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Timely feedback is important
Evaluating performance and giving feedback should be an ongoing
process. A good manager must not wait for performance appraisal time to tackle
it
How often do you communicate to your team about their performance? Do you wait
for performance appraisal time to address issues? If the answer is yes,
then you are far from being a smart manager (though not an uncommon one).
Evaluation time is often associated with negativity as managers confront their
juniors on what the latter should not have done or have fallen short of achieving.
A good manager must never wait for six months or a year to give feedback to
his team members. Whether the feedback is negative or positive, it should be
on an ongoing basis. It is a skill that they have to master with a lot of caution.
Performance appraisals should not spring any surprises apart
from the happy news of a good raise. According to Ferdinand Fournies, author
of Why Employees Dont Do What Theyre Supposed to Do and What
To Do About It, there are at least 16 reasons why people dont perform
the way you want them to. The one who loses most when an employee fails
is the manager; the one who gains the most when an employee performs well is
the manager. declares Fournies. Consequently, it is the manager who must
intervene to assist the employee to perform appropriately.
Appraisals not the same as feedback
"If you have a culture of communicating with
subordinates, or if the
feedback comes from
their peers,
the impact is effective"
- Minoo Dastur
Chief Operating Officer
Nihilent Technologies
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Appraisals have nothing to do with feedback, asserts Minoo
Dastur, Chief Operating Officer, Nihilent Technologies. Feedback should
be given all the timein the context of objectivesand throughout
the year. These should be in planned sessions. There should be at least 3-4
feedback sessions (around the persons growth). Employee appraisals
are HR tools and the cycle for both should be separate.
It is important to understand the purpose of the feedback
process. Feedback is a part of the cyclic process towards
improvement. Hence, there is probably no right time
as against the wrong time, if the feedback is geared
towards improvements. If the feedback intends to be judgmental then
it needs to be timed. Positive feedback perhaps has no proper
time; it is human nature to be happy hearing praise or encouragement,
hence such feedback may only motivate, not otherwise, comments
Harish Bhattiprolu, Director, Sales, Kenexa Technologies. He points
out that prudent management practice would distinguish between those
issues which are tied to strategic performance and those which are
rather tactical and of everyday nature. Those which are important
for performance evaluation must be highlighted at the performance
appraisal. However, routine or everyday observations and operational
feedback may be given continuously, adds Bhattiprolu while
pointing out that it is quite important to apply adequate discretion
in raising issues.
"It is not a good idea to give feedback too often over
trivia as this gives the employee a feeling of being watched"
- Suhas Nerurkar
President
TVA Infotech
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Caution is the key. Suhas Nerurkar, President, TVA Infotech,
feels that while feedback has to be at least once in three months (or in some
cases, immediate, if need be), it is not a good idea to give feedback too often
over trivia as this gives the employee a feeling of being watched. Further,
feedback should never be given in the middle of a crisis. It should always be
done when pressures are relatively less, advises Nerurkar.
Delays unpardonable
"Delayed feedback is
unpardonable. The manager shouldn't wait till the end to declare
that the employee was doing the right thingor not"
- Sai Gundavelli
CEO & President
Solix Technologies
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Asserts Sai Gundavelli, CEO & President, Solix Technologies,
Delayed feedback is unpardonable. Every individual works for the benefit
of the organisation. The manager shouldnt wait till the end to declare
that the employee was doing the right thing or not. He should spontaneously
and constructively keep track of the developments to ensure that he doesnt
miss the boat along with his staff.
Gundavelli acknowledges that managers often dread and struggle with the performance
appraisal processsometimes over how to communicate, sometimes trying to
understand the effect of the feedback they are providing. It is a skill
a manager has to have to ensure that his or her appraisal style and wording
of different pieces of performance feedback result in a constructive open discussion
that helps avoid any pitfalls in the appraisal process.
Whether feedback is negative or positive, it
should never reach late. Delayed negative feedback becomes
meaningless as by then many more mistakes will have been committed
by the employee. Positive feedback, if delayed, is a lost opportunity
to build morale as the impact is best when immediate, explains
Nerurkar. He however feels that sometimes it is prudent to hold
off negative feelings to cool off a crisis.
For a professional, both negative and positive feedback are equally important.
Charuhas Khopkar, Senior Vice-president, Aftek Infosys, asserts that the methodology
of giving these two types of feedback needs to be different. For both
types of feedback, the delay is directly proportional to the damage regarding
the values of an individual.
Bhattiprolu believes that if a consistent practice of suitable appraisal is
followed, it will not lead to surprises. If it does, then it may be surmised
that this is not consistent with the actual performance. It is not uncommon
for associates to be given unexpected ratings. It is also true that an associate
may perform his tasks assuming that he is on the correct path, to be completely
surprised by the review saying that he is barking up the wrong tree.
- Negatively affects individual productivity
- Leads to more mistakes
- Team performance suffers
- Bad for team morale
- Creates communication rift between manager and
team members
- The organisation suffers; might impact the bottom-line
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Handling negativity
Managers often delay criticism for fear of confrontation. Most experts will
agree that the delivery of negative feedback is an art. It must be given
in the context of the effect of the negative work. For example, if a person
comes late for meetings, it must be explained to the person that this is wasting
the time of others and hence it is unfair to them; this approach is preferable
to harping on organisational values, states Nerurkar.
He reminds that empathy towards employees is the key. If I know that the
other person understands my side of the story, then I am more likely to take
a negative feedback in the right spirit. Many managers treat their team members
as juniors, and act that way. This prevents bonding and creates
distrust, which is typical of most older organisations.
Dastur highlights the need for great communication skills if the feedback happens
to be negative. If you have a culture of communicating with subordinates,
or if it comes from their peers (like in 360 degree appraisals), the impact
is effective. Abroad, they have a system of getting peer groups together for
the process.
According to Khopkar, one of the best ways is to gather and
analyse all the relevant data and be unbiased towards any individual while giving
negative feedback. Any negative feedback should not be based on opinions
or views as every human being is different.
The aim of performance appraisal should not be to give negative feedback to
people, but to evaluate their performance. A great deal of sensitivity is needed
from the manager while doing a review. Most organisations today give training
to appraisers so that they do not fall victim to the common mistakes they are
likely to make.
In its nature, performance appraisal is to be oriented
as a positive act which benefits all concerned. However, if the
objectives are diluted towards trading blame and responsibility,
or pinning down a person with the feedback, the negative connotation
is palpable. Smart managers would not let the performance evaluation
process get a negative connotation, states Bhattiprolu. According
to him, performance appraisal is an extension of the management-by-objective
philosophy. If the objective-setting is not accurate, it can result
in skewed results and a negative environment. But if it is implemented
with the right spirit, it can result in an environment that recognises
and rewards potential while eliminating non-performance.
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