SlideShare uma empresa Scribd logo
1 de 29
A travel guide to peak performance
The next 4 stages to reinvent
Performance Management
What is Agile Performance Management?
2
As of now, we suggest adjustment towards:
• Agreeing commitments Setting goals
• Helping managers everyone coach others
• Providing more continuous micro feedback, support, and
growth or change (shifting the focus from annual evaluation
and rankings to continuous feedback feed forward and
development just in time learning)
• Being more collaborative, social, and faster-moving
• Providing people analytics for decision support
…. and this will continue to evolve
3
Last time we commenced our journey
Plan your route
Which direction will you take, how far do you want
to go, and how to avoid the sinkholes
Prepare for your journey
Pump up the tyres, check the warning lights and fill
up the fuel tank
The hill climb
How to overcome resistance and build momentum
Getting to know your travel companions
The essential relationship skills for an enjoyable trip
Recap: The 4 essential first stages
4
Today we’re entering tougher terrain
Traffic Jams and Scenic Lookouts
The 3 causes of upset and how to work around
them
Picking up hitchhikers
How do you get support for the change, and which
types of supporter can help with what
Alternate Route
Changing your attitude to embrace conflict
Stop! Are you ready to remove ratings
If you are planning to remove performance ratings,
what are the pre-requisites?
The next 4 stages to create an agile culture
Traffic Jams and Scenic Lookouts
5
To put it simply, 3 things cause upset#
6
Simplification can be useful in agile approaches
1. Withheld Communication
2. Unfulfilled Expectations
3. Thwarted Intentions
What should we do when upset rears it’s head?
# Originally from Werner Erhard/Landmark Education
Withheld Communication
7
Growth Mindset requires risk taking & courage
Cause of the Jam Things to do at the Scenic Lookout
Withheld Communication
Communication that is not clear occurs when our message is
not heard the way we want it to be. Not communicating
clearly leads to conflict through misunderstanding
Communication that is not direct occurs when we fear there
will be consequences for speaking the truth. Tacit repression
leads to conflict through resentment.
Communication that is not complete occurs when we leave it
to the listener to fill in the blanks. This causes conflict through
confusion and fear of failure.
In Understanding your travelling companions we looked at differences in
communication styles. Acknowledging varying communication styles and
perspectives explains why clear communication can be challenging.
MindTools have a great checklist covering the 7 C's of clear
communication here
(https://www.mindtools.com/pages/article/newCS_85.htM)
Overcoming fear is a harder nut to crack. In her book "The Psychology
of Fear in Organizations" Sheila M. Keegan advises
•Build trust. That means being straightforward, admitting
mistakes, keeping promises, showing vulnerability and letting
go of grievances.
•Improve your listening skills. Focus on what your employees
are saying to you. Hear and interpret their verbal and nonverbal
communication. Maintain a neutral and open attitude. Most
importantly, don’t judge.
•Encourage risk-taking and reward courage. Urge employees to
experiment, learn and improvise. Help them rediscover their
sense of joy and intrinsic reward of working.
•Treat employees with respect. Acknowledge their worth and
help them succeed.
Another great book in support of speaking up is "The Courageous
Follower" by Ira Chaleff
Unfulfilled Expectation
8
Improper delegation is a disaster waiting to happen
Cause of the Jam Things to do at the Scenic Lookout
Unfulfilled Expectations
We expect something to happen as a result of others, and it does not.
This causes conflict through attachment of blame
Our work life is filled with many expectations; how we behave, what we produce,
what we wear, when and how we are appreciated, and the knowledge, skills and
resources we bring to work for example.
The cardinal rule is an implicit expectation is an unrealistic one rather than an
unfulfilled one, so make sure expectations are explicit (and consistently applied) as
your starting point.
Assuming you've done that, you've narrowed the expectation gap to unfulfilled
realistic expectations. Follow an expectation management lifecycle to handle these.
Assignment - Progression - Delivery - Closure
Assignment
If expectations are being set for you make sure you know the context by asking
questions. What's expected, how might it be achieved, when is the outcome
needed, what is it's priority against other things, and how will success be measured.
If you're setting expectations and get no questions, ask for your brief to be echoed
back to you and listen carefully that it's fully understood.
Progression
Get incremental buy-in, it will always work better than a fait accompli.
Raise challenges or failure early, there's nothing worse than facing failure without
any options to avoid it.
If you're holding expectations, check-in often (not to be confused with
micromanagement) to guide the outcome you're seeking.
Delivery
Leave contingency for corrections (e.g. time & budget).
Collaborate to finalise work whenever possible to close any expectation gaps jointly.
Closure
Once an expectation has been met it's important to reach closure. That's your time
to appreciate the work done, reflect on the experience and refine expectations for
the future.
The main thing throughout this lifecycle is to leave no doubt that expectations are
being met and immediately address where they are not.
Thwarted Intentions
9
Do you have people ‘winning at all costs’?
Cause of the Jam Things to do at the Scenic Lookout
Thwarted Intentions
We wish to take action but are unsuccessful due to
Lack of skill
Lack of will
Lack of time
Lack of resources
This leads to conflict because of guilt and remorse
Being intentional is encouraged.
