Recognition
As Part Of Performance Management
By: Chris Herrmann
Performance Management is a system developed out
of the best practice of top performing organizations to provide managers
with a structured approach to the key retention criteria.
Simplistically,
most people will feel motivated and will want to stay in their job
if their manager:
pays attention to their work provides them with a job to match their
skills, knowledge and experience gives them opportunities to grow
and develop judges their performance objectively
Most Performance
Management processes contain critical opportunities for recognition.
Appraisals
Traditionally,
the annual appraisal is the only meeting during the year when an average
or better worker will meet their boss to discuss performance. People
with poor performance can and do have a regular audience with their
manager; sometimes on a weekly basis. Your appraisal form is "the"
document that is held on file as a record of how good, bad or indifferent
you might have been.
For some,
this may be the only time in the year that they receive plaudits and
even these may be guarded comments because of the close link in everyone's
mind between appraisal and pay rise despite repeated denials. Too
much praise might raise expectations of a large pay increase. Poor
performers, however, frequently receive far more than their fair share
of management attention throughout the year.
If paying
attention to our employees is one of the greatest motivators, when
did we decide that high performers need less motivation than poor
performers? Of course they don't! Many of the top performing companies
in the world have introduced regular coaching and mentoring sessions
to supplement the appraisal system and to give all employees a regular,
sometimes fortnightly, opportunity to talk about their job, their
performance against their objectives, their motivation and their aspirations.
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Coaching
Often
you can see situations where managers act as spectators. Their behavior
plus the words they use along with their body language would not be
out of place at a soccer or baseball match. They would be sitting
in the stands eating a hot dog, throwing down a beer and belting out
criticism at the players (their staff) on the field. There is almost
no connection between the manager and the staff other than they just
happen to be sitting in the same building.
This
image is used to point out the profound difference between the 'manager
as coach' and the 'manager as spectator'. A coach works individually
with players, helping them to overcome setbacks and obstacles to progress
forward. They know and understand how their players respond to different
types of motivation and how their family life and health impact their
performance.
The majority
of coaching is done on a very frequent basis. You simply don't wait
for the big match to deliver your advice to the team in the way the
'manager as spectator' does. You work very closely with everyone in
the team, understanding the strengths and weaknesses of your defense
and your strikers before they are tested under pressure.
Article
Source: Published by BoomerangAwards.com.
Empowering business using technology and an ancient primeval technique
to create a new employee recognition and reward program.
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