Leadership Success Is Based on Sound Performance Management
Because a leader's success is defined by the performance of
others, learning to manage and improve the performance of one's
staff is a major priority for any successful leader.
The ability to motivate your people depends upon two-way communication
of goals and expectations that will cultivate respect and willing
participation in a performance improvement plan. Building a stronger
team is easier with a performance management system in place
that everyone understands and works within.
Performance management is not just a once-a-year review. It
must be an ongoing, carefully planned process, year-round. And
to be effective, it takes a commitment to coaching and reinforcement
that will pay off in the long term. Success is better achieved
by partnering with your direct reports to strive for and measure
excellence on a regular basis.
Assessing Performance
A first step is to find out where employees stand in relation
to their job description and responsibilities. In order to clearly
and accurately identify each individual's strengths and weaknesses,
you need to base your assessments on the facts. An objective
assessment is possible if you set uniform testing criteria and
compare results with a benchmark from within your own organization,
or your industry. There are several ways to achieve this. Online
surveys, video simulations and other tools can make this important
step easy, efficient and cost effective.
Establishing Learning Objectives
To set the individual up for success, you must establish a clear
understanding of expectations and where the individuals stands
in relation to them. Agreement at this stage is critical to get
a buy-in from your employee for the process ahead. Make sure
the individual understands the assessment results as they relate
to the job expectations for the future. In addition, go over
corporate strategic goals and incorporate them into every phase
of the performance management plan. Finally, make sure you listen,
as well, to the individual's opinions, goals and suggestions.
Creating an Environment for Success
Gaining commitment to the changes necessary for improvement
is key to any program. Once you identify what motivates the individual,
you can establish procedures and guidelines for input and feedback.
Together, you and your employee should agree on the phases you
need to set up for effective performance management. Based on
the individual's strengths and weaknesses, you set up targeted
work plans to focus on improvement of critical skills. If you
align individual performance models with the established goals ø both
personal and corporate ø employees are much more likely to commit
to success.
Partnering for Improvement
As indicated earlier, the performance improvement process is
an ongoing, daily commitment from both manager and direct report.
As a leader, you need to be both coach and counselor to keep
the individual motivated and on the right track. You must be
ready to correct deficiencies as they arise and as they relate
to the agreed-upon model for improvement. After all, you have
both agreed certain behaviors were to be corrected, so it is
important to reinforce the obligation immediately. In addition,
you must recognize and reward good performance ø especially improved
performance ø on the spot.
This requires more diligence and persistence than many leaders
may have invested in the past. But it often delivers the added
bonus of increased mutual respect and commitment.
Evaluating and Documenting
A key ingredient for a successful performance improvement plan
is agreement and commitment to a follow-up and measurement system.
What is the benchmark? When will you review progress? What degree
of improvement is expected? In what length of time? What are
the consequences of failing to improve? What are the rewards
for excelling?
Keeping good documentation of all phases will help both parties
understand where they are vs. where they need to be. From initial
review and assessment through progressive stages, written evaluations
should be based upon facts and agreed-upon criteria. Periodic
written communications should include praise as well as critique.
Your HR Department will have specific guidelines for permanent
employee records requirements, so be sure you also incorporate
these into your performance improvement plans.
For additional information and resources for performance improvement
planning, click
here or send an email to info@questcorp.com.
|