Handling Poor Performance

What you need to know about Performance Management

 

conversation(copy)Who should read this?


Employers with full-time, part-time, casual or fixed-term employees.
 

Why is it important?

  • To ensure employees have clear targets and perform to agreed standards, both in terms of what is expected and how the results are achieved.

  • Ensuring employees understand what is expected of them and deliver to agreed targets will enhance their contribution to your business, helping you to achieve your business targets. It is also more likely to result in higher productivity and motivation through increased job satisfaction.

  • Managing performance in a fair and clearly defined manner can also help avoid problems later if an employee does not meeting agreed standards.

What you need to do

Performance management is an ongoing process, with a formal review at agreed intervals during the year. The degree of formality will vary depending on your workplace, but it’s important to ensure employees clearly understand what is expected of them. This is best done through regular discussion about their performance.
 
There are four main steps involved:
  1. planning
  2. monitoring and coaching
  3. reviewing performance
  4. managing outcomes of performance review, either:
This page provides access to checklists of the key tasks involved with each step. The Employment Relations Act 2000 requires employers to act in good faith and follow fair and reasonable processes.  

This page cannot be viewed as a definitive set of rules. However, it provides a guide to good practice behaviour in performance management that will help you establish strong employment relationships.


Key Steps to Effective Performance Management

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1. Planning checklist

 

Link to business performance

Yes

No

n/a

Are you clear on what your business is trying to achieve?

 

 

 

Do you have a clear view on how your employees can contribute to your overall business objectives?

 

 

 

Can you describe the culture of your business and how your employees need to behave to fit this culture and help achieve your business goals?

 

 

 

Have you determined how you will acknowledge performance achievements?

For example:

  • will you offer monetary rewards

  • will you acknowledge success in non-monetary ways, e.g. gift vouchers, dinners or trips away?

 

 

 

Are your managers and supervisors clear on their role in managing staff performance?

 

 

 

 

When a new employee starts

Yes

No

n/a

Have you discussed performance expectations?

 

 

 

Have you discussed expectations relating to the employee’s work and how they behave?

 

 

 

Does the employee have all the required competencies for the role or do they need coaching in some areas? For example:

  • relevant technical skills

  • relevant people skills, e.g. teamwork.

 

 

 

Have you ensured that the employee knows who will be assessing their performance?

 

 

 

Is the employee clear about the process that will be followed to review their performance and the timing? (For example, a formal review might be held twice a year, with regular informal feedback during the year.)

 

 

 

 

Set performance expectations for all staff

Yes

No

n/a

Have you agreed 4-6* performance objectives that are clear, specific and measurable so that performance can be measured fairly and objectively?

Consider:

  • job specification

  • business plan

  • company targets and budgets.

[*guideline only – more or less may be appropriate]

 

 

 

Have you ensured that each employee’s objectives link back to your business goals so that they help you achieve them, and the employee understands how their role helps the business succeed?

 

 

 

Have you considered having team as well as individual objectives?

 

 

 

Have you written down the agreed objectives and given a copy to your employee?

 

 

 

Have you got a process in place to update objectives if circumstances change?

 

 

 

 


2. Coaching and monitoring performance checklist

 

Informal review

Yes

No

n/a

Are you observing your employees’ performance regularly and not just when the formal review is due to take place?

 

 

 

 

Informal feedback

Yes

No

n/a

Are you giving your employees regular feedback on their performance to ensure there are no surprises when the formal review takes place? (Try to give specific examples of what your employee did well and where they could improve)

 

 

 

 

Acknowledge good performance

Yes

No

n/a

Are you acknowledging good performance so your employees know they are doing well and meeting performance expectations?

 

 

 

 

Coaching poor performance

Yes

No

n/a

Are you supporting employees who are not performing well and making sure they know what they need to do to improve their performance?

 

 

 

Are you providing training where this is necessary to help them improve their performance?

 

 

 

 

Updating objectives

Yes

No

n/a

If circumstances change, are you updating objectives with your employees?

 

 

 

 


3. Reviewing performance checklist

 

Set review process and time

Yes No n/a

Have you advised your employees that their review is due to take place and what it will involve?

     

Have you:

  • sought input from all relevant parties, e.g. customers, peers, other managers etc
  • ensured the employee knows this feedback will be sought?
     

Have you given the employee sufficient time to prepare and submit a self-assessment of their performance? (This encourages participation and enables them to give their views on their performance. It also forewarns you of potential issues that may arise in the performance discussion.)

     

 

Preparation

Yes No n/a

Have you taken time to prepare for the employee’s review meeting?

 

 

 

If you disagree with the employee’s self-assessment, have you thought of examples to illustrate your point of view?

 

 

 

Have you put personal views aside so you can be objective and fair to all employees?

 

 

 

Have you anticipated likely questions in advance and considered your response?

     

 

Review meeting

Yes No n/a

An open and honest discussion is an important part of the review meeting.

 

 

 

Have you discussed each objective in turn with the employee, listening to their point of view and clearly communicating your own views?

 

 

 

Have you discussed the employee’s behaviour against the required competencies, listening to their point of view and clearly communicating your own views?