Intentions are how we commit to learning, to goals and to doing our
best.
Problems arise though when people become attached to their
intentions rather than committed to them.
Attachment limits objectivity, flexibility and creativity and instead
fuels us to "win at all costs".
It's visible as anxiety, fatigue and competition.
Build a culture that celebrates the insight from failure as a way to
reflect, learn, reframe intentions and recommit and you'll see
increases in innovation and contribution.
Supplement that with a process that rewards the way goals are met,
and not just that goals are met and you'll start to weed out those
people winning at all costs and burning everyone around them.
The principle of winning the right way is one of my personal
passions. I highly recommend you read "Winning Well: A Manager's
Guide to Getting Results---Without Losing Your Soul" by Karin Hurt
and David Dye
.
Picking up Hitchhikers
10
What is your stand?
11
How do people decide if they want to join in?
What’s the one simple thing
that people can do to be seen
to be part of your
‘movement’?
Are you standing up for meaningful work?
Are you standing against anxiety in the
workplace?
Standing for lifelong learning and supportiveness,
for recognition and appreciation, for autonomy,
empowerment, transparency
or against ineffective bureaucracy, artificial
hierarchy, or dog-eat-dog extrinsic motivation
schemes?
Be easy to follow
12
Favouring followers drives momentum
There will be people craving an agile
performance management culture
Supporting them is a better use of
energy that coercing others
The tipping point is where it
becomes less risky to join than not
to join the change
Using 3 types of influencers
13
Network Analytics help to visualize the people dynamic
Connectors - people in the network
who bond others together and span
social, cultural and economic circles
Mavens - people who connect us to
new information and start word-of-
mouth epidemics
Salesmen - charismatic people with
powerful negotiation skills needed
to persuade others
Taken from “The Tipping Point” Malcolm Gladwell
Take a firm line on detractors
14
Change the people or change the people
1. Listen to their concerns and make reasonable
adjustments if needed
2.Encourage a growth mindset to fight their self-
sabotage
3. Isolate the detractor from situations where they
can sour others (particularly if they are influential)
4. Remove the detractor from the environment
completely
Alternate Route
15
Conflict – Good or Bad?
16
There is potentially great value from conflict
"There is giant untapped potential in
disagreement, especially if the disagreement is
between two or more thoughtful people".
Ray Dalio CEO Bridgewater Associates
It depends!
17
or possibly high cost
On average US employees spend 3
hours a week dealing with conflict
27% of employees report conflict
led to personal insults and attacks
22% of employees report conflict led
to illness and absence from work
10% report project failure being a direct
result of conflict
Psychologically, conflict is
a disagreement that
represents a perceived
threat to position,
interests or needs.
In Australia exit interviews reveal that
chronic unresolved conflict is a decisive
factor in at least 50% of all employee
departures
The push & pull
18
Surfacing & resolving is critical
• Leaders speaking last during ideation or
problem solving, avoiding prejudicing the
dialogue or outcome
• Celebrating those who openly question
decisions or challenge the status quo
• Appointing a devil's advocate in
meetings to search for problems,
shortcomings and oversights with group
decisions or plans
• Getting tough on team members who
later show they had withheld perspective
that could have been valuable if tabled
1. Focus on the facts and
behaviours in question
2. State the impact on you, your
team or the company
3. Consider why a rational and
ethical person would indulge the
facts or behaviours that are
troubling you
4. Know what is non-negotiable
to you and why
Push conflict handling skills Pull conflict out into the open
5 levels of conflict
19
Though sometimes not necessary or possible
Differences
Misunderstandings
Disagreements
Discord
Polarization
Stop!
20
Rating Reliance
21
Why the dilemma?
A proxy for recognition
To simplify communication
Bonus eligibility
Salary Level
Promotion/Succession
Performance Improvement Plans
Talent Management
Learning & Development
HiPo Acceleration
etc….
3 inherent flaws
22
Alternatives don’t carry this baggage
BIASED THREATENING HISTORICAL
HR Data is everywhere
23
Use current data & people analytics for decisions
Remove the rubric
24
Ask reviewers what they undisputedly know
Given what I know of this person’s
performance, and if it were my money, I
would award this person the highest
possible compensation increase and
bonus.
Given what I know of this person’s
performance, I would always want him or
her on my team.
This person is at risk for low performance.
This person is ready for promotion today.
Multiply your data points
25
The more in-year reviews there are more informed periodic decisions become
Capture the stories, calculate the score
26
Qualitative data can become quantitative with algorithms
Rebekah was extremely
knowledgeable, very helpful, great
personality, explained everything
& always with a smile … her
assistance & patience prompts me
to acknowledge her & refer her to
my friends who need the same
assistance that I did. Thank you.
Rebekah works in the Electronics
Department of Target in
Selinsgrove, PA, United States
“Please give us your feedback” Based on your most recent experience, on a scale
of 0 to 10 where 0 is not at all likely and 10 is
extremely likely, how likely would you be to
recommend us to your friends or colleagues?
1 2 43 5 6 7 8 9 10
Consider retaining 1 last rating
27
If beliefs don’t align, the rest doesn’t matter
I believe what you believe
28
Look out for the next 4 stages of the journey
I-spy Bias
Learn more ….
29
www.paycompliment.com/xecr1r
www.paycompliment.com/blog

