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Showing posts with the label Employee Conversations

Eight Behaviors To Show You Value Your Employees

There are  eight specific actions  business leaders can take to  show that they value their employees , according to  Andrew Leigh , author of the book,   Ethical Leadership -- Creating and Sustaining an Ethical Business Culture . Those  eight behaviors  are: Attention  -- Pay attention to what people say to show your interest. Listen  -- Make time to hear what colleagues, peers and employees have to say to show you care. Positive Language  -- Find words and phrases to show employees they're needed.  Examples are, "We couldn't have accomplished this without you," "That was really useful." Document  -- Put praise in writing to increase its impact.  Make clear where the credit belongs. Micro Sessions  -- Create two-way communication sessions. Visits  -- Schedule visits to teams and work areas. Stories  -- Share stories that highlight unusual contributions and provide your personal response to them. Invite...

6 Best Open-Ended Questions To Ask Your Employees

To help you bring out the best in your team, you need to get close and understand their skills, abilities, and motivations. So, the authors of the book,  Your First Leadership Job , recommend you hold  getting-to-know-you conversations  with each of your direct reports. Ask these  open-ended questions . Let each team member know the purpose of the meeting in advance. And, don't cheat by adding in work-specific questions. What do you enjoy doing most as part of your work? Why? What do you  miss most about the jobs you've had in the past? Why? What things about your current job do you enjoy the least? Why? How do you cope with or relieve stress? To help you do your job, what could I change about: Your work environment? The content of your work? How you get your work done? What form of recognition do you prefer or not prefer?

Critical Questions To Ask New Employees Within Their First 90 Days On The Job

  In  Paul Falcone ’s book,  75 Ways For Managers To Hire, Develop And Keep Great Employees , he recommends asking new employees the following questions 30, 60 and 90 days after they were hired:   30-Day One-on-One Follow-Up Questions Why do you think we selected you as an employee? What do you like about the job and the organization so far? What’s been going well? What are the highlights of your experiences so far? Why? Tell me what you don’t understand about your job and about our organization now that you’ve had a month to roll up your sleeves and get your hands dirty. Have you faced any unforeseen surprises since joining us that you weren’t expecting?   60-Day One-on-One Follow-Up Questions Do you have enough, too much or too little time to do your work? Do you have access to the appropriate tools and resources? Do you feel you have been sufficiently trained in all aspects of your job to perform at a high level? How do you see your job relating to the organi...

The Better Way For Discussing Performance With An Employee

Here is some great advice about the emerging practices for performance and development dialogue with an employee from the new book, Reinventing TheOrganization . Authors Arthur Yeung and Dave Ulrich recommend your conversations switch from :  Having a conversation about performance at one point in time TO having performance conversations in real time (ongoing). Focusing on ability TO focusing on effort to help create a growth mindset in the employee. Praise efforts as well as results. Looking back TO looking forward to see opportunity and to create learning. Emphasizing what is wrong TO focusing on what is right (keep a five-to-one positive-to-negative ratio). Focusing on actions TO focusing on the sustainability of actions. Talking about what has happened and what should happen TO listening and engaging in affirmative conversation about what could happen next.  To learn more ways your company can deliver radically greater value in today’s fast changing m...