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Gonzaga University

Gonzaga University. Performance Management: Leading Workplace Performance For Management Personnel. Session Agenda. Management’s Roles and Responsibilities Setting Goals and Expectations Performance Coaching Guidelines for Effective Performance Discussions

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Gonzaga University

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  1. Gonzaga University Performance Management: Leading Workplace Performance For Management Personnel

  2. Session Agenda • Management’s Roles and Responsibilities • Setting Goals and Expectations • Performance Coaching • Guidelines for Effective Performance Discussions • Prepare for the Performance Discussion • Conducting the Discussion • Performance Review Document Enhancements and Timeline • Summary • Resources

  3. Management’s Continued Roles & Responsibilities • Greater accountability • On-going assessment and communication of employee performance • Performance reviews will be used to assist in determining promotion, pay, annual salary increases, and overall employment status • Determine employee annual salary increases as part of the new compensation system • Prepare to enter into potentially difficult discussions as we move forward • Assess knowledge, skills and abilities (KSA’s) of yourself and your supervisory team

  4. Defining Organizational Success Vision/ Values Strategic Plan: Organizational goals/objectives Tactical Plans goals/objectives Departmental goals/objectives Individual and/or Team goals/objectives

  5. Defining Management Success • What does success as a manager look like? • What does success as a manager look like in your organization? • How do you distinguish between good and poor performance with your employees? • To whom and when do you provide performance feedback?

  6. Defining Management Success • All organizations must be wise about their choice of strategies to remain competitive • Everyone and everything in the organization must be doing their part to ensure strategies are implemented effectively • Managers are responsible for the results accomplished by their employees • Simply put, effective performance management ensures that goals are consistently being met in an effective and efficient manner “Being busy is not the same as producing results”

  7. Performance Management Cycle 1 • Setting Goals & Expectations • Define job criteria by which performance will be measured based on job description • Establish goals and objectives • Communicate expectations to employees • Rework objectives or performance standards, if necessary 3 2 • Annual Performance Review • GU Performance Review • Mistakes to Avoid • Behavior Based Statements • Performance Coaching • Define coaching • Give effective feedback • Recognize employees’ area of development • Coach for better performance • Document

  8. Setting Goals and Expectations Goals are an essential part of successfully conducting business. Goals provide the motivation and direction necessary for growth and success in every area of an organization Module Objectives • Understand the importance of setting goals/expectations • Learn to set SMART goals • Discuss performance standards • Practice setting goals and standards • Be open to reworking goals/expectations when necessary

  9. Criteria for Effective Goals Setting Goals and Expectations An effective goal statement provides an excellent basis for setting and monitoring progress toward strategically aligned goals Effective goal statements ensure objectivity in measurement

  10. Benefits of Effective Goals Setting Goals and Expectations • Establish strategic DIRECTION • Set TARGETS • Identify EXPECTED results • Improve TEAMWORK through a common sense of PURPOSE • Provide a FAIR basis for appraising performance

  11. SMART Formula Setting Goals and Expectations • Specific –goals need to be specific in order to be achieved. “Improving customer service” vs. “Reduce customer drop-out rate to less than 20%”. • Measurable –goals need to be quantifiable and measurable in a way that leaves no doubt that the goal has been achieved. Employee should know how progress will be measured. • Agreed Upon –goals should take into account the knowledge and needs of the people involved in accomplishing them. When there is buy-in, people are more willing to make efforts toward achievement of goals. • Relevant–A relevant goal aligns with existing plans and priorities of the organization. It reflects the results which must be improved or maintained to successfully accomplish the mission. • Timed –goals exist within the context of a schedule. There needs to be an agreed upon timetable that incorporates regular, structured review and assessment of progress toward the goal.

