Title: APPRAISAL
1- APPRAISAL DEVELOPMENT
- Achieving Success Developing People
- 2005
2PROGRAMME
- 1.PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT
- - The Council Priorities 2004-7
- - Defining performance management
- - Why it fails
- - Test your culture
- - Making performance breakthroughs
-
3- 2. APPRAISAL
- - What its about
- - The Appraiser role
- - The Appraisee role
- - Preparation
- - Managing the appraisal discussion
-
4- 3. PERFORMANCE COACHING
- - The coaching experience
- - A personal coaching session
- - Principles skills
- - Using the GROW model
- - Review
5- 4. RESOURCES
- - Questions that help
- - Guidelines for feedback
- - Constructive criticism
- - Development planning
61.PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT
7Bradfords Corporate Priorities 2004-7
- Enhancing opportunities for young people through
education and life long learning. - Creating a more prosperous district.
- Developing more cohesive and safer communities.
- Improving waste management and the environment
cleaner. - Delivering social care for vulnerable people.
- Transforming customer service, using e-government
to the full.
8PERFORMANCE TWO MEANINGS
- GETTING THE JOB DONE
- - Results/Objectives achieved
- - BUSINESS
- HOW ITS DONE
- - Competence demonstrated/developed
- - CAPACITY
-
9PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT
- A process for establishing shared understanding
about what is to be achieved - An approach to managing people
- To increase the probability of achieving job
related success - A CHANCE TO CATCH YOU DOING SOMETHING RIGHT
- (Aquarius Consulting, November 2000)
10 its about getting results. Getting the best
from people and helping them realise their
potential.. An approach to achieving a shared
vision of the organisation. Its concerned with
teams and individuals realising their potential
whilst recognising their role in contributing to
the goals of the organisation. ( Pam Jones, The
Performance Management Pocketbook 1999)
11PERFORMANCE BREAKTHROUGHS IMPROVING
PERFORMANCE IN PUBLIC SECTOR ORGANISATIONS
2002 Audit Commission report based on their work
in 12 organisations in local government, the
health service the emergency services
12- The mechanics targets, indicators, plans
are only a small part of the whole process,
they are easy to deal with in comparison with
getting the right focus, leadership culture in
place - The benefits remains strong organisations that
work at managing performance know what they need
to do how to do it
13WHY MANAGING PERFORMANCE IS DIFFICULT
- Leaders arent interested
- Theres no time to learn
- There are too many priorities
- People dont understand that what we do has to
change - The system doesnt help
- Some people dont perform
14LEADERS ARENT INTERESTED
- Leaders not making it clear to staff that
managing improving performance is important - Without this,managers cant sustain this message
- Staff unlikely to feel supported in trying to
improve
15THERES NO TIME TO LEARN
- Structured approach found difficult is avoided
- - no confidence that problems can be solved
- - looking at personal problems difficult
- - skill in designing delivering sessions
poor - Taking feedback is uncomfortable
- No time or space is made available for it
- It takes time, focus energy away from other
important matters
16THERE ARE TOO MANY PRIORITIES
- No one at the top has translated the many
complex demands from the outside world into a
clear direction that makes sense to staff - Dont blame others, take control!
- If youve done the thinking, communicate the
results clearly - What are the priorities, what can be dropped?
17PEOPLE DONT UNDERSTAND THAT WHAT WE DO HAS TO
CHANGE
- Tough choices about services, to back new
priorities, not made - How to motivate people to change not understood
people dont change easily or quickly - Staff should be involved in developing
priorities, so that they are prepared to make the
changes needed to achieve them - What you say about improving performance must be
put in plain language - People dont how what they do contributes to
improving performance
18THE SYSTEM DOESNT HELP
- Its only a system it can help organise an
approach but cant do the hard thinking
decision making you need to undertake - Does the system reflect the needs of the
organisation, can it change with changing
needs? - Is it clear that the system will help measure
what is important or just what is measurable?
19SOME PEOPLE DONT PERFORM
- Managing people who perform inadequately is
challenging therefore avoided - If this is not done higher up the organisation,
why should you feel under any pressure to do it? - You may not have been adequately trained
supported to spot under performance, understand
deal with it - How do you help people do their jobs to the best
of their ability? - Do systems (eg rewards), processes (eg levels of
delegation) culture(accepted norms of behaviour)
help people to perform well?
