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Solving the Problems You Hate Most
That’s just the tip of the iceberg.
We’ll also drill down
and work on the problems that bother you most – whether you’re just
starting to do Evals or have been at it for years.
(Frankly, given how
little help most organizations give managers and how poorly thought out
most evaluation protocols are, experience probably isn’t all that much of
a plus.)
Regardless of your time in the trenches, you still have
problem employees you need to motivate, misunderstandings you need to
correct and an organization that’s counting on you to turn even the least
productive employees into top producers – preferably overnight.
Which brings us to the things you hate most about doing
evaluations – the areas where you’re just not sure what to do and how to
achieve the results you need to succeed (and impress the people who do
YOUR evaluations).
"That’s Not Fair!" Avoiding Mistakes That Can Poison the
Evaluation
You’re a fair person… a decent person. Someone who wants to
gather information with clear eyes, weigh issues honestly and give
evaluations that are free of bias.
But good intentions aren’t enough. It’s also important to
recognize that, as a normal human being, you probably have some tendencies
and preconceptions that can trip you up no matter how experienced you
are.
In “How
to Give Performance Evaluations the Right Way”,
I’ll help you recognize – and
overcome --the ten key barriers to truly fair evaluations, including:
Stereotyping. Sure it’s easy to spot in
its most obvious form, but there are subtle kinds of stereotyping you
may not even recognize. (I’ll tell you a story about a person – me --
who believed he never stereotyped, who put his foot in his mouth because
of a preconceived notion about what a particular job entailed.)
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Central tendency bias. Could be you’re
short on information. Could be a cop-out. Either way letting your
reviews fall into this trap short-changes both your employees and your
organization.
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Horn or Halo effect. Once you realize
how powerful these can be you’ll be ready to evaluate your employee’s
TOTAL performance in an evenhanded manner.
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Seven other fairness-killing mistakes
you can easily avoid – once you know how to spot them.

If you prefer to be invoiced instead of using a credit card,
please call
Rebecca at 1-800-538-4595.
The Moment of Truth: Telling Employees What They Need
to Hear (But Don’t Want to)
Which should you give employees first, the good news or the
bad? It sounds like the beginning of a thousand bad jokes but it’s a
serious and important question.
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Give criticism first and lots of employees will be
so concerned they don’t even hear the praise you dole out.
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Give praise first and its benefits may evaporate as
soon as they hear about areas where they need to improve.
In “How
to Give Performance Evaluations the Right Way”, I’ll show you how to find the
right balance – so that ALL your important messages get
through.
Sign Here: Getting Employees to Buy Into the
Evaluation
Lots of managers do strong, fair, well thought out
evaluations – but then have difficulty getting their employees to buy in
to the process.
We’ll take a look at the best ways to actually get your
employees involved and motivated. Plus, we’ll examine:
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Why getting your employee to sign the evaluation is
crucial – and why you should keep those signed evaluations on file
pretty much forever.
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How to get emotionally fragile (AKA basket case)
employees to buy in instead of coming apart – including the one word you
must avoid AT ALL COSTS, if you want to get them on board.
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How to harness the remarkable power of
self-evaluation to turn the review into a true dialogue and, very
possibly, uncover issues that may have been keeping your employee from
realizing his or her true potential.
Step by Step to Evaluations That WORK
There’s lots more, too – including a close look at what kind
of evaluation form will work best for you and a thorough discussion of how
to suit the evaluation’s style to the employee you’re talking to. But you
get the idea.
“How
to Give Performance Evaluations the Right Way”
addresses (and SOLVES) all the
tough problems you associate with giving evaluations.
I’ve also made the
program really affordable at only $197. Just click on this blue button
now.

If you prefer to be invoiced instead of using a credit card,
please call
Rebecca at
1-800-538-4595.
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