  12. Setting Goals and Expectations Example SMART Goal Train all supervisors on the revised Performance Management and Compensation Systems by Marchto ensure that they can: • understand the university compensation system • understand the university performance review forms and procedures • set SMART goals • effectively manage the performance of their employees throughout the year

  13. Obstacles to Goal Achievement Setting Goals and Expectations • It is important to note that in today’s world change happens suddenly and without notice. Objectives may change based on the organization’s needs. Be sure to adjust employee goals and objectives accordingly. • It makes no difference if the barrier is tangible or solely in one’s own mind (psychological) - the barrier is real. Therefore, it is very important to: • Identify and remove the obstacles • OR adjust objectives accordingly

  14. Performance Management Cycle 1 • Setting Goals & Expectations • Define job criteria by which performance will be measured based on job description • Establish goals and objectives • Communicate expectations to employees • Rework objectives or performance standards, if necessary 3 2 • Annual Performance Review • GU Performance Review • Mistakes to Avoid • Behavior Based Statements • Performance Coaching • Define coaching • Give effective feedback • Recognize employees’ area of development • Coach for better performance • Document

  15. Performance Coaching The role of the coach is to clearly communicate performance expectations and standards, give regular performance feedback and develop the skills of the employees. The best coaches, by their mere presence, improve performance and uplift energy, morale, and focus. Module Objectives • Explore the purpose of coaching • Learn to effectively recognize employees • Learn to give performance improvement feedback through coaching • Discuss how to handle poor performers • Practice performance coaching • Learn when and how to document performance

  16. NO NEWS IS GOOD NEWS

  17. Preparing to Coach Performance Coaching • The role of the coach • How to use fundamental coaching tools • Expectation of performance (what to measure) • Employees’ strengths and limitations • Employees’ long term goals • Employees’ developmental goals To be a great coach, capable of elevating performance, you need to know:

  18. Discussion: Who needs coaching? Performance Coaching • New Hire • Orientation, training, recognition, re-directed, learn the culture • Problem Performer • Recognize that a problem exists and analyze what’s causing it • Coaching for improved performance • Satisfactory Performers • Recognize good work, discuss ways they can grow • Development coaching • Promotable Person • Development coaching

  19. Performance Discussions Definitions • Feedback= communication regarding the effect one’s behavior is having on another person, the team, the organization, or the customer • Positive feedback = involves telling someone about behavior that meets or exceeds standards and expectations. Provide specific examples and explain how these behaviors benefit the organization • Constructive feedback = alerts an individual to behaviors which could improve. Constructive feedback is not criticism; it is descriptive and should always be directed to the action, not the person

  20. Effective Feedback Performance Coaching • A manager’s role is to get things done through people. Giving and receiving feedback can strengthen the partnership between manager and employee. It also creates a positive, motivating work climate. • Useful feedback serves to: • Keep the performance on track, and • Get the performance back on track • One of the most productive things a manager can do is provide specific, ongoing feedback

  21. Effective Feedback Performance Coaching Feedback should be: • Specific, direct and honest • Focused on the what not the who • Done at the right time in the right place • Consistent • Solution-oriented Most importantly, treat others with RESPECT

  22. Performance Coaching: Positive Feedback Performance Coaching • Describe the behavior observed -- be specific • Explain why it is important • Thank the employee and express your personal appreciation • Encourage them to continue doing well • Record the conversation Example: • Chris, I just saw the way you handled the situation where Derek was using a tool improperly. You approached him in a calm and non-threatening manner. You treated him very professionally and educated him on proper usage of equipment. • Having a safe working environment is important to all employees at Gonzaga. Actions like yours help keep this a safe place to work. • Thank you for taking the initiative and helping your co-worker. It means a lot to me to know that you really care and will do what you can to maintain a healthy and safe environment. • Keep up the good work!

