Managing People: getting the best out of your staff Robert Cusack, General Manager, Prince of Wales Private Hospital, Presentation to Emerging Health Managers, ACHSE, 12 th July 2007
Introduction People Jobs Environment Feedback Rewards and Recognition Performance Appraisals Performance Management Managing People Older than yourself Managing Clinicians Scenarios – Groups and discussion
People An issue in all organisations Health – Service industry – all about people Teams Recruitment – vital process. Select the right person for the right job Development and motivation of employees
The job Position (Job) descriptions Involvement of the employee in development of the PD (if possible) Ensure they understand their role Clear KPI’s. The ones that have the greatest impact on the responsibility of the role
Environment Culture – positive or negative Values – eg respect, honesty Organisational/Society Communication – keep people informed Training and Development Pride, enjoyable, safe
Feedback Informal recognition Formal – including performance appraisal Power of a thank you note or letter Celebrate success
Rewards and Recognition Staff awards Peer recognition (or Family) Tokenism? Staff lunch, movie tickets Attitude – how is it treated? Financial and other motivators
Performance Appraisals Importance – ACHS experience Have an agreed plan with the employee Review the plan with the employee No surprises essentially a positive session. Any unsatisfactory performance issues should have been raised at the time (see The One Minute Manager)
Performance Management The most challenging area Needs to be tackled Other employees do not have respect for a manager who does not effectively deal with an employee with performance problems Needs to be done in the correct manner Empathy – if you were in their place Sometimes necessary for the greater good Not at the expense of time with good employees
Natural Justice Also known as procedural fairness The Aphorism - ‘Justice should not only be done, but should be seen to be done’ 3 rules of natural justice Hearing rule – the right to be heard, which means the right to have a fair hearing, with the opportunity to present one’s case Bias Rule – the right to have a decision made by an unbiased decision-maker Evidence rule - the right to have the decision based on evidence, not speculation or suspicion
Performance Management - Process Seek expert HR advice if available on both the approach and process Records – file notes, formal letters Empathy Common mistakes Not crossing t’s and dotting i’s Not providing prior warnings Not documenting warnings and process Employee not fully aware of both the issue and the implications Allowing appropriate support in the process Unions will want and expect this No follow up
The One Minute Manager Set the rules ie people know your approach to feedback Do it immediately – avoid procrastination "Nothing is so fatiguing as the eternal hanging on of an uncompleted task." --William James, “Putting off an easy thing makes it hard. Putting off a hard thing makes it impossible.” -- George Claude Lorimer Be specific Let them know your feelings about the situation Remind them of the positives Reaffirm that you think well of them, but not about this situation Separate the reprimand from other interaction ie know when it is over
Managing people older than yourself ‘Tuesdays with Morrie’ – Mitch Albom Respect Empathy Be yourself Treat them as you would others, praise, discipline etc
Managing Clinicians Don’t pretend you know Don’t be afraid to ask questions They need your strengths ie business management, resources Treat them as you would others, praise, discipline etc Non employees
Scenarios 1.Well liked, but not good at their job 2.The person no one wants to work with 3.Performance plans for people not coping 4.Problem person you have now
Three take home messages People issues are essentially the same no matter what the organisation Values and Empathy should provide the framework for effective staff management and motivation Performance Management – Get the process right and don’t procrastinate about it
Providing a productive environment for an employee(s) to develop and see them flourish and excel at their job or in their career development is one of the most rewarding things that can happen for a manager