“Tell me why you didn’t say anything to Katy about the problems with her job performance.”
“I didn’t say anything because I didn’t want to hurt her feelings.”
This explanation happened in an unlawful termination lawsuit. Fed up with an employee’s ongoing failure to meet job requirements, the supervisor had fired her. Having not received any feedback about her job performance, Katy believed she had been let go because she was the oldest person in her department.
If you supervise, manage, and/or lead others, talking to them—candidly, caringly, frequently—about their job performance is a must-have skill in your leadership tool kit.
I remember the first time I had to tell someone their job performance was missing the mark. I mentally postponed the discussion at least a dozen times. The time lag only made me more and more uncomfortable. Plus, it revealed the silliness of my secret hope that the employee would somehow read my mind and miraculously start doing a better job.
As the possibility of that miracle receded further and further and his job performance continued to fail, I asked a respected colleague for guidance.
“Since you’re holding back, you must be afraid of something. What is it?”
“I’m afraid of hurting his feelings.”
“What will happen if his performance doesn’t get any better?”
“I’ll have to let him go.”
“What about his feelings then?”
Ooh!
My colleague told me effective leaders talk frankly and frequently about performance—be it good and/or bad—with their employees, and that those discussions come from a place of caring, not out of belittlement or forced obligation (like the mandatory annual performance review).
Here are 3 tips for giving authentic, timely, and meaningful feedback. As a leader, you own developing the skills of your team just as you own production or sales numbers or whatever other metric is used as the yardstick to assess results. To make that happen:
As for that employee who was my first “feedback guinea pig”—he thanked me for being upfront with him and went on to become a star performer.
What’s the best and/or worst feedback you ever received?