Employers Survival Tip #4

Establishing Performance Standards to Achieve Success

Competitiveness, profitability and growth are rooted in the ability of your human capital to execute your strategy. Setting benchmarks for what constitutes success, measuring performance against those benchmarks and finally, rewarding achievement are keys to maximizing the potential of your employees.

So what factors contribute to low performance, low productivity and lack of business success?

Lack of communication, or improper communication greatly contribute to low quality performance and low productivity. Business owners and customers tend to assume that employees and managers see things the same way they do but in reality, not many employees think like business owners because they don’t have the same goals for achievement as an owner does. Creating a crystal clear set of performance standards and communicating it effectively to your employees is the key to business success.

Time Barriers

Unfortunately, due to limited time and resources, businesses owners are typically too busy just focusing on revenue generation, operations and keeping the business growing to really focus on the people that make it possible. Subsequently, small businesses consistently fail to transition to the next level and succeed to their potential. Performance Management is a necessary function of every business to invest the time necessary to accomplish what needs to be done.

Making the Complex Simple

Managing performance involves many complex factors, but can easily be accomplished and scaled down to meet the needs of a small business within the time and resources available to most small business owners. The following steps are foundational to an effective performance management strategy:

  • Determine what needs accomplished, when and who should be responsible
  • Set short term and long term goals, corporately, by department and then individually and break them into small steps
  • Set measurable standards for each goal and make it clear what defines success. Ensure there is consistency between employees with similar duties
  • Communicate in writing what is expected from your employees. Have the employee(s) sign the performance plan. Encourage the employee to take ownership of the goal and be open allow the employee the freedom to choose how to best succeed, within certain boundaries of course
  • Monitor performance on a regular basis, even before the goal is due to determine progress and make adjustments as necessary
  • Avoid linking performance to pay increases or bonuses unless you set up a specific compensation for the performance plan
  • Recognize achievement and completion of goals – recognition drives future performance

Start with the big goals and break them into small goals. Set up a system to review your goals regularly and make adjustments as necessary. Always communicate your goals to your employees and get that “buy-in” factor in place.

Performance Standards Provide Liability Protection

Additionally, failing to set performance goals and measuring performance opens the doors for employer liability. When you have clear documentation illustrating an employee’s shortcomings as compared to organizational/individual goals and objectives and subsequently, to other employee’s performance, you stand a much better chance to defend claims or lawsuits associated with wrongful termination and discrimination.

The primary purpose for goal setting is for everyone to individually succeed, and for the business objectives to succeed. By measuring performance against reasonable goals, the weaknesses in your team will stand out. You can then begin the process of strengthening the weakness or eliminating it.

Employers Survival Tip #1

Know Who You’re Hiring Because You Just Don’t Know Who You’re Hiring

A bad hiring decision can wreak havoc on a company budget, productivity and liability. Employees may apply for a position in your company and come in well dressed, able to articulate well, gush with personality but in reality, they may be hiding critical information that you as an employer should know. In this era of high unemployment, you as the employer are in the drivers seat and its critical that you cautiously approach hiring any new employee. Face it, you have limited payroll dollars and you can’t afford to make a mistake.

According to the Society for Human Resource Managers (SHRM), nearly half of more than 3,100 hiring managers interviewed report they’ve caught a job candidate lying on his or her resume or application.

Skeletons in the Closet?

What else is hiding in the closets of the candidates you are looking at? Illegal drug possession or usage? Embezzlement? Other criminal convictions?

The impact from drug or alcohol abuse in the workplace, includes tardiness, absenteeism, turnover, attitude problems, theft, decreased productivity, crime and violence. Sixty-five percent of all accidents on the job are related to drug or alcohol, and substance abusers utilize 16 times as many health care benefits and are six times more likely to file workers compensation claims then non-abusers.

Deterrence is a Great Prevention Tool

Candidates that are seeking employment with you are not likely to notify you of negative history that might affect their chances for employment. Additionally, knowing ahead of time that background checks are required, employees that have serious past issues will be deterred from seeking employment with you to avoid exposure of their history.

The only way to know who is coming into your place of business is to legally and thoroughly perform a strategic pre-employment screening related to your business needs as part of a specific and consistent hiring process.

Pre-Employment Background Checks

Background Checks are relatively inexpensive and can be customized to meet the needs of your business. Background checks can only be preformed before you hire an employee, or in association with a promotion.

Pre-Employment Drug Testing

Most drug testing is done by sending an applicant to a collection site, where a urine sample is obtained and sent to a certified laboratory for analysis. Negative results are normally available within 24 hours and in some cases immediately.

Physical Fitness Screening

If the position you are filling requires physical fitness to perform, it is wise to require a physical fitness test before employees are hired. It is all too common for an employee who has been injured previously to wind up on your workers compensation insurance.

Pre-Employment  screening is part of a specific hiring process that should be carefully and strategically designed and performed to ensure government compliance and maximum effectiveness.  Contact Champion for more information

Next Tip – Can Employees Reach Their (Your) Destination Without a Road Map?