It
is thank you time: Remember that we are sitting to appraise someone who
has worked for you for twelve months. The least way to start a
conversation is to thank the person for choosing to be with you and to
do whatever he did. This always works to put the appraisee at ease.
Possibly avoid a very formal setting: While
this is not always practical, it again is a useful technique. Sitting
across a table almost always to me signals a power distance. Sitting at a
right angle or on a round table or even doing a conversation away from
your typical meeting room is a useful relaxant and sets the stage for a
more relaxed conversation, which helps ease defensiveness of the
appraise.
Always begin with compliments: Unfortunately
appraisals are seen by many as pure inquisition exercises. The reality
is this is to take stock of how the year went. And one needs to be
really terrible or unfortunate to have done nothing that would be
useful. A positive start is very useful to help the other side
understand that the manager is not there to be the hangman.
Let the appraisee speak in equal measure: Many
appraisers choose to use this time to deliver sermons. This is so out
of step with the purpose of a good appraisal conversation. Allow the
person in front to share views on what went right and what could have
gone better. A good manager will encourage reflection and introspection
by the appraisee. That is the best way of building ownership, not a one
sided preach session.
Learn the art of paraphrasing: Many
times the choice of words or the tone of communication could
misrepresent the intent. It is always useful to play back what your
understanding of the message is. It could either confirm or clarify what
really was meant. There is no point in assuming and later sorting out a
much bigger misunderstanding.
Get comfortable having a difficult conversation: This
is as much a reality of life and many managers fight shy of it. This is
unacceptable. A good appraisal discussion has to be honest, howsoever,
unpleasant it may seem. There is a need to call a spade. One must share
feedback, if something was not done well enough.
More
likely, there is a behavioural dysfunctionality that needs to be
flagged. One must have done enough stakeholder conversations to know
exactly what the issue is. The manager must not mince words but must not
be insensitive in tone or pitch. Always look the person in the eye at
this point. It conveys you are being deliberate and straight.
Remember
how a good coach would speak to his players? Tough, straight but always
forward looking. Giving specific examples is always useful. The
appraisee can connect the feedback with the instance and finds it less
subjective.Allow for questions and clarifications: If
the appraisee has questions, you must encourage them to be raised. It
conveys that you are committed to a level-playing field. Some
clarifications may be legitimate and gives you crucial data points. More
importantly, that you heard him out is far more a signal of
credibility. However, this is not a time for filibustering. If the
appraisee continues indefinitely, politely but firmly put the issues to
an end. Something like "I have heard you. I would stay with my inputs.
Please reflect on them" typically works.
This is pure appraisee time: A
good manager must ensure that there are no distractions as the meeting
proceeds. Calls, even from a bigger boss, is not acceptable appraisal
etiquette.
Communicate your decision firmly: As
a manager you have the final responsibility of conveying the
organisational decision. Typically, a bell curve is the reality of life
from school days. Why should we suddenly baulk in our work life. You
have to make your decision. You cannot pass the buck to someone else,
and surely not hapless HR.
Thank and close: Politeness
always helps, even for the "Hari Sadus". Thank the appraisee for
putting together a summary, for the time for this conversation, for
actively participating in the discussion and seeking the support for the
next year. Try the recipe in your appraisal kitchen. The dish is bound
to taste better.
No comments:
Post a Comment