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379 ELRS/LGRT 17 Oct 2005 Brought to you by: AFMentor

EFFECTIVE EPR WRITING. 379 ELRS/LGRT 17 Oct 2005 Brought to you by: AFMentor. Overview. Why Write a Quality EPR? Bullet Construction How Many Bullets? Level of Leadership Trim the “Fat” Markings on the EPR Quantification Common Mistakes EPR vs Award Winning Packages Summary.

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379 ELRS/LGRT 17 Oct 2005 Brought to you by: AFMentor

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  1. EFFECTIVE EPR WRITING 379 ELRS/LGRT 17 Oct 2005 Brought to you by: AFMentor

  2. Overview • Why Write a Quality EPR? • Bullet Construction • How Many Bullets? • Level of Leadership • Trim the “Fat” • Markings on the EPR • Quantification • Common Mistakes • EPR vs Award • Winning Packages • Summary UNCLASS

  3. DISCLAIMER There are many ideas (some good, some bad) about how to write EPRs which may be contrary to information presented here. The ideas included here are suggested approaches that have proven effective in the past. UNCLASS

  4. WHY WRITE A QUALITY EPR? UNCLASS

  5. WHY WRITE A QUALITY EPR? • There are dozens of uses for an EPR other than E-8/9 promotion boards • Decorations • BTZ / STEP Promotions • OTS, ROTC, Air Force Academy applications • Air Force Educational Leave of Absence (AFELA) formerly known as Bootstrap Education • Air Force Institution of Technology (AFIT) applications UNCLASS

  6. WHY WRITE A QUALITY EPR? • Weak bullets on an EPR make it difficult to write strong decoration, BTZ, STEP and other such packages • EPRs with weak bullets do not provide the support needed for these programs and awards • It is a disservice to your subordinates when you cut/ paste the same bullets to all 5 people you rate • The EPR is the only way to track someone's long term potential and consistency • The primary focus of an EPR is to show the whole person concept UNCLASS

  7. BULLET CONSTRUCTION UNCLASS

  8. BULLET CONSTRUCTION • Step 1: Every action must have a quantifiable/tangible result • If you can’t assign a number, rate, quote, grade, or specific measured outcome to something, it may not be useful • Enhancing morale is a non-quantifiable exception UNCLASS

  9. BULLET CONSTRUCTION • Step 2: Gather the facts • Make sure your information comes from a credible source such as QA database, account custodian, inspection reports, etc. • Use up to date information • Results are always more credible if you can attach a specific number, rating, or quote UNCLASS

  10. BULLET CONSTRUCTION • Step 3: Write it down • Write all actions and results • Keep a running log so as not to exclude anything UNCLASS

  11. BULLET CONSTRUCTION • Step 4: Trim the “fat” • Single, one line bullets • Each main topic should be its own bullet • Use acronyms • If the acronym appears on the MAJCOM list, never spell it out • Spell out on first use UNCLASS

  12. BULLET CONSTRUCTION • Step 4: Trim the “fat” • Use acronyms • Do not spell out equipment designations (be sure to identify what it is, i.e. aircraft, weapons system, etc. • Use symbols to save space ($, &, /, K, M) UNCLASS

  13. BULLET CONSTRUCTION • Step 4: Trim the “fat” • Say as much in as little space possible as long as bullet remains effective • Example: • He is dedicated to the pursuit of academic excellence and the completion of a degree • OR • - Dedicated to academic excellence/degree completion UNCLASS

  14. BULLET CONSTRUCTION • Step 5: Edit • Look for and replace words that are repeated in the EPR - especially adjectives like 'outstanding' • If it needs to be read more than once to be easily understood, reword it • Delete the fluff/filler words/space and add results • Limit common phrases to no more than twice in an EPR UNCLASS

  15. BULLET CONSTRUCTION • Step 6: Use correct bullet punctuation • Three periods (…) take more space than a (;), (/), or (--) • Semicolons (;) should come after the action if there is additional actions or details in the bullet before you get to the result • They separate related thoughts that aren’t joined by a conjunction (and, but, or, etc) • Semicolons break up multiple facts in a bullet that are loosely related UNCLASS