Mais conteúdo relacionado

Mais procurados

atd15-Building agile cultures-Chikmagalur Mohan
atd15-Building agile cultures-Chikmagalur Mohanatd15-Building agile cultures-Chikmagalur Mohan
atd15-Building agile cultures-Chikmagalur Mohan
Madhur Kathuria
 
What's Your Employee Ownership Quotient?
What's Your Employee Ownership Quotient?What's Your Employee Ownership Quotient?
What's Your Employee Ownership Quotient?
powerservice
 

Mais procurados (20)

The Extraordinary Coach Workshop
The Extraordinary Coach WorkshopThe Extraordinary Coach Workshop
The Extraordinary Coach Workshop
 
Can Strengths be Taken Too Far?
Can Strengths be Taken Too Far?Can Strengths be Taken Too Far?
Can Strengths be Taken Too Far?
 
4 Reasons Leadership Development Fails
4 Reasons Leadership Development Fails4 Reasons Leadership Development Fails
4 Reasons Leadership Development Fails
 
Strengths-based Leadership Development
Strengths-based Leadership DevelopmentStrengths-based Leadership Development
Strengths-based Leadership Development
 
Driving Higher Performance: Leadership and Development Tools to Positively Im...
Driving Higher Performance: Leadership and Development Tools to Positively Im...Driving Higher Performance: Leadership and Development Tools to Positively Im...
Driving Higher Performance: Leadership and Development Tools to Positively Im...
 
atd15-Building agile cultures-Chikmagalur Mohan
atd15-Building agile cultures-Chikmagalur Mohanatd15-Building agile cultures-Chikmagalur Mohan
atd15-Building agile cultures-Chikmagalur Mohan
 
Developing Leaders of Growth: 5 Leadership Success Factors for Fast Growth
Developing Leaders of Growth:  5 Leadership Success Factors for Fast GrowthDeveloping Leaders of Growth:  5 Leadership Success Factors for Fast Growth
Developing Leaders of Growth: 5 Leadership Success Factors for Fast Growth
 
What I've learned about Culture Transformation...
What I've learned about Culture Transformation...What I've learned about Culture Transformation...
What I've learned about Culture Transformation...
 
