BackBackNextNext
4.3 Evaluating Performance (Continued)
  1. By overlooking instances of poor performance, you do yourself and your employee a disservice. You will lack proper documentation in the employee's personnel file if you subsequently decide to terminate the individual for continued unacceptable performance. And you prevent giving your employee a chance to fix whatever performance defects you've identified.
  2. Before a performance review, scan the employee's job description and the results of the last evaluation. Remind yourself of the goals and objectives that have been set for the employee and what related commitments both employee and employer have made over the past year, such as to provide training or modify the job requirements.
  3. You want to enter the meeting with a detailed understanding of the employee's history of performance evaluation and a clear sense of what you want to achieve for the future.
  1. Warning: Don't assume that you must only document performance problems. It's important to track what the employee does right as well. Maintain complete records on every worker in which you cite instances of both praiseworthy behavior and substandard behavior.
  1. THE EAP CAN HELP: When you evaluate your employee's performance, don't forget to consider a supervisor referral to the EAP based on unsatisfactory performance.
It's True!
It's True!
No one likes to receive �average� ratings in a performance review, so use a scale that avoids �average� and �below average.� Better examples include �poor, marginal, competent, above average and outstanding� or a numerical system that uses rankings of one to five.
Try This...
Experiment with this Performance Evaluation Behavioral Anchors Grid
BackBackNextNext