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If F you work hard all the year, and the director evaluates your performance it's bad, how will you deal with it?

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Question added by Hani Al Mowallad , Director of Talent & Culture , Mövenpick Hotel & Residences Riyadh
Date Posted: 2015/08/10
Deleted user
by Deleted user

If this is reality of the situation, you should move to another department, working with such a manager would not provide the desired fruits of it, and will develop squelched, affecting your career

 

 

Sayed Rubab Sayed
by Sayed Rubab Sayed , Finance Officer , The Next

you have option to get yourself reevaluated... but this appeal will risk your career with the same company.

Emad Mohammed said abdalla
by Emad Mohammed said abdalla , ERP & IT Software, operation general manager . , AL DOHA Company

I fully agree with the answers been added by EXPERTS.................Thanks.

Valentine Donnelly
by Valentine Donnelly , Business Operations Manager , Supreme Group

Most companies now have a proper appraisal system in place, this would include short meetings throughout the year with your Manager. If something is wrong then you would know well before the final appraisal takes place, this would also or should also be addressed throughout the year rather than tell someone at the end of the year they have not done well.

If a proper process is in place then in the appraisal meeting you would be in a position to discuss all of the comments before the appraisal is deemed complete, also you have the right to question the decisions / remarks made by your Manager to his or her Manger if you feel it is totally wrong after the discussion and nothing was changed.

Probably you don't have a proper process in place and that is why you are having the issue, again if you are working hard throughout the year but not performing properly then it should be addressed early and not at the end of the year. This helps individuals to understand what they may be doing wrong and give them the chance to change or even gain some training to help them get on track.

 

 

Vinod Jetley
by Vinod Jetley , Assistant General Manager , State Bank of India

Try and improve myself in the current year.

Khaled Anwar
by Khaled Anwar , Senior Sales Engineer , "Automotive company''

 

I agree with the experts answers. Thank you.

Deleted user
by Deleted user

no one is perfect and there is a scope of improvement everywhere.

Duncan Robertson
by Duncan Robertson , Strategy Consultant , Duncan Robertson Consultancy

Just because you've worked hard doesn't mean you've worked well.  The Director may have a point, so make sure you truly understand and accept any constructive feedback you have had.

If, however, you really have worked well then there is no alternative to moving jobs.  A boss who has it in for you is something that cannot be directly overcome.

khaled elkholy
by khaled elkholy , HR MANAGER , misk for import & export

It’s performance review season, and you know the drill. Drag each of your direct reports into a conference room for a one-on-one, hand them an official-looking document, and then start in with the same, tired conversation. Say some positive things about what the employee is good at, then some unpleasant things about what he’s not good at, and end — wearing your most solicitous grin — with some more strokes of his ego. The result: a mixed message that leaves even your best employees feeling disappointed. But if you take the right approach, appraisals are an excellent opportunity to reinforce solid performers and redirect the poor ones.

What the Experts SayFor many employees, a face-to-face performance review is the most stressful work conversation they’ll have all year. For managers, the discussion is just as tense. “What a performance appraisal requires is for one person to stand in judgment of another. Deep down, it’s uncomfortable,” says Dick Grote, author ofHow to Be Good at Performance Appraisals. Evaluating an employee’s job performance should consist of more than an annual chat, according to James Baron, the William S. Beinecke Professor of Management at Yale School of Management. Performance management is a process, he says. “Presumably you’re giving a tremendous amount of real-time feedback, and your employees are people you know well. Hopefully your relationship can survive candid feedback.” No matter what kind of appraisal system your company uses, here are several strategies to help you make performance review season less nerve-racking and more productive.

Set expectations earlyThe performance review doesn’t start with a sit-down in the spare conference room. You must be clear from the outset how you’ll evaluate your employees. Grote suggests holding “performance planning” sessions with each of your direct reports at the beginning of the year, to discuss that person’s goals and your expectations. “You’ll see immediate improvement in performance because everyone knows what the boss expects,” he says. “And it earns you the right to hold people accountable at the end of the year.” Listen carefully to your employees’ personal ambitions, as it will inform the way you assess their work. “Oftentimes managers are evaluating performance without necessarily knowing what that person’s career aspirations are. We often assume that everyone wants to be CEO. But that’s not always the case,” says Barron. Understanding what your direct reports want from their careers will help you figure out ways to broaden their professional experiences.

Lay the groundworkAbout two weeks before the face-to-face review, ask your employee to jot down a few things he’s done over the last year that he’s proud of. This will both help refresh your memory, and “will put a positive focus on an event that is so often seen as negative,” says Grote. Next, go over other notes you’ve kept on your employee over the year: a well-executed project; a deadline missed; the deft handling of a difficult client. Finally, ask for feedback from others in the company who work closely with your employee. “The larger number of independent evaluations the better,” says Barron. About an hour before the meeting, give your employee a copy of his appraisal. That way, he can have his initial emotional response — positive or negative — in the privacy of his own cubicle. “When people read someone’s assessment of them, they are going to have all sorts of churning emotions,” says Grote. “Let them have that on their own time, and give them a chance to think about it.” Then with a calmer, cooler head, the employee can prepare for a rational and constructive business conversation.