What's Your Employee Ownership Quotient?
What's Your Employee Ownership Quotient?What's Your Employee Ownership Quotient?
What's Your Employee Ownership Quotient?
 
Navigating the 7 Cs of Good Leadership
Navigating the 7 Cs of Good LeadershipNavigating the 7 Cs of Good Leadership
Navigating the 7 Cs of Good Leadership
 
Making the Business Case for Building Effective Business Leaders
Making the Business Case for Building Effective Business LeadersMaking the Business Case for Building Effective Business Leaders
Making the Business Case for Building Effective Business Leaders
 
Four Elements of Effective Performance Management
Four Elements of Effective Performance ManagementFour Elements of Effective Performance Management
Four Elements of Effective Performance Management
 
Sustaining excellence through leadership in the new normal
Sustaining excellence through leadership in the new normalSustaining excellence through leadership in the new normal
Sustaining excellence through leadership in the new normal
 
The Unintended Outcomes of Unconscious Bias in Performance Management
The Unintended Outcomes of Unconscious Bias in Performance ManagementThe Unintended Outcomes of Unconscious Bias in Performance Management
The Unintended Outcomes of Unconscious Bias in Performance Management
 
What is the InsideOut Mindset?
What is the InsideOut Mindset?What is the InsideOut Mindset?
What is the InsideOut Mindset?
 
Agile camp2016 leadingothers
Agile camp2016 leadingothersAgile camp2016 leadingothers
Agile camp2016 leadingothers
 
Working at PI
Working at PIWorking at PI
Working at PI
 
Agile Network India | Coaching is not just for Agile Coaches | Vaibhav Sharma
Agile Network India | Coaching is not just for Agile Coaches | Vaibhav Sharma Agile Network India | Coaching is not just for Agile Coaches | Vaibhav Sharma
Agile Network India | Coaching is not just for Agile Coaches | Vaibhav Sharma
 
Manager vs. leader
Manager vs. leaderManager vs. leader
Manager vs. leader
 
Leadership Workshop
Leadership WorkshopLeadership Workshop
Leadership Workshop
 

Semelhante a The next stages of your journey to agile performance management

7 Habits of Highly Effective People
7 Habits of Highly Effective People7 Habits of Highly Effective People
7 Habits of Highly Effective People
sandeep kotla
 
AARPUHC_Frost&Sullivan_2015
AARPUHC_Frost&Sullivan_2015AARPUHC_Frost&Sullivan_2015
AARPUHC_Frost&Sullivan_2015
Marla J Hetzel
 
Brian CosgroveProSpective Assessment
Brian CosgroveProSpective AssessmentBrian CosgroveProSpective Assessment
Brian CosgroveProSpective Assessment
Brian Cosgrove
 
Complacency change-mgt
Complacency change-mgtComplacency change-mgt
Complacency change-mgt
Ali Kamran
 

Semelhante a The next stages of your journey to agile performance management (20)

12 signs your culture is broken
12 signs your culture is broken12 signs your culture is broken
12 signs your culture is broken
 
Soft Skills as Transferable Skills - What, Why & How?
Soft Skills as Transferable Skills - What, Why & How? Soft Skills as Transferable Skills - What, Why & How?
Soft Skills as Transferable Skills - What, Why & How?
 
INFLUENCE: A Brain-based Approach for Stand-out Leadership
INFLUENCE: A Brain-based Approach for Stand-out LeadershipINFLUENCE: A Brain-based Approach for Stand-out Leadership
INFLUENCE: A Brain-based Approach for Stand-out Leadership
 
The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People (summary).pdf
The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People (summary).pdfThe 7 Habits of Highly Effective People (summary).pdf
The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People (summary).pdf
 
Secrets Of Winning Ways
Secrets Of Winning WaysSecrets Of Winning Ways
Secrets Of Winning Ways
 
Leading Without Formal Authority
Leading Without Formal AuthorityLeading Without Formal Authority
Leading Without Formal Authority
 
Success factors to lead the team
Success factors to lead the teamSuccess factors to lead the team
Success factors to lead the team
 
7 Habits of Highly Effective People
7 Habits of Highly Effective People7 Habits of Highly Effective People
7 Habits of Highly Effective People
 