  16. BULLET CONSTRUCTION • Step 6: Use correct bullet punctuation • The double dash (--) is used after the last 'action' and right before the result Example: - Repaired 15 master cylinders; created new renovation process--ensured 100% mission capability UNCLASS

  17. HOW MANY BULLETS? UNCLASS

  18. HOW MANY BULLETS? • Each bullet should be ONE line - when possible Wrap around bullets can be used, but 99% can be boiled down to one line • Sub-bullets should only be used if there’s more information than can fit in a one line bullet • The main bullet should have a distinctive accomplishmentandresult • Occasionally you may need the entire first bullet to spell out the accomplishment, but keep it to a minimum UNCLASS

  19. HOW MANY BULLETS? • -- Each sub-bullet should ATTEMPT to have a distinctive accomplishment of its own, but a clear result is absolutely MANDATORY -- The result should be unrelated to the result in the previous bullet/sub-bullet UNCLASS

  20. HOW MANY BULLETS? • Example 1: • Led emergency shipment of $90M in assets 2 days early--rapid shipping saved $3K in A/C costs • -- Shipment timeline smashed ACC estimate by 50%--received 4 FW/CC coin for A+ planning • -- Early shipment permitted preemptive strike on 300 enemy troops--effort lauded by COMEUCOM UNCLASS

  21. HOW MANY BULLETS? • Example 2 (Before): • Superior knowledge of F-16 aircraft, ability to communicate and work well with others makes him a first-rate maintenance instructor; this is evident by the numerous positive comments denoted on the end of course critiques • -- His quality instruction on the F-16 aircraft and attention • to detail resulted in all his students receiving 100 percent • pass rate on all end of course Wing Quality Assurance Evaluations—a maintenance training benchmark • -- A direct result of the extra time he spends with students • who have a weakness in performance of critical tasks UNCLASS

  22. HOW MANY BULLETS? • Example 2 (After): • Superior knowledge of F-16; first-rate maintenance instructor--consistently praisedon end of course critiques • Gifted instructor; 100% pass rate on Wing Quality Assurance Evaluations--a maintenance training benchmark UNCLASS

  23. HOW MANY BULLETS? • Community service/self-improvement bullets should be no more than one line long While they are important, they should not monopolize an EPR. UNCLASS

  24. LEVEL OF LEADERSHIP UNCLASS

  25. LEVEL OF LEADERSHIP • Leadership focus at specific ranks - not all inclusive • A1C and Below • Leadership in different areas; special projects they took on and excelled (this sets them up for BTZ) • 2-3 community service bullets/extra curricular activities they led (e.g. helped organize Christmas party) • Highlight fast CDC completion or excellent EOC scores UNCLASS

  26. LEVEL OF LEADERSHIP • Leadership focus at specific ranks - not all inclusive • SrA • More focus on leadership than working • Highlight programs they ran, people they taught, operations they crew chiefed • Note higher level responsibility • DG/John Levitow at ALS • Participation in Honor Guard UNCLASS

  27. LEVEL OF LEADERSHIP • Leadership focus at specific ranks - not all inclusive • SSgt • Roughly 40% on leadership of others and projects • Less on working, more on management and increased responsibility • Exceptional CDC progress/completion • Educational accomplishments demonstrate a willingness to lead/learn • Leadership in community service programs UNCLASS

  28. LEVEL OF LEADERSHIP • Leadership focus at specific ranks - not all inclusive • TSgt • 60% or more on leadership of personnel • Stress their performance of primary duties listed on the front of the EPR • Focus on programs they ran above their normal duties • Stress plans they revised/created, shops they helped setup or reorganize UNCLASS

  29. LEVEL OF LEADERSHIP • Leadership focus at specific ranks - not all inclusive • TSgt (Con’t) • Management of schedules/workload/personnel/ equipment/facilities/budget/training programs, etc • Stress their performance of primary duties listed on the front of the EPR • 2 bullets on community service; something they helped coordinate • Awards at NCOA; ways they broaden and perfected their technical expertise and supervisory techniques UNCLASS

