with fortnightly âcoaching conversationsâ. âIs this a good idea for the future workplace or a fad?â My first thought was âWho cares!â, but rather than blurt this out, I took a moment to explain why very few people care. You see, when you work with someone, you have to get a few things right to make the relationship work. The foundations for the working relationship are exactly the same as every other relationship you have in your life. You have to respect each other. You have to give a damn about each other. You have to have some interest in why youâre together. And, at a minimum, you have to meet each otherâs expectations. So, why did anyone invent performance appraisals? I think they were trying to bring a bit of structure to the baselines of the working relationship. Letâs have a conversation about a) whatâs expected, b) how youâre going against those expectations, c) how Iâm going to link that to how I show my appreciation for your contribution, whether that be rewards, or recognition, and d), if youâre not doing well, what we can do to help you get better, and finally, e) how we would both like it to develop as we go forward â" Is there anything we need to tweak or change? So the original intention wasnât too bad, albeit a little one-sided. What went wrong with the process was it got really boring. It got legal instead of human. It got attached to MASSES of paperwork. It went âon-lineâ so people didnât even have to face each other for a conversation anymore. And it got one-sided â" Iâm the boss and Iâll tell you how youâre going, but there will be no time for you tell me whatâs expected of me and how Iâm going. And those last two pieces of the good process â" coaching someone to improve and planning to develop the relationship into the future â" got left off, and it became a pretty brutal scorecard rather than a conversation to keep a relationship working really well. So, to the question of whether you toss it out. Well, it depends. You are still going to need to talk about expectations. Itâs still important to give feedback and discuss ideas. Itâs important to plan forward. It is still important to coach and develop. Get rid of the process, and youâll still need to do those things. So the big sensational new idea is âhave them fortnightly â" and keep them casualâ. Awesome dude, but good bosses already do. The annual or twice a year formal sit down is just a nice opportunity to record whatâs already happening. If youâve ever had a good boss, you know that these conversations are goldmines â" ideas, feedback, appreciation, gratitude â" itâs all there. But for bad bosses or those who make these annual or twice yearly conversations boring and useless, then âfortnightly coaching conversationsâ are probably going to be just as boring and just as dreaded. Instead of two boring and somewhat awkward conversations each year, youâve now got 26! Eek! You see â" leadership trumps process â" always has, and always will. Give a good leader a bad process and theyâll make it work. Theyâll keep people feeling supported, connected and appreciated. Give a bad leader a good process and theyâll find a way to make it awkward and a waste of time. If the question was a different one â" Should we have boring conversations with your team? Then the answer would be an obvious âNo, absolutely not. You shouldnât have them yearly, twice a year, and certainly not every two weeksâ. And if the question was the right one â" Should you regularly have really good conversations with the people on your team â" about work, about expectations, about contribution, about ideas and developing the relationship to be better for the future? Then the answer would be a much more engaged âYes! Absolutely! Prepare for them. Make them as interesting and relevant as you possibly can. Give them your best efforts to ensure the best possible impact on the other person. Be very clear that itâs a two-sided relationship and youâre listening. And have these really useful conversations as often as you possibly can. Call them whatever you like â" except maybe âperformance appraisalsâ because they have a bad rap. This blog was originally published in October 2015 on the FlexCareers website. About Rhonda Rhonda has spent her career on the people stuff, working with some of the biggest and best companies all around the world, but she has always thought â" âwe could do this better. We could make work (and leadership) better for all of us â" more inclusive, more real, and more âhumanâ. She fundamentally believes that inclusion, good leadership and treating each other as equals, is not only foundational for good people practices in organisations but equally of more equitable and prosperous economies and communities. In short, if we include as many people as possible in work, then we start to build the sort of community and society we all want to live in. Rhonda is also co-founder of mwah, a Community, a Toolkit, a Think Tank, and a Boutique Consultancy, all aimed at Making Work Absolutely Human. A knowledge base and a community of all the real stuff you need to lead and work with people, today and in the future.
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