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Employee feedback is an essential tool for effective management. It helps employees understand what is expected of them, identifies areas of improvement, and recognizes their achievements.
Sometimes employers miss the opportunity to provide constructive criticism because they want to avoid confrontation. We’re here to guide you through the steps to becoming a leader who is a coach: providing feedback and helping employees do a great job.
There are many reasons why employers and managers are reluctant to raise performance issues with an employee:
While these are all valid, and often well-founded, ignoring a performance issue can impact productivity and morale.
Performance issues can arise for a variety reasons, including poor communication, lack of clarity about expectations, inadequate training or even simply a lack of motivation on the employee’s behalf. You will need to determine whether the issue is person-based or process-based.
Person-based: the employee is willfully or deliberately not doing their job, not meeting standards, etc.
Process-based: the employee is prevented from doing their job correctly by lack of training, faulty equipment, etc.
Correcting performance issues can save you money. It generally costs a business more time and money to terminate an employee and hire and train a replacement than it does to correct the employee’s behaviour.
It's also important to address these issues promptly and constructively.
Here’s how:
Feedback should be given not only when there is a performance issue, but also when an employee is doing well, and you want to acknowledge their efforts. Not sure how to praise an employee who is doing well? Read our article How to acknowledge good performers.