Five more markers and examples of what a good annual review looks like

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In my previous article, I provided five markers of what a well-conducted annual review looks like. Let’s look at some more. It is possible to actually conduct an annual review well, but this is no guarantee. So let’s keep looking for those precious markers of a manager who knows how to use the annual review for good, rather than perpetuate it as a tool for suffering.

Marker #6: Improvement is germane to the discussion

If the annual review has any discussion about where the employee’s skills and performance was at the beginning of the year, and a comparative analysis at the end of the year – in those same skills – then this means that the manager is actually concerned with increasing the capability of the organization. I would consider this generally a good thing. For example:

“At the beginning of the year, we discussed how we can improve Alex’s presentation skills, as she frequently presents business partners. During the year Alex sought mentoring and feedback in this area, and the results show that this effort has paid off. Our partners have reported that they find her speaking style inviting and informative, and Alex has consistently been able to meet the objectives of the presentations.”

Marker #7: References to the goals

First, a marker would be that the employee and the team actually have some sort of goals. That would be the first marker of a good performance evaluation, as it provides something against which the manager evaluates the employee. Now, the second part of this is if the manager actually references the goals in making the evaluation.

“We had the ambitious goal at the beginning of the year to implement a new payroll system to further streamline what was before a highly labor-intensive project. Jeanine was a key part of the team that scoped the project, identified the goals of what success of the project was. Jeanine managed the vendor selection process, kept the team focused on the desired outcomes, and ensured that the team understood what was in scope and out of scope via her weekly communications. This was a key factor in assuring that the project stayed on track, which it did. The new payroll system was launched on time earlier this year, and has significantly reduced the processing time.”

Marker #8: Teamwork is referenced by both the employee and the manager

The individual performance review necessarily focuses on the individual. I consider this bad management design, as individual work is good, but teamwork can create greater outcomes. Almost all workgroups rely on teamwork. Managers and employees can transcend the design by invoking what teamwork happened during the review period. Let’s say that the manager talks about the great teamwork that the employee engaged in. Let’s say that the employee mentions how she contributed to building the team, and how she made an effort to improve the capability of the team, or looked out for the interest in the team. This would reflect that the manager and team are actually concerned with the power of teamwork over the expectation for an individual to perform independently of teamwork. Here’s an example:

“Jonathan demonstrated that he is an excellent team player by creating a process document that showed how to complete a task that many team members performed irregularly. This helped the team gain some efficiencies, and inspired other team members to make similar efforts. The team is healthier as a result of Jonathan’s efforts.”

Marker #9: Goals seem to have a similar voice and scope across team members

Many annual reviews have a section where the employee’s goals are documented. One could look at the goals of all the team members across a managers’ team. Imagine, if you will, goals that seem to have a similar tone, similar metrics, and similar scope across team members. They don’t have to be exactly the same, because not all roles are the same, but if the goals are all striving toward a similar metric or output, this demonstrates that the manager knows what the team is striving to do, and has actually infused it in the goals. When the goals seem to be similarly written, we also know that the manager has provided input and perhaps even co-authored the goals – or this is sometimes tough to imaging – this was done as a group. Too many times we see managers push down the goal writing process to the individual employees, which results in, by definition, different looking goals. Let’s celebrate those times when we see goals across the team show some kind of consistency across the team.

Marker #10: There is agreement between the employee and the manager

If a manager and employee seem to say that they agree about things on the performance review, this reveals that the employee and the manager actually talked about these things prior to the annual review. Differences in what the results were, what the impact of the employee’s actions and whether or not the employee performed at a high level – well these were resolved external to the review, as should be the case. Many managers wait until the review to resolve lingering disagreements, sometimes even using the review to create new ones, but those managers who seek alignment and understanding with their employees throughout the year, and don’t wait until the end of the year should be recognized as superior managers. Here’s what alignment looks like:

Employee: “I increased sales by 15% through my efforts to reach out to a new customer base.”

Manager: “I agree with the employee. He was effective at identifying a new target market, and then executing the strategy of accessing the market.”

See? no debate! Do you think that a debate might have happened during the year to get to this agreement of what the employee’s efforts were and what were the estimated results? Yes. Does it appear on the annual review? No, but the agreement of the results of the discussions do appear.

We should celebrate when managers do a great job on the perilous annual performance review, and do whatever we can to increase the chances of a well-conducted review.

Have you seen these markers of success on a review? Let’s hear your stories!

Related Articles:

Let’s look at what a well-conducted annual review looks like

 

The annual review reveals more about the manager’s performance than the employee’s performance (part 1)

The annual review reveals more about the manager’s performance than the employee’s performance (part 2)

The annual review reveals more about the manager’s performance than the employee’s performance (part 3)

The annual review reveals more about the manager’s performance than the employee’s performance (part 4)

 

 

Why the annual performance review is often toxic

How to neutralize in advance the annual toxic performance review

The myth of “one good thing, one bad thing” on a performance review

Let’s look at what a well-conducted annual review looks like

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I’ve recently published a series of articles that describe how annual reviews reveal more about the manager than the employee. The examples I’ve provided focus on examples of bad management practices that could cause damage and general resentment in the manager/employee relationship. But of course not all annual reviews are conducted poorly.