  30. LEVEL OF LEADERSHIP • Leadership focus at specific ranks - not all inclusive • MSgt/SMSgt • 80% or more on leadership; show transition to operational leader • Excellence in primary duty; acceptance of additional duties; chair of external programs • State impact to unit/wing/MAJCOM/Air Force • OPLANS, CONPLANS, FOIs authored/implemented • Process improvements UNCLASS

  31. LEVEL OF LEADERSHIP • All EPRs, regardless of rank, should include the following: • Pursuance of any college or continued education • Receipt of any awards or coins from commanders • Implementation of their idea/process at the group or above level • Heroic acts • Out of cycle promotion (BTZ, STEP) UNCLASS

  32. TRIM THE "FAT" UNCLASS

  33. TRIM THE "FAT" • Is it a valid self-improvement? Is it relevant to the Air Force? • Example: • Dedicated to fitness and personal well-being;quit • smoking habit UNCLASS

  34. TRIM THE "FAT" • Is the accomplishment at the member’s level of responsibility? • Don’t cut/paste bullets from an airman’s EPR • onto an NCO’s EPR • If an airman did the work, the NCO’s EPR should • reflect how he led the work UNCLASS

  35. TRIM THE "FAT" • Is the education meaningful? • Example: • Dedicated to continued education--actively enrolled in • Community College of the Air Force UNCLASS

  36. TRIM THE "FAT" • Is the education meaningful? • Must be additional classes taken in pursuit of a • degree • Included the GPA if it’s outstanding UNCLASS

  37. TRIM THE "FAT" • Delete the fillers • That “say nothing” first bullet to “set the stage” • Example: • Airman Smith is a superior performer with boundless • initiative; trusted to get the job done • Effective stage setting: • State an outstanding achievement that directly relates to primary duties • List a significant award received (Flt NCO of Year) UNCLASS

  38. TRIM THE "FAT" • Delete the fillers • The first indication of fluff is when unquantifiable • words are used Example: Several, many, dozens, immeasurably, all • Led review of all training records prior to Nov 04 UCI • Inspection--corrected several discrepancies Correction: - Led review of 192 training records prior to Nov 04 UCI inspection--corrected 37 discrepancies UNCLASS

  39. TRIM THE "FAT" • Delete meaningless “power adjectives” Example: Outstanding, impressive, superior, terrific • Outstanding! Led 15 people during shipment of 28 pallets • of munitions--completed 2 hours early • “Outstanding!” didn’t do more than take up 12 letters • Use the space to build accomplishment • If the action is truly outstanding, the facts will speak for themselves UNCLASS

  40. TRIM THE "FAT" • Delete meaningless “power adjectives” Better Example: • Led 15 people in shipment of 28 munitions pallets; completed 2 hrs early--set ACC benchmark UNCLASS

  41. TRIM THE "FAT" • “Fat” Indicators: • “Greatly improved…” • “Reduced workarounds…” • “Improved safety…” These phrases lack quantification • “Assisted with…” A weak, passive expression that sounds like someone played a minor role. UNCLASS

  42. MARKINGS ON THE EPR UNCLASS

  43. MARKINGS ON THE EPR Start off by saying, he/she supervises XX personnel. In the case of SrA, they might not supervise someone. Then list the specific duties they perform starting with the most to least important. Numbers should be listed when available. For instance, if they warehouse items, list the $$ amount or number of items. For AB/AMN/A1C, this block is helpful to show responsibility for BTZ consideration. ADDITIONAL DUTIES: List significant (long term) duties. If an airman doesn’t have at least 1 additional duty, the supervisor isn’t doing his/her job. UNCLASS

  44. MARKINGS ON THE EPR • There are 4 blocks in each category: “fails to meet the standard”, “meets the standard”, “exceeds standards”, “exemplifies standards” • Original intent: “meets the standard” = on par with peers • Anything to the right was a mark up • Current thinking: any markings to left of “exceeds • standards” was considered a mark down UNCLASS