Leading With Authenticity, Vulnerability, Inclusivity, Trust, and Reflection
Leading With Authenticity, Vulnerability, Inclusivity, Trust, and ReflectionLeading With Authenticity, Vulnerability, Inclusivity, Trust, and Reflection
Leading With Authenticity, Vulnerability, Inclusivity, Trust, and Reflection
 
AARPUHC_Frost&Sullivan_2015
AARPUHC_Frost&Sullivan_2015AARPUHC_Frost&Sullivan_2015
AARPUHC_Frost&Sullivan_2015
 
YUVRAJ MANAGERIAL FILE.pdf
YUVRAJ MANAGERIAL FILE.pdfYUVRAJ MANAGERIAL FILE.pdf
YUVRAJ MANAGERIAL FILE.pdf
 
Brian CosgroveProSpective Assessment
Brian CosgroveProSpective AssessmentBrian CosgroveProSpective Assessment
Brian CosgroveProSpective Assessment
 
Engaged teams slide deck
Engaged teams slide deckEngaged teams slide deck
Engaged teams slide deck
 
Avoiding the Five Temptations of a Student Leader
Avoiding the Five Temptations of a Student LeaderAvoiding the Five Temptations of a Student Leader
Avoiding the Five Temptations of a Student Leader
 
Models of Educational leadership
Models of Educational leadershipModels of Educational leadership
Models of Educational leadership
 
Art of Leadership Nov 2017
Art of Leadership Nov 2017Art of Leadership Nov 2017
Art of Leadership Nov 2017
 
The role of Psychological Safety & Mission Critical Behaviours for organizati...
The role of Psychological Safety & Mission Critical Behaviours for organizati...The role of Psychological Safety & Mission Critical Behaviours for organizati...
The role of Psychological Safety & Mission Critical Behaviours for organizati...
 
Complacency change-mgt
Complacency change-mgtComplacency change-mgt
Complacency change-mgt
 
Spireworks guiding principles
Spireworks guiding principlesSpireworks guiding principles
Spireworks guiding principles
 
P.11.what are soft skills (2)
P.11.what are soft skills (2)P.11.what are soft skills (2)
P.11.what are soft skills (2)
 

Último

Beyond the Codes_Repositioning towards sustainable development
Beyond the Codes_Repositioning towards sustainable developmentBeyond the Codes_Repositioning towards sustainable development
Beyond the Codes_Repositioning towards sustainable development
Nimot Muili
 
Abortion pills in Jeddah |• +966572737505 ] GET CYTOTEC
Abortion pills in Jeddah |• +966572737505 ] GET CYTOTECAbortion pills in Jeddah |• +966572737505 ] GET CYTOTEC
Abortion pills in Jeddah |• +966572737505 ] GET CYTOTEC
Abortion pills in Riyadh +966572737505 get cytotec
 
internship thesis pakistan aeronautical complex kamra
internship thesis pakistan aeronautical complex kamrainternship thesis pakistan aeronautical complex kamra
internship thesis pakistan aeronautical complex kamra
AllTops
 
The Psychology Of Motivation - Richard Brown
The Psychology Of Motivation - Richard BrownThe Psychology Of Motivation - Richard Brown
The Psychology Of Motivation - Richard Brown
SandaliGurusinghe2
 

Último (14)

How Software Developers Destroy Business Value.pptx
How Software Developers Destroy Business Value.pptxHow Software Developers Destroy Business Value.pptx
How Software Developers Destroy Business Value.pptx
 
Information Technology Project Management, Revised 7th edition test bank.docx
Information Technology Project Management, Revised 7th edition test bank.docxInformation Technology Project Management, Revised 7th edition test bank.docx
Information Technology Project Management, Revised 7th edition test bank.docx
 
Siliguri Escorts Service Girl ^ 9332606886, WhatsApp Anytime Siliguri
Siliguri Escorts Service Girl ^ 9332606886, WhatsApp Anytime SiliguriSiliguri Escorts Service Girl ^ 9332606886, WhatsApp Anytime Siliguri
Siliguri Escorts Service Girl ^ 9332606886, WhatsApp Anytime Siliguri
 
