The annual performance evaluation is an opportunity to accelerate staff performance and create greater results for the company and the individual. My intent is to evaluate how coaching skills can be used in creating a positive annual evaluation experience for both the employee and the supervisor. With our focus on how to maintain excellent performance going throughout the year.
Performance appraisals are often dreaded by both the employee and the supervisor. Often the manager raises issues that the employee didn't expect. With the manager as a coach and partner committed to building the staff member's results the environment can shift. This is achieved by reframing the evaluation experience, creating a positive, goal focused environment that thrives on success.
By using coaching focused questions you have the opportunity to create powerful positive energy, determine what the gaps are and what the resources needed are.
When meeting with a staff member:
oBe in the present, focused on the employee
oListen actively, with focus and eliminate all other distractions
oSee their greatness
Simple Coaching Style Questions will assist you:
oWhat's going right?
oWhat makes it right? or Why does it go well?
oHow can we build on this success?
oWhat is it that would be ideal
oWhat are the challenges you are dealing with?
oWhat resources do you need?
You, the supervisor become the coach ? coaching staff members 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 job is to build successful teams and we have to have successful team members in order to do that. If we spend our energy on creating successful team members 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 not written well, not measurable it becomes difficult to succeed or give any feedback. So, how do we make them measurable? Measurable is countable, how many, when, who?
? Vision is central in establishing the plan, the company vision, the employee's vision.
? Goals Point to an exciting future.
? SMART Goals are positive, specific, measurable, attainable, relevant and time bounded
Annual goals are typically big. It's important to break them down into smaller steps. Make them attainable and not overwhelming.
Building in accountability in your annual success plans is vital. Often performance appraisals are done, and then left without a glance until the following year. This causes the original framework of stress and discomfort to begin again.
Building in accountability is the responsibility of the supervisor. Schedule regular meetings with staff, reviewing the goals and create new plans for the upcoming month. Spending time with staff each month or more frequently gives you as the supervisor continuous information about what is happening.
It's unrealistic to come at a staff person at the end of the year and say you didn't accomplish what we outlined in your plan. In addition, 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 plan created are focused on creating better results for the company. this is important to you. Focus on the plan.
Each meeting:
? Review the vision
? Review the accomplishments (What's going right?)
? Review the goals and score them: 60%; 85%
? When a goal is less than 80% use coaching skills to help figure out what the problem is and how to change it.
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 regular review of the performance goals gives you the opportunity to talk with staff in detail and focused on their goals and support them in developing success. It prevents the annual performance review dread. Employees know you are invested in their success as well as that of the company. This is significant. You become a partner of the staff and strengthens you as a leader and gives you information about where the focus needs to be. You have created a regular stream of communication-both ways that can only improve results.