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Provide training. Give feedback to reinforce learning. Providing Positive Feedback. Rarely do employees receive more than enough feedback, ...
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Follow the Guidelines for Effective Interpersonal Communication
There are fundamental strategies that should always be part of interpersonal communication in the work place.
¸ Don’t personalize the situation or behavior, concentrate on the facts. ¸ Be considerate and respectful of the other person. ¸ Develop productive alliances with others in the work place. ¸ Be an example.
Don’t personalize the situation or behavior, concentrate on the facts:
By focusing on facts, you minimize blame, reduce defensive reactions, and encourage cooperation.
In difficult or negative situations,
“You vs. I” statements
“You” statements tend to be received defensively—they blame, judge, and assume things that may not be true. “I” messages let the employee respond with his or her perspective on the situation.
“YOU did this.” “This is what I observed.” “YOU shouldn’t have done that.” “Here’s how I think.. .” “YOU must be crazy.” “It’s important that we talk about this.”
Simply beginning a statement with the word “I” doesn’t make it an effective statement.
“I feel frustrated when you don’t get your reports to me on time.” Vs. “I feel frustrated when I don’t have the reports in time for the 2: meeting.”
Be considerate and respectful of the other person.
Employees work best when they feel they are making a contribution to the client and the company. Each person needs to feel confident that they can do the job. As a supervisor or manager, the confidence you show (or don’t show) in your employees affects their performance.
It’s importa nt to give positive feedback to others in the organization based on their efforts, as well as their results. Show them that you believe they have the ability to do the job well.
Say “Thank you” to others to show your appreciation for the contributions they make to the organization.
Remember...
Look at the following phrases:
“You’ll have to take this to George.” “You’ll have to have it ready in time for the meeting.”
Communication is made up of three parts—
55% non verbal —expressions, gestures
38% tone of voice
7% actual words
Take advantage of opportunities to show your co-workers and others you work with that you are interested in them. Be courteous and appreciative. Treat them the way you want to be treated.
Handle small problems while they’re small—don’t let them build into bigger problems. Keep focused on the future. It might feel good to unload occasionally, but generally it’s not worth it.
Keep the goals of the organization in mind, and continue to develop collaborative relationships between co-workers, departments, and governing agencies.
Be an example.
What you do is often more important than what you say.
In your leadership role, your actions show others:
q The priorities of the organization and your work group. q How to deal with change. q How to consider department goals and objectives to make good decisions. q Whether it is worth the risk to suggest improvements. q What you value.
The way you handle situations and issues is looked at by others as a guide to what you think is important and what is important. Employees model their behavior based on what they see you do.
First , be sure you understand what your department’s and your priorities and goals are.
Second , look for opportunities to show your commitment to those priorities and goals.
Coaching is frequent, specific feedback designed to raise the level of performance. It has many important applications and functions:
ÿ To improve poor performance Look for patterns in the employee’s behavior. If you see a performance problem or a potential performance problem, determine if the employee understands what is expected, what obstacles might be preventing good performance, and whether there is a lack of skills, training, or motivation.
ÿ To maintain standard performance Give praise to keep performance on track. If the person wants to expand skills, allow for appropriate training.
ÿ To encourage employees to exceed performance standards Praise to keep performance on track. Provide training to expand skills. Mentor for increased responsibility. Assign special projects, if possible.
ÿ To assist employees in developing new skills Provide training. Give feedback to reinforce learning.
Effective coaches help others to achieve results by building on their strengths, developing their skills, providing encouragement, and increasing their confidence. It requires getting the employee to examine his own performance and find ways to improve performance. Coaching uses informal work progress discussions, formal performance reviews, and workday “coachable moments.”
Learn to identify coaching opportunities and act on them—person asks, is struggling or stuck, expresses the desire to improve, has a negative attitude, etc.
Would you be interested.. .? Would you like to discuss.. .?
Encourage the employee to analyze his own performance. The employee’s input might give the coach new information about the problem.
Performance-based feedback should be balanced; it should reflect the array of activities, behaviors, and progress employees have made related to their work assignments and responsibilities. Feedback can reflect positive performance, competent performance, or needs improvement performance. In any of these cases, it should be direct, specific, and reasonably assessed.
Frequent, specific feedback is designed to raise the level of performance. It has many important applications and functions:
ÿ To improve poor performance Look for patterns in the employee’s behavior. If you see a performance problem or a potential performance problem, determine if the employee understands what is expected, what obstacles might be preventing good performance, and whether there is a lack of skills, training, or motivation.
ÿ To maintain standard performance Give praise to keep performance on track. If the person wants to expand skills, allow for appropriate training.
ÿ To encourage employees to exceed performance standards Praise to keep performance on track. Provide training to expand skills. Mentor for increased responsibility. Assign special projects, if possible.
ÿ To assist employees in developing new skills Provide training. Give feedback to reinforce learning.
Rarely do employees receive more than enough feedback, let alone more than enough positive feedback. Conditioning theory and practical experience tell us that positive feedback and praise produce more of the desired behavior. For employees learning new tasks or doing good work, providing positive communication is invaluable to continuing the learning or good work. Here are some examples of positive communication that is specific, constructive, and reinforcing :
“I want to thank you for the work you’ve done on… The user reports that their productivity has greatly improved since you worked on their tracking system.”
“Good work on improving the proposal. You have done a much better job of assessing your audience, defining problems, and developing specific, doable recommendations.”
“It has been difficult learning this material. It’s clear to me from your application reviews that you’ve got a good eye for the details of the application process. That will help our clients.”
These simple statements, which do not cost any money to give, will produce positive results in productivity and future quality work.
Give praise
Use the Willing/Able – Unwilling/Unable Matrix
Your performance evaluation process may benefit from figuring out whether your problem performer has a “willingness” or “ability” problem. Look at the grid below:
The employee is:
What characteristics demonstrate this condition?
What characteristics demonstrate this condition?
What characteristics demonstrate this condition?
What characteristics demonstrate this condition?
Your solution to employee performance problems will depend on whether the employee has the ability or willingness to do the job. If the employee cannot do the job because he/she doesn’t have the skill, your solution will be more training and skill development. If the employee can do the job but will not, you will have to discern the obstacle to performance.
After answering your planning questions, you are ready to use your best communication skills to have your feedback session with your employee.