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7 Tips to Deal With a Bad Performance Review
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Prepare your employees to be active and constructive participants in the performance appraisal process. Performance appraisals work best when employees understand the process, prepare, and see the benefits of being engaged in it. Getting The Most From Performance Appraisals For Employees is meant to get employees ready. Get a copy for each of your staff members. Free preview available. Click here for more information about Getting The Most From Performance Appraisals For Employees |
Ask for a second meeting, explaining calmly that you need time to think. Use the time to collect your backup file. Consider a consultation with an outsider: career coach, consultant, human resources professor - even a lawyer if the situation warrants.
Do not discuss your report or your decision to seek help with your peers. Ever.
6. Back up a rebuttal with facts, not emotion.
Assemble your own evidence of performance. Collect letters of appreciation, dates and times of project completion, statistics showing how you helped the company.
Often simply placing a rebuttal letter in your own file will defuse the impact of a negative evaluation. When you've had a strong track record, your company will ignore an occasional negative, unless there's a new agenda.
Your boss may be ordered to grade on the curve, i.e., assign some employees the “low” category even if everyone's doing great. And, being human, he may assign those ratings to those who are least likely to speak up. A strong, carefully written rebuttal will clarify your strength of purpose.
7. Avoid jumping to conclusions - or to a new job.
When clients ask, “Should I look for a new job?” my answer will be, “When you work for any organization, keep yourself marketable. Maintain your network. Identify reputable recruiters and build ties with them.”
It's rarely a good idea to share your career change plans with your colleagues or boss until you have a written offer in hand. And it's rarely a good idea to accept a counter-offer from your present company. (Over half the workers who accept a counter-offer are gone within six months, one way or another.)
But if your company wants to send a “Go Away!” message, they may be happy to give you a good reference that reflects your real contribution.
Cathy Goodwin, Ph.D., helps midlife professionals create small, medium and huge career changes, start a business or start over.
Free Report: Ten secrets of managing a major life change.
Mailto:subscribe@cathygoodwin.com
Contact cathy@cathygoodwin.com
or call 505-534-4294
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Robert Bacal, 2000 - 2008 Reprint or distribution without permission prohibited.
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Associates | 722 St. Isidore Rd. | Casselman, Ontario, Canada | K0A 1M0
| Phone: (613) 764-0241 | Email: ceo@work911.com
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