Power Tools & Tips For Workplace Leaders

What is wrong with annual reviews?


6 tips to improve them


Annual reviews are a thorn in the side of employees, managers and HR. Yet, despite the bad rap, companies continue to schedule performance reviews one time a year.


Employees usually dread the conversations, wondering how they’ve measured up. Managers often stress over the additional pre- and post-meeting work, plus the discomfort associated with sometimes having to tell employees things they don’t want to hear.


HR has to keep it all in check, adding more chaos to your year-end. For many, this could be the first year in a few you’ll amp up for reviews as many organizations dropped formal evaluations and career conversations throughout the pandemic.


Still, nearly a third of companies still do them, and another 18% check in biannually, according to research from Workhuman. Employees worry that sitting down once a year isn’t enough. Specifically, Workhuman found employees are concerned that:


  • their review won’t accurately reflect their performance (22%)
  • they won’t receive a bonus/raise (19%), and
  • they had fewer opportunities to grow, and that will be reflected (12%).


“Annual reviews are not a bad idea, but they must be part of something larger and never stand alone as an indicator of performance,” says Rosette Cataldo, Vice President of Performance and Talent Strategy at Workhuman. “Many employees have grown weary with the traditional once-a-year appraisals and its clunky processes and managers can become overwhelmed with the shear amount of work it takes to look back and recall all that the employee contributed or fell short of delivering over the year.”


Every organization is different and the pace, complexity and process for performance reviews will need to vary. But some strategies are universally effective to help employees perform well and stay engaged, plus help leaders and companies manage performance to optimize business.


Here are six strategies for more effective performance evaluations.


Ditch annual reviews


Experts, practitioners and researchers agree that employers should ditch annual performance reviews for varying reasons.


Perhaps this is the best reason: Just 14% of employees strongly agree an annual review is actually effective, a Gallup study found.


This isn’t to say you should ditch reviews entirely. Instead, most experts agree, you want to increase the regularity of reviews – quarterly or monthly.

And train managers to approach them more informally so the constant review of what’s going well and what needs to be tweaked is comfortable for both sides.


From there, you can add these other effective strategies.


Start with online assessment


More companies today start the regular cadence of reviews with brief self-assessments. It’s particularly effective with more informal, frequent reviews.


For instance, Treva Fairman, Chief Operating Officer at Ascend Behavior Partners, told the Wall Street Journal, her organization adopted an online assessment that takes managers just about 10 minutes to complete before having brief one-on-one chats with front-line employees who traditionally didn’t get much feedback. It’s helped them evaluate employees on performance and their commitment to company values.


Whether you use a third-party tool or rely on an in-house manual process, you can create a three-question assessment to make the actual conversation effective. Touch on:


  • What’s gone well since the last discussion
  • Where there have been struggles, and
  • The support the employee needs going forward.


Put weight on company culture


Company culture matters – and employees want credit for their contributions to it. In fact, 35% of employees plan to put greater emphasis on their contributions to company culture in self-assessments. That’s ahead of how much they plan to emphasize their business contributions!


“Employees are investing more of their whole selves into the workplace. A culture that fosters positivity through recognition, continuous feedback and the sharing of goals for the purpose of receiving supported growth recreates an environment where employees have a greater sense of belonging, purpose, achievement, happiness and enthusiasm,” says Cataldo.


While it might be more difficult to quantify employees’ impact on company culture, front-line managers can almost always see if employees’ lift up or bring down others. Make that part of the assessment, having managers and employees identify behaviors that add to or detract from culture.


Read on!


Information provided by: HR Morning

Performance reviews – the one thing almost every manager and employee hates! Managers don’t like them because they’ve never been trained on how to conduct them, and employees don’t like them because the news is seldom as favorable as they would like. 


And yet, feedback on performance is the number one motivator of people in the workplace, when done properly, and evaluations that are tardy or never completed cause incredible levels of frustration among your people. Learn how to give effective and regular performance feedback. We can show you how.


Contact us at 605.335.8198 to get your performance reviews on track!

ALTERNATIVE HR | www.alternativehr.com | 605.335.8198 



STAY CONNECTED
Facebook  Instagram  Linkedin