I know that for some of you out there this might be hard to believe. Just as it is easy to recognize poor management practices in action on an annual review, there’s the ability to identify when a review is done well. Here are some examples of markers of a well-conducted employee performance review:

Marker #1: Level of detail

A well-conducted annual review will show that both the manager and the employee have a mastery of the details of the role being reviewed. The details should include specific actions that the employee performed. The manager can demonstrate involvement in the actual work by discussing how she actually reviewed the work and found it at the desired performance level and what the impact of the work is, or is anticipated to be.

Marker #2: Agreement of metrics

First, let’s assume that there are success metrics (yes, numbers) that are documented somewhere on the review. That is a good sign. Second, let’s say that the manager and the employee BOTH refer to the same numbers on the review. That’s another good sign. So then we know that both the manager and the employee seem to be striving for the same numbers. That’s a third good sign. (We’re taking baby steps here. I would also be great if the metrics were tied to drivers of business/organization success – but let’s start really basic and have the employee and manager agree on a few metrics first.)

Marker #3: Referencing performance feedback/strategy sessions

When either the manager or the employee reference in the review actual feedback conversations (or what I also refer to as “employee strategy sessions”) that happened external to the review context, this is a good sign. That means that the manager has taken an active interest in the employee’s ability to perform the job well, and has taken the time to coach the employee. Also imagine the employee referencing in the review having been coached, taking the feedback and applying it, and then getting better results. That would be even a better sign.

Marker #4: The performance feedback/strategy sessions are related to the job functions and results

It’s one thing to have feedback discussions throughout the year, but it’s another to have feedback discussions that actually revolve around performing the job better. Many times managers stick to things that are closest to the manager, but are at best indirectly associated with doing the job:

“Jeff is late for our team meetings”

“Anne didn’t attend the all-team meeting

“Isabelle needs to speak up during the team meetings”

“Mark brings up problems during 1:1 meetings”

OK, so those seem to be things revealing a lot about the employee/manager logistics, but nothing about the job. How about instead:

“Jeff created a strategic business plan that researched the competitive landscape. We identified some new tools he can use to create deeper understanding of our competitors, and he introduced to them to the organization.”

“When we found errors coming from our vendor, Anne identified the top issues and worked with the vendor to reduce errors and costs.”

“In looking at the contracts Isabelle writes, they are consistent, keep the company’s interests at the forefront, and delivered on time.”

“Mark is skilled at finding issues in the organization, and raising them such that they help the team run. One example is our outreach efforts to our partner teams. He identified that this was an issue, and he proposed that he and I meet with them to better understand how we work together. The result was that the partner teams have included us in key decisions that we wouldn’t have been involved with otherwise.”

Marker #5: An outside party can actually identify what the job is by reading the review

If you look at the above examples, you can actually start to guess what the employee actually does. This should be the focus of a review – most of the commentary should be on what the employee did, and how well, and whether they met the goals or improved things.

These are some (not all) of the markers of a well-conducted annual review. If you have managers that display these markers, perhaps you should praise them for doing this well?

Have you seen these markers on an annual review? Or is it more common to see the markers of poorly conducted reviews?

 Related Articles:

The annual review reveals more about the manager’s performance than the employee’s performance (part 1)

The annual review reveals more about the manager’s performance than the employee’s performance (part 2)

The annual review reveals more about the manager’s performance than the employee’s performance (part 3)

The annual review reveals more about the manager’s performance than the employee’s performance (part 4)

Why the annual performance review is often toxic

 

 

How to neutralize in advance the annual toxic performance review

The myth of “one good thing, one bad thing” on a performance review

 

 

 

 

The annual review reveals more about the manager’s performance than the employee’s performance (part 4)

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In my previous articles (here, here and here), I discuss how the annual review process reveals more about the manager than the employee. The annual review’s text may be about the employee’s performance, but what really is powerful about the performance review is the subtext – what the review reveals about the manager’s practices as a manager.

Here are some more examples of what you can see in a performance review and what it says about the manager:

1. The incident that defines the whole year

Annual reviews were developed to review the whole year. Yet many reviews boil down to a particular incident during the course of the year. Both the manager and the employee may recount the incident, and use this as the basis for the employee’s performance. It might be interesting to see what the incident is. Did the employee disagree with the manager? Was the employee supported by the manager through the incident, or left hung out to dry? When this is observed, know that employees will work extra hard to avoid “the incident”, or work hard to re-define “the incident.” In any case, it should be rare, not common, that a single event could define someone’s work, and if that’s the case, it should be reflected in their goals.

2. Bias

Many employees fear that their manager has a bias toward or against various members of the team. The annual review is a great place to test this thesis. Does the manager reveal in the comments a preference to one employee over another? Is one employee looking for attention and another basking in it? One can read for tone as well as content to reveal the answer to these questions.

3. The lack of performance-based language

The Manager by Designsm blog writes frequently about using behavior-based language, also known as performance-based language (read here for a primer on how to tell if you are using performance-based/behavior-based language). The annual review should be a bastion of performance-based language, yet it is often the opposite. “Michael is the best!” “Andrea is a real go-getter!” “Pete doesn’t have what it takes,” “Aaron needs a better attitude.” These are generalizations and value judgments that reveal that the manager does not think in behavior-based terms, which indicates that the employee is probably being evaluated on impressions rather than performance.