20- TESTING YOUR HIGH PERFORMANCE CULTURE QUIZ
21EIGHT WAYS TO BREAK THROUGH
- 1. Make it clear that performance matters
- 2. Join up your thinking learn
- 3. Take action on what matters most
- 4. Make national agendas work for you
- 5. Sign up your staff
- 6. Find your own framework
- 7. Measure what matters
- 8. Help people to perform
221. MAKE IT CLEAR THAT PERFORMANCE MATTERS
- Champion this, set an example
- Leadership throughout, not just at the top
- Dont just say the right things, do things
differently - Show sustained commitment from the top
- Visit staff speak to them about performance
issues - Show strength, enthusiasm
232. JOIN UP YOUR THINKING LEARN
- A learning organisation iswhere members of the
organisation question the operations
continuously, to find mistakes or differences
fix these themselves by restructuring their
organisation operations - Chris Argyris
- Question operations continuously
- Take time out in management teams regularly in
well facilitated sessions - Get feedback from others about what they feel
works/could be improved
24- Use good performance information, which reflects
specifically the results of the decisions you
have made - Reflect on what you need to do differently, as an
organisation, as a management team, as
individuals - Share this with the organisation, to guide action
reflection - Combine this with encouraging people to
experiment, try new ways of doing things - Accept that some things will not work but make
sure you learn from your mistakes - Take an hour out with a colleague to ask what is
really going on here?
253. TAKE ACTION ON WHAT MATTERS
- Its only possible sustain focus on a limited
number of issues - Focus on priorities do something
- Get the right people involved clarify top
priorities by talking to local people - Put resources behind what matters most allocate
re allocate
264. MAKE NATIONAL AGENDAS WORK FOR YOU
- Make them mean something, rather than a burden to
work round - How do national targets fit onto your agenda?
- The primary focus is to change what you do to
improve services to customers - Dont be a victim!
275. SIGN UP YOUR STAFF
- You may redesign, reconfigure, reorganise for
efficiency, but it is the performance of people
in everyday jobs that cause an organisation to
work well - It is easy to create systems to manage
performance but much harder to make people want
to use them to bring about change - Consult staff about how best to improve services
- Allow people to take responsibility make them
accountable
28- People will perform better if they feel
responsible for something - Stop upwards delegation!
- Use plain language to describe what good
performance should be - Jargon ambiguous language can work against you
by creating confusion resistance - Peter Senge
- Communicate well
296. FIND YOUR OWN FRAMEWORK
- the moment performance management turns into a
system, the battle has been lost - Tom Lester
- Show a clear line of sight from corporate
objectives to the jobs that people do - Teams individuals then understand what they
personally have to do in order for the
organisation to achieve its aims - Force any conflicts between objectives out into
the open, to help you manage better -
30Common Problems
- Failing to think through why you want a new
framework, what you want it to do - Taking an off the shelf system not tailoring it
- Focusing too much on the mechanics, rather than
the purpose to improve services - Paralysis by analysis collecting more than
the important information - Making the system too complicated instead of
working to keep it simple - Expecting the framework to do the hard thinking
for you
31- Failing to give high enough priority to getting
the framework right - Failing to involve staff or prepare them for
change - Not being prepared to update the framework
continuously
327. MEASURE WHAT MATTERS
- If measures reflect the organisations strategy,
people understand better what they have to do - This is important when facing new external
challenge, or there are improvement programmes - Some just collect what is collectable, or just
what is specified nationally - Others discuss what constitutes good performance
with stakeholders, ie focus on outputs as well as
inputs outputs - Large amounts of data may feel comfortable but do
not of themselves improve anything - Interpretation must be intelligent
338. HELP PEOPLE TO PERFORM
- Actually, you cant empower people you can
only create a climate in which they can empower
themselves - M.D., Engineering Company
- Develop, train support people to do a well
defined job - Create a culture which motivates staff gives
them responsibility - Give honest, critical feedback the those whose
performance you are not happy with
34- Give feedback which is honest about problems but
supports individuals - This discussion takes thinking courage from
both parties - If the employee sees feedback as accurate
useful, it can lead to a breakthrough in their
performance their relationship with their
manager - Managers need to pursue poor performance issues,
not wait for someone to leave or someone better
will join
35- Separating the person from their performance
enables you to work with the performance of those
you do not like - Also,concern about racial /or sexual harassment
can prevent people being honest open - honesty
robust evidence from the manager are especially
important here
362.APPRAISAL
37WHAT ITS ABOUT
- An opportunity for managers employees to have a
dialogue about their key work objectives how
their work contributes to the achievement of
organisational priorities - The means through which performance standards can
be agreed feedback provided on performance
against them - Emphasising developing continuous improvement
38- Supporting individuals to achieve objectives
standards as agreed - Supporting the development of competences
required by the organisation - Helping individuals to maintain a wide range of
skills in their personal portfolio
39THE AIMS OF P.A.D.S.
