SERIES: Part Four of a Four-Part Article
So you thought it was unique to you. You never thought anyone
else faced this. You stayed up late at night wondering how you ended up with
this person.
Well the reality is you are not alone!
Some people have evolved into a behavior and mindset that they are the only
person in the universe and they can do whatever they want. Unfortunately, this
mindset has evolved due to years of an overconfident economy and protective
self-serving entities that have rewarded their behavior by overcompensation and
avoidance. But most importantly, it has evolved because no one has ever truly
held them accountable for their actions!
That behavior that gets recorded gets measured.
What gets measured gets addressed.
What gets addressed gets fixed!
Like a cancer within an organization, these people erode the mettle that makes
an organization great. They serve to bitter those that would have otherwise
been great contributors to your team.
So what are possible solutions? Consider:
1.
Employee
Assessment Instrument Facilitation – Consider the active use of your performance review instrument
with this person and all employees. If the net purpose of a performance
instrument is to coach individuals to peak performance, the case is self-made
for regular monthly completion.
2.
Employee
Assessment Instrument Measurement Categories – Consider the behaviors necessary for an optimal performing
business unit and the players within it. Each category of behaviors should be
listed on your instrument. The score grid should be fair and allow for positive
and brutally honest constructive feedback as well. If someone “fails/stinks” in
an area, it should be brutally listed accordingly. Conversely, if someone
excels in an area, they should be listed accordingly.
3.
Employee
Assessment Instrument Measurement “Problem Behavior” Categories – Recognize that with many problem employees, their
implosion-causing behaviors are typically just outside the scope of your
standard instrument. Every time a new corrosive behavior appears, let that be
your clue to add a new individual entry or entire section for future
assessment. Although the instrument will grow over time, it is actually a good
thing. Remember: the purpose of the instrument is to improve professional
performance, and one individual’s act of poor performance serves as a benchmark
for ensuring others not evolve into poor habits and behaviors.
4.
Duality
of Signatures – Whichever instrument you use to identify poor
behavior performance, it should require a signature by all parties involved in
the review process. This should also specifically stipulate when the follow-up
session will occur to determine if the identified behaviors and action plans
are being addressed.
5.
Resignation
of Employment Clause – Consider crating a statement into your
assessment instrument, stipulating that if the problematic behavior continues,
the next assessment will serve as a 30-day notice. The notice should
confirm that if the said behavior continues, the signed document would serve as
a voluntary “Resignation Statement” that can be implemented by that
organization’s leadership without further notice. This allows for two entire
months for a person to change their behavior and two entire months for the leadership
team to be held accountable to work with them from a solution-oriented
perspective.
The
unfortunate situation that has grown out of this terrorist behavior is that it
has become so corrosive to the team that the levels of greatness, which everyone
could be experiencing, are lost. Also, there is always the concern of
litigation after you free up someone’s future. Overwhelming documentation of a
poor performer who has not aggressively worked to change that station is hard
to legally defend. Conversely, your lack of data upon letting someone go will
make for a heavy payday for the ambulance- chancing legal team!
While there is a significant amount of institutional knowledge, training and
financial investment that an organization has made into every player in an
organization, just “firing someone” should never be a first thought – or a
thought at all! Robert Half & Associates, a leading employment
search firm, estimates that the cost of transitioning one player out and going
through the processes of getting a functioning new player online can cost
upwards of two and a half times a person’s annual salary. As a tactical leader,
it is necessary to realize the heavy investment you have made and determine
every possible mean of salvaging that investment.
The “Personnel
Assessment” you use for cultivating performance greatness and converting your
terrorists into transformers will serve as a powerful objective instrument and
allow for you to hold yourself to fair assessment.