| Casual Articles |
Hubs | Hubbers | Topics | Request |
| #1 in Business | Subscribe Email Print |
|
You are here: Home > Business > Management > Giving Good Feedback |
|
Casual Articles - Giving Good Feedback
Calibration Services the employee to hear, particularly if the critique is long after the problem has occurred. If your style around Thanksgiving is to say, “Remember that situation last June, before the company picnic, when you handled Mrs. Jones’ order?” You’ve waited too long! Give immediate feedback and your employee will learn from it.Almost all calibration laboratories’ quality systems fulfill the standards set by ISO/IEC 17025:1999, and include all functions that have an impact on the attribute of the 17025 calibration service, like equipment, personnel, calibration procedures and reporting.17025 calibrations correspond to ISO 9000 for calibration and testing laboratories. However, certification to ISO 9000 does not necessarily mean the efficiency of •Provide specific feedback. Ask, “What did you do wrong on Mrs. Jones order? How To Start Your Own House Cleaning Business We can learn so much from our children. Ben, my 4-year old son, is learning to dress himself, and each morning my wife lays his clothes out for him. It’s amazing what you learn when you stay home in the morning! With great ceremony, she sets each article of clothing on the floor. His shirt goes upside down, and with any luck, it ends up on his body the right way.If you are thinking about starting your own house cleaning business, begin by evaluating your present circumstances. There are no right or wrong answers to these questions, but how you reply will affect what you do.How much strength and stamina do you have? If you have lots, you can schedule more house cleaning jobs than someone who is more average in these ways.What times of the week are you available? If you have It was my job to help Ben this morning. I laid out his clothing as only a father can, wrong! I put his shirt down backwards, but not upside down. Ben, knowing a novice when he sees one, shocked me by saying, “You have to do it wrong, to do it right.” Wow, I thought. How profound! I started to think about applying something so simple to a management situation. Each day employees do many things right, and some things wrong. What should we do when their actions leave something to be desired? Do we chastise them? Do we humiliate them in front of their peers? How we handle such situations can ultimately determine if the employees learn from their mistakes. In many cases, people have to “do it wrong before they can do it right.” Giving feedback in the proper way is vital. Here are some success factors for giving good feedback. •Give immediate feedback. Seems easy, doesn’t it? It’s not, because people are sensitive. They don’t like to hear when they’ve done something wrong. Calling someone out on their mistake is embarrassing for them. Despite our own trepidation, we must do it swiftly, while the incident is still fresh, and respectfully. Putting critique off just makes it harder for the supervisor to do, and even harder for the employee to hear, particularly if the critique is long after the problem has occurred. If your style around Thanksgiving is to say, “Remember that situation last June, before the company picnic, when you handled Mrs. Jones’ order?” You’ve waited too long! Give immediate feedback and your employee will learn from it. •Provide specific feedback. Ask, “What did you do wrong on Mrs. Jones order? 4 Things Your Clients Want From Your Company ng. I laid out his clothing as only a father can, wrong! I put his shirt down backwards, but not upside down. Ben, knowing a novice when he sees one, shocked me by saying, “You have to do it wrong, to do it right.” Wow, I thought. How profound! I started to think about applying something so simple to a management situation.Sure, all clients are different. They have different kinds of strengths, weaknesses, cultures and goals. Even what blocks their efficiency and growth (blind spots) is different. Davis, Kingsley & Company has conducted hundreds of interviews and there are four strong themes that always emerge.Listen to me. This is the Big Daddy of client desires. Your clients want you to listen to them. The implications of this them Each day employees do many things right, and some things wrong. What should we do when their actions leave something to be desired? Do we chastise them? Do we humiliate them in front of their peers? How we handle such situations can ultimately determine if the employees learn from their mistakes. In many cases, people have to “do it wrong before they can do it right.” Giving feedback in the proper way is vital. Here are some success factors for giving good feedback. •Give immediate feedback. Seems easy, doesn’t it? It’s not, because people are sensitive. They don’t like to hear when they’ve done something wrong. Calling someone out on their mistake is embarrassing for them. Despite our own trepidation, we must do it swiftly, while the incident is still fresh, and respectfully. Putting critique off just makes it harder for the supervisor to do, and even harder for the employee to hear, particularly if the critique is long after the problem has occurred. If your style around Thanksgiving is to say, “Remember that situation last June, before the company picnic, when you handled Mrs. Jones’ order?” You’ve waited