Increasingly, entrepreneurial companies are implementing formal employee evaluation tools. Both in the short and long term, if properly administered, this process will be extremely effective and motivating. Some of the common benefits are increased revenue, creativity, productivity, employee satisfaction and career path clarity. Why? Because employers and employees can clearly understand and chart employee value and potential to the company.
Career specialist and author David Campbell once said: “If you don’t know where you’re going, you’ll probably end up someplace else!” When management and non-management can work together to improve performance and outcomes, everyone wins.
Generally, the three areas you need to comment on are quite similar. They refer to what the person is doing now; how well he or she is doing it; what needs to be changed, improved or learned now and in the future; and their career path – where the individual is or can be headed in the short and long term at your company. Employers and employees have the opportunity to share their current and individual assessment of the employee, plus discuss plans for growth into future positions, knowledge and skill bases. I specifically added the word “employee” to the previous statement. I firmly believe that if the employee can provide input into the performance appraisal interview prior to the evaluator’s providing comments, the employee will feel he or she has had an opportunity to evaluate self-performance.
Clear, action-oriented, positive and negative statements and steps need to be expressed here by both parties. In that way, the employee can learn what skills need to be improved or acquired in order maintain employment or continue to move ahead on the career path. The employer can learn the employee’s goals and, if interested, assist the employee in gaining the desired position or responsibilities.
Specifically, as a leader, you can address the particular actions and knowledge sources where the employee achieves or is deficient. Hopefully, these comments and interventions will be made throughout the year, as opposed to the more common practice of a once-a-year formal or informal assessment. Take this occasion seriously as an opportunity to praise and therefore further motivate the individual.
Also, use this time to identify key deficiencies and opportunities for growth in the employee. Many evaluators either understate or overstate the negatives or positives. The usual result is that the employee is overwhelmed by the number or intensity of negative statements, or is disappointed by the lack of positive ones.
I strongly urge that these statements be balanced to point out that employee performance is never all effective or all ineffective. Rely on these key questions to guide your comments: “How can the employee grow, improve and build on his or her current set of successes to contribute a maximum to the company’s success?”; “What can I as the leader do to point out or provide resources, guidance and opportunities, while minimising the obstacles for the individual to grow, change and achieve?”; and “What does the individual need to do on his or her own to continue to grow and succeed?” Once both you and the employee seriously and objectively assess the employee’s current and future resources, interests, knowledge, skills and abilities, you, the employee and your company will benefit.