 

 

 

Have you discussed factors that may be impacting the employee’s performance (e.g. skills, resources, issues outside of work) and how they can be resolved?

 

 

 

Have you discussed areas for improvement and how this can be achieved?

     

 

Discuss and finalise assessment

Yes No n/a

Do you and the employees reporting directly to you agree on their overall assessment? (If not, is there an independent person you could ask for an opinion, if this is appropriate?)

 

 

 

Do you agree on the assessments given by your managers and supervisors for their staff?

  • you need to ensure fairness for employees across the business

  • if you don’t agree, you will ultimately make a decision but the aim is to ensure all parties understand your rationale.

 

 

 

Have all employees and their manager or supervisor signed the review document?

 

 

 

Has one copy been given to the employee and one copy placed on their personal file?

     

 


4A. Reward and recognition checklist

 

Acknowledge achievements

Yes No n/a

Have you acknowledged employees who have met or exceeded objectives?

 

 

 

Have you acknowledged employees who are meeting agreed competencies?

     

 

Rewarding achievements

Yes No n/a

If you have remuneration or other benefits linked to the achievement of performance objectives, have you ensured the employee gets what they are entitled to?

 

 

 

Have you discussed development and/or training needs and opportunities identified in the review discussion? (Opportunities might include things like projects, promotions and mentoring.)

     

 

Update objectives

Yes No n/a

Have you agreed new objectives for the next review period?

     

 


4B. Managing poor performance checklist

 
If the employee’s performance has not improved with coaching and regular performance discussions, you may need to implement a formal performance management process.

The following is a guide only and is indicative of the steps to follow in dealing with problems relating to poor performance.
 
It pays to get it right!
 
The most common cause of successful Personal Grievance claims is the failure of the employer to follow a proper and fair process.  As well as avoiding having to pay extra wages and compensation following the process outlined in this section will:
  • save you time by avoiding mediation

  • save you legal fees

  • avoid negative publicity

It can't be stressed enough.  It is important to follow this process.  If an employee takes a personal grievance against you then you are going to need to be able to defend your actions by showing:

  • that a fair and reasonable process was followed; and

  • that the decision you made was justified.  You need to be able to show that you had good evidence and that the outcome was fair based in all the circumstances.

Individual cases may need specialist advice.  


 

Before considering the problem

Yes No n/a
Have you checked:
  • your legal requirements including obligations and definitions in the Employment Relations Act (including the ‘test of justification’)
  • the employment agreement for the problem solving process
  • the job description, performance indicators and company standards to ensure that it is clear where performance is falling short?
     

 

Fact finding

Yes No n/a

Have you carried out a thorough investigation of the facts and identified the problem? For example, identified where standards are not being met and checked that training and induction occurred? It is important to keep an open mind and consider all relevant information throughout the process.

 

 

 

Have you interviewed the appropriate people?

     

 

Trial periods

Yes No n/a

Have you checked whether your employee is on a trial period?

 

 

 

If they are and you give notice within the trial period, do you know that:

  • you need to give notice in accordance with your employee’s employment agreement

  • you do not need to provide a reason for the dismissal or follow all of the dismissal processes in this guide?

     

 

Arrange meeting with employee

Yes No n/a
Have you arranged a meeting with the employee and advised:
  • the reason for the meeting
  • that a support person/representative can attend?
     

Have you recorded that a meeting has been arranged?
     

Have you arranged for a witness to attend the meeting?
     

 

Meeting with employee

Yes No n/a
Have you held the meeting and covered the following:
  • outlined concerns
  • listened to employee
  • agreed on standards expected in the future
  • set training schedule
  • set next review meeting
  • discussed/outlined warning, if appropriate
  • recorded actions/meeting on file?
     

 

If improvements are not made

Yes No n/a

Have you checked the employment agreement to confirm the problem solving process?

 

 

 

Have you arranged a further meeting and advised:

  • them of your concerns and that disciplinary action and/or dismissal is a potential outcome prior to the meeting

  • that a support person/representative can attend?

 

 

 

Have you recorded that a meeting has been arranged, and arranged for your witness to attend?

     

 

Follow up meeting

Yes No n/a
Have you held the next meeting and:
  • formally warned the employee (in writing unless verbal in employment agreement)
  • recorded the warning and actions on file
  • set next review date?
     

 

If performance is still an issue by review date

Yes No n/a
Have you checked:
  • the employment agreement and notice provisions
  • redeployment possibilities?
     

Have you arranged a final meeting, if appropriate?
 
     

 

Final meeting

Yes No n/a
If still no resolution to the problem, have you:
  • held the final meeting with the employee (including any support person/representative for the employee and/or witness for yourself) and confirmed outcome, e.g. termination of employment
  • ensured the termination is under the terms covered by the employment agreement?
     

 

Calculate final pay

Yes No n/a

For employees whose employment has been terminated, have you calculated their final pay to the end of their notice period, including all holiday pay and any final entitlements, e.g. superannuation?

     

 

Collect company property

Yes No n/a

Have you collected all company property including keys, access cards, credit cards, uniforms, computers, passwords, security codes, cell phones etc before the employee leaves?

     

 

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