Thursday 10 April 2014

What Keeps You Awake at Night?

Based on my own research what keeps leaders most awake at night are:
Growing sales and a full pipeline
Managing profitability
Managing employees
4  The Competition
This month I want to bring the spot light onto Performance.  ‘Management Today’ found that British Managers often shy away from having difficult conversations about performance – and if they do have to take the plunge, quite often make a hash of it.  However not managing performance more frequently results in:
·         Low teamwork
·         Conflict
·         Blame Culture
·         High staff turnover
·         Mediocre results
Is there any organisational practice more broken than performance management? Everyone hates it – employees and managers alike.  Very few do it well with the performance management programmes becoming organisation wallpaper. They exist in the background with little or no expectations for impact.

Yet despite its poor popularity, performance management at both an individual and organisational level is critical to business success. It can’t just be ignored.

So what are the 4 essentials to transform performance management so that it becomes a key contributor to business success?
1. Link performance management to business strategy
At the end of the day, you and your leadership team will be judged in terms of how successful you have been in achieving your business strategy. You need to measure the right things to establish whether you are on or off track in terms of achieving your strategy. You will only do this if your performance management system is clearly linked to your business strategy.
2. Clarity of Objectives – Critical Success Factors
The critical success factors are the key levers that need to be operating optimally if the desired results are to be achieved. You need to be able to clearly define what those critical success factors are and ensure all department, team and individual’s objectives are aligned on the same page.
3. Evaluate and Measure
Financial measures are the most common in many organisations.  It is equally important to have a range of non financial measures which focus on areas like customer satisfaction, productivity and innovation.
4. Involve people
As a leader, don't fall into the trap of developing performance measures in isolation. Often those closest to the delivery of the service or making the product have the greatest insights into what is most critical to success. Make sure you use that expertise to get results for the organisation.
At the end of the day, performance management is a practical tool and if done simply can be a real contributor to organisation success. So what steps do you need to take in order to gain real benefits from your performance management system?

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