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How to conduct a performance review
4 minutes | Travis O’Rourke | Article | Leadership Managing a team Learning and development
In today’s competitive market for top talent, performance reviews are essential to retention. With the correct preparation and a positive mind set, you can use the review as an opportunity to:
Contrary to popular opinion, many employees look forward to their performance review. The performance review is a chance for staff to:
1. Preparation
Preparation is essential. Have your employee complete a pre-review form and compare answers with previous review notes and assess:
2. The review
Do not reschedule. Ensure the employee knows this is important to you and the business. As a guideline, allow an hour for the review and hold all calls. Have an agenda and review it at the start of the meeting. Explain the importance of the review and that the purpose is to focus on the employee. The discussion should centre on the following:
3. Handling confrontation
You may be required to communicate that the employee is failing in a particular aspect of the job. This could be as simple as timekeeping or personal appearance, or more sensitive, such as competence at specific tasks or ability to get on with colleagues. Be prepared:
Raising issues: The opportunity to ‘raise other issues’ can result into personal gripes about other members of staff, complaints about office ergonomics, accusations of unfair treatment and grievances about workload or resources. Despite the size or nature of the complaint, the issue can be of great magnitude to the employee.
Think on your feet and get to the root of the issue:
4. Providing a career map
Help your staff build a career map. It can help clarify for your employee, his or her future ideals for career progression, and for you, as an employer, it identifies specific areas that require training – and also the strengths of individual employees that can be built upon. Before the review, have your employee complete the following exercise to review in the meeting:
5. Post-review action
It’s essential to make the action points actually happen – and be seen to be making them happen. If you’ve committed to exploring further training or arranging meetings with other departments, then find out or get these sessions set up as soon as you can. The quickest way to lose valuable staff is to allow decisions made at reviews fall by the wayside.
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Travis O'Rourke President of Hays Canada & CCO, Hays Americas
Travis is a Marketing graduate from Fanshawe College and was the 2023 recipient of their Distinguished Alumni Award. He joined Hays after holding various leadership roles elsewhere in the Canadian staffing industry. Travis setup and established Hays' outsourced talent solutions business and played an integral role in building Hays’ temporary and contract divisions throughout Canada. Initially joining Hays with a deep background in Technology, he holds extensive cross functional knowledge to provide clients with talent solutions in Financial Services, Energy, Mining, Manufacturing, Retail, and the Public Sector.