4. The difficult review discussion

External to the actual form, do you have managers who dread the review period, talk about “difficult” reviews, and otherwise find the process difficult and cumbersome? This teaches you that the manager could be letting the management tasks slide until the review period comes along. There will be a lot of pent-up angst when this happens, and the review discussions will be necessarily difficult if you are trying to resolve a year’s worth of issues in one discussion. Remember, it is supposed to be a re-view, not a view into the employee’s performance.

5. The wildly variant employee ability across time

In this situation, the employee is a “star performer” one year, and a “weak performer” another year. What changed? It could be the employee, but if you assume that, you’re going to be right only some of the time. Other things probably have changed – the manager and/or the work challenge. If an employee was great on one team and terrible on another team, is it really the employee? If the employee was supported, had good processes and reasonable expectations, and they did well, that’s great. If the same employee joins a team with no processes, unreasonable work expectations, and a difficult political environment, we have just learned the difference of the managers (and the manager of managers), not the employee.

6. Only things the manager observes

A manager often comments on the review the things about the employee they have directly observed. This is generally a good idea, because the rest is hearsay. But what if we learn through the comments what it is that the manager has directly observed? If the manager only comments about the behavior of the employee during 1:1 discussions, team meetings, and emails/status reports to the manager, then we know that the manager is evaluating only employee behaviors in the context of interacting with the manager. You can forget about the work output, how the employee interacts with colleagues and customers, and other areas of performance. But if that employee is quiet during the team meeting, then it will appear on the review.

7. Relying on what “others” say

Similarly, a manager may focus on what others say to rate the employee. This could come from the boss’s boss, other team members, or the prior manager. If there is a dearth of other areas that are examined about the employee’s work output and ability to produce results, then this should be a cause of concern that the manager is more focused on political aspects of the work environment (“what are others saying”) and less on the work output and ongoing behaviors (“what did the employee do.”)

So for the budding Management Designers out there, how do you use the Annual Review to understand the management behaviors? Or are you leaving this rich artifact on the table and relying on other channels to learn about your managers?

Let me know your stories of how managers reveal their management practices on performance reviews.

 Related Articles:

The annual review reveals more about the manager’s performance than the employee’s performance (part 1)

The annual review reveals more about the manager’s performance than the employee’s performance (part 2)

The annual review reveals more about the manager’s performance than the employee’s performance (part 3)

 

 

Let’s look at what a well-conducted annual review looks like

Why the annual performance review is often toxic

The myth of “one good thing, one bad thing” on a performance review

Behavior-based language primer for managers: How to tell if you are using behavior-based language

Behavior-based language primer for managers: Avoid using value judgments

 

 

 

 

 

The annual review reveals more about the manager’s performance than the employee’s performance (part 3)

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In my previous articles here and here, I discussed how the annual review process reveals more about the manager than the employee. The annual review’s text may be about the employee’s performance, but what really is powerful is the subtext – the manager’s practices as a manager.

Here are even more examples of what kinds of things are revealed about a manager in an employee performance review:

1. The Fight

Two articles ago, I cited “the debate”, which I characterized as a disagreement on the review over what happened over the course of the year. But sometimes you’ll see actual arguments spill over onto the review. The argument may be over points of fact, or points of interpretation, but if the two parties are extending their argument into written form when the annual review is written, then you know, at the minimum, that the manager is comfortable not resolving disputes, and letting them extend into a variety of forums and formats, and it probably doesn’t stop at the review.

2. Egocentrism

Many managers will talk about their own actions and contributions on an employee’s review. It’s one thing to talk about the team accomplishments, but when you see a manager say, “I was able to help Jim achieve an increase in sales,” or “I made a great hire in Tammy,” you can infer that the manager has more focus on him or himself than the team. Just count the number of “I’s” in the manager comments and you can get a feel for this.

3. The one good thing one bad thing

I have commented on this in a prior article – but this is a good time to revisit it. Many managers believe that they need to be “fair” in providing one good piece of feedback and one bad piece of feedback on an employee. “Jim was able to deliver a high volume of work, but sometimes his emails can be too long.” Doing this makes little sense, because typically employees do go to work and then do one thing good and one thing bad. If there is something that the employee needs to get better at to do her job, then this needs to be articulated as something the manager and the employee are already working on. It reveals a lot about a manager who waits until the review to articulate the wrong things the employee does without having any reference to an effort to improve the employee in that area. Perhaps this frequently happens because the “bad thing” that is cited is often irrelevant to the employee’s performance, “Max didn’t go to the team event.”

4. Areas irrelevant to the performance

The annual performance review is often a treasure trove of irrelevant feedback. Many managers will cite events that are not relevant to meeting goals (what time the person comes in every morning, the length of emails, for example). Look closely at what the manager critiques and praises. Is there a connection to the team achieving the metrics, or is simply something that is generally considered bad (being late on occasion, being slow to respond on email) or good (setting up a weekly happy hour), but not necessarily directly connected to work output.

5. The blank career development area

There are lots of places on the form to fill out. Sometimes managers do not fill in certain areas. A common area that often goes untouched is the career development plan. Many review forms have a “looking forward” section that discusses what the employee plans to do to develop his or her career. If this section is blank – and it often is – then you know for sure that the manager isn’t engaging in this discussion with the employee. If the manager does have it filled in, and it looks robust and connected to the employee, then you know that this is something the manager is good at.