  23. Constructive Feedback • Focus on the employee’s performance issues. Describe the specific behavior and why it concerns you • Explore the causes of the employee’s poor performance by listening to the employee. Seek agreement on how to solve the problem(s) • Explore options for improvement by asking for the employee’s ideas for solving the problem • Agree on a specific plan for improvement (describe consequences if necessary) • Express confidence, set a follow-up date and document the agreement

  24. Chronic Performance Problem Performance Coaching At times, the coach is faced with an employee who demonstrates an inability to reach standards and goals. It is important that the coach do something about it, or the virus of “mediocrity” could infect the entire department. • Focus on the fact that the employee has not corrected the performance problem • Explore the causes of the employee’s poor performance and seek agreement on how to solve the problem(s) • Explore options for improvement • Agree on a no-compromise plan for improvement • Document agreement and follow-up

  25. When Coaching is Not Enough Performance Coaching • Coaching may not always result in a change of behavior. If this should happen, partner with Human Resources to progress to the next phase(s) of corrective action. • Sometimes coaching is not the right approach. In incidents of inappropriate conduct it may be necessary to bypass coaching and go directly to corrective action. If this should happen, partner with Human Resources to determine the most appropriate next step. • If a serious situation should occur, call Human Resources

  26. Potential Legal Liability Issues and Guidelines to Avoid Liability • Liability Issues • Disparate Treatment - Gender Equity – Discrimination – Retaliation etc. • Guidelines to Avoid Liability • Be consistent in setting expectations and performance review criteria for similar positions • Apply ratings consistently across organization • Address performance concerns as soon as possible (deal with it or live with it) • Performance Notice, Letter of Expectations, Corrective Action Plan • GU policies and procedures • Gather the facts and document year round and on each employee • Use HR as a resource

  27. Correcting Performance Performance Coaching Below is an example of steps used for addressing unsatisfactory job performance. • Verbal Coaching (ASAP) • Performance Notice (Documenting discussion of issues) • Letter of Expectation • Corrective Action Plan • End of Employment

  28. ABC’s of Documentation Performance Coaching Documentation includes everything you write down that concerns an employee’s performance. It is essential that everything you write about a person’s performance be clear, accurate, and free from bias. A clear written record of discussions about performance issues can prevent misunderstandings and provides proof that employment decisions (corrective action, promotions, review scores, etc.) and actions were based on fair, objective, job-related criteria. Below are key components of documenting performance: Accurate • Document as incidents occur rather than from memory • Describe those actions you directly observed or heard; NOT hearsay • Concentrate on job-related incidents Behavioral • Document specific behaviors about job-related facts rather than describing employees’ personality Consistent • Balance the documentation; cite both positives and negatives • Use the same format and level of detail for each employee

  29. guidelines for effective Performance discussions

  30. Guidelines • Minimize your role as a judge. Work for a collaborative environment. • Emphasis should be on improvement and learning for the future rather than criticism of the past • Effective feedback involves what or how something was done, not why. Asking why is asking people about their motivation and that provokes defensiveness

  31. Guidelines • Discuss positive as well as unsatisfactory performance • Provide specific examples and explain how these behaviors benefit the organization or why they are problematic • Work for understanding, rather than complete agreement • Never compare one employee with another

  32. Guidelines • No surprises. • Poor performance should have been addressed when it happened • The Performance Review Discussion is not the place to mention it for the first time • If poor performance has been significant, a Performance Improvement Plan should be in place

  33. Guidelines • Avoid common rating errors in forming your opinion of performance. • The halo effect - Letting one favored trait or work factor influence all other areas of performance, resulting in an unduly high overall performance rating • The horn effect - Allowing one disfavored trait or work factor to overwhelm other, more positive performance elements, resulting in an unfairly low overall performance rating • Most recent behavior - Failing to take into account the entire evaluation period and focusing on a recent performance episode, positively or negatively. Base your evaluation on representative information from the whole evaluation period to avoid this error • Personal bias - Allowing personal feelings toward employee to influence rating

  34. Guidelines • Examples of ineffective ways to give feedback: • Being personal • Giving feedback in public • Not being factual • Giving a subjective opinion • Waiting until weeks or months after the fact • Not being specific • Providing feedback on issues over which the employee has no control

  35. Guidelines • Examples of effective ways to give feedback: • Keeping the feedback to behavioral issues • Giving it in private • Providing it with the intent for improvement • Giving it in a timely manner • Being specific • Keeping the content to issues the employee can control

  36. Prepare for the Performance Discussion As you prepare to hold the Performance Discussion for employees, consider several factors.

