How the Best Leaders Conduct Successful Performance Reviews
The thinking and policies regarding performance reviews have experienced a shift within organizations. HR researcher Josh Bersin estimated as many as 70 percent of multinational companies are moving away from the outdated annual review approach to performance management. In the last five years, corporations including GE, Adobe, Microsoft, and Dell have axed annual performance reviews.
Eliminating these practices means leadership in the workplace can take priority over management. The problem is that 30-40 percent of companies still utilize annual performance reviews and most employees hate them. Conversely, the vast number of companies that do not rely on performance reviews are burdened with managers struggling to give constructive feedback.
Great leaders give constructive feedback day in and day out.
The most successful leaders give constructive feedback to their employees on a daily basis. This method is successful because these leaders do two things well:
- Document positive and deficient behaviors of team members
- Provide feedback in as close to real-time as possible
On the Follow My Lead podcast, I asked Dave Needham, CEO of Ohos, "Why do so many managers struggle to do these two things in today's business environment?" His response was, "What managers struggle with is the amount of time it takes to document things that create effective feedback conversation or even a performance review."
Dave is right. It is common today for managers to have 10 or more direct reports, many of whom are working in different time zones and primarily communicating via Slack or email. The amount of one-on-one time managers receive today is much different than in years past. This is not an excuse, however. With the ban on performance reviews must come an environment in which managers can deliver feedback on not only the results but the behaviors and habits of their team.
While formal performance reviews are becoming old-fashioned, this does not mean they have to be ineffective. In fact, with remote teams, a quarterly review is often a good option. Classical Conversations, a leading homeschool education company, has a primarily remote workforce, and because of this, they find the quarterly employee review to be extremely effective. If performance reviews produce great results for your organization, ensure you do these three things:
1. Get data from more than just yourself.
It is impossible for one person to have eyes on everything. You will always find that people are excellent at straightening up in their chair and putting their best foot forward when the boss comes around. This gives even more of a reason to plug into those who interact with the team on a regular basis. Data from co-workers or team members can frequently provide the most insight into the positive and negative behaviors of an individual.
2. Relay data on an ongoing basis.
An alternative to sharing performance data once a quarter or once a year is finding a way to share live data on an ongoing basis. This provides people with a means to be informed on how they are doing across results, behaviors, teamwork, positivity, or work ethic. Basketball games have scoreboards for a reason--no one wants to guess who won the game when the final buzzer goes off. Yours does not have to be an elaborate system. It could be as simple as a spreadsheet with the key metrics being updated both the manager, direct report, and co-workers.
3. Be a great coach.
One of the most important actions any manager can take is being a great coach to their people. Fighting the urge to tell people what or how to do something will help strengthen their skills and ability to perform. Choose to coerce their ideas out. Great coaches live out the saying, "Education of the mind without education of the heart isn't education at all." Get inside the heart of your team members and drive their best self out by building upon their strengths and improving deficient behaviors.
Whether you are in an organization that continues to have quarterly or annual performance reviews or not, employ these lessons to improve the performance of your team members.
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About the Author John Eades is the CEO of LearnLoft, a full-service organizational health company which exists to turn managers into leaders and create healthier places to work. John was named one of LinkedIn’s 2017 Top Voices in Management & Workplace and was awarded the 2017 Readership Award by Training Industry.com. John is also the host of the “Follow My Lead” Podcast, a show that transfers stories and best practices from today’s leaders to the leaders of tomorrow. He is also the author of FML: Standing Out and Being a Leader and the upcoming book “The Welder Leader.” You follow him on instagram @johngeades.
President/COO @ Cornerstone Manufacturing Group | Let’s Revive U.S. Manufacturing
6yOutstanding. Felt for a long time annual reviews are outdated and lame. Much more progressive approaches to drive better leadership and “less management.” Nothing says manager more to me than annual reviews and the admin process of writing 6 month novels of all the things you did or didn’t do.
Speaker | Speaker Coach | Leadership & Business Development | Events I help speakers increase their income with their signature talk
6yRich Milanese per our more recent meeting...something to consider.
Head, Office Products Sales & Branches
6yYou said it! Just got through one myself albeit not for me but my staff. The review involved my boss reviewing my review on my staff. A mouthful of reviews isn't it? "Great leaders give constructive feedback day in and day out" consequently and apparently becomes irrelevant as there was minimal interaction between my boss and my staff to give a fair view on the person being reviewed.
Account Manager / HR Consultant for EAP Department at Pine Rest Christian Mental Health Services
6yWell said ...
"Education of the mind without education of the heart isn't education at all." Couldn't have said it better myself.