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Performance Management and the
Disciplinary Conversation
Copyright ©
All rights reserved
By Ken Chapman, Ph.D.
Ken Chapman & Associates, Inc.
Almost inevitably, one or more of the people
who report to you will act in an unacceptable way — an hourly worker is
repeatedly late, a service rep blows up at a customer, and a manager makes
an inappropriate comment to a report. Occasionally, such actions are so
egregious that the offending employee must be summarily terminated. Far
more often, though, the faulty behavior does not call for such an extreme
step, but it is up to the leader to take appropriate corrective action.
The first thing to be clear about here is
what you want to achieve. Should the goal of company disciplinary policies
be to punish, to mete out some form of justice or should it be to propel
employees toward better behavior? Consider that the words “discipline” and
“disciple” share an etymological root focused on teaching or molding. As
opposed to dealing with the occasional outrageous offender, the more common
challenge for leaders is to use a performance management conversation to
foster improvement in a worker who has made a mistake. Use the
following guidelines:
Before a Problem Occurs —
Give credit when credit is due.
The first prerequisite for a productive
disciplinary conversation is that it be an exception to the usual pattern of
praise and recognition. Put another way, disciplinary actions should be
only a small number of a leader’s formal contacts with employees. Most
workers are competent, well intentioned, and self-disciplined. If you
provide feedback only or even primarily, when they stumble, you are missing
out on a signal opportunity to motivate them. Psychologists have long known
that positive reinforcement is the most effective method of affecting
conduct. Make a point to tell your people when they have done something
right — even if that something is relatively minor. Do it right after the
commendable act and do it regularly.
If they are consistently performing below
your expectations, let them know that too.
It might seem obvious to you that an
employee’s performance is sub par, but does the employee know it? In the
absence of regular feedback and suggestions for how to improve, many people
tend to believe they are better than they truly are. A recent study found
that fully eighty percent of American men thought they were in the top ten
percent of all men when it came to athletic ability.
Communicate company rules well in advance.
Too often, management prefers to
leave its disciplinary policy unspoken, perhaps fearing it will appear
unfriendly and overly ready to penalize. But the majority of employees, who
will never be disciplined, may actually be heartened to know that there are
some boundaries you do not step over. If they perceive that the company
will act firmly in the face of poor behavior, they may be relieved that they
will not have to carry the load for goof-offs.
When a Problem Occurs —
Don’t act when you are angry.
Strong emotions cloud judgment. What is
more, angry accusations beget an angry response, which turns the employee’s
focus away from his actions (or lack thereof) and toward the leader’s
response.
Reprimand in private.
Most people fear public embarrassment more
than discipline itself. If you publicly injure an employee’s reputation,
you reduce the likelihood that his performance will improve.
Probe to determine whether the problem is
with the employee or with the working conditions.
Conditions that interfere with someone’s
ability to do his job are often difficult to detect simply because we are so
used to them. But a bit of reengineering might succeed in freeing up an
employee to perform well. Ask if anything is hindering her work. This line
of questioning demonstrates that you are interested in performance, not
blame.
Frame your complaint specifically in terms of
observed behavior. Lay out the
difference between desired and actual behavior in a clear and unambiguous
statement, and present it to the employee for discussion. This statement of
the problem should be unarguable so that the dialogue will center on
identifiable actions on the part of the employee. For example, do not
describe the problem as “a bad attitude” and do not assume that is the
case. A leader cannot know what goes on in an employee’s head. Also, an
accusation about an attitude will not stick as a defense in a suit for
wrongful termination. But you can observe behavior to determine if it
improves, worsens, or stays the same.
Cite the business reasons behind a policy. If an employee tries to rationalize a
transgression as “no big deal,” you should be able to defend the sound
business grounds for a company’s policy — for example, the impact on
profitability, fellow employees, or departmental deadlines. If you are
unable to do so, perhaps the policy is at fault, not the employee.
Gain the employee’s commitment to change.
Ask for the employee’s agreement
to improve his behavior. Most employees will make this commitment once
their shortcomings are confronted in a calm, professional manner. If he
resists, reiterate the reasons behind company policy. A personal pledge is
more effective and more lasting than a boss’s decree to “shape up.”
Furthermore, by gaining a commitment to change, you shift the focus of any
future discussions from company policy to personal integrity. Straying from
the latter is much more difficult to explain away.
Coach — but don’t counsel.
In a disciplinary conversation, what you are
trying to do is to coach the employee to improve his performance by
clarifying expectations and making him understand his responsibility to act
correctly. Counseling him on his personal problems is entirely different
and should be left to professionals. Though it may well be appropriate to
give the employee “a good listening to” regarding his or her personal
problems, it is usually not appropriate to attempt to advise the employee
about such matters.
If a Problem Remains —
Sometimes an employee will fail to improve or
will backslide. The following actions up the ante and can ultimately lead
to a justified and defensible termination. Yet they also leave the door
open for a change of heart on the part of the employee and the real
possibility of permanent improvement in behavior.
Issue an oral reminder.
Meet with the employee to remind him of his
promise to change. Be specific both in describing his failure to live up to
that commitment and the company’s expectations of performance. Be sure to
state that this is the first step of the formal disciplinary process and
outline subsequent stages. Also be sure to document the meeting afterward,
its spoken nature notwithstanding.
Proceed to a written reminder.
In essence, repeat the meeting in which you
delivered the oral reminder, adding the facts of the continuing bad behavior
and explaining that documentation of this meeting will go on permanent
file. A copy should be given to the employee, along with an explicit
description of what happens next. Rather than issuing a preprinted “turkey
ticket,” write a memo after the meeting describing your specific concerns,
the steps taken thus far, and the employee’s response.
Consider having the employee take a paid
leave of absence. Many companies
have instituted a one-day leave of absence, with pay, at this stage in the
disciplinary process. You might ask, “Why pay for continued poor
behavior?” This concept, originated by psychologist John Huberman two
decades ago, has several advantages. It continues to focus attention on the
employee’s behavior. It shows the company’s desire to gain improvement
rather than simply punish. It can transform anger, which employees
typically feel during unpaid leave, into appropriate guilt. For these
reasons, companies using paid leave of absence have consistently found that
costs associated with disciplinary procedures have dropped. Employees file
fewer grievances and win fewer of those they do file.
Issue an ultimatum.
A key part of Huberman’s approach, which is
known as “positive discipline” or “discipline without punishment,” is giving
employees a choice. During the leave of absence, they are told to think over
the company’s performance demands and either commit the very next day to
meeting them or go elsewhere. In this way, the decision-making leave, as it
is termed, is a far tougher response than an unpaid probation. Instead of
being able to cast a leader as the heavy, an employee is forced to take
responsibility for his actions and their outcome.
Terminate.
Discharge should not be viewed as the final
step of the disciplinary process. It is the failure of the process.
Experience has shown that most people placed on a decision-making leave come
back resolved to correct their behavior. When they do not, termination
should be the inevitable consequence of that choice. A company following
the procedures above will be justified — ethically and legally — in moving
intransigent employees out and moving on.
For more information about
Ken Chapman and Associates’ Leadership Development Programs, contact Ken
Chapman at 205.366.0265 or email Ken at
kchapman@leaderscode.com.
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