W.H.Bender Quote 62 - Always strive to be a Hospitality Service professional
W.H.Bender Quote 62 - Always strive to be a Hospitality Service professionalW.H.Bender Quote 62 - Always strive to be a Hospitality Service professional
W.H.Bender Quote 62 - Always strive to be a Hospitality Service professional
 
Gautam Buddh Nagar Call Girls 🥰 8617370543 Service Offer VIP Hot Model
Gautam Buddh Nagar Call Girls 🥰 8617370543 Service Offer VIP Hot ModelGautam Buddh Nagar Call Girls 🥰 8617370543 Service Offer VIP Hot Model
Gautam Buddh Nagar Call Girls 🥰 8617370543 Service Offer VIP Hot Model
 
Persuasive and Communication is the art of negotiation.
Persuasive and Communication is the art of negotiation.Persuasive and Communication is the art of negotiation.
Persuasive and Communication is the art of negotiation.
 
Beyond the Codes_Repositioning towards sustainable development
Beyond the Codes_Repositioning towards sustainable developmentBeyond the Codes_Repositioning towards sustainable development
Beyond the Codes_Repositioning towards sustainable development
 
digital Human resource management presentation.pdf
digital Human resource management presentation.pdfdigital Human resource management presentation.pdf
digital Human resource management presentation.pdf
 
International Ocean Transportation p.pdf
International Ocean Transportation p.pdfInternational Ocean Transportation p.pdf
International Ocean Transportation p.pdf
 
Marketing Management 16th edition by Philip Kotler test bank.docx
Marketing Management 16th edition by Philip Kotler test bank.docxMarketing Management 16th edition by Philip Kotler test bank.docx
Marketing Management 16th edition by Philip Kotler test bank.docx
 
Abortion pills in Jeddah |• +966572737505 ] GET CYTOTEC
Abortion pills in Jeddah |• +966572737505 ] GET CYTOTECAbortion pills in Jeddah |• +966572737505 ] GET CYTOTEC
Abortion pills in Jeddah |• +966572737505 ] GET CYTOTEC
 
internship thesis pakistan aeronautical complex kamra
internship thesis pakistan aeronautical complex kamrainternship thesis pakistan aeronautical complex kamra
internship thesis pakistan aeronautical complex kamra
 
Safety T fire missions army field Artillery
Safety T fire missions army field ArtillerySafety T fire missions army field Artillery
Safety T fire missions army field Artillery
 
The Psychology Of Motivation - Richard Brown
The Psychology Of Motivation - Richard BrownThe Psychology Of Motivation - Richard Brown
The Psychology Of Motivation - Richard Brown
 

