
performance appraisals training
Regular staff appraisals are important even if you only have one employee.
They should not be intimidating or need to be formal, but they should be clear and well planned. You should aim to schedule performance appraisals at lease every six months.
Silicon Beach Training provide regular Performance Appraisals Training courses in Brighton, Sussex. Other HR Training courses include Train the Trainer courses, PRINCE2 Training, ITIL Training and MSP Training.
Performance appraisals should make your employees aware of how well you think they are doing. It is an opportunity to tell them if you are pleased with their performance and use the opportunity to encourage and reward. It is also an opportunity to raise issues if you are not satisfied with their performance. The aim is to to help them understand where there is room for improvement and it is important to suggest how they might accomplish this improvement.
Be Specific
Don’t make sweeping statements like “You need to get your act together.” Chances are that they don’t know they are under performing or what they should be doing differently.
Allow your employees to air their own opinions.
A appraisal should provide an opportunity for your employee to discuss their future within your business or organisation, and they should be made comfortable to raise any issues that might concern them. This allows them to vent any frustrations they might be feeling. This may be the only opportunity for them to have you listen sincerely and objectively to what they say.
Remember it is a two way process.
Read more
Posted by Heather Buckley in Human Resources Training, Management Skills Training on December 21st, 2010 | 2 Comments »

performance appraisals
Here is a definition of Performance Management:
“an integrated set of planning and review procedures which cascades down through the organisation to provide a link between each individual and the overall strategy of the organisation.”
Out of Performance Management has arisen the need for Performance Measurement.
Silicon Beach Training provide both Performance Appraisals training and Performance Management training courses in Brighton, Sussex. Private Appraisals and Performance Management courses can be arranged 01273 622272.
Why measure performance?
The main reasons for measuring performance can be summarised under three main headings:
ACCOUNTABILITY
CONTROL
DEVELOPMENT
An increasing emphasis on performance and on the achievement of results is leading to the adoption of performance management schemes by more and more organisations. These schemes may vary in their design and application but nearly all are based on the simple premise of reviewing an individual’s (or a team’s) performance against previously agreed targets. The traditional idea of an annual appraisal meeting where a form was completed and then forgotten until the next year is disappearing, as performance management is accepted as a key part of the manager’s responsibility in developing their staff.
Performance Appraisals
From the point of view of an organisation or a manager, performance appraisal provides an opportunity to assess the value of each individual’s performance over a period of time. It is a learning opportunity for both managers and the individual being appraised and to review:
- If performance was good (i.e. agreed objectives were met or exceeded), what made it good and how can these contributing factors be maintained?
- If performance was merely acceptable, what could the organisation, manager or individual do to improve in the coming appraisal period?
- If performance was below the agreed standard, what were the reasons?
The emphasis in well-designed performance management schemes is not to punish “below-par performance” but to help people to reach a better standard of performance in the future (or maintain an already high standard).
Schemes not designed and applied in this way rarely benefit individuals or the organisation. Performance cannot be appraised without the existence of an explicit standard. So the other major benefit to both organisations and their staff is that it forces discussion and agreement on an objective standard of performance which staff members are supposed to reach.
Conducting a Performance Management Meeting
10 Point Checklist
- Set a clear agenda and objectives for the meeting and prepare thoroughly.
- Use specific examples rather than generalities when describing performance, good or bad.
- Listen!
- Motivate – balance positive and negative feedback.
- Focus on behaviour that can be changed rather than on more vague aspects of personality or attitude.
- Discuss development needs and performance improvement.
- Summarise to ensure clarity about what has been agreed.
- Don’t avoid emotive issues if they important.
- Set SMART objectives. SMART = Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Realistic, Time-bound.
- Be prepared to receive feedback on yourself as a manager.
For a practical and comprehensive look at this topic we have a 2 day Performance Management Course which can be customised around your own organisation’s performance management procedures and documentation. We can also arrange Appraisals Course to provide the interpersonal skills required to conduct performance reviews.
Read more
Posted by Heather Buckley in Management Skills Training on April 15th, 2007 | No Comments »
Performance Appraisals can sometimes be an uncomfortable experience, for both managers and the employees and will often only help in further dividing the manager-employee relationship. Appraisals will often determine the next pay alteration, who is fired and who is promoted, the most common element of this sort of appraisal is often to underline what a person has done wrong.
However what people sometimes forget is that appraisals are there to try and help and improve a person’s performance. It is a method through which managers are able to gather important information from their staff which they then should use to try and better the performance, not only of that individual, but also of the whole project in general. Through focusing on the improvement and bettering of an individual, and not on punishing them for their faults, the emphasis of that appraisal, not to mention the experience of the employee, will no longer be a negative one.
With the correct approach, there should no longer be the division between employee and manager that there once was, now you should get the feeling that you are both working for the same team and that any criticism that you level at an employee is constructive and warranted.
Read more
Posted by Heather Buckley in Management Skills Training on October 13th, 2009 | No Comments »