But wait, there’s more! Tune in next week for more ways the review reveals more about the manager than the employee. What stories do you have?

Related articles:

The annual review reveals more about the manager’s performance than the employee’s performance (part 1)

The annual review reveals more about the manager’s performance than the employee’s performance (part 2)

The annual review reveals more about the manager’s performance than the employee’s performance (part 4)

 

 

Let’s look at what a well-conducted annual review looks like

The Cost of Low Quality Management

Why the annual performance review is often toxic

The myth of “one good thing, one bad thing” on a performance review

Tenets of Management Design: Managing is a functional skill

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The annual review reveals more about the manager’s performance than the employee’s performance (part 2)

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In my previous article, I discussed how the annual review process reveals more about the manager than the employee. The annual review’s text may be about the employee’s performance, but what really is powerful is the subtext – the manager’s practices as a manager.

Here are some more examples of what kinds of things are revealed about a manager in an employee performance review:

1. The lack of detail

The manager usually has a comment box in an employee review form. If the manager does not write much in it, what does that tell you? Probably that the manager has no idea what the employee did over the course of the year. Compare the following:

“Joe had a great year. He met all of this goals and is well-liked on the team.”

“Tiffany created a new system that was implemented across the team to improve communication, streamline processes, and create more accountability. She identified the largest issues facing quality teamwork, and her efforts in this area contributed to a better team understanding of the deliverables and timelines.”

In the second example, the manager appears to know what Tiffany did. In the first example, it is not clear whether the manager even knows who Joe is, and what he does.

2. The lack of discussion of improvement

One of the tasks of a manager is to facilitate an ever improving team atmosphere and capability. Or, at the minimum, get it to an acceptable level and keep it there. But what if you never see any language that expresses any effort to improve the team or its members?

Something like, “At the beginning of the year, Andy and I discussed improving his follow-through on resolving quality issues in his work. We worked together to identify how we can improve in this area, and during the year, Andy had many fewer issues in this area. In fact, Andy is now a team champion on how to assure our team’s work output is both timely and with quality.” This indicates a drive for improvement.

Instead we often see the flat, “Andy has quality issues.” In this case, we quickly learn that the manager sees no responsibility in improving Andy’s quality issues. This indicates a quality issue of the manager.

3. The disconnect from goals

Many performance reviews have a section that require employees and managers to compare the actual results of the work with the goals established at the beginning of the review period. It is often observed that managers will not comment on these goals and whether or not they were met by the employee, and instead focus on personality elements. Perhaps you’ve seen something like: “Joan brings a lot of fun to the team!” “We love Harry’s sense of humor and positive attitude.” That’s on the positive side. On the negative side, it might be, “Marty is always late for meetings” or “Patrick could improve his attitude” or “Maurice could be more helpful with other team members.”

If the manager writes something that is not connected to the goals and does not reveal her opinion as to whether or not the employee met the goals, we learn that the manager didn’t take the goals seriously in the first place, or doesn’t know whether they were met.

4. Comparison of goals across team members

Sticking to the topic of goals, one exercise is to compare the goals across the manager’s team members, which are usually documented on the annual review. Are they the same? Do they appear to lead to a team strategy? Or do they appear written independently by the individual members of the team? One team member may have tons of goals, and another may have hardly any. Are one set of goals very crisp and another set of goals unformed and vague? That can happen if the manager is not taking the goal-writing process seriously, and has not provided input.

5. Expectation of teamwork

The manager is ostensibly a leader of a team, not a series of individuals. However, the annual review typically has very little commentary about how team members helped one another. If the manager does not have discussions somewhere in the review (goals, what the team achieved vs. what the individual achieved) that identify the quality of teamwork, then we know that this is not a priority of the manager. Is this the kind of management practices we are looking for?

My next article will discuss even more examples of when a manager reveals more about herself on the employee’s performance review.

Do you have examples of when the review says more about the manager than the employee? Send them my way!

Related Articles:

The annual review reveals more about the manager’s performance than the employee’s performance (part 1)

The annual review reveals more about the manager’s performance than the employee’s performance (part 3)

The annual review reveals more about the manager’s performance than the employee’s performance (part 4)

Let’s look at what a well-conducted annual review looks like

 

The Cost of Low Quality Management

Why the annual performance review is often toxic

The myth of “one good thing, one bad thing” on a performance review

Tenets of Management Design: Managing is a functional skill

The annual review reveals more about the manager’s performance than the employee’s performance (part 1)

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I have written in the past about “the annual toxic performance review.”  The basic point is that this is the only time many managers provide insights – the view – on how the employee is performing, is during the re-view.  The view in to the employee’s performance is often during the re-view. Kind of ironic.

Another ironic situation is that the employee’s annual review usually reveals more about the manager’s performance than the employee’s performance.  Yes, the review covers all sorts of aspects of the employee’s performance, usually both from the employee’s perspective and the manager’s perspective.  That’s the text.

But the subtext of any employee performance review is how well that manager managed the employee during the review period.  And looking at a manager’s reviews from this perspective will quickly reveal lots about how that manager manages.