The next stages of your journey to agile performance management

  • 1. A travel guide to peak performance The next 4 stages to reinvent Performance Management
  • 2. What is Agile Performance Management? 2 As of now, we suggest adjustment towards: • Agreeing commitments Setting goals • Helping managers everyone coach others • Providing more continuous micro feedback, support, and growth or change (shifting the focus from annual evaluation and rankings to continuous feedback feed forward and development just in time learning) • Being more collaborative, social, and faster-moving • Providing people analytics for decision support …. and this will continue to evolve
  • 3. 3 Last time we commenced our journey Plan your route Which direction will you take, how far do you want to go, and how to avoid the sinkholes Prepare for your journey Pump up the tyres, check the warning lights and fill up the fuel tank The hill climb How to overcome resistance and build momentum Getting to know your travel companions The essential relationship skills for an enjoyable trip Recap: The 4 essential first stages
  • 4. 4 Today we’re entering tougher terrain Traffic Jams and Scenic Lookouts The 3 causes of upset and how to work around them Picking up hitchhikers How do you get support for the change, and which types of supporter can help with what Alternate Route Changing your attitude to embrace conflict Stop! Are you ready to remove ratings If you are planning to remove performance ratings, what are the pre-requisites? The next 4 stages to create an agile culture
  • 5. Traffic Jams and Scenic Lookouts 5
  • 6. To put it simply, 3 things cause upset# 6 Simplification can be useful in agile approaches 1. Withheld Communication 2. Unfulfilled Expectations 3. Thwarted Intentions What should we do when upset rears it’s head? # Originally from Werner Erhard/Landmark Education
  • 7. Withheld Communication 7 Growth Mindset requires risk taking & courage Cause of the Jam Things to do at the Scenic Lookout Withheld Communication Communication that is not clear occurs when our message is not heard the way we want it to be. Not communicating clearly leads to conflict through misunderstanding Communication that is not direct occurs when we fear there will be consequences for speaking the truth. Tacit repression leads to conflict through resentment. Communication that is not complete occurs when we leave it to the listener to fill in the blanks. This causes conflict through confusion and fear of failure. In Understanding your travelling companions we looked at differences in communication styles. Acknowledging varying communication styles and perspectives explains why clear communication can be challenging. MindTools have a great checklist covering the 7 C's of clear communication here (https://www.mindtools.com/pages/article/newCS_85.htM) Overcoming fear is a harder nut to crack. In her book "The Psychology of Fear in Organizations" Sheila M. Keegan advises •Build trust. That means being straightforward, admitting mistakes, keeping promises, showing vulnerability and letting go of grievances. •Improve your listening skills. Focus on what your employees are saying to you. Hear and interpret their verbal and nonverbal communication. Maintain a neutral and open attitude. Most importantly, don’t judge. •Encourage risk-taking and reward courage. Urge employees to experiment, learn and improvise. Help them rediscover their sense of joy and intrinsic reward of working. •Treat employees with respect. Acknowledge their worth and help them succeed. Another great book in support of speaking up is "The Courageous Follower" by Ira Chaleff
  • 8. Unfulfilled Expectation 8 Improper delegation is a disaster waiting to happen Cause of the Jam Things to do at the Scenic Lookout Unfulfilled Expectations We expect something to happen as a result of others, and it does not. This causes conflict through attachment of blame Our work life is filled with many expectations; how we behave, what we produce, what we wear, when and how we are appreciated, and the knowledge, skills and resources we bring to work for example. The cardinal rule is an implicit expectation is an unrealistic one rather than an unfulfilled one, so make sure expectations are explicit (and consistently applied) as your starting point. Assuming you've done that, you've narrowed the expectation gap to unfulfilled realistic expectations. Follow an expectation management lifecycle to handle these. Assignment - Progression - Delivery - Closure Assignment If expectations are being set for you make sure you know the context by asking questions. What's expected, how might it be achieved, when is the outcome needed, what is it's priority against other things, and how will success be measured. If you're setting expectations and get no questions, ask for your brief to be echoed back to you and listen carefully that it's fully understood. Progression Get incremental buy-in, it will always work better than a fait accompli. Raise challenges or failure early, there's nothing worse than facing failure without any options to avoid it. If you're holding expectations, check-in often (not to be confused with micromanagement) to guide the outcome you're seeking. Delivery Leave contingency for corrections (e.g. time & budget). Collaborate to finalise work whenever possible to close any expectation gaps jointly. Closure Once an expectation has been met it's important to reach closure. That's your time to appreciate the work done, reflect on the experience and refine expectations for the future. The main thing throughout this lifecycle is to leave no doubt that expectations are being met and immediately address where they are not.