too long! Give immediate feedback and your employee will learn from it. •Provide specific feedback. Ask, “What did you do wrong on Mrs. Jones order? In Search of Integrity we do when their actions leave something to be desired? Do we chastise them? Do we humiliate them in front of their peers?When Merriam-Webster assembled their list of most searched definitions for 2005, they could easily reason why certain words would make the list. Levee, tsunami, filibuster, and refugee were tied to events during the year. Even insipid was explainable due to the timing of the hits and comments made by Simon Cowell of wannabe singers during American Idol. Yet one word, the top word, seemed to be more wide-spread than caused by How we handle such situations can ultimately determine if the employees learn from their mistakes. In many cases, people have to “do it wrong before they can do it right.” Giving feedback in the proper way is vital. Here are some success factors for giving good feedback. •Give immediate feedback. Seems easy, doesn’t it? It’s not, because people are sensitive. They don’t like to hear when they’ve done something wrong. Calling someone out on their mistake is embarrassing for them. Despite our own trepidation, we must do it swiftly, while the incident is still fresh, and respectfully. Putting critique off just makes it harder for the supervisor to do, and even harder for the employee to hear, particularly if the critique is long after the problem has occurred. If your style around Thanksgiving is to say, “Remember that situation last June, before the company picnic, when you handled Mrs. Jones’ order?” You’ve waited too long! Give immediate feedback and your employee will learn from it. •Provide specific feedback. Ask, “What did you do wrong on Mrs. Jones order? Business Cards Design Guidelines •Give immediate feedback. Seems easy, doesn’t it? It’s not, because people are sensitive. They don’t like to hear when they’ve done something wrong. Calling someone out on their mistake is embarrassing for them. Despite our own trepidation, we must do it swiftly, while the incident is still fresh, and respectfully.In the business industry there are lots of strategies in which advertisers do to promote the products and services their company can give. Though it is said that advertising needs bigger budget businesses still find ways on how to economically minimize their advertising cost.Using business cards for advertising can be a great passport in winning your client’s attention. First they are cost effective. Second they are porta Putting critique off just makes it harder for the supervisor to do, and even harder for the employee to hear, particularly if the critique is long after the problem has occurred. If your style around Thanksgiving is to say, “Remember that situation last June, before the company picnic, when you handled Mrs. Jones’ order?” You’ve waited too long! Give immediate feedback and your employee will learn from it. •Provide specific feedback. Ask, “What did you do wrong on Mrs. Jones order? Growth the employee to hear, particularly if the critique is long after the problem has occurred. If your style around Thanksgiving is to say, “Remember that situation last June, before the company picnic, when you handled Mrs. Jones’ order?” You’ve waited too long! Give immediate feedback and your employee will learn from it.Growth is vital to prosperity. Every person, every company, and every national economy must grow. Are you working for a company that is growing? Is it growing profitably and with no decline in velocity? What happens when the growth rate is low or even negative?If the company as a whole or your business unit lags behind competitors, your personal progress will suffer. If the company's sales are flat for five or six years, •Provide specific feedback. Ask, “What did you do wrong on Mrs. Jones order? Did you enter the wrong delivery time in the computer, or did you match the wrong wine with her famed Veal Osso Buco dish?” (I’d suggest a Rhone from the South of France, but that belongs in another column). The point is that your comments have to be specific or they will have very little meaning. •Effective feedback should be behavior related and not based on personality. When we give feedback that is personal, we can assume the recipient will immediately become defensive. It’s no way to start an already difficult conversation. We should key on the specific problem behavior, and not the person causing the problem. Saying “What’s the matter with you?” or something equally unspecific is unhelpful and hurtful and will not help the cause. It’s always a good idea to start with something positive, which softens the approach. The individual will be predisposed to receive the constructive feedback more easily, and it will have a greater impact. Always end the meeting on a positive note by praising the individual. Wasn’t it Shakespeare that said, “All’s well that ends well”? As Managers, we must diligently give feedback, both positive and negative. Always remember these simple rules and your people will learn from their mistakes. Soon there will be less mistakes and their performance will improve. I imagine the wife used some of this logic with Ben.
HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
Related Articles:The Employment Interview - How Hard Can It Be Why a Permanent Job is Bad for You (2) - The Personal Costs
|