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The
Manager's Dilemma
Delivering Business Results and Developing Your Employees
This
article was published in the OD/Leadership News, April 2004
Author: Jill Ririe Walsleben
Lew
is a senior level manager at a professional services firm. At his
firm, managers are expected to do a lot. He is responsible for growing
his line of business, maintaining positive relationships with several
key clients and for overseeing the development of a ten-person consulting
team. In short, Lew faces a dual mandate of delivering business
results and developing his employees. As he sits down at his desk
and takes a sip from his first cup of coffee, Lew ponders how he
can accomplish all he needs to do. Client meetings, budget planning,
and completing the annual performance management process for his
team--all urgent and pressing business responsibilities-- are competing
for his time and attention. He wants to do the right thing, but
knows even with some effective delegation he can't get it all done.
As Lew looks at all the papers on his desk, he wonders what the
best way to prioritize his time is.
Anyone
who thinks being a manager is easy, has either never been one or
did not fully perform all the required roles. It is tough trying
to effectively balance your time between meeting employee, client
and organizational demands. Unfortunately, we cannot completely
solve Lew's dilemma. But in the area of performance management,
we can guide him to focus on those activities that will most significantly
accelerate individual development and drive performance improvement.
Before
we look at those activities, let's take a moment to look at performance
management in general. Historically, performance management was
an HR-driven process focused on assessing performance and documenting
results. But today in some companies, it has evolved to a business
management process--one that is focused on aligning individual and
team goals with business objectives to positively impact business
performance. Why is this happening? According to a 1996 study by
Hewitt Associates, companies with effective performance management
processes outperform other companies without such processes on every
financial and productivity measure used; including profits, cash
flow and stock market performance. According to the same study,
a well-designed and implemented performance management system can
bring about significant and measurable improvements in human performance
and a corresponding increase in a company's overall value.
Improving
employee performance is not just the responsibility of the manager.
It is a shared responsibility with organizational factors (such
as company culture and the performance management process) and employee-related
factors (such as the willingness to accept and act on feedback)
impacting its effectiveness. The most effective systems are those
where all the three elements work collaboratively. However, according
to a 2003 study conducted by the Corporate Executive Board (CEB)
almost half of the many activities that organizations, employees
and managers conduct to improve individual performance, relate directly
to the role of the manager. So if managers play such an important
role in driving performance improvement, what specifically should
managers being doing? Do all manager-related activities have the
same impact, or are some more impactful than others? According to
the study, managers can drive performance improvement by targeting
their efforts at a handful of activities which have the potential
for improving employee performance by 25%. These activities are
the following:
-
Provide fair and accurate informal feedback
- During
the performance review meeting, emphasize performance strengths
- Be
knowledgeable about the employee's performance
- Provide
feedback that will help the employee do their job better
Alternatively,
managers should steer away from the following activities, as they
most likely will result in a decrease in performance:
- Frequent
changes to projects and assignments
- During
the performance review meeting, emphasizing performance weaknesses
- Emphasizing
performance weaknesses during informal feedback
- Emphasizing
personality weaknesses during the performance review meeting
While
a well-designed and implemented performance management process is
one of the most effective tools an organization has to drive high-performance,
employee perceptions of their mid-level and front-line managers
(according to a 2002-2003 study conducted by Aon) suggest that their
managers are lacking in critical management skills. This is troubling
as an employee's decision to stay with, or leave an organization,
is often based on his or her relationship with an immediate supervisor.
Company's that educate and train their managers to conduct the most
highly leveraged performance improvement activities will reap a
variety of rewards, including increased productivity and enhanced
employee retention.
Failure
to find the time to effectively execute everything from big-picture
strategic goals to narrow individual objectives is a problem shared
by all managers. Lew had it right. He knew what he needed to accomplish,
he just wasn't sure the most effective way to get there. When managers
get it right, research shows they increase revenues, shareholder
value, interest from institutional investors and employee satisfaction.
Are there some "Lew's" in your organization who might benefit from
some help in prioritizing their performance management activities?
Jill
Ririe Walsleben is a principal at The Wynhurst Group, LLC, a human
resources consulting firm focusing on HR strategy consulting and
employee development solutions. To learn more about The Wynhurst
Group, visit their website at www.thewynhurstgroup.com
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