Providing good customer
service is a must for any business to survive. Your employees are crucial to
that success. As a good supervisor you owe it to your employees to provide them
with constructive feedback on their performance. In that you should be constantly
developing your employees so a situation on whether to terminate does not
arise. If an employee falls behind, and their behavior effects performance to a
point it makes a negative workplace, communicative action must be clear to all
involved. The company’s goals are
important, and can be jeopardized if; counseling is not effectively communicated
to correct the deficiency.
In
the provided scenario you have an employee that for the last two years is still
operating at a substandard level. The first step as the supervisor will be to
gather information on the employee. This information would consist of their
skill level, and has there been any continuing counseling that he or she has
fallen behind. I would first get with the Human Resource Office to make sure
there are no other instances that have been documented as in warnings and
performance evaluations. In any counseling
session that is of a negative aspect you need documentation to develop a plan
or any warnings on firings.
After gathering the needed records and
documents I would also want to know the extent of the customer service
complaints. This is important for if the company is having the person work in
an area that he or she is not qualified for that could be a cause in the issue.
Documented customer feedback will also aid in the meeting with the employee to
avoid he said she said disagreements. After gathering enough information I
would set up a meeting with the employee.
In the initial meeting there should be
an open discussion with the employee. At first you need to be upfront with the
employee and let them know that there are some serious concerns that management
has, and that performance is affecting the overall goals of the company. The employee will probably be very defensive
or even hostile. As the supervisor you need to be firm and straightforward. This
is also a time now to practice the S-TLC system which is an acronym for Stop,
Think, Listen, and Communicate. In that
system as the supervisor you will want to listen to the employee views of the
current situation. Listening skills are crucial. How I’m viewed in taking
concern of the employee’s viewpoint will help them accept the credibility of
whatever my final decision is. It will also help de-escalate any tensions in
the meeting.
In the counseling session I will need to
separate the person from the problem. No matter my personal feelings or
preconceived notions the supervisor must focus on the problem. In the text book
Managing Conflict Through Communication,
this is described as
“One
of the most important actions we can take in a conflict is to keep our
perceptions of the other person separated from our perceptions of the problem
or issue. It is easy in a conflict to confuse how we feel about the issue with
how we feel about the person involved with it. Because this can work in either
positive or negative ways, our like or dislike of a person can cloud our
decision-making processes.”(Cahn & Abigail, R. 2007)
By adhering to that
principle and using effective listening skill to the problems laid out to the
employee a training plan can be implemented. If this is a long list of
documented problems and there has been numerous warning that have not led to
improvement then it would be time to terminate.
If
the company was remiss in not helping the employee in identifying weak area,
this would be a good time to outline an improvement plan and timeline. Taking
the employee concerns in during the listening phase and determines that if
there is no improvement than this will lead to termination. In a situation like
this one needs to communicate effectively. There is a time to be to the point.
When an employee falls behind your communications is important. If they are not
effective or ignored the situation will arise over and over.
You have a very clean page and I love “The Office” picture that you have posted to go along with your latest article on delivering bad news tactfully as Steve’s character rarely does on the show. I loved the spread out of each article and how they were specifically labeled but I did have a hard time find the right spot to add feedback, which is why my feedback is attached to one of the articles. I am not sure what could be done to add on that but it is a thought. It would also make your blogs stronger if they included a small reference list at the bottom along with what you already have in the blog. I also like the way that each blog opens up into its own blog space when it is clicked on, this makes it easily readable and distinguishable from the other blog posts. Great job! ~ Jessica Sphon
ReplyDelete