Let’s take a look at some examples of how the review reveals information about the manager:

1.  The debate

Many times you will see a debate emerge about the employee’s performance via the employee’s self evaluation and the manager’s comments.  If there is disagreement, this reveals that the manager has not discussed the employee’s performance openly with the employee during the year, and has instead waited until the performance review to share his thoughts.  The employee, perhaps anticipating this debate, will submit multiple pieces of evidence (metrics, stories, customer quotes) to pre-empt the anticipated contrarian position of the manager.  It’s interesting to see if the manager’s comments actually address these pieces of evidence, or ignore them and make generalizations about the employee’s performance.

2. Performance Feedback on the review

Many times you will see a manager finally take that step and provide feedback to an employee via the review.  “Jim needs to be more accountable.”  “Alex needs to manage meetings better.”  “Alyssa has quality issues that have hurt the team.” “Patrick needs to connect with his peers more.”  (Note: As these are generalizations, they are poor examples of performance feedback, but nonetheless examples of performance feedback likely to be found on the review.) If the manager gives this feedback and does not reference a conversation to this effect in the review (i.e., “We discussed how Patrick can engage with his peers”), then the manager has simply waited until after the review period to give performance feedback.  As discussed many times in this blog, this is the most un-artful way to manage and to provide performance feedback, as it is neither specific nor immediate.

Yet so many managers do it today, it has become almost a norm.  Should you see this on your organizations’ annual performance reviews, expect there to be contempt for the managers in your org.

3.The “keep it short” instruction and subsequent debate

Many annual review forms have an employee self-evaluation section, and then a manager comment section.  Managers often give instructions to their employees to “keep it short.”  That is – don’t write much about your performance.  This reveals much about the manager – a) The manager does not want to hear about good work being done by the employee, and wants to deny that opportunity of expression  b)  The manager is trying to limit discussion of and knowledge of what the employee accomplished c) Apparently doesn’t want to read more than a page of text and; d) Wants to give negative feedback during the review (see point 2 above), but fears that the employee may submit evidence that this negative feedback is incorrect, so the best mitigation strategy by the manager is to cut off discussion.   Often there will be more debate – in the review form itself, prior to the discussion, and during the discussion – about the amount of text an employee can enter in the review form than there is a discussion about the employees performance.  Crazy.

What are examples you have of managers revealing more about their performance on the annual review?  Send them to me!

In my next article, I’ll provide more examples of how the annual review reveals more about the manager than the employee.

Related articles:

The annual review reveals more about the manager’s performance than the employee’s performance (part 2)

The annual review reveals more about the manager’s performance than the employee’s performance (part 3)

The annual review reveals more about the manager’s performance than the employee’s performance (part 4)

 

 

Let’s look at what a well-conducted annual review looks like

The Art of Providing Feedback: Make it Specific and Immediate

An example of giving specific and immediate feedback and a frightening look into the alternatives

How to be collaborative rather than combative with your employees – and make annual reviews go SOOO much better

Why the annual performance review is often toxic

The myth of “one good thing, one bad thing” on a performance review

Tenet of management design: If you don’t have a system, it’s probably being done over email

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Managers seem to have a lot of email to work through. Especially managers in office environments. Lots and lots of emails. Managers are always checking emails, responding to emails, catching up on email. Why?

It’s probably because there isn’t a system for whatever is trying to be accomplished via email. Some sample tasks that managers perform via email:

1. Providing team expectations

2. Task direction

3. Problem solving

4. Performance feedback

5. Brainstorming

6. Addressing escalated issues

7. Developing and reviewing work output (documents) of the team

8. Unblocking issues

9. Getting buy-in from partners

10. Answering knowledge questions

11. Coordinating team members to work with one another

12. Giving and getting status updates

13. Promoting the team performance

14. Discussing hiring decisions

15. Doing budgeting

16. Organizing a meeting

17. Reviewing business/team insights

18. Determining the agenda of the meeting

19. Giving follow up after the meeting

I know that I’m missing dozens of other tasks that managers perform, but this sample gives a feel for how integrated email has become in the experience of being a manager (or any employee in an office).

So the question should be – is email the best system to perform these and other tasks? In absence of a system, in many cases email is preferable. But could there be better tools for doing the above things?

Email is a robust and powerful tool for communication. But I fear that its power has held back the development of improved manager capability. Because email exists as a ready means to communicate with your team, your team’s partners and customers and your boss, efforts to improve upon these have rarely been made.

Email is an interesting tool in that each time it is used it re-invents the process for getting the task done. Just as quickly as a process is established over email, that process breaks down (or fades away) as soon as the next issue or task emerges, which is all the time. The time constraints and quality criteria are usually embedded in the email communication (if at all), and generally have no enforcement. Accountability and tracking of who contributed in what way is also difficult to piece together.

Here’s an example from #7 above. Your team is getting ready for a big presentation. The script being developed gets passed around by email. Some people contribute to that document, and the new version gets passed around. Different people are brought in to give their input. The manager wants to make changes and passes it around to multiple people. Different versions of the document fall on the person needing to create the final script. That new version goes out to everyone via email. And the cycle begins again.

While it’s great that there is the speed of distribution, it is bad in that during this review cycle, new people were brought in, different versions were created, and additional reconciliation of the feedback has to take place.

Then the next time a presentation needs to be created. . . the same cycle occurs: establishment of who to involve, the expansion of contributors, and the painful reconciliation of the input takes place again. All because it is so easy to distribute something via email and respond via email.