  37. 1. Review Job Description • Make sure job description is up to date from your perspective • Include a copy of job description when you provide the self-review and ask employee to assess whether it is still an accurate reflection of their job • Use job description as a starting point for performance discussion and goal setting

  38. 2. Time and Place • Choose a quiet, private, neutral place where you will not be interrupted during the meeting • Give employee your full undivided attention (e.g. don’t answer cell phone/work on lap-top/allow others to interrupt/etc.) • Confirm the time and place of the meeting with the employee • Allot at least one hour for both you and the employee to adequately and thoroughly give input and express concerns about his or her performance.  This will eliminate schedule conflicts and help set the tone for a productive discussion

  39. First, ask yourself: Do they know the performance standard? Are they able to do it (skill level)? Do they have all the resources to do it? Are they willing to do it (motivation level)? If not, what can YOU DO to fix the situation? 3. Performance Problems?

  40. 4. Data • The employee’s self-assessment • Any notes you made during the year • Documentation from coaching sessions • Feedback you gathered from employee’s colleagues, customers, students, etc. • Any other information you have that bears on performance

  41. Conducting the discussion

  42. Conducting the Discussion • Start on a positive note • Set the tone as one of communication and feedback • Discuss responsibilities, clarify expectations and compare actual performance to performance standards • Use documentation to discuss specific instances of performance

  43. Conducting the Discussion • Ask for the employee's assessment, comments and suggestions • Listen carefully and seek to understand what is being said • Don't interrupt • Ask for examples • Liberally use the phrase, "Tell me more" • Avoid becoming defensive • Don't take it personally • Be open-minded—there may be a better way • Admit mistakes • Don't try to fix blame on someone or something else • Thank the employee

  44. Performance Management Cycle 1 • Setting Goals & Expectations • Define job criteria by which performance will be measured based on job description • Establish goals and objectives • Communicate expectations to employees • Rework objectives or performance standards, if necessary 3 2 • Annual Performance Review • GU Performance Review • Mistakes to Avoid • Behavior Based Statements • Performance Coaching • Define coaching • Give effective feedback • Recognize employees’ area of development • Coach for better performance • Document

  45. GU Performance Review Packet • Timeline of Key Months Document - Outlines process for completing review • Overview Document - Compensation philosophy, guidelines and annual review rating definitions • Employee Self-Review Document - Contains self assessment and employee goals • Annual Performance Review Document - Performance and behavior criteria Performance Review Packet can be found at www.gonzaga.edu/humanresources

  46. Performance Review Program Guidelines • Supervisor forwards signed document to the department head, dean, or area vice president for signature • Original signed copy of the review should be sent to Human Resources to file • Supervisor should conduct on-going performance discussions, maintaining open communication, and work on the outlined goals throughout the year

  47. Performance Review Program Guidelines • Typically, annual salary increases spreadsheets will be distributed for approval/signature by Human Resources to the Area Vice President and should be returned to Human Resources as part of the annual budgeting process • Any employee concerns regarding performance review content should be addressed within the Area Vice President Division • Final annual increase spreadsheets are provided to Payroll for loading from Human Resources • Annual increases will be communicated by the President

  48. Summary • Performance Management is an ongoing feedback process designed to help employees gain greater competence and overcome barriers to improving performance. • The goal of coaching is to create a change in behavior, to move employees from where they are to where you want them to be. • Recognition is a vital component to performance coaching. Thanking employees and providing them with specific examples of good and exceptional performance encourages them to continue doing well. Following the guidelines from this session will help improve the performance of your employees and department, while avoiding legal liability.

  49. Additional Resources • Performance Conversationsby Christopher D. Lee, PhD • It’s Okay to Be the Bossby Bruce Tulgan • Performance Managementby Robert Bacal • Writing Performance Documentationby Janis Fisher Chan • www.gonzaga.edu/gutraining

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