Title: Staff Evaluation and Termination
1Staff Evaluation and Termination
- Laura Slaby
- Kristi Kolasinski
- Stephanie Prachel
2Objectives of Presentation
- After this presentation, the reader will be able
to - Know what the positive and negative aspects of
punishment are. - Know the importance of feedback and progress
reviews. - How is performance monitored?
- When to terminate an employee.
3Evaluating Performance
- Performance information is gathered for
administrative, guidance, counseling, and
research purposes. - Frequent monitoring means early detection of
problems.
4Two categories of Performance Data
- Judgmental Measures One persons account of
another individuals performance. Not
recommended. - Non-judgmental Measures This information can be
seen and counted, such as absenteeism. This is
the better of the two.
5Factors that are included in Employee Performance
Ratings.
- Quantity of work
- Quality of performance
- Absenteeism and Tardiness
- Amount of supervision required
- Attitude and conduct
- Cooperation
- Initiative
- Adaptability
- Ability to work with others
6Feedback and Progress Reviews
- Regular feedback is important because
- Then the employee knows how they are doing.
- Performance that doesnt meet the requirements
can be identified early and can be changed to
help the employee improve. - Employees can inform you about the work.
- Questions that have arisen can be answered and
resolved. - Changes in priorities can be addressed.
7Discipline
- Discipline has both training and education as
well as enforcement and punishment. - Training that molds, strengthens, improves, or
corrects. - Control is gained by enforced obedience.
- Punishment for violations of rules, standards,
and direct orders.
8Negative Aspects of Punishment
- Cause anxiety for both employee and supervisor
- The employee may avoid the manager
- May hide mistakes
- The employee will constantly check with the
supervisor - May only suppress poor behavior
9Advantages of Punishment
- Rapidly changes behavior
- Inexpensive
- Might be the only feasible action available
- Punishment is a natural occurrence
10How to Punish
- Must use a Hot Stove approach.
- Punish immediately The longer the consequences
from the unacceptable behavior, the less likely
the punishment will work. - Penalize consistently All employees are
disciplined fairly. - Penalize actions, not personalities Discipline
in private and focus on behavior.
11How to Punish
- Provide a rationale Tell employees how to avoid
further penalties and tell them what the
consequences are. - Establish a supportive relationship Deliver
penalties in the context of a warm and friendly
relationship.
12Discipline Without Punishment
- Step 1 Manager reminds worker in a casual,
friendly way that a job responsibility has been
violated. - Step 2 Manager calls attention and explains the
need for the rule. - Step 3 Step 2 is repeated with managers boss
present. If the rule is not acceptable to the
worker, he/she may decide to change jobs, and
counseling is provided.
13Discipline Without Punishment
- Step 4 Employee is sent home for the rest of the
day, with pay to decide whether or not to follow
the rule or chose a new occupation. He/she is
told if the rule is broke one more time, there
will be termination. - Step 5 Ask for the employees decision. If
he/she stays and the rule is broke again,
termination.
14Advantages to Non-Punishment
- Leads to reduced absenteeism, turnover, and
disciplinary problems. - Less distasteful for supervisors.
15Employers Responsibility
- Make sure rules and penalties have been
communicated through handbooks, orientation, and
union contracts.
16Penalty Appropriateness
- Employees work record
- Employees past disciplinary record
- Employees length of service
- What caused the employee to break the rule?
17Seven Things to Avoid When Taking Disciplinary
Actions
- Not obtaining all relevant facts and acting only
on hearsay. - Disciplining while emotionally charged.
- Not letting employee know what exactly he/she is
being disciplined for. - Not getting the employees side of the story.
18Seven Things to Avoid When Taking Disciplinary
Actions
- 5. Letting the employee talk you out of
justifiable punishment. - 6. Not documenting the disciplinary interview.
- 7. Holding a grudge.
19How to Verbally Reprimand an Employee
- This is done to bring about a change in employee
behavior - Tell the employee specifically what is wrong.
- Tell the employee how the manager feels about his
or her actions. - Leave a moment of uncomfortable silence so the
employee can ingest what the manager said and ask
questions.
20How to Verbally Reprimand an Employee
- Remind the employee their value to the firm, but
let them know they have erred. - Dont hold a grudge.
21What to Include in a Written Warning
- Who the warning is to (employee name and social
security number) - Who the warning is from
- Dates of warning conversation, rule broken, and
form was filled out - Description of incident (specific)
- What rule was broken give time, places,
witnesses, and what was said
22What to Include in a Written Warning
- Reference past conversations about the problem
- Change is expected in the employee
- Possible consequences if behavior doesnt change
- Employees comments
- Signatures
23Terminating an Employee
- Be sure rule broken is related to organizational
success. - Make sure rule was explained to employee.
- Investigate employee misconduct thoroughly.
- Make sure there is sufficient evidence.
24Terminating an Employee
- Make sure termination is consistent to
organizational practice, and there is no
discrimination. - Check that termination is appropriate to severity
of the offense and employees work record.
25Reference List
- Haimann, Theo (1987). Supervision Concepts and
Practices of Management (4th Edition).
Cincinnati Southwestern Publishing Company, pp.
24 27. - Landy, Frank J. (1983). The Measurement of Work
Performance. New York Academic Press, pp. 200
201.
26Reference List
- McAfee, Bruce and Champagne, Paul (1994).
Effectively Managing Troublesome Employees.
Westport, Connecticut Quorum Books, pp. 1 52.
27Summary
- Evaluations are important tools to catch mistakes
and problems early. - Discipline is a training and educational tool as
well as a enforcement and punishing tool. - Discipline should be done with consideration for
the employee.