- Share views on work performance
- Discuss issues of importance concerning work
future career development - Establish agree achievable performance targets
in line with Unit/Divisional objectives - Praise acknowledge work completed
40THE APPRAISER ROLE
- To grasp the purpose, processes procedures of
performance appraisal - To understand the key objectives of the
organisation, their Department the priorities
for their area of responsibility - To translate these goals into objectives for an
individual - To communicate these proposals clearly
41- Diagnose staff strengths development needs
- Formulate agree a development plan
- Coach staff on how to achieve performance
objectives - Monitor staff performance give feedback
-
42APPRAISEE ROLE
- To prepare thoroughly consider their workload
key priorities - To self assess seek feedback on work
performance - To consider what aspects of work their working
environment helps hinder their effective
performance - To check out expectations of them
- To engage positively in the appraisal discussion
43 44PREPARATION
- Give adequate notice
- Consider performance
- -what were last years objectives?
- -what supporting facts are there?
- -what affected appraisee performance
(internal/external factors)
45- Identify what needs achieving in the current
business plan - Look for ways of improving organisational
effectiveness - Make sure you are familiar with the requirements
of the job - Review employee historyskills, training,
experience, past jobs performance - Note any personal development which may be needed
based on any assessed competence - Allow for time privacy
46MANAGING THE APPRAISAL DISCUSSION
- INTRODUCTION
- Establish rapport
- State objectives of session
- Explain the process/procedure/approach youll
take - Keep the atmosphere positive informal
47- MAIN BODY
- Encourage the employee to talk from the start
- Ask open questions to find out how they feel
about the job - Use probing behavioural questions to find out
facts about how they have performed over the
period, to gain evidence - Use reflective questions to encourage them to
expand on their points - Use summaries to keep the session on line, point
out the progress made the way ahead
48INDIVIDUAL PERFORMANCE OBJECTIVES
- SPECIFIC
- MEASURABLE
- ACTION FOCUSSED
- REALISTIC
- TIMEBOUND
- ENCOURAGE DEVELOPMENT
- REGULARLY REVIEWED
49FROM SERVICE OBJECTIVES TO INDIVIDUAL DEVELOPMENT
- Select a service objective
- Create a SMARTER objective for a team member
- Work out any support they might need to achieve
this - Specify any development methods which might assist
50- ENDING FOLLOW UP
- Complete any forms get the appraisee to sign
them - Review the success of the session
- Agree diary date of next appraisal session
intervening review meetings - Take any action you have agreed to take
throughout the year
51REVIEW
- Schedule diary meetings throughout the
appraisal year before the end of the appraisal
session - Without these, progress towards, achievement
of, targets will be missed - They will allow targets to be changed in the
light of developments - Actions taken by appraiser appraisee can be
monitored - All this should be recorded
523. PERFORMANCE COACHING
53THE COACHING EXPERIENCETake your seat
- Work with a partner
- A stands up
- B instructs A how to take their seat from a
standing position - B uses a number of component parts rather than
general instructions, such as Sit down - You have three minutes
- Swop roles repeat
54TAKE YOUR SEATDe - brief
- Coachees
- What was it like being instructed?
- How easy or difficult was it to take your
seat why? - What would you have liked more of from the
coach? - What were your feelings?
- General comments
- Positive negative, from coach
- Positive negative, from coachee
55 A PERSONAL COACHING SESSION
- The GROW model
- Key principles
- Awareness responsibility
- Skills
- Effective questioning active listening
- Steps
- G oals what do you want?
- R eality what is happening now?
- O ptions what could you do?
- W ill what will you do?
- (from Coaching for Performance, John Whitmore,
Nicholas Brearley Publishing, 1996)
56ACTIVITY(Plenary)
- Think of something at work that you would
personally like to be coached in - Take questions from the GROW model record on
the proforma - What actions will you commit to?
- How much are you committed to them
- from 0 low commitment
- to 10 high commitment ?
57 PRINCIPLES SKILLS
- What do you think the principles
- AWARENESS
- RESPONSIBILITY
- might mean in the coaching context ?
- What might be involved in the skills
- EFFECTIVE QUESTIONING
- ACTIVE LISTENING ?