  • 9. Thwarted Intentions 9 Do you have people ‘winning at all costs’? Cause of the Jam Things to do at the Scenic Lookout Thwarted Intentions We wish to take action but are unsuccessful due to Lack of skill Lack of will Lack of time Lack of resources This leads to conflict because of guilt and remorse Being intentional is encouraged. Intentions are how we commit to learning, to goals and to doing our best. Problems arise though when people become attached to their intentions rather than committed to them. Attachment limits objectivity, flexibility and creativity and instead fuels us to "win at all costs". It's visible as anxiety, fatigue and competition. Build a culture that celebrates the insight from failure as a way to reflect, learn, reframe intentions and recommit and you'll see increases in innovation and contribution. Supplement that with a process that rewards the way goals are met, and not just that goals are met and you'll start to weed out those people winning at all costs and burning everyone around them. The principle of winning the right way is one of my personal passions. I highly recommend you read "Winning Well: A Manager's Guide to Getting Results---Without Losing Your Soul" by Karin Hurt and David Dye .
  • 11. What is your stand? 11 How do people decide if they want to join in? What’s the one simple thing that people can do to be seen to be part of your ‘movement’? Are you standing up for meaningful work? Are you standing against anxiety in the workplace? Standing for lifelong learning and supportiveness, for recognition and appreciation, for autonomy, empowerment, transparency or against ineffective bureaucracy, artificial hierarchy, or dog-eat-dog extrinsic motivation schemes?
  • 12. Be easy to follow 12 Favouring followers drives momentum There will be people craving an agile performance management culture Supporting them is a better use of energy that coercing others The tipping point is where it becomes less risky to join than not to join the change
  • 13. Using 3 types of influencers 13 Network Analytics help to visualize the people dynamic Connectors - people in the network who bond others together and span social, cultural and economic circles Mavens - people who connect us to new information and start word-of- mouth epidemics Salesmen - charismatic people with powerful negotiation skills needed to persuade others Taken from “The Tipping Point” Malcolm Gladwell
  • 14. Take a firm line on detractors 14 Change the people or change the people 1. Listen to their concerns and make reasonable adjustments if needed 2.Encourage a growth mindset to fight their self- sabotage 3. Isolate the detractor from situations where they can sour others (particularly if they are influential) 4. Remove the detractor from the environment completely
  • 16. Conflict – Good or Bad? 16 There is potentially great value from conflict "There is giant untapped potential in disagreement, especially if the disagreement is between two or more thoughtful people". Ray Dalio CEO Bridgewater Associates
  • 17. It depends! 17 or possibly high cost On average US employees spend 3 hours a week dealing with conflict 27% of employees report conflict led to personal insults and attacks 22% of employees report conflict led to illness and absence from work 10% report project failure being a direct result of conflict Psychologically, conflict is a disagreement that represents a perceived threat to position, interests or needs. In Australia exit interviews reveal that chronic unresolved conflict is a decisive factor in at least 50% of all employee departures
  • 18. The push & pull 18 Surfacing & resolving is critical • Leaders speaking last during ideation or problem solving, avoiding prejudicing the dialogue or outcome • Celebrating those who openly question decisions or challenge the status quo • Appointing a devil's advocate in meetings to search for problems, shortcomings and oversights with group decisions or plans • Getting tough on team members who later show they had withheld perspective that could have been valuable if tabled 1. Focus on the facts and behaviours in question 2. State the impact on you, your team or the company 3. Consider why a rational and ethical person would indulge the facts or behaviours that are troubling you 4. Know what is non-negotiable to you and why Push conflict handling skills Pull conflict out into the open
  • 19. 5 levels of conflict 19 Though sometimes not necessary or possible Differences Misunderstandings Disagreements Discord Polarization
  • 21. Rating Reliance 21 Why the dilemma? A proxy for recognition To simplify communication Bonus eligibility Salary Level Promotion/Succession Performance Improvement Plans Talent Management Learning & Development HiPo Acceleration etc….
  • 22. 3 inherent flaws 22 Alternatives don’t carry this baggage BIASED THREATENING HISTORICAL
  • 23. HR Data is everywhere 23 Use current data & people analytics for decisions
  • 24. Remove the rubric 24 Ask reviewers what they undisputedly know Given what I know of this person’s performance, and if it were my money, I would award this person the highest possible compensation increase and bonus. Given what I know of this person’s performance, I would always want him or her on my team. This person is at risk for low performance. This person is ready for promotion today.
  • 25. Multiply your data points 25 The more in-year reviews there are more informed periodic decisions become
  • 26. Capture the stories, calculate the score 26 Qualitative data can become quantitative with algorithms Rebekah was extremely knowledgeable, very helpful, great personality, explained everything & always with a smile … her assistance & patience prompts me to acknowledge her & refer her to my friends who need the same assistance that I did. Thank you. Rebekah works in the Electronics Department of Target in Selinsgrove, PA, United States “Please give us your feedback” Based on your most recent experience, on a scale of 0 to 10 where 0 is not at all likely and 10 is extremely likely, how likely would you be to recommend us to your friends or colleagues? 1 2 43 5 6 7 8 9 10
  • 27. Consider retaining 1 last rating 27 If beliefs don’t align, the rest doesn’t matter I believe what you believe
  • 28. 28 Look out for the next 4 stages of the journey I-spy Bias