Turning performance reviews into a tool for greatness
Thursday, April 30, 2009
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by
ASTD Staff
Performance-review time often scares the willies out of both
managers and employees. But it doesn't have to be that way. I am
currently reading the edited manuscript for Ultimate
Performance Management by Jeff and Linda Russell, and I think
they may be on to something.... The book is part of a new ASTD
Press series, the Ultimate series, which is a spinoff of
the ASTD Trainer's WorkShop series and is designed to give
you everything you could ever need to train people in a particular
area. Other books that are currently planned for the series are
Elaine Biech's ASTD's Ultimate Train the Trainer and
Christee Gabour Atwood's Ultimate Basic Business Skills
Training.
But I am getting off topic, I wanted to talk about Jeff and Linda's
book, which deals with transforming the scary once- or maybe
twice-annual performance review into an ongoing development tool
that enables people to go from "Eh, well, I am doing OK," to "Wow!
I am doing GREAT!" The book presents a series of workshop designs
that transform the performance review from a single retrospective
event into an ongoing, forward-looking development process. Jeff
and Linda present a larger performance management framework called
the Great Performance Management Cycle, which has much of its roots
in ideas from Chris Argyris, Donald Schn,
and others. Implementing the framework probably requires a fairly
substantial change in the way that organizations manage their
people, but has potentially huge benefits for employees, their
managers, and the organization as a whole. This is because the
ongoing coaching conversations that Jeff and Linda advocate enable
employees to feel heard and be encouraged to do great things,
managers are encouraged to help their employees achieve those great
things, and the organization as a whole reaps the rewards of all
those great things.
The book primarily provides everything that a trainer or
facilitator would need to facilitate workshops for managers and
employees on the new performance management model, including lots
of training tools, participant handouts, training instruments, and
learning activities--all of which is good, practical,
here's-how-get-it-done stuff. However, for me, the heart of the
book is chapter 2, which explains the theory and thinking behind
the model and is a fascinating read.
Turning performance reviews into a tool for greatness
ASTD Staff
2009-04-30