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    Monthly E-Tip                                                                                                           November 2008
This Month
Painless Performance Conversations - Focus on Behaviors
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Recommended Reading
Meet the MEG Team
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Greetings!
 
Many of you have become proficient at setting clear expectations, keeping good performance records, and writing a performance evaluation that is specific. Still, the confidence to face an employee with constructive input without shaking in your boots seems to be a challenge we've yet to overcome. With that I'm going to focus the next few e-tips on confidently having painless performance conversations. My hope is that you will enter into these sometimes uncomfortable discussions with clearer purpose, enhanced confidence, and better outcomes.  Have a great month! 

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Painless Performance Conversations - Focus on Behaviors  
                                                                                                        
MEG11-08                   
 
Is there a conversation you need to have with an employee that you're avoiding because you know it's going to be unpleasant? With the job of supervision comes the task of addressing problems or tough issues even though you'd rather not. We procrastinate. We "wait and see" if the problem will take care of itself. We avoid the issue. In most cases, the waiting only makes the situation bigger and more hairy.

Over the next few months, our e-tips will offer some ideas for having more productive and painless performance conversations. My first tip is: focus on behaviors, not on the person.

Performance conversations are often sensitive. When you focus your approach on the person, you risk touching on their character, their value, and their worth as a human being. When you focus on observable behaviors, you'll find more success. Factually state the situation, focus on what the person did (rather than on who they are), and it will be easier for you and the other person to remain non-defensive. Here are some examples:

Focus on the person - "You have irritated your co-workers to the point that they don't want to work with you."
Focus on the behavior - "When you avoid eye contact and don't greet your co-workers in the morning, they are less willing to work with you."

Focus on the person - "You need to work on meeting your deadlines."
Focus on the behavior - "Three times this month the deadlines were not met."

Focus on the person - "You seem to be making a lot of errors in your reports lately."
Focus on the behavior - "There have been more errors in the reports lately."

In each case, the same message is being delivered but when the focus is on the behavior, rather than on the person, it remains less emotional and more likely to be heard. Try it this month and let me know how it goes. I'd love to hear about your experiences with painless performance conversations.


Click here to view more performance management tips.
 
Upcoming Events
 
women's boot camp

2009 Women Entrepreneurs' Small Business Boot Camp
February 7th, 2009
7:00a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
Chaparral Suites Resort
Scottsdale, AZ

Join us for the 2009 Women's Business Boot Camp. Grow your business, expand your expertise, explore new opportunities, build a band of resources and mingle with your peers. Don't miss this exciting day of education and motivation that will energize, synergize and maximize your success.

Women's Business Boot Camp: http://www.womensbusinessbootcamp.com/
 


Recommended Reading
 
The Leader Within
A few years ago I attended an executive education program at Harvard University's Kennedy School of Government. The program, The Art and Practice of Leadership Development, showed me new techniques for guiding and coaching leaders to new levels of confidence. The one principle I learned from the experience that stands above all others is that extraordinary leaders first know themselves and then they focus on others.

This month's recommended reading is based on that one important principle: The better you understand yourself, your personality, your values, and your leadership approach, the more commitment, joy, and success you will generate in others. Check out The Leader Within for a useful guide to "learning enough about yourself to lead others." Written by four well-known leadership experts including Ken Blanchard, the book draws on the popular DISC model and seven years of world-class research centered around how successful leaders exert influence.

The Leader Within is available via our website at a discount. Click here to order this helpful tool.
FTPress.com (Pearson Education)
Meet the MEG Team
 

C. Muldoon The Management Education Group, Inc. collaborates with some of the most impactful and powerful presenters and facilitators around. We'd like to introduce you to a few of our most valuable players. This month our featured MEG team member is Christine Muldoon. Chris is a dynamic, knowledgeable and insightful seminar leader and keynote speaker. She has over twenty-five years experience as a specialist in the area of persuasive communication skills making her a seasoned educator, coach and consultant. Her workshops are among the most highly rated of all those offered by the Management Education Group, Inc. Chris presents a number of topics including:

· Collaborative Communication: 1+1=3
· The Persuasive Communicator: Getting in PACE
· EasySpeak: A Public Communication Course
· Team Power: Clarifying Core Values

Recently, a client said this about Chris: "I just wanted to thank you for your presentation. You are an excellent presenter with a powerful message to share. What touched me the most was the strength and integrity that I felt was at your core. It made your message that more valid to me."

The Management Education Group, Inc. is proud to call Chris Muldoon a colleague. To learn more about Chris and the work she does that regularly blows participants away, click here.
  

Thank You

Thank you to everyone for your ongoing support and feedback. Even in these challenging times, we have much to be thankful for. Please use November as a time to remind those around you that you appreciate them and their contributions. Happy Thanksgiving!
 
Sincerely,

Marnie Green
Management Education Group, Inc.