Set a toneToo often the face-to-face conversation takes the form of a “feedback sandwich:” compliments, criticism, more niceties. But because there’s no single, clear message this approach demoralizes your stars and falsely encourages your losers. Instead, pick a side. “Most people are good solid workers, so for the vast majority, you should concentrate exclusively on things the person has done well,” says Grote, adding that this method tends to motivate people who are already competent at their jobs. For your marginal workers, however, do not sugarcoat bad news. Performance reviews are your chance to confront poor performers and demand improvement. “People are resilient,” says Grote. “As time goes on, that person is not going to get a promotion and not going to get a raise…You’re not doing this person any favors by [avoiding their deficiencies].”

Constructively coachAfter discussing the strengths and achievements of your solid performers, ask them how they feel about how things are going. “In most cases you’re dealing with mature adults and you’ll elicit their honest concerns,” says Grote. For both solid and poor performers, frame feedback in terms of a “stop, start, and continue” model, suggests Barron. What is the employee doing now that is not working? What are they doing that is highly effective? What actions should they adopt to be more so? By focusing on behaviors not dispositions, it takes the personal edge out of the conversation. Give specific advice and targeted praise. “Don’t say things like: ‘You need to be more proactive.’ That doesn’t mean anything. Say something like: ‘You need to take more initiative in calling potential sales leads.'” Similarly, “Saying: ‘You’re an innovator’ is nice but it’s helpful to know exactly what they’re doing that reflects that,” says Barron.

Hold your groundThe hot button issues associated with performance reviews are money and rank. If your company allows it, separate any talk of compensation from the performance review. “But if you must, do not save the salary information for the end of the conversation,” says Grote, “otherwise there’ll be an invisible parrot above the employees’ head squawking: how much? throughout the entire discussion.” Rank is another place for potential bruised feelings. A majority of companies require managers to rate their employees — often on a scale of1-5. Your goal is go over the data, and make a judgment call. Remember: the1-5 system is not analogous to the A-F grading scheme in school; most employees will get the middle rank, a3. This might leave some employees feeling let down, thinking they’re merely “average.” Don’t cave in. “In the corporate world, you’re dealing with a highly selective group,” says Grote. “The rules of the game have changed. In school, a C was mediocre, but a3 in the working world means they’re meeting expectations. They’re shooting par.” Conveying that message is a leadership challenge. “People can accept it rationally but it may be hard to accept viscerally,” he says. “This is why it’s so important to hold a performance planning meeting at the outset. If they hit their targets, they are a3. It’s a goal.”

Principles to Remember

Do

  • Make it clear at the beginning of the year how you’ll evaluate your employees with individual performance planning sessions
  • Give your employees a copy of their appraisal before the meeting so they may have their initial emotional response in private
  • Deliver a positive message to your good performers by mainly concentrating on their strengths and achievements during the conversation

Don’t

  • Offer general feedback; be specific on behaviors you want your employee to stop, start, and continue
  • Talk about compensation during the review; but if you must, divulge the salary information at the start of the conversation
  • Sugarcoat the review for your poor performers; use the face-to-face as an opportunity to demand improvement

Case Study #1: Understand and set goals togetherBen Snyder*, an expat working in London at a global media company, was new at his job. He inherited an employee, Jim, whose primary responsibility was to travel to Africa, the Middle East, and Russia to develop partnerships, which would ultimately drive sales to Ben’s business. But Jim wasn’t delivering.

“During quarterly performance reviews, Jim and I had long conversations about his approaches and the great relationships he was developing. I would tell him how glad I was that people were talking to him, that he was forming these relationships. But I also told him that that we needed tangible deals,” says Ben.

This happened for three straight quarters: same conversation, no deals. Increasingly, though, Ben was under pressure: Jim was spending a lot of the company’s money with nothing to show for it.

“I needed to scare him into action. At the next performance review, I gave Jim90 days to close a deal.”

Nothing changed and Jim was eliminated. “Even when we sat down with HR and let him go, he was genuinely surprised,” recalls Ben.

In retrospect, Ben says he went overboard in validating Jim’s spadework, and didn’t establish the right tone during their conversations. “The message wasn’t clear — Jim only heard what he wanted to hear — the positive praise about the relationship building. He ignored the demand to close deals.”

Ben also should have worked harder in the beginning to understand the specifics of Jim’s job, and set clear expectations. “It was a business I wasn’t familiar with. I didn’t know how to push him in the right direction because I wasn’t exactly sure what he was doing. I had never really sat down with him and defined what success should look like.

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