  45. MARKINGS ON THE EPR • Markings should be honest and reflect performance • Ensure that you are providing timely feedbacks • Document poor performance • Ratees should never be blindsided by EPR markings UNCLASS

  46. MARKINGS ON THE EPR AF Form 910 (Amn - TSgt) - Managed 50 T.O. accounts; corrected 27 discrepancies--zero defects on 12 QA inspections - Rewrote master storage plan to rewarehouse 7 bldgs; reclaimed 27% space--done 2 days early - Organized workout program for 20 Airmen; annihilated personal fitness test--top 10% of sqdn - First-5 organization Treasurer; organized carwash to support squadron picnic--raised $537 - Led 5 person crew palletizing 50K chaff/flare for AEF 5/6; done 8 hrs early--no discrepancies - Completed 5-lvl upgrade rqmts 3 months early--outstanding 94% on CDC end of course exam - Authored new fire symbol update process; cut notification time in half--QA fails down 22% UNCLASS

  47. MARKINGS ON THE EPR AF Form 910 (Amn - TSgt) • The most important bullet in this block--highlight exceptional performance of primary duties • Save your 2 best bullets for line 1 of blocks V & VI, the strongest of the 2 goes in block VI • After first 2 bullets, talk about additional duty--avoid wrap around bullets at all costs -- No bullet more than one line and no more than 2 sub-bullets for each main bullet -- Avoid fancy adjectives--if you delete the flowery words, can it stand alone? • Things affecting the flight/squadron should go in block V--save the bigger things for block VI • -3rd and 2nd to last bullets in this block are good places for community service and school • No single community service activity will warrant more than one line or bullet • Stratify here or list major awards rec’d--this bullet should agree with the front markings Any derogatory comments or mention of administrative action in these blocks will make this a referral EPR • 1st bullet should enhance bullet 1 in block V--also a good place to mention special honors • Things that affected the squadron, group, wing and Air Force should go here - No single community service activity will warrant more than one line or bullet - The most important bullet in an EPR--list major awards like BTZ, Sqdn NCO of Yr, etc UNCLASS

  48. MARKINGS ON THE EPR AF Form 911 (MSgt - CMSgt) - Exceptional SNCO; selected as 4 FW Maintenance Professional of the Year for 2004 - Detected test set defect causing AIM-9 failures; developed new process--implemented AF-wide - Authored new expenditure FOI; reduced form routing 32%--accountability errors down 30% UNCLASS

  49. MARKINGS ON THE EPR Start off here by saying, he/she supervises XX personnel, then list the specific duties they perform starting with the most to least important. Numbers are CRUCIAL. If they were an account custodian, put in the $$ amount or number of items. Board members care VOLUMES more about what this block says than they do about the Duty Title. This section demonstrates their level of responsibility, whereas the Duty Title is just a flowery way to say it. ADDITIONAL DUTIES: List significant (long term) duties Any 'mark down' on a SNCO EPR very likely will disqualify the member from senior rater endorsement and guarantees they won’t be promoted that cycle. UNCLASS

  50. MARKINGS ON THE EPR • The most important bullet--highlight exceptional performance in primary duty • The 2nd bullet builds on 1st and reinforces performance in primary duty • Accomplishments should relate to the flight/unit level--save higher levels for bottom • -- Best to use sub-bullets here rather than in lower blocks • -- No bullet should be more than 1 line and no more than 2 sub-bullets per main line • The 2nd to last bullet should be hard hitting community service bullet--leadership • #1 of ## MSgts assigned; flt SNCO of Yr for 2005; absolutely ready for promotion • Bullet needs to address primary duties and reinforce line 1 above--the 2 must agree • Avoid sub-bullets in this block unless absolutely necessary, then only one • As last line in block V, stratify and list squadron or group recognition • Line 1 & 5 are the most important bullets in the entire EPR--talk primary duties • Use only single bullets--all bullets should be high level impacts • Focus on events affecting the Wing, MAJCOM, Air Force--no community service here • Stratify here/list major items MAJCOM/AF-level awards--this is 1st bullet noticed UNCLASS

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