Given this, it is possible to imagine that there could be a more structured – and efficient – way of getting this done – and without email. The manager could establish who on the team is responsible for creating the document, how it is to be shared, scope who should be the reviewers and contributors, provide a window and focused time to do that reviewing and contributing, and have a decision-making process to get differences resolved. There are better tools these days for sharing documents, but they are for the most part underutilized, or, worse, ignored.

Because we have email, we tend not to create this structure in attempting to get something done. We rely on the ability to communicate and, in turn, establish the de-facto structure to whatever the task at hand is, and we don’t necessarily to create process constraints that could create greater efficiencies, innovation, and quality improvements.

Therefore it is a tenet of the emerging field of Management Design to look at what Managers are doing over email, and determine – is there a better way of doing this? Are there tools and processes that can be established that can better manage the various outputs required of managers, rather than relying on email to establish the process (and then watch that process immediately fade away)?

What kind of management tasks do you do over email? What kind of management tasks do you do that are not over email? Which ones have a more efficient and repeatable process?

 Related Articles:

Tenets of Management Design: Focus on the basics, then move to style points

Tenets of Management Design: Managing is a functional skill

Tenets of Management Design: Drive towards understanding reality and away from relying on perceptions

Tenets of Management Design: Identify and reward employees who do good work

Tenets of Management Design: A role in management is not an extension of performance as an individual contributor

Tenets of Management Design: Managers are created not found

Quick tips for making all-hands meetings tolerable and useful

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My recent articles discuss how all-team meetings (or “group meetings” or “all-hands meetings”) are essentially risky endeavors for group leaders (here and here).  So here are some tips on how to mitigate the risks:

1.     Don’t make the meetings mandatory

If you have to make a meeting mandatory, it is a sign that something is not compelling about your meeting.  Call meetings that people want to attend.  As a corollary to this, try not to have your lower level management team spend time in their team meetings talking about why it is mandatory and why people need to attend.  Instead, they should talk about what team members are expected to get out of the (preferably) non-mandatory meeting.  Read on for what that might be. . .

2.     Stick to the strategy

People want to hear what the strategy is.  The strategy should be stated, and discussed.  When getting everyone together, the main objective should be getting the full team on board to understand the group or company strategy.  Anything other than the strategy is, to a certain degree, specific execution, and probably isn’t appropriate at the “all-group” or “all-hands” meeting level.

3.     Review the key performance indicators, and performance against these

As part of the strategy, look at your key performance indicators, and show that this is what the management team is looking at.  Avoid showing stress at the metrics that are lower than target. Instead, discuss how you are going to support improving not only the underperforming metrics, but further accelerate the metrics that are above target.

4.     Stop there.

This makes the all-team meeting short and sweet.  It shows level that the layer of management running the meeting the strategic level at which they are working.  If there isn’t much content beyond looking at the strategy and the key performance indicators, then the meeting can be short and sweet.  Your greater team will thank you that you haven’t taken more time out of their work.

5.     Don’t mistake “Q&A” with “interactive” 

Many managers leading all-hands meetings say that they want the session to be “interactive.”  This often means that there is a question an answer session after the presentation.  This isn’t interactive, since the vast majority of the attendees aren’t interacting during the Q&A session.  It’s a Q&A session, not interactivity.  Meeting leaders can budget time in for Q&A, but know that it doesn’t create the impression of openness and interactivity to leadership.  Instead, it shows that leadership is implying that their interactions with the larger group is limited to all-team meeting Q&A sessions.

6.     Have the team work together to solve a problem or generate ideas

Many managers want their all-team meetings to be “interactive.”  They also want the members of the larger team to “get to know each other.”  Many times they’ll have post-meeting receptions, or require that people introduce each other during the all-team meeting.  These actions rarely create lasting connections.

Instead, here is a way to create interactivity that is more meaningful:

Break up the larger session into groups of 4-6 people.  Now issue a challenge with a time limit – what can we do to better execute this strategy? Improve this key performance indicator?  Improve the work environment?  What areas are we not investing in, but you think we should?

In short, find a problem that the leadership team wants solved, and then put the larger team to work to solve it.  Have the teams document the results, and have them delivered to the meeting leaders.  The leaders (or the groups) can then share them back to the larger group or a few other groups.

The meeting leaders now have tons of ideas related to their strategic concerns, and with tons of problem-solving brainpower.  And it was interactive, work related and a more meaningful use of time.   I would consider this a little bit better than introducing each other or having a post-meeting party.

OK, follow these tips for all-hands meetings, and you’ve increased the chances that the all-team meeting is useful, relevant and meaningful to the attendees, and the meetings will probably be a lot shorter and cost less.  Not bad!

Related articles:

Do your all-team meetings make your team cringe?

Reasons many employees dread all-team meetings

 

 

 

If you’re the manager, it’s your job not to act surprised

 

 

Nine simple tips to make meetings more compelling

 

More reasons mandatory meetings are bad for you and bad for your team

 

Making it a mandatory meeting sabotages the meeting

 

More reasons mandatory meetings are bad for you and bad for your team

 

The first step to getting out of the mandatory meeting cycle: Don’t call meetings if you were planning one-way communication

 

Managers behaving badly: Training the team not to report bad news

What to do when you see a status or metric as “Red”

 

 

Reasons many employees dread all-team meetings

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In my previous article, I mentioned that all-team meetings (big meetings with 30+ people) create a risk of degrading employee’s experience as an employee.  When managers a) try to entertain or b) praise the great work of people that aren’t so great and who did work that was terrible, it is guarantee that at least some people in the room will cringe.  Especially when the director calling the meeting makes it a mandatory meeting, this guarantees that people who don’t want to be there will be there.

