articlehaul.com articlehaul.com
Search:    Index Page :> About Us :> Privacy of Info :> Terms of Use :> Add Your Link :> Submit Article   
Add Your Link
 

Self Help

Healthcare & Medicine

Education & Learning

Travel & Accommodation

Online Shopping

Adventure & Sports

Drink & Food

Research & Science

Finance & Investment

Careers & Employment

News & Media

Relationship & Lifestyle

Health & Hygiene

Family & Home

Recreation & Entertainment

Vehicles & Automotive

Art & Culture

Computers & Networking

Politics & Government

Property & Estate

Teens & Kids

Indoor Games

People & Communities

Companies & Business


 

Index Page –› Companies & Business –› Management & Administration
 

Performance Evaluation: How To Create Change

 

STEPS TOWARDS GIVING A GOOD APPRAISAL INTERVIEW: Give specific feedback. Statements such as, Youre doing a good job and Youd better shape up are almost without value unless accompanied by specific feedback on what the employee is to continue doing or to stop doing. If you evaluate with the word positive, describe how the employee manifests that characteristic. If you say that the employee shows initiative, talk about specific occasions on which the employee did indeed take the initiative. If in your appraisal you must deal with other vague adjectives such as cooperative, talk about instances in which the employee has worked well with others.

STEPS TOWARDS GIVING A GOOD APPRAISAL INTERVIEW: Outline aspects of performance where improvement is needed. Clarify areas in which you both agree there is a need for improvement. Jointly plan ways to make these improvements. Focus upon just two or three performance areas in which to concentrate during the next evaluation period. The result of this phase of the discussion should be a list of two or three areas of strengths and weaknesses in performance and commitments from the employee and the supervisor (you) to an improvement program.

STEPS TOWARDS GIVING A GOOD APPRAISAL INTERVIEW: 1. Get commitment to change. Dont conclude the session without the employee acknowledging the specific improvements you have agreed upon and committing to dates, review meetings, and follow-up times. 2. Do not rush: allow sufficient time. The review should be open-ended. Take as long as you believe is necessary to discuss past present and future performance issues and to get agreement on what is to happen. 3. Set a follow-up date. Set a follow-up date to evaluate progress in achieving the objectives. Dont wait until the next appraisal discussion. Instead, set a specific date when you will meet again to evaluate progress on the object-wives. 4. End on an encouraging note. Show the employee that this is the beginning of a better future toward which you are both working.

Author: Andrew E. Schwartz
 
Author Bio:
Andrew E. Schwartz is a popular columnist. Andrew likes to pen down articles about this area.
This article can be searched using: project management, risk management, small business administration, performance management
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
How To Check If Your Home Business Is Legal?
 
Direct Mail Marketing
 
Powerful Product Names
 
Case Study; Staples VS Office Depot
 
Management Advice: The Third Option
 
Business Essentials
 
MLM Compensation
 
Become An Online Casino Affiliate Marketer: Cashing In On A Hot Trend
 
Sales Managers: Should You Dress Salespeople For Success?
 
Feel the Beat
 
 
 
 
 

Impressing Your Customers Is Easy With 3 Guaranteed Tactics

Customer satisfaction isn't one single act, but a group of actions that work together to make their ... - Allyn
 

Creating a Call Center Script

Call center script creation has many pitfalls that can leave your operators and your callers confuse ... - Karin Rosner
 

Creativity Management and Time Pressure

There is a pervasive belief that time pressure stimulates creativity. This is both true and false. T ... - Kal Bishop
 
 

Website Templates for the Aspiring Marketer

So you want to join up as the latest and greatest internet marketer? You have a brilliant idea, and ... - Ashwin Kumar
 

Seven Questions to Improve Your Business, Your Relationships, and Your Life

One of the most powerful tools we have as humans is our ability to ask questions. The more adept we ... - Kevin Eikenberry
 
 
Index Page :> Privacy of Info :> Terms of Use
Copyright © 2008 www.articlehaul.com All Rights Reserved.