All companies have a formal
review system that they implement annually for all the employees, however it’s
always advisable to have frequent informal review and feedback processes taken
in 2-3 months.
Most supervisors like to go
for a team-meeting once a week, just to discuss what the team has achieved in
the last week and what the agenda is for the next one. Managers typically like
to go monthly or quarterly reviews.
Here is a typical Performance Review Form to keep track of weekly progress −
Work delegated in priority order |
Success Ratio |
Due Date for project |
Probability of meeting
deadlines |
Employee’s opinion about job |
Date of conversation |
Supervisor’s Previous Feedback |
Date of feedback |
|
Date of review |
As a performer, it’s very
important to keep a record of your team’s goals and accomplishments. Many
companies implement a performance journal where every achievement, big or
small, is registered. This progress graph is then shown to the employees to get
them motivated and encouraged. Comparing goals and performances of one another
will also make the employees competitive and more aware of the strength of
their own team.
To make all policies directed
toward improving employee’s performance effectively, the manager should have a
good working relationship with his team. The relationship should be
professional, ethical and transparent. The manager needs to inform the employees
of any important changes that need be done and a logical explanation behind it.
If the employees don’t trust
their manager and vice versa, the overall productivity of the company suffers.
It is therefore important that the managers learn to see things from the
employee’s perspective so that they can properly deal with the employee
evaluation process.
Performance managers
occasionally function as performance coaches to help people address those
concerns that’s stunting their growth and improvement. It involves open
communication, encouragement, and suggesting corrective measures. In such
cases, performance managers also resort to providing skill-based training.
One of the most important
steps in achieving consistent outcomes is to prioritize goals. Every employee
should select for himself a priority list of goals and objectives, where the
maximum focus should be given on the ‘Top 3” goals. This helps him channel all
his energy into delivering the best output because he knows exactly what he is
supposed to work on, and what he is supposed to be doing.
Performances must be
measurable. Without empirical data, it will be very difficult to evaluate an
employee’s productivity. However, people need to exercise caution while
measuring performances as it’s often difficult to put it in numbers.
Areas like software coding can
have strict, measurable performance indices as the work progress can
effectively be traced back to the output, however in industries like writing,
forcing employees to deliver high quantities can result in dilution of the
standards of output.