But why stop at two reasons people cringe at all team meetings when there are so many more reasons all-team meetings could be considered high-risk and even damaging to the team?

Forced interaction that is not work-related

Frequently people will have to introduce themselves to their neighbor or someone they don’t know and “get to know” them.  This is great on one level, and painful to many on another.  Those who like to get to know each other and socialize love it.  Those who would rather be back at their desk getting work done think it’s pointless.  Just because the director thinks that all the people ought to all know each other, this is not a good venue for doing this.

The director should instead identify work-related efforts to get people from different parts of the organization to work with each other.  Creating a working relationship that involves producing real deliverables will be much better than ad-hoc forced networking at an all-team meeting.  If you want people to socialize, then socializing should be the main event (but still don’t expect everyone to be there).

Not relevant

I warn against trying to entertain people at an all team meeting, because this can create the most embarrassing moments.  Slightly less embarrassing, but no less painful, is being bored through lack of relevance.  An all team meeting is boring precisely because it often talks about stuff not related to the person’s job.

Long

I haven’t been able to figure out why it is that the bigger the meeting is, the longer it is.  My observation is that an all-team meeting is at least two hours, sometimes three, maybe more.  And they tend to go well past the regularly scheduled time.  So if the director is trying to set an example of how to manage a meeting, and meeting runs long by 45 minutes, so much for setting an example on the smart use of time.

Irrelevant Games

This is an off-shoot of trying to entertain the full team.  Play a game!  I don’t really care what game it is, unless you are entirely skilled at creating a game that is specifically related to a work-challenge currently at hand, then it this will come across to some –not all—as filler, and as a waste of time.  Games are fun, but is fun the objective of an all-team meeting?  If so, is the message that you expect the non-all-team meetings to be half-filled with non-work-related game time?  That’s the message that’s being sent.  Games should be played during breaks and off hours, so wrap up the all-team meeting and let people go out and play.

The costs of the meeting

There are those who attend a meeting with 50 to 100 people, and immediately start calculating what the cost of the event is.  Let’s say the average salary is $50,000.  That’s about $25 an hour.  50 people, 2 hours at $25 hour.  That’s $2500 to hear the director play games, entertain, and talk – and then there’s the stuff that is not being done while everyone is at the mandatory all team meeting.  Is it worth it?  I’m sure there will be some who doubt the director’s fiscal responsibility.

Not able to get work done

The director has called an all-team meeting for 60 people, lasting 2 hours.  Perhaps a quarter of those 60 people had some pressing deadline or responsibility for that day.  That’s 15 people who don’t want to be there, would rather do their work, and do a good job at their work.  That better be a really good meeting to pull these folks from getting their work done on time.  It might be a late night at the office for these folks.

Not having to do something differently after the meeting

Perhaps the most pernicious of all. You attend an all-team meeting.  You’ve heard three or four director-level people talk.  You’ve learned a lot about the organization.  Now what do you have to do differently on your job?  Nothing.   There is rarely an effort to equate the information being shared at a group meeting with what on the job needs to be done differently.  This, of course is hard to do.  However, one the hallmarks for a good meeting is that there is some change as a result of the meeting.  If the all-team meeting can’t do this, then should you expect the other meetings that happen in your organization to be any different?

I’m being pretty tough on the all-team meeting.  That’s because all-team meetings can be pretty tough. I’m not saying all people hate all-team meetings, just a lot of people!  So if you’re planning an all-team meeting, beware!

Related Articles:

Do your all-team meetings make your team cringe?

Quick tips for making all-hands meetings tolerable and useful

Criteria to generate a virtuous cycle for meetings

How to get out of what seem to be useless meetings

How to get out of really useless meetings

A leading indicator for team performance: Chart your meeting quality

Nine simple tips to make meetings more compelling

More reasons mandatory meetings are bad for you and bad for your team

Making it a mandatory meeting sabotages the meeting

More reasons mandatory meetings are bad for you and bad for your team

The first step to getting out of the mandatory meeting cycle: Don’t call meetings if you were planning one-way communication


Do your all-team meetings make your team cringe?

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I was talking to an independent consultant the other day, and she told me that, while tempting, she didn’t want to go full-time at the business she was consulting with.  The reason she didn’t want to report to the client as a full-time employee was that she didn’t want to go to that team’s “all-team meetings” (also known as “all-hands meetings” or “group meetings.”)  She felt that her relationship would go right out the window as soon as she had to attend one of those dreaded meetings.  She would go to that meeting kicking and screaming, and then cringe through the whole thing.  Instead, she’s happy as someone who can focus on doing her work, getting results, and establishing great relationships with her clients.

The lesson learned from this discussion – “all hands” meetings can be de-motivating and take away from good work.

So clearly something is wrong with all-hands meetings.  So wrong, in fact, that this highly capable consultant who would otherwise consider working for the company full time has ruled it out for this reason only.  Yikes!

So what’s so bad about these all-hands meetings? 