58AWARENESS
- Helping the coachee focus on the reality of the
situation as it is now - Understanding their role, involvement influence
- Enabling them to explore fully the relationship
between a perceived understanding of the
situation the reality of what is happening - How they might change their behaviour
59RESPONSIBILITY
- Coachee finds solution
- Takes responsibility ownership
- Leads to motivation
- Things that give us a buzz, or employ our unique
talents, are not found difficult - Coach needs only to prompt or offer support
60EFFECTIVE QUESTIONING
- Framing questions to help the coachee think
beyond the obvious bland answer - Drawing out the coachee
- Remaining on their agenda
- Helping them move forward with their own ideas
- Not hinting what the coach would like to hear
- Not suggesting what the coachee should do in the
future
61ACTIVE LISTENING
- At two levels
- - the meaning/content of the words (WORDS)
- - the feelings carried by the spoken word
(MUSIC) - Undivided attention given to the coachee
- Maintain eye contact
- Close, but not threatening, physical presence
- Not invading personal space
- Not distant/distracted
- Hearing both words music(hints at doubts,
concerns, reservations)
62USING THE GROW MODEL
- Coach, Coachee, Observer triads
- No role playing
- Each person thinks of a real life situation on
which they would like coaching - Select coach, coachee observer for round one
- Coach works through the GROW Effective
Questions sheet with coachee - Observer notes questions reactions
- Coach, coachee, observer complete a
Reflections sheet - Observer debriefs first the coachee, then the
coach - Plenary discussion
- Change around within the triad repeat
- again!
63REFLECTIONS ON COACHING PRACTICE SESSIONS
- Coach
- How I felt
- What I thought went well
- What I learned about myself as a coach
- Coachee
- How I felt
- What I liked
- What I have taken away
- Observer
- My overall feelings about the coaching are
- What I would like to offer the coach
644. RESOURCES
65QUESTIONS THAT HELP
66QUESTIONS THAT HELP
- OPEN QUESTIONS
- Cannot be answered yes or no
- Require opinion,feeling, explanation, experience
- Examples
- What is your opinion of
- How do you feel about
- What do you think caused
67- Advantages
- Demonstrates your interest in them
- Confirms you value their ideas feelings
- Stimulates thought
- Helps you understand their needs
- Encourages dialogue not monologue
68- REFLECTIVE QUESTIONS
- Repeats a statement the other had made, as a
question - Requires good listening
- Important to select the most important aspect
- Example
- Employee Our results would be better if we
modified the procedures to take samples - Manager you seem to be saying that you
definitely believe it possible to improve the
results? -
69- Advantages
- You are not evaluating what has been said-this
can avoid arguments - You confirm your understanding of what has been
said - They are encouraged to clarify expand
- Encourages dialogue
70- PROBING QUESTIONS
- Solicit information about a particular point or
issue - Used to deepen communication
- Example
- Manager If you are convinced the results can
improve,what steps would you take when would
you take them?
71- Advantages
- Generate information in the areas of most
interest to you - Challenge the other to to explore ideas, defend
statements, contribute suggestions - Foster clear thinking
- Raises personal responsiblity
72- BEHAVIOURAL QUESTIONS
- Seek specific examples, from past experience, of
a particular skill - The other person can learn what you are looking
for give you much information - Examples
- Tell me about a time when you
- Give me a specific example of when you had to
deal with a poorly performing team member what
did you do? - Can you give me some examples of the kinds of
decisions you have had to make on your own
initiative?
73- Advantages
- Past performance is the best predictor of future
behaviour - You will get specific names, dates, numbers,
times, locationsie real evidence - You will get beyond your preconceptions or first
impressions of the employee
74GUIDELINES FOR FEEDBACK
75GUIDELINES FOR FEEDBACK
- Giving
- Be sure of your motives
- Always own it
- Measure it
- Be descriptive specific, not judgemental
- Focus on achievable change
- Give soon after performance
76- Negotiate understanding
- Try the sandwich
- - positives first
- - negatives in the middle
- - end on a positive note
- Maintain their self esteem
77GUIDELINES FOR FEEDBACK
- Receiving
- Listen acknowledge positive negative feedback
- Dont crumple!
- Recognise your strengths
- Look for opportunities to improve
- Maintain you self respect
- Act on justifiable criticism
78CONSTRUCTIVE CRITICISM
79CONSTRUCTIVE CRITICISM
- Confrontation causes anxiety
- Anxiety distorts
- pussyfooting not stating the problem clearly
- clobbering too much negativity
- Middle road
- tell the truth based on firm evidence, but
given with care
80- Focus on facts behaviours rather than
personalities opinion - Communicate facts clearly honestly
- Clarify what you think the problem is
- Commit both of you to an agreed course of action
to deal with the problem - If you cant take it, you cant give it!
81DEVELOPMENT PLANNING
82WHAT THE PLAN SHOULD HAVE
- SMARTER development objectives
- Methods for their achievement
83 DEVELOPMENT METHODS
- Team Coaching 1 1
Instruction - Mentoring
Placements - Shadowing
Secondments - Delegated work Open
eLearning - Project work Off the job
courses
84GETTING STARTED
- Changes which are self attributed are
maintained to a greater degree than those which
are believed to be due to external causes
Goodwin - It all starts with you your desire to learn
- You must take a risk, a jump, a chance
- You need some SMARTER objectives
- You will need to assess yourself against these
85- You need supporters friends, colleagues,
networks - You will need perseverance, gumption