Writing Performance Reviews What? How Much? How?.

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Presentation transcript:

Writing Performance Reviews What? How Much? How?

THE PROBLEM WITH REVIEWS According to Supervisors..  Take too long to write.  People only want good news.  It’s about “Show me the money!”  Don’t improve performance. Employees say...  Never get one or it’s late.  All checkmarks and no examples.  No guidance about what to do differently.  No link between performance and pay.

REINFORCE EXPECTATIONS  What is expected of me?  Why is it important?  How am I doing? Why Write Performance Reviews? Opportunity for formal written feedback and dialogue about development. Emphasize a “performance” culture. Reinforce expectations & recognize achievement of them. Generate documentation and a record (+ and -). Justification for employment decisions. Performance reviews should clarify:

Ongoing Feedback Set Goals March Cascade Goals Upward Mid Year Review September Self Assess Manager Assess January Review Meeting February Performance Management vs Performance Review Performance Management  Continuous interaction  Part of the ongoing “routine”  Ongoing development  Observations with feedback for small incremental changes  “Real-time” here-and-now orientation COACHING Performance Review  Singular meeting (2x’s/yr)  “Dedicated” time  Development “plan”  Summarizes results against expectations  Documentation of past events EVALUATION

Rater Biases: How to Limit the Effect  Contrast/Comparison  Central Tendency  Familiarity/Similarity  Halo/Horns Effect  Recency  Length of Service  Prior Reviews Collect your own documentation!!!

Documentation Guidelines  Keep a record of examples & samples.  Note successes and lessons learned.  Document as events occur.  Note dates, times, objective measures.  Include important items, not every routine action.  “Deliberative” notes & samples.  Copy & paste: s, portions of electronic documents, sample work. You have the opportunity to influence your review by what you choose to write and how you write it!

General Writing Tips  Provide specific examples or quantitative, measurable information to demonstrate progress compared to a target.  Give more examples of important information as evidence for a very high (Top) rating or for a very low (Requires Improvement) rating.  Use different examples for each goal/ expectation/competency.  Keep your comments descriptive and succinct. (Focus on facts & measures. No generalities, labeling or personality traits.)  Use correct grammar, punctuation, spelling. OR, a bulleted list of accomplishments if there are several instead of a narrative paragraph.

Writing Tips – Form Specific  Goals/Expectations Objective quality-quantity-date information that directly supports the level of attainment. Description of specific related activities; references to a work sample, project, incident.  Behavioral Competencies Specific examples that show obvious connection to each competency. Incorporate phrases from Appraisal Wizard along with a specific incident involving you.  Overall Comments General summary regarding the level of performance. Reiteration of key positive highlights/ progress achieved.

SAY WHAT?!?!?  “This young lady has delusions of adequacy.”  “Works well when under constant supervision and cornered like a rat in a trap.”  “He brings a lot of joy whenever he leaves the room.”  “Got a full six-pack but lacks the plastic thing to hold it all together.”

WRITING TIPS “Just the Facts” Opinion or Vague -Self-  I am organized and efficient in performing my daily tasks in a timely manner.  Improved quality & satisfaction of learning programs in Supervisor Comment  Disorganized and does not multi-task well. Fact (Specific) -Self-  Utilize a “5 Top Priorities” list to plan my daily tasks and accomplished all assignments on or before requested deadlines. Reorganized electronic folders in June 2010 by project areas to enable faster retrieval.  Increased 2009 program fill- rate to 95% vs. avg of 67% in Overall rating average of 9.7 vs. 8.3 during same time. Supervisor Specific Comment  Filing items by project name and on department drive will enable faster retrieval/updates by Pat & others despite phone/people interruptions.

WRITING TIPS “Straight Talk” Negative Tone -Supervisor-  Fails to follow customer request instructions which causes customer problems. Rater Bias -Self-  “Received excellent patron feedback on Fall performance series. ( Recency) Instructive Tone -Supervisor-  Needs to read all information on request form & obtain customer confirmation of plan before executing event details. Specific Examples -Self-  Consistently increased patron satisfaction ratings from Winter (7.2) to Spring (7.9) to Fall (9.1) by implementing patron suggestions noted on evaluations.

PERFORMANCE LEVELS  TOP Exceeds expectations in most aspects of the job frequently. Goes above and beyond what is asked. Thinks ahead. Is proactive. Seeks improvement. Solves problems independently.  VALUED Meets expectations in all major aspects of the position and exceeds some. Sometimes goes beyond what is asked. Takes initiative to solve problems. Seeks learning and improvement.  DEVELOPING New to the position or some duties are new. More training/learning is needed to be fully performing all aspects of the job at the desired level. Performance does not meet expectations for fully experienced person.  DEVELOPING New to the position or some duties are new. More training/learning is needed to be fully performing all aspects of the job at the desired level. Performance does not meet expectations for fully experienced person.

Strengths, Development Areas, Action Steps & Overall Comments REMEMBER THIS!  People rarely remember what they are told.  What they remember usually wrong. WRITTEN COMMENT Sections Strengths: Describe TWO things they do well. Development Areas: Name ONE area they need to improve and ONE item they need to learn or develop further. Action Steps: Describe ONE to THREE specific actions they need to take to achieve the next level of performance. Overall Comments: Describe their value to the organization