First, as the name implies, the “all-hands” meeting is usually “required” or “mandatory”.  So, by definition, a certain percentage of the population doesn’t want to go for whatever reason but is there anyway.  The “mandatory” element builds in a tough audience from the start.

Next, oftentimes all-team meetings make the attendees cringe — especially the ones didn’t want to go. Perhaps they didn’t want to go because they know the proceedings will make them cringe.

Perhaps you know what this cringing looks like – I call this the “horrified at the all-team meeting gesture” where participants look away from what is happening at the front, heads down, hands over eyes.  This gesture is often seen when the events are so embarrassingly awful that participants have to look away.  They cringe at the terrible proceedings unfolding before them.

But Walter, you may ask, what could a manager or director or senior vice president be doing that is so bad?  What is it that they could be doing that is so awful that people on the team can’t bear to watch?

OK.  I’ll give you two common actions and tell me if you’ve never witnessed these:

1. Performing skits that attempt to entertain

This was a large part of the premise of the comedy series “The Office” (I recommend the The UK Version, but the American Version has the same premise).  In this series, the manager believes that as part of being a manager he must entertain his team.  He tells jokes, does dances, acts out performances and he does a whole host of things that make the office workers cringe.   Unfortunately this isn’t a parody of what happens in actual offices, but a stone cold documentary.

The humor from the show stems from the phenomenon that people in management positions often mistake being a leader with being an entertainer.  Managers who try to entertain are, by definition, amateurs at entertaining (they should be professionals at managing).  Their ideas as to what is funny and what works as entertainment are usually poor.  Also, many people find it a waste of time.   Attempt to entertain only if you have professional entertainers there to assist you (and probably at great expense).  Even then, know that a percentage of your audience will consider it cheesy.

Attempting to entertain should be considered a highly risky endeavor and, at best, would constitute advanced “style points” of being a manager.  At worst, it negates all of the good work done as a manager.

Similarly, you can be a great manager without ever having to entertain the troops.

2.  Publically praising the wrong people, the wrong projects, and the wrong work

All-team meetings are often used as venues for the leader to publically praise people on their hard work.  They will call out different people for what they did and why they are great.  This, too, should be considered risky, since the leader of the meeting will risk praising the hard work of someone at work that others have noted to be ineffective, difficult, or otherwise produce poor work.

Here’s how it works:  The director says, “I want to thank Jeremy for his amazing work.”  Now, perhaps Jeremy has indeed produced great work – for the boss.  But imagine if Jeremy is also the proverbial “A**hole at work”   — Jeremy has been unresponsive to multiple people, yelled at others, lied to get ahead, called people he doesn’t like “stupid,” has dumped work on them or taken credit for other people’s work.  And now the director stands in front of everyone and says how much she likes Jeremy?  You can expect that many in the room will cringe.

Not only that, many in the room will wonder just how clueless the director is, to publically call out someone who is clearly an awful co-worker.  Then they will get depressed, knowing the difficulty of shedding light to the manager on the problematic aspects of Jeremy.

Now, the same thing can happen for projects.  Let’s consider Project Y: It is over budget, the people working on it have extended the timeline multiple times, and it is generally considered a debacle.  Then the director says, “I want to thank all of those on Project Y who have worked so hard to make it a success.”  The director may earnestly be trying to show support for those on Project Y, but by highlighting project Y – even with an eventual positive outcome, those on Project X, W, V and U (projects that, if run smoothly, didn’t get attention from the big boss) get upset about the public praise, because now they feel like they are being ignored, and the boss has no concept as to who is doing the good work.  Cringing ensues.

In previous articles, I discuss “public feedback” (another common all-hands meeting error), where the manager attempts to provide corrective feedback to the entire team.  “Public praise” has a similar problem.  Providing the manager’s view of who the top performers are in front of everyone and in real time has own dangers.

These cringe-worthy actions are exacerbated because these all-team meetings are often deemed “mandatory.”  This means that the people who will not be entertained – no matter how high-quality the entertainment — have to sit through the entertainment.  This means that the people who feel that they are not being recognized, while the less deserving do get recognized, will have their worst fears confirmed.

A disastrous all-team meeting might even be a galvanizing reason someone will want to leave their job (i.e., leave their managers), as they will see many things they don’t like about the job compressed into a single event and channeled through the senior leadership’s so clearly on display.  As in the case of the consultant I was speaking with, all-team meetings are the first reason she didn’t want to join an organization.

So what I’m saying is:  All-hands meetings should be considered high-risk.  Managers and directors risk inadvertently embarrassing themselves and their team, and also inadvertently make it seem like they don’t know what is happening on the team and how the team feels at the precisely moment they are trying to assert their leadership.

In my next article, I’ll enumerate more reasons all-team meetings are high risk.

In the mean time, please share your memorable “cringe-worthy” moments at all-team meetings!

Related articles:

Reasons many employees dread all-team meetings

Quick tips for making all-hands meetings tolerable and useful

 

 

Criteria to generate a virtuous cycle for meetings

 

How to get out of what seem to be useless meetings

How to get out of really useless meetings

A leading indicator for team performance: Chart your meeting quality

Nine simple tips to make meetings more compelling

More reasons mandatory meetings are bad for you and bad for your team

Making it a mandatory meeting sabotages the meeting

More reasons mandatory meetings are bad for you and bad for your team

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