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Managing Employee Performance and Reward Concepts, Practices, Strategies 2nd edition

This book provides concepts, practices, and strategies for effectively managing employee performance and rewards. It covers topics such as performance feedback and development, informal feedback, competencies, behaviors, results, formal assessment, action planning, and formal review meetings.

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Managing Employee Performance and Reward Concepts, Practices, Strategies 2nd edition

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  1. Managing Employee Performance and Reward Concepts, Practices, Strategies 2nd edition

  2. Performance feedback and development • The performance management cycle • Analysing individual performance deficiencies • Providing feedback: three approaches • Counselling underperformers • Action planning • Providing negative feedback • High performance coaching

  3. MONITORING INFORMAL FEEDBACK LEARNING AND DEVELOPMENT • COMPETENCIES • BEHAVIOURS • RESULTS FORMAL ASSESSMENT ACTION PLANNING FORMAL REVIEW MEETING The performance management cycle

  4. Performance (validly and reliably assessed) = • Motivation • Direction • Intensity • Duration X • Competencies • Knowledge • Skills • Abilities • Attributes • Person–role fit X • Resources • Technology • Materials • Information • Supervisor and peer support Recognition and rewards • Psychological contract • Deal delivery • Trust • Felt-fairness Selection, training and development Diagnosing individual performance deficits

  5. Performance review meetings (or formal feedback sessions) A formal dialogue/exchange between employee and supervisor about the employee’s performance over the review period for the purpose of reaching agreement about what has been achieved, what can be improved and how such improvements can be achieved.

  6. Performance review meetings Key steps: • Evaluate performance (competencies, behaviours, results) • Summative and detailed feedback on performance • Provide positive reinforcement • Exchange of views about what has been achieved and what needs to be done • Agreement about what needs to be done next (action planning)

  7. Aims • Tell employee of performance • Obtain employee acceptance of evaluation • Persuade employee to agree to supervisor’s plan for improvement Role of supervisor Sentencing judge Supervisor’s attitude That employees appreciate advice and constructive criticism Providing feedback: three approaches ‘Tell and sell’

  8. Aims • Tell employee of performance • Allow employee to respond to appraisal • Consider both views together, reach conclusion and plan for improvement Role of supervisor Attentive judge Supervisor’s attitude Feelings of the employee should be understood and respected Providing feedback: three approaches ‘Tell and listen’

  9. Aims • Discuss appraisal jointly • Work together to identify solutions to performance problems • Encourage employee development and improvement Role of supervisor Helper/counsellor/coach Supervisor’s attitude Mutual and constructive approach is best for identifying and correcting problems Providing feedback: three approaches ‘Problem-solving’

  10. Main interviewer competencies • Use of exploratory questions • Evaluating and reflecting ideas • Ability to listen • Ability to generate ideas • Sensitivity • Seeing job from employee’s perspective • Summarising Open Q&A dialogue • Invite reflection and self-assessment • How well do you feel that you have done? • How do you feel about that? • Why do you think that happened? Advantages • Constructive nature means improvement is more likely • Ideas and views more easily expressed (without being judged) • Greater freedom and cooperation • Mutual discussion may remove barriers and allow insight • Fosters ‘double-loop’ learning • Aim may conflict with evaluative purpose • Requires highly competent interviewers • More difficult to control; more time-consuming Disadvantages The ‘problem-solving’ review meeting

  11. Employee name:……………………………… Position:………………………………………… Signature:……………………………………… Date: …………………………………………… Supervisor:……………………………………… Signature:………………………………………. Date:…………………………………………….. • On-the-job training • Further education • Formal training • Mentoring • Committee/task force participation • Self-learning programs • Secondment • Lateral transfer • Special projects • Coaching • Higher duties • Assessment centre activity • Job rotation • Online training • Networking • Reading and discussion of relevant publications • Conference/seminar attendance • Teamworking exercises Action planning instrument Performance development plan for the year 2016 All performance development planning should be based on: A thorough and agreed analysis of the nature and scope of assessed performance weakness over the preceding year. Agreement as to the factors primarily responsible for these weaknesses and the main needs arising from these weaknesses. Agreement as to the steps that should now be taken to address these weaknesses and needs and the goals that should be applied to ensure that these needs are met in an effective and timely way. In determining the steps to be taken and goals to be set, consider which of the following options may provide the most appropriate and realistic solutions:

  12. 3–5 high priority development needs for 2016: Specific goal and measure to address each need: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 1–3 longer-term career development needs/aspirations: Goal and measure for addressing each nominated long-term need/aspiration: 1. 2. 3. Action planning instrument Performance development goals

  13. Providing negative feedback What is negative feedback? The communication of information and judgements regarding low or reduced achievement against desired performance standards or expectations. Barriers that may prevent people benefiting from negative feedback: • Most people don’t like giving it • Most people do not want it because of perceived loss of ‘face’ • Cultural barriers, especially regarding loss of ‘face’ • Typically perceived less accurately than positive feedback because mechanisms aimed at protecting self-esteem distort message • Self-serving bias: undesirable outcomes blamed on contextual factors rather than on the individual • Denial, especially by individuals with high self-esteem, history of high performance and over-exposure to positive feedback • Individuals with low self-esteem may experience a further loss of self-image

  14. Developing high performance:mentoring and coaching What is a mentor? • A mentorcan be defined as an individual of high status in the work environment who has superior experience and knowledge and is committed to providing upward mobility and career support to a mentee (Ragins, 1989) • Can be a formal or informal relationship • One-on-one support and guidance is provided by the mentor

  15. Performance coaching What is performance coaching? • A learning process to help high-performing employees to further enhance their performance • The purpose is to examine areas for development and to assist the ‘coachee’ in thinking through work-related problems and identifying and evaluating possible responses • The coach helps establish development plans and, if the relationship continues, can track accomplishments in carrying out the plan

  16. Performance coaching • Historically, focused on remediation for derailing executives • Today, is focused on preparing high-potential employees for career advancement such as: • accelerating high-potential development • developing special populations (e.g. minority executives) • special needs (e.g. on boarding or managing remote teams, or managing a specific project) (Bono et al., 2009) • Emphasis is on drawing a strong link with learning and development and assisting individuals or teams to reach their full potential.

  17. Forms of coaching • Leadership • Executive (custom-tailored) • Results • Group • Organisational • Business • Behavioural • Life

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