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In: Business| Management
8 Nov 2005
Performance Feedback - Fudge It Or Face It
So if you are finding that people are fudging performance measures instead of facing them with open curiosity and a passion to improve, it might help to do some thinking about how you can seed and nurture the capability for people to seek, hear and respond to feedback:
Stacey Barr is the Performance Measure Specialist, helping people to measure their business strategy, goals and objectives so they actually achieve them.
reprinting this article Please feel welcomed to reprint this article in your publication but make sure it stays complete and unchanged (especially including the “about the author” information at the end), and please send a copy of your reprint to staceybarr@staceybarr.com.Performance Feedback - Fudge It Or Face It
It’s very ironic that I felt this way, given that my specialty is performance measurement! Reflecting on how I responded to the above experience has helped me understand a little more about why performance measurement sounds like a great idea until performance measures come face to face with people not really ready for handling feedback.
Performance Feedback, Fudge It Or Face It by Stacey Barr, the Performance Measure Specialist Performance measures are basically a form of feedback. In general, we measure things because we want to know how something is going and whether or not and when we should do anything about it.
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Why should this happen? Why is it so much more preferable for people to turn a blind eye to poor service or low quality work than to stand face to face with some objective feedback about how much they could improve? A few things probably contribute to this:
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More often than not, however, performance measures are used as ways of judging how well someone is doing their job. How well a manager is keeping costs under control, how well a project manager is delivering a project’s objectives, how well a sales person is converting leads into customers. When someone feels that a performance measure is the fuel for someone else to judge their performance, we all know the typical unintended consequences:
I have to admit that I am guilty of each one of these states when it comes to evaluating my own performance as a consultant. When a client indicated to me that a workshop didn’t go as well as they expected, it felt like they had said that I wasn’t as good a consultant as they expected. When I read some of the participant feedback forms for that workshop, some of their comments about not understanding where I was taking them really stung my ego! I felt at that point quite ready to give in and accept my weaknesses and limitations and go back to easier and “safer” consulting work. I am also ashamed to admit that I even had a glancing thought that maybe the problem was them and not me - that my performance at the workshop was a victim of their inability to actively listen.
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